WBNA , virtual channel 21 (VHF 8 digital channel), is an independent commercial television station licensed to Louisville, Kentucky, USA. The station is owned by the local charismatic megachurch Evangel World Prayer Center. The WBNA office is located on Fern Valley Road (north of State Route 1747) in Okolona, ââand its transmitter is located on Oakcrest Drive in Shepherdsville. Thus, the WBNA is the only powerful television station in the Louisville market whose transmitter facility is not based on the Kentuckiana tower ranch in Floyds Knobs, Indiana. On cable, this station is available on Charter Spectrum and Comcast Xfinity channel 21.
Video WBNA
Histori
Sign-on WBNA-TV marked the first signal on Channel 21 analogue in Louisville since the fall of WKLO-TV (ABC/DuMont) in April 1954.
The station first aired on April 2, 1986, as the second-largest independent ruling station in the Louisville market. The WBNA initially offers the majority of local and national religious programs. When the WDRB (channel 41) joined Fox eleven months later in May 1987, the WBNA became the only independent in Louisville until WFTE (channel 58, now WBKI) was signed in March 1994. It was gradually mixed in some secular programs as well, mostly consisting of old films.
The station became the affiliate of The WB's charter when it was launched on January 11, 1995. However, Evangel was disillusioned with The WB's decision to take some program which is believed to offend most of the channel 21 most of the fundamentalist and Pentecostal supporters, such as Night Soap > Savannah , the supernatural drama Charmed and Buffy the Vampire Slayer and sitcoms Unfortunately Ever After . The WBNA chooses to precede these programs and fill these times with syndicated or religious programs. These shows were seen in the Louisville market via WGN-TV national feed during this period. The WB immediately regrets harmonizing with the conservative religious station, and starts making plans to move his program elsewhere. In 1998, WGRB-based Campbellsville (channel 34, then WBKI-original TV), which has served as a WB affiliate for the southern portion of the Louisville market for over a year, became the premier WB affiliate market. At the same time, it announced plans to build a new transmitter tower (which was activated in 2000) that would not only increase its coverage in Louisville itself and some adjacent areas, but at least provide signal coverage B in most of Kentucky. WBNA became an affiliate of the Pax TV-oriented family network - then me and now Ion Television - in September 1999.
WBNA is one of the few stations that programming from Ion Television as an affiliate of the network, rather than a station owned and operated. It is the largest Ion station based on market size that is not owned by Ion Media Networks network. In addition, the station is licensed to Louisville precisely rather than the outer periphery of the ring, as is the case with ordinary Ion stations. Because of Evangel's commitment to the network, WBNA is free to bring additional networks to its digital signal bandwidth (as described below) rather than being bound to bring all of the five networks (Ion, Qubo, Ion Life, Ion Shop infomercial services, QVC and Home Shopping Network)). taken at Ion's station.
The WBNA does not carry a full Ion schedule, and it does not clean up the additional broadcast hours that the network has added since 2008 (the network currently broadcasts daily entertainment programs from 11:00 am to 3:00 am in the Eastern Time Zone; however, and more secularly override the network daytime schedules on the WBNA). During the afternoon hours, the station also broadcasts a re-broadcast of Lexington NBC WLEX-TV affiliates at 6:00 am. news broadcasts and other local programs (also as a substitute for Ion's entertainment program within 7:00 pm). The station also divides the network Qubo block (which is calculated under the FCC E/I requirements) for two days; an hour and a half of the block aired on Friday morning in the recommended time slot, while two additional blocks of 90 minutes aired respectively on Saturday morning and evening on tape delay.
In February 2017, the WBNA dropped their affiliation with Ion and became an independent station. Ion programming began airing on Fox Communications subsidiary of Block Communications owned by Fox WDRB on March 1st.
Maps WBNA
Digital television
Digital channels
Digital station signals duplicated:
WBNA also brings programming from Retro Television Network, GOD TV, and GetTV in additional subchannels. Daystar programming was previously performed on WBNA overnight and several timeslots during the day, replacing Ion paid programs and programs like the Knife Show household block on the weekend. Some late night Ion programs (past 11:00 pm) are conducted on the Retro TV sub-channel, while the WBNA main channel carries a religious program last night.
At the end of July 2009, WBNA replaced the Ion feed provided from The Worship Network on the 21.4 digital sub-channel with Retro Television Network. In October 2009, WBNA launched "The Light" on the sixth digital subchannel; locally programmed services bring a mixture of local church services and other worship programs, which were originally mixed in the Daystar schedule, especially during the time period in which Daystar programming was aired through the station's main channel.
Some changes occurred at the end of April 2011 to accommodate technical improvements for transmitting station main channel in high-definition 720p: WBNA lowers Daystar and Ion Life, as well as sub-channel slots respectively at 21.5 and 21.6; it also started bringing GOD's TV programming through "The Light" and integrating services into 21.3 digital channels. The TV program of GOD and "Light" now airs on WBNA's main channel during the time the Daystar program aired before, while in the early afternoon period, the main channel brought the RTV program, which was subsequently replaced by a re-broadcast of WAVE and Debmar's mid-day newscasts syndicated distributed mercury. The station also rejects all teleshopping Ion channels, which include Ion Shop and QVC and HSN through aircasts airing on Ion's stations.
Analog-to-digital conversion
WBNA stops regular programming on its analog signals, via channel UHF 21, on June 12, 2009, the official date on which a full-power television station in the United States shifts from analog to digital broadcasting under federal mandate. The station's digital signal remains on the pre-transition VHF channel 8. However, Channel 8 has become a problem for many digital TV stations. Lower WBNA power signals and shorter antenna towers in Bullitt County, Kentucky (shorter due to their relative position against the NNE-SSW runway two approaches at Louisville International Airport), provide far weaker city signals than power DTV other full (and lots of Class A and LPTV), which transmit from 900 feet cliffs of Floyds Knobs, Indiana. Through the use of PSIP, digital television receivers display station virtual channels as former UHF 21 analog channels. WBNA is just one of two Louisville television stations that broadcast post-transition digital signals on the VHF band, along with WHAS-TV (channel 11).
As part of the SAFER Act, WBNA stores its analog signals in the air until June 26 to inform viewers about the transition of digital television through the National Association of Broadcasters service announcement loop.
Programming
The syndicated programs broadcast on WBNA include Payne Tyler Perry's Home , Tyler Perry Meet Browns , Supreme Court Justices with Judge Karen Mills , and The Beverly Hillbillies . In addition, the WBNA broadcast a college basketball game involving Western Kentucky Hilltoppers. The broadcasting game comes from the television division of Hilltopper IMG Sports Network based in Bowling Green. On March 9, 2017, it was announced that the WBNA will be the main broadcaster of the Louisville City FC game in the 2017 USL season.
References
External links
- WBNA official website
- The WBNA-DT3 official website "The Light"
- FCC TV station request data for WBNA
- BIAfn's Media Web Database - Information on WBNA-TV
Source of the article : Wikipedia