Based in Cleveland, it is owned by Gray Media and co-managed by Rock Entertainment Group, headed by Dan Gilbert, and its programming consists primarily of local sporting events.
It is broadcast by Canton, Ohio–licensed low-power station WOHZ-CD (channel 22) from a transmitter located northeast of Canton; in Cleveland on a subchannel of WTCL-LD, with transmitter located in Parma; in Akron on W28FG-D, a translator for both WOHZ and WTCL; in Columbus on low-power station WDEM-CD (channel 17); and in Cincinnati as a subchannel of Gray-owned WXIX-TV.
[4] After W50BE owner Mid-State Television, Inc., headed by Robert Meisse, acquired the license to WCOM-TV, that station was relaunched as WMFD-TV "TV68/50"[5] on June 1, 1992, simulcasting W50BE's programming.
[6] By the beginning of 1996, W50BE changed call signs to WOHZ-LP and was relaunched as "Z-50", offering additional local programming as a WMFD-TV extension alongside America One fare.
[7] Later upgraded to a Class A station as WOHZ-CA, it also began to offer weather information and an audio simulcast of WVNO-FM[8] from a combined studio facility in Ontario, Ohio.
[16] FanDuel, then known as Bally Sports Ohio, previously offered five Cavaliers games to Gray Television owned WUAB during the second half of the 2023–24 season[17] and the team expressed disappointment over the cable channel's lack of audience reach and financial issues.
[15] While the Cavaliers have not ruled out re-signing with FanDuel after the season, team officials have expressed a desire to reach viewers on multiple platforms, from linear television to over-the-top and mobile streaming to virtual reality headsets.