About the Book
Please note that the content of this book primarily consists of articles available from Wikipedia or other free sources online. Pages: 26. Chapters: K02RB-D, K48BL, KAZV-LP, KCAB-LP, KCCE-LP, KCFG, KJEO-LD, KKAX-LP, KMCA-LD, KNJO-LP, KORY-CA, KPBN-LP, KTVO-DT2, KTYJ-LP, KWVT-LD, KYMB-LD, List of America One affiliates, W48CX, W50DZ-D, WBEK-CA, WBIH, WBQP-CD, WFBD, WFND-LP, WHAN-LP, WHFE-LP, WHNE-LD, WJNI-LP, WJTS-CD, WKNI-LP, WLNN-LP, WLUC-DT2, WMNO-CA, WNCE-CD, WNMN, WOBZ-LD, WOTH-LD, WQXT-CA, WRBD-LP, WRWR-LD, WVVH-CD, WYHB-LP, WYKE-CD, WYLN-LP, WZRA-CA. Excerpt: The following is a list of affiliates of the America One television network in the United States and its territories. This list does not include the numerous regional cable sports networks that America One serves. WNMN is the RTV-affiliated television station for Upstate New York that is licensed to Saranac Lake. It broadcasts a digital signal on UHF channel 40 from a transmitter on the WYZY-FM tower north of the village along the Essex and Franklin County line. The station can also be seen on Burlington Telecom digital channel 14, Charter channel 18, and Comcast channel 80. It is owned by CEC Media Group, also known as Twin Valley Television. WNMN has studios on Pine Haven Shores Road in Shelburne, Vermont. Like all RTV affiliates in the Eastern Time Zone, it airs Daytime on weekday mornings from 9 to 10. WNMN operates the following network of repeaters. The station applied for its construction permit on September 22, 1995 under the temporary call letters 950809KF. The Federal Communications Commission (FCC) approved it on October 4, 2004. It was originally planning on using UHF analog channel 61 (from which the Channel 61 Associates, LLC name for the station's licensee is derived) but switched to channel 40 because channels 51-69 would no longer be used for television after the DTV transition. In 2006, the station decided on the call letters WCWF sparking speculation that the station would be an affiliate of The CW. However, that affiliation went to Fox affiliate WFFF-TV, first as a replacement for its secondary WB affiliation and then on a new digital subchannel. While it searched for its own affiliation, WCWF finally began broadcasting September 11, 2007 as a repeater of Ion Television affiliate WWBI-LP, the owners of which held a stake in the station. After a short time on-the-air, the station signed-off telling the FCC it was preparing to switch to digital. In November 2008, Channel 61 Associates sold the station to Twin Valley Television, a broadcaster based