*** Welcome to piglix ***

WCWF

WCWF
WCWF logo.png
Suring/Green Bay, Wisconsin
United States
City Suring, Wisconsin
Branding CW14
Slogan Dare to Defy (adapted from network's national slogan)
Channels Digital: 21 (UHF)
Virtual: 14 ()
Subchannels 14.1 The CW
14.2 Comet
14.3 Charge!
Affiliations The CW (2006-present)
Owner Sinclair Broadcast Group
(WCWF Licensee, LLC)
First air date February 22, 1984; 33 years ago (1984-02-22)
Call letters' meaning Wisconsin's CW Fourteen
Sister station(s) WLUK-TV
Former callsigns WSCO (1984–1998)
WPXG (1998–1999)
WIWB (1999–2010)
Former channel number(s) Analog:
14 (UHF, 1984–2009)
Former affiliations Religious/WVCY-TV (1984–1987, 1993–1997)
inTV (1997–1998)
Pax TV (1998–2005; secondary from 1999)
The WB (1999–2006)
UPN (September 2006, temporary CW transitional)
Transmitter power 800 kW
Height 332 m
Facility ID 73042
Transmitter coordinates 44°20′1″N 87°58′56″W / 44.33361°N 87.98222°W / 44.33361; -87.98222
Licensing authority FCC
Public license information: Profile
CDBS
Website cw14online.com

WCWF, virtual channel 14 (UHF digital channel 21), is a CW-affiliated television station located in Green Bay, Wisconsin, United States that is licensed to Suring. The station is owned by Sinclair Broadcast Group, as part of a duopoly with Fox affiliate WLUK-TV (channel 11). The two stations share studios located on Lombardi Avenue (U.S. 41) in Green Bay. WCWF's transmitter is located in Glenmore.

On cable, the station is available in standard definition on channel 10 on most cable systems in the market (though legacy Charter systems vary on cable positions), and channel 14 on AT&T U-verse, and in high definition on Spectrum channel 1010 and AT&T U-verse channel 1014.

The station launched on February 22, 1984 as religious independent station WSCO-TV, under the ownership of Northeastern Wisconsin Christian Television Incorporated. The station's former analog transmitter was located outside of the unincorporated Oconto County community of Krakow, four miles north of Pulaski on WIS 32. Financial problems would force the station off the air by 1987; VCY America would purchase the station's license that year and return it to the air by 1993 as a sister station to Milwaukee's WVCY-TV with religious and home shopping programming. On April 30, 1997, Paxson Communications purchased the station and converted it to a paid programming format under Paxson's inTV service. In August 1998, WSCO became a charter owned-and-operated station of Pax TV under the new call sign WPXG (for "Paxson Green Bay").


...
Wikipedia

...