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PBS Wisconsin

PBS Wisconsin (formerly Wisconsin Public Television or WPT) is a state network of non-commercial educational television stations operated primarily by the Wisconsin Educational Communications Board and the University of Wisconsin–Madison. It comprises all of the Public Broadcasting Service (PBS) member stations in the state outside of Milwaukee (which has its own PBS stations.)

PBS Wisconsin
Channels
Programming
Affiliations.1: PBS (1970–present)
.2: Wisconsin Channel
.3: Create
.4: PBS Kids
Ownership
Owner
Wisconsin Public Radio
History
First air date
May 3, 1954 (68 years ago) (1954-05-03)
Former call signs
Wisconsin Educational Television Network (1972–1986)
Wisconsin Public Television (1986–2019)
NET (1954–1970)
Call sign meaning
see table below
Technical information
Licensing authority
FCC
Facility IDsee table below
ERPsee table below
HAATsee table below
Transmitter coordinatessee table below
Links
Public license information
  • Wisconsin Public file
  • table below LMS
Websitepbswisconsin.org

The state network is available via flagship station WHA-TV in Madison and five full-power satellite stations throughout most of Wisconsin. As of April 5, 2009, all stations have converted to digital-only transmissions. PBS Wisconsin is also available on most satellite and cable television outlets. WHA-TV, along with Chicago, Illinois-based public television station WTTW-TV, serve the Rockford, Illinois television market exclusively through cable television and satellite television, as Rockford is one of a few television markets in the United States that lacks a PBS station of its own.

Until the gradual move of instructional broadcasting to IPTV services, the network, as Wisconsin Public Television, was the main conduit of educational television, GED preparation and instructional television programming produced by the WECB, which aired through PBS, Annenberg Media, those stations serving portions of Wisconsin without a WPT station, and other educational television distributors. As of October 2014, the WECB now distributes this programming exclusively online, allowing the over-the-air network to carry PBS programming full-time.

History

WHA-TV signed on the air on May 3, 1954 as the first educational station in Wisconsin and the seventh in the United States. WHA-TV is the only public television station in the country that maintains a three-letter callsign, and one of only three analog-era UHF stations altogether (along with WHP-TV in Harrisburg, Pennsylvania and WWJ-TV in Detroit) with a three-letter callsign.

Wisconsin was a relative latecomer to educational television, despite its earlier leading role in educational radio. Channel 21's radio sister, WHA-AM, is one of the oldest educational radio stations in the world. By the time channel 21 signed on, UW had already launched a radio network that evolved into today's Wisconsin Public Radio. However, for most of the time from the 1950s through the 1970s, it was one of only three stations in the state that was a member of National Educational Television and its successor, PBS. The others were WMVS (channel 10) and WMVT (channel 36) in Milwaukee. The only other areas of the state outside of Milwaukee and Madison that had a clear signal from an NET/PBS member station were the northwest (from Duluth, Minnesota's WDSE-TV) and the southwest (from the Twin Cities's KTCA-TV). During the late 60s and into the early 70s, commercial station KFIZ-TV in Fond du Lac was contracted by the UW-Madison Board of Regents to simulcast portions of WHA-TV's broadcast day, bringing WHA's programming into the Green Bay and Milwaukee markets.[1]

 
Wisconsin Public Television's logo from 1986 to 2019.

In 1971, the state legislature created the Wisconsin Educational Communications Board, activating five stations as semi-satellites of WHA-TV during the 1970s. The first was WPNE-TV in Green Bay in 1972, ending KFIZ-TV's part-time affiliation with WHA (and hastening its demise only two months after WPNE went on the air). This was followed by WHWC-TV in Menomonie and WHLA-TV in La Crosse in 1973; WHRM-TV in Wausau in 1975 and WLEF in Park Falls in 1977, most taking call signs that originated from their co-owned radio counterparts. Originally, programming origination was split between WHA-TV and WPNE-TV. The stations adopted the on-air name of Wisconsin Public Television in 1986, and by then WHA-TV had become the sole originating station. Transmission and station identification is based out of ECB's Madison facility; all stations still maintain studios at their respective universities, but have generally been deprecated with the evolution of public broadcasting and technology.

