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・ WWA World Heavyweight Championship (Indianapolis)
・ WWA World Heavyweight Championship (Los Angeles)
・ WWA World Heavyweight Championship (Mexico)
・ WWA World Junior Light Heavyweight Championship
・ WWA World Lightweight Championship
・ WWA World Tag Team Championship
・ WWA World Welterweight Championship
・ WWA World Women's Championship
・ WWAB
・ WWAC
・ WWAG
・ WWAMI Regional Medical Education Program
・ WWAT-CD
・ WWAV
・ WWAX
WWAY
・ WWAY Belfast
・ WWAY-DT2
・ WWB Colombia
・ WWBA
・ WWBB
・ WWBC
・ WWBD
・ WWBE
・ WWBF
・ WWBG
・ WWBI-LP
・ WWBK-LP
・ WWBL
・ WWBM


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WWAY : ウィキペディア英語版
WWAY

WWAY is the ABC-affiliated television station for North Carolina's Cape Fear region that is licensed to Wilmington. It broadcasts a high definition digital signal on UHF channel 46 (or virtual channel 3.1 via PSIP) from a transmitter, west of Winnabow, in Town Creek Township. Owned by Morris Multimedia, the station has studios on North Front Street in downtown Wilmington next to Cape Fear Community College. Syndicated programming on WWAY includes ''Entertainment Tonight'', ''The Insider'', ''The Dr. Oz Show'', and ''Judge Judy'' among others.
==History==
WWAY signed-on October 30, 1964 as the second television station in Wilmington, 10 1/2 years after NBC affiliate WECT (channel 6). It was originally owned by Cape Fear Telecasting, a firm controlled by local interests. Logically, it should have signed on as a CBS affiliate. However, it has been an ABC affiliate from the very first day. This was somewhat unusual for a two-station market, especially one of Wilmington's size. For most of its first 20 years in television, ABC was relegated to secondary status on existing stations in most two-station markets. However, at the time channel 3 signed on, no ABC affiliate put even a grade B signal into Wilmington. In contrast, WBTW in Florence, South Carolina put a fairly strong grade B signal into the area. Cape Fear thus figured that if it signed with ABC, it would not get much local competition.
In 1968, Cape Fear sold WWAY to Clay Broadcasting (later to become Clay Communications). In 1987, Clay sold its broadcasting interests, including WWAY, to Price Communications,〔(COMPANY NEWS; Clay-Price Pact On 4 TV Stations - New York Times )〕 setting off a revolving door of owners over the course of the next two decades. In 1988, Price sold WWAY to Adams Television 〔(COMPANY NEWS; BRIEFS - New York Times )〕 who flipped the station to Hillside Broadcasting in 1995. Hillside then sold WWAY to Cosmos Broadcasting, a subsidiary of the Liberty Corporation, in 1999.〔(Company News; Liberty Subsidiary Buys Tv Station In \North Carolina - New York Times )〕 That company sold off its insurance interests two years later, bringing WWAY directly under the Liberty banner.
In 2005, Liberty merged with Raycom Media. That company already owned WECT and could not keep both stations due to Federal Communications Commission (FCC) duopoly rules that do not allow common ownership of two of the four largest stations in a single market. Raycom opted to keep the higher-rated WECT and spun off WWAY to current owner Morris Multimedia in 2006. However, the station still retains the Liberty-era logo it has used since 2003. On May 8, 2008, the FCC announced that Wilmington had been selected as a test market for the 2009 national digital television transition. Five stations in Wilmington, including WWAY, also agreed to voluntarily cease analog broadcasting on September 8. Channel 3 made its transition from analog to digital at Noon on that date.〔http://hraunfoss.fcc.gov/edocs_public/attachmatch/DOC-282032A1.pdf〕 On June 15, WWAY started broadcasting the Retro Television Network on its second digital channel. This had previously served as a 24-hour local weather channel.
In North Carolina, WWAY is still carried in Rowland which is part of the Florence/Myrtle Beach/Lumberton market. Rowland and all of Robeson County used to be part of the Wilmington market and even earlier the Raleigh/Durham/Fayetteville DMA. Lumberton, the county seat of Robeson County, used to carry WWAY as well until around 1999. Jacksonville still carries WWAY even though it is part of the Greenville/Washington/New Bern market. In South Carolina, WWAY used to be carried in Myrtle Beach and Surfside Beach up until the late-1990s. It was carried along the South Carolina borderbelt communities near the North Carolina state line but no longer is. WWAY is not carried on satellite outside of the market in the Carolinas. In Brunswick County, the station is carried on ATMC channel 5. In September 2013, WWAY announced that it would add The CW on a digital subchannel; the channel launched on September 30, 2013, carrying the branding "Cape Fear CW".〔(【引用サイトリンク】url=http://www.starnewsonline.com/article/20130905/ARTICLES/130909840/1177?p=1&tc=pg )〕 The addition of The CW pushed RTV to channel 3.3. Cozi TV took over the tertiary frequency in January 2015.

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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