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WLNY

WLNY-TV
WLNY TV logo 2012.jpg
Riverhead, New York
United States
Branding general: WLNY TV 10/55
newscasts: TV 10/55 News
Slogan We love New York!
Channels Digital: 47 (UHF)
Virtual: 55 ()
Affiliations
Owner CBS Corporation
(CBS LITV LLC)
Founded around April 1985
First air date April 28, 1985; 31 years ago (1985-04-28)
Call letters' meaning We Love New York
or
W Long Island, New York
Sister station(s) WCBS
Former callsigns WLIG (1985–1996)
Former channel number(s) Analog:
55 (UHF, 1985–2005)
Digital:
57 (UHF, 2002–2009)
Transmitter power 1000 kW
Height 193.7 m (635 ft)
Facility ID 73206
Transmitter coordinates 40°53′50″N 72°54′54.6″W / 40.89722°N 72.915167°W / 40.89722; -72.915167Coordinates: 40°53′50″N 72°54′54.6″W / 40.89722°N 72.915167°W / 40.89722; -72.915167
Licensing authority FCC
Public license information: Profile
CDBS
Website Official website

WLNY-TV, channel 55, is an independent television station licensed to Riverhead, New York, United States serving the New York City market. The station is owned by CBS Corporation, and is one-half of a television duopoly with CBS' flagship station WCBS-TV (channel 2). The stations share studio facilities inside the CBS Broadcast Center in Midtown Manhattan, and WLNY maintains a secondary studio in Melville, New York, with its transmitter based in Ridge, New York.

WLNY's primary over-the-air signal serves most of Long Island, comprising Nassau and Suffolk counties, and is available widely on cable television in most of the New York City television market. It is known on-air as "TV 10/55" because it is located on cable channel 10 in most of the Tri-State area.

The origins of channel 55 date back to 1965, when WRIV radio in Riverhead applied for a construction permit for UHF channel 55. The proposed WRIV-TV likely would have gone to air as the NBC affiliate for eastern Long Island, presumably due to the presence of WRIV radio's part-owner at the time, NBC News anchor Chet Huntley. WRIV-TV would have filled a coverage hole for NBC in eastern Long Island, as there was limited reception from New York City's WNBC-TV (channel 4) and the UHF signal from WATR-TV (channel 20, now WCCT-TV) in Waterbury, Connecticut. In comparison, eastern Long Island was well served by the Connecticut-based VHF signals from CBS on WTIC-TV (channel 3, now WFSB) and ABC on WNHC-TV (channel 8, now WTNH). WRIV-TV was ready to go on the air by the early 1970s, but the combination of a tough economic environment and the widespread popularity of cable television – which enabled viewers on eastern Long Island to receive New York City television stations clearly – likely prevented WRIV-TV from making it on the air.


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