- WGRZ
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WGRZ Buffalo, New York Branding Channel 2 (general)
Channel 2 News (newscasts)Slogan On Your Side Channels Digital: 33 (UHF)
Virtual: 2 (PSIP)Subchannels (see article) Affiliations NBC
Universal Sports (DT2)Owner Gannett Company, Inc.
(Multimedia Entertainment, Inc.)First air date August 14, 1954 Call letters' meaning WGR (radio station)
Z=2 (refers to virtual channel and former analog channel)Former callsigns WGR-TV (1954–1983)
WGRZ-TV (1983–2009)Former channel number(s) Analog:
2 (VHF, 1954-2009)Former affiliations ABC (1956–1958)
DuMont (secondary, 1954–1955) [1]
RTV (DT2; 2009-2011)Transmitter power 480 kW Height 295 m Facility ID 64547 Transmitter coordinates 42°43′6.6″N 78°33′47.2″W / 42.7185°N 78.563111°W Website www.wgrz.com WGRZ, virtual channel 2 (digital channel 33), is the NBC-affiliated television station in Buffalo, New York. Its studio is located at 259 Delaware Avenue in downtown Buffalo. Its transmitter is located at 11530 Warner Hill Road in South Wales, New York. The station is owned by Gannett Company, Inc., publisher of the national newspaper USA Today, and owner of numerous television stations.
Contents
Digital television
The station's digital signal, broadcasting on UHF channel 33, is multiplexed.
Digital channels
Virtual
channelVideo Format Programming 2.1 1080i 16:9 Main WGRZ programming / NBC (HD) 2.2 480i 4:3 Universal Sports WGRZ-DT2 was part of NBC Weather Plus until December 2008, when that network shut down, and aired a locally originated "Weather Plus" channel between that time and June 2009. Incidentally, both of WGRZ's subchannel networks were originally on WKBW-TV.
WGRZ ended analog broadcasts at 1:00 P.M. on June 12, 2009 and began a two week analog night light operation. The station's digital signal remained on channel 33. However, digital television with PSIP capability display WGRZ's virtual channel as 2. WGRZ dropped the -TV suffix, like most Gannett stations just a week after the transition.
Retro Television Network was previously seen on WGRZ-DT3. The 2.3 channel was removed in September 2011 with no replacement in order to provide better picture quality to both Universal Sports 2.2 and the main WGRZ signal; the DT3 signal had never gained significant cable carriage and by that time, much of the programming was being duplicated by WBBZ-TV.[2] Although the DT2 subchannel has achieved significant cable penetration dating to its time as a Weather Plus outlet, Universal Sports itself is scheduled to cease terrestrial broadcasting in January 2012 as part of Comcast's overhaul of the NBC Sports division[3] and will be replaced by NBC Nonstop, which WGRZ has so far not agreed to carry.[4]
History
The station premiered in 1954 as WGR-TV, owned by the WGR Corporation along with WGR-AM 550. It was an NBC affiliate sharing the 140 Barton Street studios of UHF outlet WBUF/Channel 17. In 1955, WBUF, which was silent at the time, was sold to NBC. In January 1956, WGR became an ABC affiliate after NBC moved its programming to WBUF. It was a bad move. All television reception at the time was via set top rabbit ears or roof top aerials. UHF television technology was in its infancy, and most people did not understand how to receive the signals, which are very different and subject to much greater degradations in strength than those of the other local stations, which transmitted on VHF. WGR switched back to NBC in September 1958 after NBC shut down the money-bleeding WBUF (which eventually was revived as a public broadcaster; the license is currently held by channel 23 WNLO while the channel 17 space is currently occupied by WNED), although WGR continued to carry a secondary affiliation with ABC for another two months until WKBW-TV/Channel 7 signed on in November of that year. The abject failure of WBUF-TV in Buffalo actually gave UHF a bad name to the broadcasting industry and the viewing public, but served as a boon to WGR-TV locally. Viewers still wanted more choices, could easily receive the VHF channel 2 signal, and the station now had more syndicated and network program options. The station also carried programming from the now-defunct DuMont Television Network.[1]
During the 1960s, WGR-TV also operated a repeater station on VHF channel 6 in Jamestown, New York; this continued until the channel 2 transmitter was moved from Elmwood Avenue in Buffalo to the South Wales transmitter site, which greatly improved signal coverage into the population center of the mountainous Chautauqua region south of Buffalo.
