The video production company that was originally part of the Cathedral of Tomorrow moved out of town and is known as Classic Worldwide owned by Jerry Patton. As far as what they edited in the past and what they didn't, seems a bit strange to insert your recollections in this article since all broadcast stations over the decades have changed standards.

These changes would boost the station, with WBNX eventually surpassing WUAB in the ratings. WBNX moved to become a major player in Cleveland television in September 1994, when it overhauled its programming lineup to include a mix of classic sitcoms, movies and cartoons as well as a couple hours of religious shows each day; infomercials were also relegated to overnight time slots at that time. I notice the image page specifies that the image is being used under fair use but there is no explanation or rationale as to why its use in this Wikipedia article constitutes fair use. [6][7][8][9] Like other New World stations affected by the affiliation agreement, WJW decided to not air the Fox Kids block upon joining Fox, choosing instead to air newscasts and syndicated programs weekdays, and infomercials and local real estate programs on weekends. I think not. WBNX formally became an independent station on July 16, with CW network programming, consisting of 1 hour daytime, 2 hours nightly and Saturday mornings, being replaced with syndicated programs already on channel 55's schedule.[19][20][21][22][23]. I use WIKI 2 every day and almost forgot how the original Wikipedia looks like. The winning applicant was "Rhema Television Corp." not "Winston Broadcasting Network" and I have yet to find evidence that Angley owned Rhema, which was the licensee of record when they signed on. I did not edit the page because I am uncertain if what may remain after removing the erroneous material is even worth keeping, since it is about a station that never went on the air. [16][17][18] WBNX remained a WB affiliate until the network ceased operations on September 17, 2006; when the station affiliated with The CW upon that network's debut on September 18, WBNX began branding as "WBNX, The CW," and adopted a new wordmark logo consisting solely of the WBNX-TV call letter and the CW network logo design.

WBNX, the television station, was built from the ground up, as their transmitter was located in a completely different city and their offices were located in a remodeled section of the complex next door to the Cathedral of Tomorrow. Should we place on every station's article the edit changes they've made and standards practiced since the 1950's? The WB affiliation also resulted in WBNX adding the Kids' WB lineup, so with having both Fox Kids and Kids' WB, channel 55 promoted themselves at that time as being "Cleveland's Kids Superstation". The station also expanded its distribution, increasing its carriage on local cable providers throughout northeast Ohio (including within the adjacent Youngstown market). By 1990, WBNX was running paid programming half the broadcast day, low budget syndicated programming about 1/4 of the day and religious shows a few hours a day.
I've visited every station in the Cleveland market including WBNX on business. You could also do it yourself at any point in time. On July 11, 2018, Raycom Media and CBS Corporation announced that it signed a long-term deal in which WUAB would become the CW affiliate in Cleveland, with WBNX 55.1 becoming independent, effective July 16. On September 1, 1997, WBNX-TV took over as the Cleveland-area affiliate of The WB Television Network, assuming the rights from WUAB-TV (channel 43). [28], In November 2015, it was announced that WBNX would become an affiliate of the Heroes & Icons network. When WJW and WOIO swapped networks on September 3, 1994, WBNX acquired the local rights to the Fox Kids programming block. Likewise, if your programming is geared toward 18-34 year olds you're editing standards are different. WBNX's original transmitter was located on Snowville Road in Brecksville, Ohio, which was originally used by WKYC-TV (channel 3) in its earlier days.

At that same time, WJW reached a news share arrangement with WBNX that allowed the latter to air tape-delayed rebroadcasts of WJW's 10:00 p.m. newscast, Newscenter 8 (later retitled ei8ht is News at 10:00 in May 1995, and then Fox 8 News at 10:00 in August 1996) each night at 11:00 p.m.; WBNX continued to air these rebroadcasts until September 1996.