| |
---|---|
Channels | |
Branding | NewsNet Buffalo |
Programming | |
Affiliations |
|
Ownership | |
Owner |
|
History | |
First air date | September 3, 1993; 31 years ago (1993-09-03) |
Former call signs | W56DS (1997–1998) WBXZ-LP (1998–2020) |
Former channel number(s) | Analog: 56 (UHF, 1993–2009) Digital: 17 (UHF, 2009–2020) |
The Box/MTV2/HSN (until 2010) Rev'n (2014–2016) Cozi TV (2014–2023) | |
Call sign meaning | We're TheBoXZ (former affiliation) |
Technical information[1] | |
Licensing authority | FCC |
Facility ID | 14317 |
Class | LD |
ERP | 15kW |
Transmitter coordinates | 42°52′48″N78°52′36″W / 42.88000°N 78.87667°W /42.88000; -78.87667 |
Links | |
Public license information | LMS |
Website | http://buffalo.newsnetmedia.com/ |
WBXZ-LD (channel 56) is alow-powertelevision station inBuffalo, New York, United States. The station is owned byManoj Bhargava.
The station broadcast on channel 56 analog until it had to vacate that frequency when theFederal Communications Commission (FCC) removed it from the broadcast spectrum. It used to be an affiliate ofThe Box, from which the station gets itscall sign, and was owned byCraig Fox, who owned several similar low-power stations across New York State. In December 2013, retired police officer Steven Ritchie[2] purchased the then-silent station.[3] In a statement toThe Buffalo News, he stated that he did not expect the station to be profitable and mainly planned to operate the station as a hobby, stating he did not want to take business from the other locally owned station in Buffalo, Phil Arno'sWBBZ-TV.[3]
After the digital transition, the station moved from analog channel 56 to channel 17 (the channel had been held by WBUF-TV from 1953 to 1958 andPBSmember stationWNED-TV from 1959 to 2009) through a Special Temporary Authority approved by the FCC. (In thespectrum reallocation, it moved up to physical channel 23, previously occupied byWNLO andWPXJ.) The station returned to virtual channel 56 upondigital conversion, at which point it also planned to add severaldigital subchannels fromLuken Communications, among them beingRetro Television Network,PBJ andHeartland.[3] WBXZ-LP returned to the air on April 17, 2014 with test programming; on May 2, the station indicated it was having trouble securing a carriage agreement with Luken (mainly because Ritchie could not fit the necessarylarge satellite dish onto theOne Seneca Center where the station's transmitter is located but also in part due to Luken's financial problems) and was seeking other options.[4] As of 2014, the station was carryingCozi TV on 56.1 and "Throwback TV" (a locally programmed outlet) is carried on 56.2 (later moved to 56.4). Retro and a new Luken subchannel known asRev'n would be added to WBXZ-LP on December 1, 2014.Buzzr would be added shortly after that network's launch.
Luken's networks, along with Buzzr, were pulled from WBXZ-LP on June 28, 2016 after technical difficulties.Ebru TV and AMGTV were briefly added as replacements; both have since been removed. With the exception of Cozi and the returningTuff TV (which was re-added after it split from Luken). Retro (but not any of the other Luken networks) was re-added in July 2017; Tuff TV was dropped later that year.
In February 2018, Buzzr was added back to the list of subchannels.Jewelry Television was added shortly thereafter, with the station signing on withNewsNet, an upstart news network, when it launched in fall 2018, bringing the number of subchannels to 11. With Tuff TV ceasing operations in August 2018, Rev'n was re-added; Rev'n was dropped in August 2020 in favor of the returning AMGTV. WBXZ-LP began showing This TV in September 2019, taking over the affiliation from rimshotWVTT.
On April 13, 2023, Bridge Media Networks, the parent company of NewsNet and Sports News Highlights (SNH) and backed by5-hour Energy creatorManoj Bhargava, announced it would acquire WBXZ-LD from Ritchie for $800,000. Upon completion of the transaction, WBXZ-LD will become Bhargava's first TV station property in the state of New York. The station would also re-add NewsNet to its subchannel lineup, this time as an owned-and-operated station.[5] Ritchie addressed the sale in a June 13Facebook post, discussing the history of the station, its frequent (and usually FCC-imposed) frequency changes and low budget, and thanked his friends for being able to populate Throwback Television with low-cost programming; he turned over control of the station to Bhargava on July 1.[6]
Bhargava abruptly ended NewsNet's operations on August 2, 2024.[7]
The station's digital signal ismultiplexed. ShopHQ airs on 56.3,Ace TV airs on 56.4.