From 1960 to 2007, WHA-TV/WPT aired same-day tape-delayed coverage of some Wisconsin Badgers football and men's basketball home games, which was produced in association with UW-Madison's athletic department. This ended in 2007 with the Big Ten Conference's new media rights deals (including the new Big Ten Network cable channel).[2] The state network offers tape-delayed broadcasts of Badgers men's and women's hockey, women's basketball and volleyball throughout the year over the secondary Wisconsin Channel.[3]

In 2018, Wisconsin Public Television collaborated with the American Archive of Public Broadcasting to preserve digitized items in the WPT collection.[4]

On November 4, 2019, Wisconsin Public Television was renamed PBS Wisconsin, aligning itself with the new national PBS brand identity unveiled the same day.[5]

Stations

Full-power stations

There are six full-power stations in the state network, each located in major cities throughout the state, and all are broadcast on the UHF band. On April 5, 2009, the state network ended analog service for all stations, which map via PSIP to their former analog channel location; WLEF's analog signal was terminated on February 3, 2009. All digital facilities and channels in the network except for WLEF were designed for pre- and post-transition use.[6]

WPNE moved its physical channel from 42 to 25 on July 1, 2018, and WHLA moved its physical channel from 30 to 15 on September 7, 2018, both as part of the FCC's spectrum repacking, but both stations continue to use their PSIP channel mappings.[7]

Station City of license
Call sign meaning ERP HAAT Transmitter coordinates First air date Public license info Facility ID
WHA-TV Madison 21 (20) From sister station WHA radio 200 kW 454 m (1,490 ft) 43°3′21″N 89°32′6″W / 43.05583°N 89.53500°W / 43.05583; -89.53500 (WHA-TV) May 3, 1954
  • Public file
  • LMS
6096
WHLA-TV[a] La Crosse 31 (15) WHA - La Crosse 400 kW 345.5 m (1,133.5 ft) 43°48′18.3″N 91°22′5.1″W / 43.805083°N 91.368083°W / 43.805083; -91.368083 (WHLA-TV) March 17, 1975
  • Public file
  • LMS
18780
WHRM-TV Wausau 20 (24) WHA - Rib Mountain 400 kW 387 m (1,270 ft) 44°55′14.2″N 89°41′28.7″W / 44.920611°N 89.691306°W / 44.920611; -89.691306 (WHRM-TV) January 20, 1976
  • Public file
  • LMS
73036
WHWC-TV Menomonie[b] 28 (27) WHA - West Central 400 kW 350 m (1,148 ft) 45°2′48.9″N 91°51′47.6″W / 45.046917°N 91.863222°W / 45.046917; -91.863222 (WHWC-TV) June 10, 1975
  • Public file
  • LMS
18793
WLEF-TV Park Falls 36 (36) Lee E. Franks
(former WECB executive director)
400 kW 445 m (1,460 ft) 45°56′42.5″N 90°16′22.5″W / 45.945139°N 90.272917°W / 45.945139; -90.272917 (WLEF-TV) December 15, 1976
  • Public file
  • LMS
63046
WPNE-TV Green Bay 38 (25) Public Broadcasting Northeast 400 kW 375 m (1,230 ft) 44°24′34.6″N 88°0′6.7″W / 44.409611°N 88.001861°W / 44.409611; -88.001861 (WPNE) September 12, 1972
  • Public file
  • LMS
1879

Notes

  1. ^ WHLA-TV used the callsign WWWG during its construction permit from April 19 to October 1, 1973.[8]
  2. ^ WHWC-TV was licensed to Colfax until July 20, 1976.[9]

Technical information

Subchannels

All transmitters broadcast the same four digital subchannels.[10]