In 1959, WGR launched an FM radio station, WGR-FM 96.9 (now WGRF). Over the years, WGR Corporation bought several other radio and television stations across the country, including WNEP-TV in Scranton/Wilkes-Barre, WHAM-TV in Rochester (the call letters of which Transcontinent would change to WROC-TV) and WDAF-AM/FM/TV in Kansas City, and eventually became known as Transcontinent Broadcasting. Transcontinent merged with Taft Broadcasting in 1964.
In 1972 new studios were constructed at 259 Delaware Avenue.
On May 1, 1983, WGR added a Z to its callsign, thus becoming WGRZ. Less than two weeks later Taft Broadcasting and General Cinema Corporation (which operated the Coral Television division) completed the trade deal that was first announced in December 1982 in which Taft gave Channel 2 to General Cinema while in exchange Taft got Miami's WCIX. (Taft held on to WGR-AM/FM until 1987, when it was were sold to Rich Communications. The AM station is now owned by Entercom Communications, while its former FM sister is now owned by Cumulus Media.)
In the years following the 1983 exchange deal, WGRZ changed hands several times. General Cinema exited the broadcasting business by selling Coral Television to WGRZ Acquisition Corp., a partnership between SJL Broadcast Management, TA Associates and Smith Broadcasting, for $56 million in 1986. Native Buffalonian and current Newport Television CEO Sandy DiPasquale also held an ownership stake in WGRZ (through his stake in Smith Broadcasting) at this time. Two years later, Tak Communications purchased WGRZ from the SJL-led group for $100 million in 1988. Less than four years later, Tak filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy in 1991, and a group of creditors seized the company's assets in 1994. Argyle Television Holdings II, a broadcasting holding company formed by a group of managers who had recently left Argyle I after that company sold all of its stations to New World Communications, purchased the station (and then-sister KITV in Honolulu, Hawaii) from Tak's creditors for $91 million (on WGRZ's end) in 1995. Argyle II closed on WGRZ in April of that year, followed by KITV two months later.
WGRZ nearly lost its NBC affiliation in 1994 when NBC's parent company, General Electric, announced plans to purchase King World Productions, the then-owner of CBS affiliate WIVB-TV. Had it occurred, WIVB would have become an NBC owned-and-operated station. However, the deal fell through, and WIVB was sold to the LIN TV Corporation (who entered into a long-term affiliation renewal with CBS for that station) instead (coincidentally, King World would eventually be acquired by CBS, who merged the company into CBS Television Distribution in 2007). However, they did lose the local rights to the Buffalo Bills to WIVB when the NFL on CBS returned in 1998 with the rights to the American Football Conference package.[5]
Gannett acquired WGRZ and WZZM-TV in Grand Rapids, Michigan from Argyle II in a 1996 swap deal (with KOCO-TV in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma and WLWT in Cincinnati, Ohio going from Gannett to Argyle II). The deal closed in January 1997, seven months prior to Argyle II's merger with the broadcasting unit of the Hearst Corporation to form what then became Hearst-Argyle Television (which Hearst now wholly owns under a new name, Hearst Television).
Programming
Syndicated programs
Syndicated programs currently featured on WGRZ include Rachael Ray, Dr. Phil, The Ellen DeGeneres Show, Entertainment Tonight, and The Insider on weekdays, and The Closer on weekends.
Local shows
- 2 Your Home - housing show about renovation of homes throughout Western New York, formerly known as DIY Western New York
- Tee 2 Green - A golfing program hosted by Kevin Sylvester.
