WLLC-LP

WLLC-LP
Nashville, Tennessee
United States
Branding Univision Nashville
UniMás Nashville (DT2)
Bounce TV Nashville (DT3)
Slogan Nashville's Only Spanish Station!
Channels Analog: 42 (UHF)
Digital: 41 (UHF)
Virtual: 42 (UHF)
Subchannels 42.1 Univision
42.2 UniMás
42.3 Bounce TV
Affiliations Univision (2014–present)
Owner JKB Associates, Inc.
First air date November 7, 1996
Former callsigns W59AW (1996–1997)
W52CT (1997–2004)
W42CR (2004–2005)
Former channel number(s) 59 (1996–1997)
52 (1996–2004)
Former affiliations America One (1996–2004)
TeleFutura (2004–2013)
Transmitter power 25 kW
Height 96 m (315 ft)
Class TX
Facility ID 41793
Transmitter coordinates 36°09′56.00″N 86°46′46.00″W / 36.1655556°N 86.7794444°W / 36.1655556; -86.7794444
Website http://bouncetvnashville.com

WLLC-LP is a digital low power television station in Nashville, Tennessee, broadcast locally on analog channel 42 and digital channel 41.

History

The station signed on the air with the call sign W59AW on Channel 59 in 1996. It carried programming from America One 24 hours a day.[1] The station only stayed on Channel 59 for a year until 1997, when it then moved to Channel 52 and changed its call sign to W52CT.

In 2004, it moved to its current channel position of Channel 42 and changed its call sign to W42CR. The station also dropped the America One affiliation and became an affiliate of the new Spanish network TeleFutura.[2] The station changed its call sign again that same year to the current WLLC-LP.

On September 26, 2011, WLLC launched a second digital subchannel on 42.2 affiliated with Bounce TV, the first 24/7 digital multi-cast broadcast network created exclusively for African Americans.[3] On January 7, 2013, TeleFutura relaunched and rebranded as UniMás. From 2005 to 2013, the station was branded as TeleFutura 42, and after TeleFutura was rebranded to UniMás, the station itself rebranded and then identified itself as UniMás Nashville.

On September 15, 2014, WLLC affiliated with Univision (which is a sister network to UniMás) on its main channel of 42.1, therefore programming from UniMás moved to WLLC's second subchannel of 42.2, and programming from Bounce TV moved to a new subchannel of 42.3.[4] Univision was previously seen over the air in the Nashville area on WGAP-LP, which then became WNTU-LP. WNTU-LP was sold to Daystar on April 16, 2009, and switched to Daystar programming. Nashville was left without a Univision affiliate for five years, although Univision could still be seen via cable in the Nashville area.

Digital television

Digital channels

Channel Video Aspect PSIP Short Name Programming[5]
42.1 480i 4:3 WLLC-LP Main WLLC-LP programming / Univision
42.2 UniMas UniMás
42.3 Bounce Bounce TV

News operation

WLLC previously carried daily 90-second news updates. The News Updates were produced by WTVF and were anchored by Eva Melo. It was the only Spanish-language newscast in Nashville, a market consisting of about 4% Spanish-speaking viewers, a fast-growing audience in the Middle Tennessee area. As of 2011 WTVF no longer producess news updates for WLLC, as they were canceled.

WLLC may be in the process of bringing back Local News Programming, but CEO of the Station, Dave Carter said Nashville’s Univision channel will include news-related programming but won’t have traditional news for at least a year, therefore it will be awhile before Local News returns to Channel 42.[6]

Availability

WLLC is also available on cable. WLLC's Main Channel (Which carries the Univision Affiliation) is available on AT&T U-verse on Channel 42 & in High-definition on Channel 3002. That is the only channel from WLLC that the AT&T U-verse Cable System carries.[7] Also, All three of WLLC's Channels are available on Comcast/Xfinity, with Univision on Channels 99 & 613, UniMás on Channels 247 & 612, and Bounce TV on Channel 235.[8]

WLLC is not available on any of the other cable providers in the Middle Tennessee area, as Low Powered Stations do not require must carry coverage.

References

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Friday, March 11, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.