Diemazz

02138
Rai (Indian)
Bernate Ticino
Category:Sainthood
Battle of Mobei
deaf videophone
August 19
Maratha Empire
Semyon Kurkotkin
Cesseras
Parramatta railway station, Sydney
Hong Kong films of 1970
Category:Government stubs
Baden
Category:1995 albums
Kevin Coogan
Tate Modern
Padda
The Saint's Girl Friday
Image:Yuexiu Park Station JPG
Oboe
Narahara Station
Category:Stub categories
Treatise on Astrology of the Kaiyuan Era
Nikolay Mordvinov
MissionFish
Sailing
play bmx games online
Convent
Emperor Hui of Han China
Pamphlet
t368t
BTR 4
cammy awards
WDAI
Prison rape
Ümit Aydın
Category:Chilean politicians
Littoral
Internal Revenue Code 63
t801t
Chillicothe Gazette
Louis the Stammerer
bohemian grove
Wildside (album)
August H Andresen
t690t
Second Sino Japanese war
Aisai, Aichi


WCWG
Image:WCWG20.jpg
Lexington/Greensboro/Winston-Salem/High Point, North Carolina
Branding WCWG 20
Slogan We're Your Station!
Channels Analog: 20 (UHF)

Digital: 19 (UHF)

Affiliations The CW
Owner Pappas Telecasting Companies
(WCWG License, LLC)
First air date April 1992
Call letters’ meaning CW Greensboro
Former callsigns WEJC (1992-1996)
WBFX (1996-2000)
WTWB-TV (2000-2006)
Former affiliations CTN (1985-1996)
The WB (1996-2006)
Transmitter Power 5000 kW (analog)
800 kW (digital)
Height 553 m (analog)
576 m (digital)
Facility ID 35385
Transmitter Coordinates 35°52′2.6″N 79°49′25.4″W / 35.867389, -79.823722
Website www.wcwg20.com

WCWG, Channel 20, is the CW affiliate licensed to Lexington, North Carolina, and serves the Greensboro-Winston-Salem-High Point, North Carolina (Piedmont Triad) television market. It offers cartoons from Kids WB, sitcoms, first-run talk and reality shows, CW prime time programming, movies, and dramas. The station is owned by Pappas Telecasting. Its transmitter is located in Randleman, North Carolina.

History

The station signed on in 1992 as WEJC and aired a religious educational format, running mostly Baptist based programming (staying away from the Benny Hinn/Kenneth Copeland type evangelists). WEJC stood for "Education in Jesus Christ". The station was locally owned until 1993 when it was sold to the Christian Television Network. After that CTN programming and some of the more charismatic programs were added. The station continued on with its Christian programming.

The station was sold to Pappas in the summer of 1995. Initially the station kept the religious format, but it soon became a WB affiliate, and added WB programming to its lineup immediately after the sale was finalized. In the spring of 1996, it changed its call letters to WBFX. Religious programming was reduced to 5-7am and 9am-noon in the spring of 1996, and ran syndicated cartoons 7-9am, westerns in the early afternoon, cartoons until 5pm, some more westerns in the evening, WB shows and older movies in prime time, and drama shows and old movies late nights.

That summer, the station made an agreement with WGHP, the market's Fox station, to add Fox Kids programming to the lineup which would be dropped from WGHP after barely a year of airing it. Also more recent off-network sitcoms were added to the mix, and more religious shows disappeared from the schedule. Call letters changed to WTWB-TV in 2000.

WTWB dropped Fox Kids at the end of 2001 (which Fox had canceled nationally but kept running repeats on Saturday mornings for stations that wanted to air it). In the fall of 2002, Fox began a new Saturday Morning kids block called 4Kids TV, but opted not to carry it on WGHP. As a result, Fox's children programming does not air in the Triad.

In January 2006, The WB and UPN announced that they would merge into a new network, The CW. The news of the merger could change the course of programming for WTWB. On March 2, 2006, UPN affiliate WMYV (the former WUPN-TV) was announced as an affiliate of My Network TV. Two weeks later on March 17, 2006, WTWB was confirmed as the market's CW Network outlet. On August 11, 2006, the call sign was changed to WCWG to reflect the affiliation.

Previous Logo

External links


search:

Site Map: RSS 2.0

Recent Searches: Monty
Infante Carlos of Spain
WGHP
Ladoga
Tanjung Kupang
Monophysites
WBKO
American Racing Drivers Club
Tomorrow Never Dies (song)
Davy Jones

Related Pages: