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・ WBPG
・ WBPH-TV
・ WBPI-CD
・ WBPL
・ WBPL-LP
・ WBPM
・ WBPN-LP
・ WBPQ (The CW Plus)
・ WBPT
・ WBPW
・ WBPX-TV
・ WBPZ
・ WBQB
・ WBQC-LD
・ WBQD
WBQD-LP
・ WBQH
・ WBQK
・ WBQM-LD
・ WBQN
・ WBQP-CD
・ WBQT
・ WBQT (FM)
・ WBR
・ WBR Sessions
・ WBRB
・ WBRC
・ WBRD
・ WBRE-TV
・ WBRF


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WBQD-LP : ウィキペディア英語版
WBQD-LP

WBQD-LP was a low-power television station licensed to Davenport, Iowa, United States. The station had broadcast a low power analog signal on UHF channel 26 from a transmitter on 70th Street, next to Black Hawk College, near the Poplar Grove section of Moline, Illinois. WBQD was owned by Four Seasons Broadcasting (a partnership between Malibu Broadcasting in Cleveland, Ohio and Venture Technologies Group, LLC in Los Angeles, California) but operated through a local marketing agreement and a Technical Services Agreement by The New York Times Company, and later by Local TV, LLC, both previous owners of ABC affiliate WQAD-TV, with studios for WBQD being co-located with WQAD-TV on Park 16th Street in the Prospect Park section of Moline. Upon going silent in December 2011, WBQD-LP was the second-to-last television station in the Quad Cities market to broadcast an analog signal, having been surpassed only by 3ABN translator station K16EL (now K20KF-D) which flash cut to digital operations in September 2012.
==History==
Northwest Television, the original owner of Galesburg licensed WMWC-TV, had applied for a license to broadcast on channel 53 and had planned to sign on September 1, 2001 as the UPN affiliate for the Quad Cities television market, with operations for the proposed station to be handled by Second Generation of Iowa, owner of KFXA in Cedar Rapids. However, the application for the new station was challenged by Grant Broadcasting System II, then-owner of KLJB-TV and KGWB-TV. In May 2002 after receiving permission to begin broadcasting on UHF channel 26, this station began transmitter tests and on June 1, signed-on as WBQD-LP with the UPN network affiliation that was originally to have gone to WMWC. In November 2004, it was announced that WBQD would enter into a joint sales agreement with WQAD. On September 5, 2006, WBQD became a MyNetworkTV affiliate. It adopted the nickname "My TV 16" in reference to its channel number on Mediacom. WBQD's over-the-air signal did not reach the entire market due to its low-power status, but most viewers watched the station via its simulcast on WQAD's third digital subchannel, which covers the entire market.
The station had a construction permit for a low-power digital transmitter on VHF channel 7 with the calls WBQD-LD. However on June 30, 2009, Four Seasons Broadcasting filed for digital displacement relief and requested to move its digital channel assignment to UHF channel 14 instead.〔http://fjallfoss.fcc.gov/cgi-bin/ws.exe/prod/cdbs/forms/prod/cdbsmenu.hts?context=25&appn=101319809&formid=346&fac_num=167296〕 After an engineering study, it was determined that even as a low-power digital station, WBQD would cause and/or receive more than acceptable interference to and from KWWL in Waterloo, Iowa and KHQA-TV in Hannibal, Missouri, both of which are full power digital television stations that broadcast on channel 7 and had "flash-cut" to their former analog channels after the digital transition.〔http://fjallfoss.fcc.gov/prod/cdbs/forms/prod/getattachment_exh.cgi?exhibit_id=767551&formid=346&q_num=5100〕
While transmitting an analog signal, Four Seasons Broadcasting had WBQD operated through a local marketing agreement (LMA) by The New York Times Company from 2004 to 2007 and by Local TV from 2007 to 2011. This made it a sister outlet to WQAD and the two outlets shared studios. However, some internal operations of WBQD (such as the maintenance of program logs) were actually based at the shared facilities of co-owned MyNetworkTV affiliate WAOE as well as ABC/CW affiliate WHOI and NBC affiliate WEEK-TV in East Peoria, Illinois. During the overnight hours, WBQD aired paid programming from Corner Store TV.
On December 9, 2011, WBQD-LP notified the FCC that they went silent after losing their tower lease on the Black Hawk College campus in Moline. This occurred more than a year after Black Hawk College sold public broadcasting station WQPT-TV to Western Illinois University-Quad Cities though there is no indication of any connection to this. However, on June 6, 2013, the FCC cancelled the license of WBQD-LP, after being off the air for over a year.〔(FCC letter to Four Seasons Peoria, LLC, June 6, 2013. )〕 After WBQD went silent in December 2011, WQAD, which had for years been simulcasting WBQD's programming and MyNetworkTV affiliation in 480i 4:3 standard definition on digital subchannel 8.3 (WQAD-DT3), began operating the Quad Cities' MyNetworkTV affiliation outright on channel 8.3,〔(Broadcasting News-June 2013 )〕〔(Iowa Media News 2013 )〕 rebranding it as "My TV 8.3" in reference to the station's virtual channel location. As WQAD is continuing to broadcast its programming on their own subchannel and cable providers used 8.3 as their signal source for the station for years, the low-powered license for WBQD-LP was practically all but redundant. On October 9, 2012, the cable channel assignment for WQAD-DT3 on Mediacom moved from channel 16 to channel 3.
WMWC-TV was eventually granted its construction permit on July 20, 2007, and it finally signed on in August 2012 as a religious station affiliated with TBN. As of December 2012, WMWC is now owned and operated by the TBN network.
On July 1, 2013, Local TV announced that all of their stations, including WQAD, would be acquired by the Tribune Company. On April 22, 2014, WQAD-DT3 began broadcasting in high definition, utilizing MyNetworkTV's standard 720p format.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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