- WNY Living - A weekly Saturday morning lifestyle show hosted by Janet Snyder from Kiss 98.5. It highlights local attractions, upcoming events and businesses. [3]
- The Healthy Zone - A weekday show hosted by Janet Snyder from Kiss 98.5 and Dr. Derek Alessi, which focuses on physical, emotional, and financial health and wellness. This show debuted in December 2010 and follows Channel 2 News Midday. [4] [5]
- The Bill O'Loughlin Show. Formerly a WECK radio show, O'Loughlin moved this show to WGRZ in May 2011. After a successful summer run in a Sunday late night slot, it moved to weekdays at noon on September 6, 2011 to accommodate Sunday Night Football. Bill O'Loughlin co-hosts the show with Lydia Dominick.
- Spiel the Wine - A self-described "wine-tasting show for people who don't know anything about wine," hosted by Kevin LoVullo. Originally scheduled to air on WBBZ-TV,[6] WGRZ picked up the show after WBBZ had difficulties landing a local studio.[7]
Previous local programs include the talk show Your Today in WNY (2007–2008), a local version of It's Academic (2008), the talk show Nearly Noon (hosted by Dan Neaverth, 1980s), a local version of Bowling for Dollars (hosted by Ed Kilgore, two runs—one in the 1970s and a second shorter run in 2008), and the classic television anthology series Lunchtime with the Classics (September 7, 2010 to September 6, 2011).[8][9]
In 2000, WGRZ took over the live broadcast rights of the state lottery from its long-time home on WKBW-TV when that station's contract with the lottery ran out.
News operation
The station used the NewsCenter brand in the 1970s. The current brand, "Channel 2 News," dates to the 1980s and early 1990s. In the early 1990s, WGRZ used the "24 Hour News Source" format. Historically, Channel 2 was a distant third in the three-way news race for most of its existence, with the exception of a brief period in the 1970s when Ron Hunter anchored the evening newscast, when the channel beat then-leader WBEN-TV and the rising WKBW. WGRZ's return to respectability in the ratings began in 2001. In the May ratings "sweeps," the 11 p.m. newscast finished in first place over longtime news leaders WKBW-TV and WIVB-TV. It was WGRZ's first ratings win in decades.
From 2001 to 2003, WGRZ (as part of an NBC initiative, as well as an effort to preempt WNLO and WIVB's plans to launch its own 10 p.m. news) produced a 10 p.m. newscast for PAX TV affiliate WPXJ-TV. In 2006, WGRZ began producing a new 10 p.m. newscast for local WB (now MyNetworkTV) affiliate WNYO, known as 2 On Your Side at 10 (formerly known as 2 News on 49 - 10 at 10, which originally featured ten minutes of news and the rest dedicated to sports).
WGRZ was the last of the three Buffalo television news outlets to produce a noon newscast, having launched it in February 2008. In June 2009, it dropped its noon newscast in favor of an 11:00 a.m. "midday" news, the first of its kind in the Buffalo market. Unlike most television stations, WGRZ takes an openly activist "watchdog journalism" approach to its news coverage, with its commitment to "Holding People In Power Accountable" and being "On Your Side." To do this, WGRZ has the largest staff in the Buffalo market with more general assignment/feature story reporters and sports reporters than either WIVB or WKBW.
