WDME-CD explained

Callsign:WDME-CD
Location:Washington, D.C.
Country:United States
Branding:MeTV Washington D.C.
Digital:20 (UHF)
Virtual:48
Owner:Weigel Broadcasting
Licensee:TV-49, Inc.
Founded:May 16, 1989
Erp:15 kW
Haat:172.60NaN0
Class:CD
Facility Id:168449
Coordinates:38.9401°N -77.0813°W
Licensing Authority:FCC

WDME-CD (channel 48) is a low-power, Class A television station in Washington, D.C., airing programming from the classic television network MeTV. Owned and operated by network parent Weigel Broadcasting, the station maintains a transmitter in Ward Circle in Washington's northwest quadrant.

History

The station signed on for the first time on September 29, 1989, as W48AZ in Winchester, Virginia, a relay of the original WAZT-LP in Woodstock (then W10AZ, now WDCO-CD). The WAZT network offered some programming from Cornerstone and other religious networks, but it generally did not show them in-pattern with those networks, and it also broadcast some secular syndicated programming and classic television shows.

W48AZ changed its callsign to WAZW-LP on August 20, 1999. The station gained Class A status on December 26, 2000, becoming WAZW-CA.

Ruarch sold the WAZT stations to JLA Media & Publications (no relation to ABC affiliate WJLA-TV, channel 7) in 2006. Jones Broadcasting acquired the stations out of Chapter 7 bankruptcy in 2011.[1]

Jones Broadcasting sold the group of stations to Venture Technologies Group in December 2013. Venture immediately began moving WAZT and its sister stations to the far larger Washington, D.C. television market. After spending most of its time as a religious broadcaster branded as simply "WAZT", the station and its relays changed to the branding "Faith Television Network" under Venture's ownership.

WAZT-CD's callsign was changed to WDCO-CD on October 11, 2017. On the same day, Winchester repeater WAZW-CD became WAZT-CD.[2] On January 24, 2018, Faith Television Network announced it would cease broadcasting. All four remaining stations in the network became full-time affiliates of Jewelry Television on January 31.[3]

On June 25, 2020, Venture Technologies Group filed an agreement with the FCC to sell WDCO-CD and WIAV-CD to Sinclair Broadcast Group (owner of WJLA-TV) for $8.5 million.[4] [5] The sale was completed on October 15,[6] making them Sinclair's second and third properties in the Washington market, alongside WJLA-TV. On the same day, WDCO-CD and WIAV-CD flipped to Sinclair's TBD multicast network, simulcasting WJLA-TV's fourth digital subchannel in 1080i full high definition.

WAZT-CD was not included in the sale and continued to air Jewelry TV programming. It was later sold to Weigel Broadcasting in September 2021 for $3 million.[7]

On April 21, 2022, the station's callsign changed to WDME-CD.

Subchannels

The station's signal is multiplexed:

Subchannels of WDME-CD[8] ! Channel! Res.! Aspect! Short name! Programming
48.1 MeTV MeTV
48.2 Story Story Television
48.3 Catchy Catchy Comedy
48.4 MeTV+ MeTV+
48.5 TOONS MeTV Toons
48.6 Dabl DABL
48.12 EMLW OnTV4U (infomercials)

External links

Notes and References

  1. News: Seyler. Dave. Transactions: 10-31-11. May 27, 2012. Television Business Report. October 28, 2011.
  2. Web site: Facility No. 168449 Record. FCCData.
  3. Web site: Celebrating 32 years and saying goodbye. Faith Television Network. January 24, 2018.
  4. Web site: Application for Consent to Assignment of Broadcast Station Construction Permit or License. CDBS Public Access. Federal Communications Commission. June 25, 2020. June 27, 2020.
  5. News: Jacobson . Adam . A Major Broadcast Player Snags D.C. LPTV Duo . Radio & Television Business Report . June 26, 2020.
  6. https://licensing.fcc.gov/cgi-bin/ws.exe/prod/cdbs/forms/prod/cdbsmenu.hts?context=25&appn=101822511&formid=905&fac_num=57905 Consummation Notice
  7. Web site: Assignment of Authorization (LMS File No. 158979) . FCC LMS.
  8. Web site: Digital TV Listing for WDME-CD. RabbitEars.Info. May 5, 2022.