PBS Wisconsin multiplex[11]
Channel Res. Aspect Short name Programming
xx.1 720p 16:9 (Station call sign)-HD Main programming / PBS
xx.2 WPT2 Wisconsin Channel
xx.3 480i WPT3 Create
xx.4 WPT4 PBS Kids
  • The programming schedule of all three channels over-the-air depends on the main network schedule; before October 2014, on late nights without overnight instructional programming, WPT went off the air at 1 a.m. and signed back on at 6 a.m. However, after a January 2010 transmitter problem took down WPNE and commercial station WBAY-TV in Green Bay during an off the air period for two weeks, the network switched from turning off their transmitters to mainly airing a network station identification card with an outline map of the network's service in the state during off-the-air hours.
    • Beginning in October 2014, the network began 24-hour service using the late night national PBS feed or network programming to fill the overnight hours, and discontinued most instructional programming outside of one overnight hour of UW-Madison/Wisconsin Public Radio programming under the title University Place.
  • A previous locally programmed PBS Kids 24/7 service aired on WPT's .2 subchannel until 2007, when PBS discontinued the service due to their interest in Sprout until 2013; subsequently the Wisconsin Channel launched in its place, along with a modified children's programming schedule across both services.
  • Since converting all their operations to digital in April 2009, PBS Wisconsin has broadcast their programming in the 720p high definition format, reduced from PBS' master 1080i resolution.

Network translator stations

A translator network also serves portions of the state where over-the-air reception for a full-power station is hindered by area topography (or in the case of Door County, distance from Green Bay), and to fill in holes between full-power stations. All of the listed translators are owned by the WECB, and flash-cut from analog to digital in the first two weeks of November 2008, including adding the subchannel services.[12] Each translator has its virtual channel mapped via PSIP to the channel number of the closest full-power station to the translator.[13]

PBS Wisconsin translators
City of license Call sign Translating Channel ERP HAAT Transmitter coordinates Facility ID
Bloomington W16DU-D WHLA 16 4.58 kW 118 m (387 ft) 42°54′08.7″N 90°56′47.5″W / 42.902417°N 90.946528°W / 42.902417; -90.946528 (W16DU-D) 63057
Sister Bay W17DZ-D WPNE 17 9.36 kW 204.9 m (672.2 ft) 45°14′16.3″N 87°05′28.6″W / 45.237861°N 87.091278°W / 45.237861; -87.091278 (W17DZ-D) 63062
River Falls W19EN-D WHWC 19 6 kW 134.1 m (440.0 ft) 44°54′10.0″N 92°41′28.0″W / 44.902778°N 92.691111°W / 44.902778; -92.691111 (W19EN-D) 63054
Grantsburg W24CL-D WHWC 24 3.71 kW 154.6 m (507.2 ft) 45°50′28.8″N 92°28′14.5″W / 45.841333°N 92.470694°W / 45.841333; -92.470694 (W24CL-D) 63034
Coloma W29ET-D WHRM 29 4 kW 166.4 m (545.9 ft) 44°01′12.8″N 89°33′31.3″W / 44.020222°N 89.558694°W / 44.020222; -89.558694 (W29ET-D) 62183
Fence W30DZ-D WLEF 30 3.22 kW 185.6 m (608.9 ft) 45°44′07.2″N 88°25′38.3″W / 45.735333°N 88.427306°W / 45.735333; -88.427306 (W30DZ-D) 63038

Network programming in Milwaukee and Superior–Duluth

PBS Wisconsin's public affairs programming is carried by WMVS in Milwaukee, including Here and Now, while Duluth's WDSE airs the shows in northeast Minnesota and northwest Wisconsin. The two stations also air the state network's live teen issues program Teen Connection quarterly with PBS Wisconsin, along with political debates and other important events originating from the Capitol such as the State of the State address and biennial budget address produced by the state network; in turn some Milwaukee PBS programming (such as Outdoor Wisconsin) and MPTV-produced debates air on PBS Wisconsin, with programs such as Wisconsin Foodie in turn airing on WMVS. Some of the state network's tape-delayed sports coverage airs in Milwaukee on WMVT.