As of February 17, 2010, WGRZ became the first Buffalo station to broadcast its newscasts in upconverted widescreen SD.[10] The news video is produced entirely in 4:3 SD, which is then cropped to a 16:9 aspect ratio and upconverted to 1080i in the master control room, before HD graphics and pictures are added for broadcast. On January 7, 2011, WGRZ mentioned that they will be receiving a brand new news set during a short segment. During the 10 day construction period, one of their interview areas was used as a temporary news set.[11]
WGRZ's new set debuted during Daybreak on January 17, 2011. The set which was designed for the transition to high definition newscasts now features extensive use of steel, glass and wood in combination with HD flat panel displays, blue lighting, and a background of several local landmarks.[12] The landmarks are Buffalo City Hall, Niagara Falls, Erie Community College City Campus, and Old Erie County Hall.[13] The new set complements the HD weather set that debuted in February 2010. After rival WKBW-TV upgraded its newscasts to true high definition in August 2011, [14], WGRZ announced its plans to do the same with true HD broadcasts beginning with the November 2011 sweeps.[15] The first HD broadcast took place on October 29, 2011 with the 11pm newscast.[16]
Storm Team 2 Weather
"Storm Team 2" is WGRZ's weather team, which currently features a staff of two meteorologists, two weather anchors, and a fill-in meteorologist. WGRZ is the only broadcast station in Western New York to operate an in-house weather radar from its broadcast tower in South Wales, New York. This is branded as "Precision Doppler 2" (formerly known as "Doppler 2000" prior to 2000). Precision Doppler 2 radar has street-level mapping and storm-tracking capabilities.[17]
In February 2010, WGRZ unveiled a new weather set. Changes with the new set include HD flat panel displays, improved lighting, and graphics and technology upgrades which would be phased in throughout Spring 2010. Storm Team 2 Interactive Radar was introduced in February 2010 as an enhancement to the main website.[18]
Starting April 15, 2010, the upgraded "Storm Team 2" weather graphics, radar system, and weather alert systems debuted on air. The new systems include: WSI TruVu MAX for standard graphics,[19] WSI TruVu TITAN for Live Precision Doppler 2,[17] and WSI TruVu Alert[20] for weather alerts. All radar and graphics systems are now in full High Definition (the first Buffalo station to have High Definition systems on-air; WKBW followed in November 2010) and provide enhanced capabilities compared to previous systems used.[21]
On May 3, 2010 during daybreak, Precision Doppler 2 was shown in 3D for the first time in showing storms going through the Buffalo area. The Live Lightning indicator was also introduced. WGRZ is the second station in Buffalo to have these capabilities; WIVB was the first in 2007. Also, the new weather crawl system called "Storm Team 2 Alert" debuted. Enhanced features include the ability to display both county maps and doppler radar with any warnings being issued.[22]
The Storm Team 2 Weather app was introduced in July 2010 providing new mobile capabilities.[23]
Ratings
WGRZ's newscasts, which have performed a strong second in recent years to rival WIVB, has begun to challenge WIVB's dominance in news ratings, specifically in the 5 and 5:30 p.m. newscasts according to Nielsen's May 2007 sweeps data. By July 2007, WGRZ's morning show, Daybreak, was soundly beating WIVB's morning show in the ratings. Channel 2's 11 p.m. newscasts have also returned to the #1 position, and have among the highest-rated in the entire United States. However, in the May 2009 sweeps, WGRZ lost significant ground to WIVB and a resurgent WKBW, and fell to a distant second, closer to third-place WKBW than it was to WIVB.
In the November 2009 sweeps, WGRZ was one of many NBC affiliates to fall victim to the so-called "Leno Effect" (referring to NBC's airing of The Jay Leno Show, which leads into the late-night newscasts of NBC affiliates including WGRZ): As in many of the affected markets, WGRZ's 11 p.m. newscast fell to a distant third, behind both WIVB and WKBW (although WGRZ's weekday morning news show regained the lead over WIVB's morning show, thanks in large part to the return of John Beard to the Buffalo market). With NBC moving Leno back to late-night in February 2010, WGRZ rebounded to a much closer second place behind WIVB in the July 2010 sweeps; however, WGRZ lost ground with Daybreak, once again falling behind WIVB. In 2011, Daybreak has regained its #1 morning show status. Also, early indications with rival WIVB losing Oprah have led to WGRZ becoming #1 for their 5, 5:30 and 6 p.m. newscasts. In addition, their broadcast of NBC Nightly News now leads in local ratings.[24]All three Buffalo stations have been among the highest rated local stations in the country and they are fiercely competitive.
