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    Milwaukee PBS

    4.0 (7 reviews)
    Open 8:00 am - 7:00 pm

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    11 years ago

    Okay, we've been adequately flogged, what will it take to get MPTV to air "Supper Clubs 101" that other markets so enjoyed?

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    Wisn-Tv - Me as Jerry Meeks and I will like to let people know that I have been sitting in prison for 22years years without a conviction

    Wisn-Tv

    2.3(6 reviews)
    0.9 miAvenues West, University Hill, Westown

    #3 - WISN 12, ABC…read more The only con I have for this station is it's choppy signal. I can't get it most of the time. Anyway, it's still a fantastic station. It has a great news team, sublime sports, accurate weather, and it's not been infected by the disease that I call "Disnebola"! Disnebola is Disney's stupidity. THANK GOD THERE IS NONE HERE.

    've reached the point where I no longer trust WISN-TV to deliver politically balanced coverage…read more The issue isn't that they never include opposing viewpoints--it's how those viewpoints are handled. Time and again, their reporting appears to follow a pattern: one side of an issue is framed as reasonable and authoritative, while the other is reduced to brief soundbites, weaker scrutiny, or less context. Even when anchors like Shawn Oswald present stories in a calm, professional tone, the imbalance shows up in the story selection, framing, and follow-up questions. Those editorial choices matter more than delivery--and that's where the bias becomes noticeable. What's especially frustrating is that this isn't about one story--it feels consistent. Whether it's state policy debates, public health decisions, or local government coverage, the pattern repeats often enough that it's hard to ignore. Local news should be the most trustworthy level of journalism. Instead, WISN increasingly feels like it's shaping narratives rather than simply reporting facts. If WISN wants to maintain credibility across the community, it needs to do more than include "both sides" on paper. It needs to: Apply equal skepticism to all viewpoints Give competing perspectives comparable depth and context Avoid subtle framing that nudges viewers toward a conclusion Until that happens, viewers are right to question whether they're getting the full story.

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    Milwaukee PBS - televisionstations - Updated May 2026

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