VintageMac
Banned
Dabl on 35.5 is back on as of this morning.
It came back last night. One thing I've noticed is that the compression on the SD subs looks better now compared to after .4 & .5 lit up, so they must have tweaked their encoders.Dabl on 35.5 is back on as of this morning.
Thank God they put "Movies" on a station with a decent signal (Channel 35). "Movies" plays major motion pictures, not beat up prints of public domain films like you find on other free movie channels.Movies moved to WOCV-CD 35.4, which is owned by their parent company. It's likely going to stay there for the foreseeable future.
Depends on where you are located. WOCV-CD comes in like a full power station for me, and their signal strength is on par with WBNX on my outdoor antennas (~35 dB SNR). I'm just under 18 miles away from their transmitter.However, signal is not as decent as 55.
You mean, Movies!I was watching WBNX yesterday morning (Sunday 4/6) and noticed a few things.
1. They aired a commercial for Rewind! and still mentioned it was on 55.3 (which is now carrying Rewind TV).
The same has been happening for the last few months with WJW. Not sure what's going on.2. Aired a few PSAs with a lower than usual volume. The other promos and programming were at normal volume.
Unlikely that Antenna TV will move over to WBNX, especially if Nexstar plans on converting it to ATSC 3.0. There's no sense in doing so if they would have to eventually move it back to WJW.3. Saw a commercial for Antenna TV with no mention of where it was airing (it is on WJW 8.2, unless it could move to one of WBNX's subchannels)
All these problems are Nexstar related between the two stations. This is what happens when you operate over 250 stations out of one location. Things are bound to get overlooked. Heck, no one has even bothered to update the Rewind TV website to include WBNX 55.3, or put a post on their Facebook page stating that it's now available in Cleveland, and it has been over 10 days since Rewind TV was made available. At this point, I'm wondering how long it will be until they accidentally start running local inserts from an out of market station. In other words, "Let's buy up stations and put 0 effort into maintaining them".They're still adjusting to new ownership it seems.
Perhaps Nathan Obral can update the WBNX Wikipedia article. He seems to be pretty good at researching and going into great detail per the other station articles that he contributed to. After all, several things on the WBNX wiki need to be updated and re-written.I logged in just to add this link to the article at the UHF History site which I originally posted several years ago, with corrections to numerous factual errors in the Akron Beacon-Journal in 2011 and a few that were in Wikipedia at the time.
History of UHF Television
uhfhistory.com
It covers pretty much the entire history of channel 55.
(And I am going back to my lurking.)
I logged in just to add this link to the article at the UHF History site which I originally posted several years ago, with corrections to numerous factual errors in the Akron Beacon-Journal in 2011 and a few that were in Wikipedia at the time.
History of UHF Television
uhfhistory.com
It covers pretty much the entire history of channel 55.
(And I am going back to my lurking.)
Redoing that whole article (and putting the proper history of WCOT-TV into either a separate article or as part of Rex's article) has been on my "to-do list" for awhile, I just need more time to get to it. 🙁Perhaps Nathan Obral can update the WBNX Wikipedia article. He seems to be pretty good at researching and going into great detail per the other station articles that he contributed to. After all, several things on the WBNX wiki need to be updated and re-written.
Nexstar now owns The CW (which explains why it is no longer doing the expensive loss-leader dramas for younger audiences CBS and WB were doing) and have been in the process of moving affiliations to their own station group, usually as the secondary station in a duopoly or on their long-established indies. They bought WBNX more or less to run it as a CW outlet.I wonder if Nexstar tried to purchase WUAB from Gray. Still, I'm surprised that WBNX is going back to the CW after losing affiliation years ago.
New ownership. And the new owner just happens to own The CW. The affiliation move back was a foregone conclusion once Nexstar bought WBNX. Whatever issues there previously were involved the station's previous owner.I wonder if Nexstar tried to purchase WUAB from Gray. Still, I'm surprised that WBNX is going back to the CW after losing affiliation years ago.
To expound on this, Nexstar has made two acquisitions for the same purpose in recent years: to make eventual CW affiliates. One is WBNX. The other is KUSI San Diego.
They are among the few acquisitions Nexstar can make outright. The reason is that the FCC does not treat duopolies separately in calculating population coverage. WJW is a VHF station, and even with the addition of WBNX (or theoretically a second VHF station), Nexstar is still "billed" for just Cleveland VHF. In San Diego, where the existing Nexstar outlet was a UHF outlet (KSWB), the addition of also-UHF KUSI did not result in an additional cap hit. In addition, duopoly-creating transactions tend to be accretive because you don't need all the staff and facilities of both shops to run a duop (though you often add a few people in sales, and KUSI of course was a news department merger in which Nexstar moved into its studios).
Nexstar has been "repatriating" affiliations in dribs and drabs since buying the network. It's not doing this in every market—indeed, it's done some evident horse-trading with operators like Sinclair (when Sinclair took on CW in Pittsburgh and Seattle, it also lost it in Oklahoma City to a Nexstar-owned secondary station) and Scripps (KASW in Phoenix got out of its primary affiliation early and in exchange Scripps carried The CW's water in Detroit for the rest of the agreement term).
CW affiliation agreements, apparently nearly universally, are tied to the network's "broadcast year" which is September 1 through August 31. So you'll have to wait until then to see in which markets Nexstar stations will pick up the network. The Tegna–CW affiliation agreement is through 2026, as a note.