News/station presentation
Newscast titles
- TV-2 NewsCenter (early–mid 1970s)
- NewsCenter 2 (late 1970s–1989)
- Channel 2 News (1989–present)[25]
Station slogans
- Buffalo's Leading News Station (1970s)
- Working Harder to Be Buffalo's Best (1980s)
- Your 24-Hour News Station (1989–early 1990s)
- It Takes 2 (1995–1999)
- On Your Side (1999–present; primary news slogan)
- Western New York's Information Center (2008–2010; secondary news slogan)
- Turn to 2 (2009–2010; general slogan)
- NBC in Western New York (used on station identification)
- No One But 2. (2010–present, general slogan)
- Not HD. HD, On Your Side. (October 2011-present; secondary news slogan and station identification used with HD debut)
News music packages
- WGR News
- Part Of Your Life
- NewsCenter Theme
- We Know What Matters
- Broadcast News
- We're 4 New York
- Image News
- Gannett News Music Package
News team
Current on-air staff[26]
Anchors
- Scott Levin: weeknights at 5, 5:30, 6, and 11 p.m.
- Maryalice Demler: weeknights at 5:30, 6, and 11 p.m.
- Marissa Bailey: weeknights at 10 p.m. (on WNYO); also reporter
- John Beard: weekday mornings Daybreak
- Jodi Johnston: weekday mornings Daybreak and weeknights at 5 p.m.
- Mary Friona: weekdays at 11 a.m.; also weekend morning reporter and host of "As Seen On TV" segments
- Josh Boose: weekend mornings Daybreak; also weeknight reporter
- Ron Plants: weekends at 6 and 11 p.m.
Storm Team 2 Weather
- Kevin O'Connell (AMS Seal of Approval): chief weather anchor; weeknights at 5, 5:30, 6, 10 (on WNYO) and 11 p.m.
- Maria Genero: weather anchor; weekend mornings Daybreak
- Autumn Lewandowski: meteorologist; weekends at 6 and 11 p.m.
- Andy Parker (AMS Seal of Approval): meteorologist; weekday mornings Daybreak and 11 a.m.
- Mary Beth Wrobel (AMS Seal of Approval): meteorologist; fill-in
Sports team
- Ed Kilgore: sports director; weeknights at 6 p.m.
- Adam Benigni: sports anchor; Sunday-Thursdays at 10 (on WNYO) and 11 p.m.
- Stu Boyar: sports anchor; Fridays at 10 (on WNYO) and Friday-Saturdays at 11 p.m.
- Ben Hayes: sports anchor; Fridays at 10 (on WNYO) and Friday-Saturdays at 11 p.m.
Traffic Tracker 2 Live Traffic
- Christie Witt: weekday mornings Daybreak traffic reporter
Reporters
- Scott Brown: general assignment reporter
- Claudine Ewing: general assignment reporter
- Pete Gallivan: chief investigative reporter; fill-in anchor
- Matt Granite: web and "Ways 2 Save" consumer reporter; consumer reports also seen on sister station WKYC in Cleveland
- Sarah Hopkins: general assignment reporter
- Rich Kellman: special assignment senior correspondent
- Heather Ly: weekday morning reporter
- Kevin O'Neill: "The Why Guy" feature reporter
- Dave McKinley: general assignment reporter
- Patrick Moussignac: general assignment reporter
- Aaron Saykin: general assignment reporter
- Michael Wooten: general assignment reporter
- Jackie Albarella: "2 The Garden" feature reporter; seen Saturday mornings on Daybreak
- Christie Jablonski: "Unique Eats" feature reporter; seen Saturday mornings on Daybreak
Local program hosts
- Bill O'Loughlin: co-host of The Bill O'Laughlin Show
- Lydia Dominick: co-host of the "Bill O'Laughlin Show"; also feature reporter
- Kevin LoVullo: host of Spiel the Wine
- Janet Snyder: co-host of "The Healthy Zone"; Kiss 98.5 radio host [27]
- Derek Alessi, Ph.D.: co-host of "The Healthy Zone"; owner of Alessi Fitness [28]
Notable former on-air staff
- Nick Clooney - anchor (1994)
- Danny Neaverth - host of Nearly Noon with Dan Neaverth (retired)
- Gary Papa - sports anchor (left in 1981; went to WPVI-TV in Philadelphia, died in 2009)
Logo
In the 1960s, the station used two cartoon elves, named Earis and Iris, as part of its logo. In 1983, to coincide with the new call letters WGRZ, the "futuristic" logo consisted of two lines, making an outline of the number two. In 1988, the station's logo consisted of simply a large number "2" in a common Avant Garde font, with a yellow triangle over blue added in the early 1990s. In the mid-1990s, the logo changed to a blue-on-red box with the bottom reading WGRZ-TV Buffalo. The NBC logo is placed to the left of the numeral "2"; however, "NBC" is not mentioned in the station's on-air brand (which is simply "Channel 2"). With the upgrade of its newscasts to high definition on October 29, 2011, the station introduced a updated version of the logo. This was determined by viewer voting on the station's website.[29]
Additional facts
According to the Baseball Hall of Shame book series by Joe and Al Zullo, WGR-TV did not complete the telecast of the game between the Houston Astros and the Los Angeles Dodgers on September 26, 1981. The station went to an Army training film as scheduled at 5 p.m. that afternoon. As a result, local baseball fans missed Astros pitcher Nolan Ryan's record fifth no-hitter.
WGRZ was one of the founding members of the "Love Network" that carried the Jerry Lewis MDA Telethon; WGRZ carries the telethon to this day. WGRZ also carries its own "Kids Escaping Drugs" telethon.
References
- ^ a b Jim Ellwanger. "TV Guide: Lake Ontario Edition". Ellwanger.tv. http://www.ellwanger.tv/collect/tvg/eds/old/lo.html. Retrieved 2010-07-23.
- ^ Pergament, Alan (1 August 2011). "WBBZ Shift Leads to Channel 2 Changes". WNY Media. http://wnymedia.net/alanpergament/2011/08/wbbz-shift-leads-to-channel-2-changes/. Retrieved 1 September 2011.
- ^ Universal Sports Dropping Multicast Outlets, TVNewsCheck, September 12, 2011.
- ^ http://www.tvnewscheck.com/article/2011/11/03/55187/nbc-reinvents-nonstop-as-national-diginet
- ^ Sandomir, Richard (1998-01-14). "PRO FOOTBALL; Monday Football Stays on ABC; NBC Out of Game After 33 Years". The New York Times. http://www.nytimes.com/1998/01/14/sports/pro-football-monday-football-stays-on-abc-nbc-out-of-game-after-33-years.html.
- ^ http://www.buffalonews.com/business/local-business/article507054.ece
- ^ http://www.buffalonews.com/business/local-business/article507054.ece
- ^ By Alan Pergament / News TV Critic (2010-07-03). "Pergament: Channel 2 to turn to classics at noon". The Buffalo News. http://www.buffalonews.com/2010/04/26/1031636/pergament-channel-2-to-turn-to.html. Retrieved 2010-07-23.
- ^ Programming for Lunchtime with the Classics included Cheers, Family Ties, I Dream of Jeannie, Mork and Mindy, The Twilight Zone, Happy Days, I Love Lucy and The Beverly Hillbillies, all of which was provided by Retro Television Network; the series was hosted by Lydia Dominick.
- ^ "Talkin' TV - Blogs - The Buffalo News". Blogs.buffalonews.com. 2010-02-10. http://blogs.buffalonews.com/talkintv/2010/02/channel-2-news-picture-will-be-changing.html. Retrieved 2010-07-23.
