Metro Manila | |
---|---|
City | Quezon City |
Branding | ABS-CBN TV 2 Manila |
Slogan | In The Service of The Filipino Worldwide |
Channels |
Analog: 2 (VHF) Digital: 43 (UHF) (ISDB-T) Virtual: 1.01 (LCN) |
Subchannels | 1.01: ABS-CBN 2 1.02: S+A (DWAC-TV) 1.03: CINEMO! 1.04: YEY! 1.05: Knowledge Channel 1.06: DZMM TeleRadyo 1.07: Kapamilya Box Office 1:08 ABS-CBN one seg (1seg) |
Translators | D12ZT 12 Olongapo City D13ZA 13 Botolan, Zambales |
Affiliations | ABS-CBN (O&O) |
Owner | ABS-CBN Corporation |
First air date | October 23, 1953 |
Call letters' meaning | DWWX |
Sister station(s) | DWAC-TV (S+A) |
Former callsigns | DZAQ-TV (1953-1972) |
Former channel number(s) | 3 (1953-1969) |
Former affiliations | BBC/City2 (1973-1986) |
Transmitter power | 60 kW TPO (346.2 kW ERP) |
Transmitter coordinates | 14°38′26″N 121°2′12″E / 14.64056°N 121.03667°E |
Website | entertainment.abs-cbn.com |
DWWX-TV, channel 2, is the flagship VHF station of Philippine television network ABS-CBN Corporation. Its studios and transmitter are located at the ABS-CBN Broadcasting Center, Sgt. Esguerra Ave., Diliman, Quezon City. It is the first and oldest television station in the Philippines, and it currently operates 24/7 except Monday mornings and mornings of the Paschal Triduum of Holy Week.
DWWX-TV traces its history to the first Philippine television station DZAQ-TV, owned by Bolinao Electronics Corporation later renamed Alto Broadcasting System.
James Lindenberg, owner of BEC, was first to apply for a license to the Philippine Congress to establish a television station in 1949. His request was granted on June 14, 1950. Because of the strict import controls and the lack of raw materials needed to open a TV station during those days, Lindenberg branched to radio broadcasting instead.
Judge Antonio Quirino, brother of then President Elpidio Quirino, also tried to apply for a license to Congress, but was denied. He later bought stocks from BEC and later gained the controlling stock and renamed the company from BEC to Alto Broadcasting System (ABS).
DZAQ-TV began commercial television operations on October 23, 1953, the first fully licensed commercial television station in the Philippines. The first program that aired was a garden party at the Quirino residence in Sitio Alto, San Juan. After the premiere telecast, the station followed a four-hour-a-day schedule, from six to ten in the evening.
In 1955, Manila Chronicle owner Eugenio Lopez, Sr. and Fernando Lopez acquired a radio-TV franchise from Congress and immediately established Chronicle Broadcasting Network (CBN) in 1956. On February 24, 1957 Lopez called Judge Quirino to his house for breakfast and ABS was bought under a contract written on a table napkin. The corporate name was reverted to Bolinao Electronics Corporation immediately after the purchase of ABS.