In March 2021, PBS Wisconsin, by way of WHA-TV, was quietly added to Dish Network's Duluth–Superior local feed in standard definition.[14]

National presentations

  • Around the Farm Table – food and farming show
  • Once Upon a Christmas Cheery, In the Lab of Spanish – seasonal special[15]
  • Sewing with Nancy – sewing show
  • Storylords – educational fantasy series
  • The War at Home – documentary

See also

References

  1. ^ AP (November 29, 1972). "Fond du Lac to Lose Station". Wisconsin State Journal. Retrieved May 26, 2018 – via Newspapers.com.
  2. ^ . www.madison.com. Archived from the original on June 11, 2011. Retrieved January 11, 2022.
  3. ^ "WPT Sports: UW Men's Hockey on Wisconsin Public Television". Wisconsin Public Television. Retrieved December 13, 2018.
  4. ^ "PBS Wisconsin". americanarchive.org. Retrieved May 27, 2020.
  5. ^ Goldsmith, Jill. "PBS begins rollout of electric-blue brand refresh". Current. Retrieved December 3, 2019.
  6. ^ Richgels, Jeff. "WHA-TV ending analog broadcasts April 5". 77 Square. Retrieved April 6, 2009.
  7. ^ "Wisconsin Public Television Contact US (Programming and station notes)". November 15, 2012. Retrieved June 1, 2018.
  8. ^ "FCC History Cards for WHLA-TV".{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  9. ^ "FCC History Cards for WHWC-TV".{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  10. ^ "Wisconsin Public Television to Launch New Digital Broadcast Lineup". October 6, 2008. Retrieved April 6, 2009.
  11. ^ "RabbitEars TV Query for WHA". www.rabbitears.info. Retrieved December 13, 2018.
    • "RabbitEars TV Query for WHLA". www.rabbitears.info. Retrieved December 13, 2018.
    • "RabbitEars TV Query for WHRM". www.rabbitears.info. Retrieved December 13, 2018.
    • "RabbitEars TV Query for WHWC". www.rabbitears.info. Retrieved December 13, 2018.
    • "RabbitEars TV Query for WLEF". www.rabbitears.info. Retrieved December 13, 2018.
    • "RabbitEars TV Query for WPNE". www.rabbitears.info. Retrieved December 13, 2018.
  12. ^ . Wisconsin Public Television. Archived from the original on April 5, 2009. Retrieved April 6, 2009.
  13. ^ . Wisconsin Public Television. Archived from the original on April 5, 2009. Retrieved April 6, 2009.
  14. ^ Ellis, Jon (April 11, 2021). "PBS Wisconsin Available in Superior for First Time". Northpine.com. Retrieved April 13, 2021.
  15. ^ "Chemistry Professor Bassam Z. Shakhashiri Is Making Science Fun for the Holidays".

External links

  • PBS Wisconsin website

wisconsin, formerly, wisconsin, public, television, state, network, commercial, educational, television, stations, operated, primarily, wisconsin, educational, communications, board, university, wisconsin, madison, comprises, public, broadcasting, service, mem. PBS Wisconsin formerly Wisconsin Public Television or WPT is a state network of non commercial educational television stations operated primarily by the Wisconsin Educational Communications Board and the University of Wisconsin Madison It comprises all of the Public Broadcasting Service PBS member stations in the state outside of Milwaukee which has its own PBS stations PBS Wisconsinstatewide Wisconsin except Milwaukee Metro United States additional coverage in portions of Eastern Minnesota and Iowa Upper Peninsula of Michigan and Northern Illinois ChannelsDigital see table belowProgrammingAffiliations 1 PBS 1970 present 2 Wisconsin Channel 3 Create 4 PBS KidsOwnershipOwnerWHA TV University of Wisconsin MadisonOther stations State of Wisconsin Educational Communications Board WHA TV Board of Regents of the University of Wisconsin System Sister stationsWisconsin Public RadioHistoryFirst air dateMay 3 1954 68 years ago 1954 05 03 Former call signsWisconsin Educational Television Network 1972 1986 Wisconsin Public Television 1986 2019 Former affiliationsNET 1954 1970 Call sign meaningsee table belowTechnical informationLicensing authorityFCCFacility IDsee table belowERPsee table belowHAATsee table belowTransmitter coordinatessee table belowLinksPublic license informationWisconsin Public filetable below LMSWebsitepbswisconsin wbr orgThe state network is available via flagship station WHA TV in Madison and five full power satellite stations throughout most of Wisconsin As of April 5 2009 all stations have converted to digital only transmissions PBS Wisconsin is also available on most satellite and cable television outlets WHA TV along with Chicago Illinois based public television station WTTW TV serve the Rockford Illinois television market exclusively through cable television and satellite television as Rockford is one of a few television markets in the United States that lacks a PBS station of its own Until the gradual move of instructional broadcasting to IPTV services the network as Wisconsin Public Television was the main conduit of educational television GED preparation and instructional television programming produced by the WECB which aired through PBS Annenberg Media those stations serving portions of Wisconsin without a WPT station and other educational television distributors As of October 2014 the WECB now distributes this programming exclusively online allowing the over the air network to carry PBS programming full time Contents 1 History 2 Stations 2 1 Full power stations 2 2 Notes 2 3 Technical information 2 3 1 Subchannels 2 3 2 Network translator stations 2 4 Network programming in Milwaukee and Superior Duluth 3 National presentations 4 See also 5 References 6 External linksHistory EditWHA TV signed on the air on May 3 1954 as the first educational station in Wisconsin and the seventh in the United States WHA TV is the only public television station in the country that maintains a three letter callsign and one of only three analog era UHF stations altogether along with WHP TV in Harrisburg Pennsylvania and WWJ TV in Detroit with a three letter callsign Wisconsin was a relative latecomer to educational television despite its earlier leading role in educational radio Channel 21 s radio sister WHA AM is one of the oldest educational radio stations in the world By the time channel 21 signed on UW had already launched a radio network that evolved into today s Wisconsin Public Radio However for most of the time from the 1950s through the 1970s it was one of only three stations in the state that was a member of National Educational Television and its successor PBS The others were WMVS channel 10 and WMVT channel 36 in Milwaukee The only other areas of the state outside of Milwaukee and Madison that had a clear signal from an NET PBS member station were the northwest from Duluth Minnesota s WDSE TV and the southwest from the Twin Cities s KTCA TV During the late 60s and into the early 70s commercial station KFIZ TV in Fond du Lac was contracted by the UW Madison Board of Regents to simulcast portions of WHA TV s broadcast day bringing WHA s programming into the Green Bay and Milwaukee markets 1 Wisconsin Public Television s logo from 1986 to 2019 In 1971 the state legislature created the Wisconsin Educational Communications Board activating five stations as semi satellites of WHA TV during the 1970s The first was WPNE TV in Green Bay in 1972 ending KFIZ TV s part time affiliation with WHA and hastening its demise only two months after WPNE went on the air This was followed by WHWC TV in Menomonie and WHLA TV in La Crosse in 1973 WHRM TV in Wausau in 1975 and WLEF in Park Falls in 1977 most taking call signs that originated from their co owned radio counterparts Originally programming origination was split between WHA TV and WPNE TV The stations adopted the on air name of Wisconsin Public Television in 1986 and by then WHA TV had become the sole originating station Transmission and station identification is based out of ECB s Madison facility all stations still maintain studios at their respective universities but have generally been deprecated with the evolution of public broadcasting and technology From 1960 to 2007 WHA TV WPT aired same day tape delayed coverage of some Wisconsin Badgers football and men s basketball home games which was produced in association with UW Madison s athletic department This ended in 2007 with the Big Ten Conference s new media rights deals including the new Big Ten Network cable channel 2 The state network offers tape delayed broadcasts of Badgers men s and women s hockey women s basketball and volleyball throughout the year over the secondary Wisconsin Channel 3 In 2018 Wisconsin Public Television collaborated with the American Archive of Public Broadcasting to preserve digitized items in the WPT collection 4 On November 4 2019 Wisconsin Public Television was renamed PBS Wisconsin aligning itself with the new national PBS brand identity unveiled the same day 5 Stations EditFull power stations Edit There are six full power stations in the state network each located in major cities throughout the state and all are broadcast on the UHF band On April 5 2009 the state network ended analog service for all stations which map via PSIP to their former analog channel location WLEF s analog signal was terminated on February 3 2009 All digital facilities and channels in the network except for WLEF were designed for pre and post transition use 6 WPNE moved its physical channel from 42 to 25 on July 1 2018 and WHLA moved its physical channel from 30 to 15 on September 7 2018 both as part of the FCC s spectrum repacking but both stations continue to use their PSIP channel mappings 7 Station City of license ChannelTV RF Call sign meaning ERP HAAT Transmitter coordinates First air date Public license info Facility IDWHA TV Madison 21 20 From sister station WHA radio 200 kW 454 m 1 490 ft 43 3 21 N 89 32 6 W 43 05583 N 89 53500 W 43 05583 89 53500 WHA TV May 3 1954 Public fileLMS 6096WHLA TV a La Crosse 31 15 WHA La Crosse 400 kW 345 5 m 1 133 5 ft 43 48 18 3 N 91 22 5 1 W 43 805083 N 91 368083 W 43 805083 91 368083 WHLA TV March 17 1975 Public fileLMS 18780WHRM TV Wausau 20 24 WHA Rib Mountain 400 kW 387 m 1 270 ft 44 55 14 2 N 89 41 28 7 W 44 920611 N 89 691306 W 44 920611 89 691306 WHRM TV January 20 1976 Public fileLMS 73036WHWC TV Menomonie b 28 27 WHA West Central 400 kW 350 m 1 148 ft 45 2 48 9 N 91 51 47 6 W 45 046917 N 91 863222 W 45 046917 91 863222 WHWC TV June 10 1975 Public fileLMS 18793WLEF TV Park Falls 36 36 Lee E Franks former WECB executive director 400 kW 445 m 1 460 ft 45 56 42 5 N 90 16 22 5 W 45 945139 N 90 272917 W 45 945139 90 272917 WLEF TV December 15 1976 Public fileLMS 63046WPNE TV Green Bay 38 25 Public Broadcasting Northeast 400 kW 375 m 1 230 ft 44 24 34 6 N 88 0 6 7 W 44 409611 N 88 001861 W 44 409611 88 001861 WPNE September 12 1972 Public fileLMS 1879Notes Edit WHLA TV used the callsign WWWG during its construction permit from April 19 to October 1 1973 8 WHWC TV was licensed to Colfax until July 20 1976 9 Technical information Edit Subchannels Edit All transmitters broadcast the same four digital subchannels 10 PBS Wisconsin multiplex 11 Channel Res Aspect Short name Programmingxx 1 720p 16 9 Station call sign HD Main programming PBSxx 2 WPT2 Wisconsin Channelxx 3 480i WPT3 Createxx 4 WPT4 PBS KidsThe programming schedule of all three channels over the air depends on the main network schedule before October 2014 on late nights without overnight instructional programming WPT went off the air at 1 a m and signed back on at 6 a m However after a January 2010 transmitter problem took down WPNE and commercial station WBAY TV in Green Bay during an off the air period for two weeks the network switched from turning off their transmitters to mainly airing a network station identification card with an outline map of the network s service in the state during off the air hours Beginning in October 2014 the network began 24 hour service using the late night national PBS feed or network programming to fill the overnight hours and discontinued most instructional programming outside of one overnight hour of UW Madison Wisconsin Public Radio programming under the title University Place A previous locally programmed PBS Kids 24 7 service aired on WPT s 2 subchannel until 2007 when PBS discontinued the service due to their interest in Sprout until 2013 subsequently the Wisconsin Channel launched in its place along with a modified children s programming schedule across both services Since converting all their operations to digital in April 