- ^ http://www.packofseven.com/tvnt/showthread.php?t=7259&highlight=wgrz
- ^ http://www.facebook.com/video/video.php?v=10150362905720599&oid=28898790358&comments&ref=mf
- ^ http://www.facebook.com/#!/photo.php?fbid=10150130311290359&set=a.199449955358.166710.28898790358
- ^ http://stilltalkintv.com/2011/08/ch-7-news-going-hd-yanks-could-be-next-on-wbbz/
- ^ http://stilltalkintv.com/2011/08/warm-and-fuzzy-beard-hurricane-hysteria-and-overpriced-pretzels/comment-page-1/#comment-69198
- ^ http://stilltalkintv.com/2011/10/many-questions-in-november-sweeps/
- ^ a b http://www.wsi.com/Collateral/Documents/English-US/titan.pdf
- ^ http://www.wgrz.com/news/local/story.aspx?storyid=74739
- ^ http://www.wsi.com/Collateral/Documents/English-US/WSI_TruVu%20MAX.pdf
- ^ http://www.wsi.com/Collateral/Documents/English-US/WSI_TruVu%20ALERT%20HD.pdf
- ^ "Press Release Details". Wsi.com. 2010-05-10. http://www.wsi.com/d2963134-f1af-4286-92b4-f76c30d61677/news-press-releases-details.htm. Retrieved 2010-07-23.
- ^ http://www.wsi.com/products-media-television-truvu-alert-hd.htm
- ^ Storm Team 2 Weather app product announcement at WGRZ.com
- ^ http://stilltalkintv.com/2011/09/beard-dropping-midday-news-ch-2-news-on-early-roll/
- ^ WGRZ-TV 11pm News Open
- ^ Meet the Team
- ^ [1]
- ^ [2]
- ^ WGRZ Asks Viewers to Help Choose new HD logo
External links
- WGRZ website
- Query the FCC's TV station database for WGRZ
- BIAfn's Media Web Database -- Information on WGRZ-TV
Broadcast television in Western New York, including Buffalo and Niagara Falls Local stations WGRZ (2.1 NBC, 2.2 Universal Sports) • WIVB (4.1 CBS) • WKBW (7.1 ABC) • WNED (17.1 PBS-HD, 17.2 PBS, 17.3 ThinkBright) • WNLO (23.1 CW) • WONS-LP 25 (A1) • WNYB / WBNF-CA 15 (26.1 TCT, 26.2 TCT HD) • WUTV (29.1 Fox) • WDTB-LP 40 (Daystar) • WNYO (49.1 MNTV, 49.2 TheCoolTV, 49.3 ATV) • WPXJ (51.1 ION, 51.2 qubo, 51.3 ION Life) • WBXZ-LP 56 (HSN)Analog • WBBZ (67.1 Me-TV, 67.2 This, 67.4 Daystar)
Adjacent locals Reception may vary by location and some stations may only be viewable with cable television Rochester, NY: WROC (8.1 CBS) • WHEC (10.1 NBC, 10.2 WX) • WHAM (13.1 ABC, 13.2 CW) • WXXI (21.1 PBS, 21.2 World, 21.3 Create/ThinkBright) • WUHF (31.1 Fox, 31.2 TheCoolTV)
Toronto / Hamilton: CBLT (5.1 CBC) • CFTO (9.1 CTV) • CHCH (11.1 Ind) • CICA (19.1 TVO) • CBLFT (25.1 Radio-Canada) • CIII-DT-41 41 (41.1 Global) • CFMT (47.1 Omni)
Johnstown, PA: WPSU (3.1 PBS) • WJAC (6.1 NBC) • WTAJ (10.1 CBS)
New York State television: Albany/Schenectady • Binghamton • Buffalo • Burlington/Plattsburgh • Elmira • New York City • Rochester • Syracuse • Utica • Watertown
Pennsylvania Broadcast television: Binghamton, NY • Buffalo, NY • Elmira, NY • Erie • Johnstown/Altoona/State College • New York City • Philadelphia • Pittsburgh • Scranton/Wilkes-Barre • Susquehanna Valley (Harrisburg) • Washington, DC • Youngstown, OH
NBC Network Affiliates in the state of New York See also: ABC, CBS, CW, Fox, ION, MyNetworkTV, NBC, PBS and Other stations in New YorkCategories:- NBC network affiliates
- Television stations in Buffalo, New York
- Gannett TV
- Channel 33 digital TV stations in the United States
- Channel 2 virtual TV stations in the United States
- Television channels and stations established in 1954
- The NHL Network (1975–79) affiliates
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