2009 PBS Wisconsin has broadcast their programming in the 720p high definition format reduced from PBS master 1080i resolution Network translator stations Edit A translator network also serves portions of the state where over the air reception for a full power station is hindered by area topography or in the case of Door County distance from Green Bay and to fill in holes between full power stations All of the listed translators are owned by the WECB and flash cut from analog to digital in the first two weeks of November 2008 including adding the subchannel services 12 Each translator has its virtual channel mapped via PSIP to the channel number of the closest full power station to the translator 13 PBS Wisconsin translators City of license Call sign Translating Channel ERP HAAT Transmitter coordinates Facility IDBloomington W16DU D WHLA 16 4 58 kW 118 m 387 ft 42 54 08 7 N 90 56 47 5 W 42 902417 N 90 946528 W 42 902417 90 946528 W16DU D 63057Sister Bay W17DZ D WPNE 17 9 36 kW 204 9 m 672 2 ft 45 14 16 3 N 87 05 28 6 W 45 237861 N 87 091278 W 45 237861 87 091278 W17DZ D 63062River Falls W19EN D WHWC 19 6 kW 134 1 m 440 0 ft 44 54 10 0 N 92 41 28 0 W 44 902778 N 92 691111 W 44 902778 92 691111 W19EN D 63054Grantsburg W24CL D WHWC 24 3 71 kW 154 6 m 507 2 ft 45 50 28 8 N 92 28 14 5 W 45 841333 N 92 470694 W 45 841333 92 470694 W24CL D 63034Coloma W29ET D WHRM 29 4 kW 166 4 m 545 9 ft 44 01 12 8 N 89 33 31 3 W 44 020222 N 89 558694 W 44 020222 89 558694 W29ET D 62183Fence W30DZ D WLEF 30 3 22 kW 185 6 m 608 9 ft 45 44 07 2 N 88 25 38 3 W 45 735333 N 88 427306 W 45 735333 88 427306 W30DZ D 63038Network programming in Milwaukee and Superior Duluth Edit PBS Wisconsin s public affairs programming is carried by WMVS in Milwaukee including Here and Now while Duluth s WDSE airs the shows in northeast Minnesota and northwest Wisconsin The two stations also air the state network s live teen issues program Teen Connection quarterly with PBS Wisconsin along with political debates and other important events originating from the Capitol such as the State of the State address and biennial budget address produced by the state network in turn some Milwaukee PBS programming such as Outdoor Wisconsin and MPTV produced debates air on PBS Wisconsin with programs such as Wisconsin Foodie in turn airing on WMVS Some of the state network s tape delayed sports coverage airs in Milwaukee on WMVT In March 2021 PBS Wisconsin by way of WHA TV was quietly added to Dish Network s Duluth Superior local feed in standard definition 14 National presentations EditAround the Farm Table food and farming show Once Upon a Christmas Cheery In the Lab of Spanish seasonal special 15 Sewing with Nancy sewing show Storylords educational fantasy series The War at Home documentarySee also EditWisconsin Public Radio American Archive of Public BroadcastingReferences Edit AP November 29 1972 Fond du Lac to Lose Station Wisconsin State Journal Retrieved May 26 2018 via Newspapers com Sports www madison com Archived from the original on June 11 2011 Retrieved January 11 2022 WPT Sports UW Men s Hockey on Wisconsin Public Television Wisconsin Public Television Retrieved December 13 2018 PBS Wisconsin americanarchive org Retrieved May 27 2020 Goldsmith Jill PBS begins rollout of electric blue brand refresh Current Retrieved December 3 2019 Richgels Jeff WHA TV ending analog broadcasts April 5 77 Square Retrieved April 6 2009 Wisconsin Public Television Contact US Programming and station notes November 15 2012 Retrieved June 1 2018 FCC History Cards for WHLA TV a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint url status link FCC History Cards for WHWC TV a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint url status link Wisconsin Public Television to Launch New Digital Broadcast Lineup October 6 2008 Retrieved April 6 2009 RabbitEars TV Query for WHA www rabbitears info Retrieved December 13 2018 RabbitEars TV Query for WHLA www rabbitears info Retrieved December 13 2018 RabbitEars TV Query for WHRM www rabbitears info Retrieved December 13 2018 RabbitEars TV Query for WHWC www rabbitears info Retrieved December 13 2018 RabbitEars TV Query for WLEF www rabbitears info Retrieved December 13 2018 RabbitEars TV Query for WPNE www rabbitears info Retrieved December 13 2018 Translators Conversion Schedule Wisconsin Public Television Archived from the original on April 5 2009 Retrieved April 6 2009 Antennas and Reception Wisconsin Public Television Archived from the original on April 5 2009 Retrieved April 6 2009 Ellis Jon April 11 2021 PBS Wisconsin Available in Superior for First Time Northpine com Retrieved April 13 2021 Chemistry Professor Bassam Z Shakhashiri Is Making Science Fun for the Holidays External links EditPBS Wisconsin website Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title PBS Wisconsin amp oldid 1140315739, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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