

On July 31, 2012, the CaribeVision network was dissolved and the station became a charter affiliate of MundoFox, which started broadcasting the next day to provide full-market coverage of the station, it was also simulcast on Fox Television Stations-owned WWOR-DT4. The station's programming consisted mainly of Argentinian and Brazilian telenovelas ( Yago, pasión morena, Mi primer amor -originally known in Argentina as Romeo y Julieta-, etc.), talk shows ( Margarita, te voy a contar), sitcoms ( Here's Lucy, Poné a Francella), infomercials during the mornings and public domain cartoons on weekends.ĭuring the week of May 4, 2009, WPXO-LP turned off its analog signal on channel 34 and began test broadcasts on digital channel 34, and as of late May, WPXO has been transmitting its programming full-time on digital channel 34. It re-launched on September 11, 2007, as an affiliate of new network CaribeVision. In August 2007, WPXO was sold to Caribevision Station Group, LLC. A year later, the station became WPXO-LP. When WPXN-TV returned to the air with a new transmitter on the Empire State Building in 2002, W31CK's signal moved back to channel 34 and was assigned W34CP as its new call letters. The next day, the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) authorized W23BA to temporarily move its signal to channel 31, boost its power to 240 kW, and change its call letters to W31CK to replace WPXN's signal. On September 11, 2001, the transmitter facilities of WPXN, as well as six other New York City television stations and several radio stations, were destroyed when two hijacked airplanes crashed into and destroyed the World Trade Center towers.

The following year, due to potential future interference from WHSI-TV (now WFTY-DT), who was assigned channel 23 for its digital signal, it moved to channel 34. After Paxson acquired WPXN-TV to serve as its New York outlet, the company sold off the Bridgeport station (which has since become WZME) and made W23BA a translator of WPXN. Fox, which made it a translator for its station in Bridgeport, Connecticut, WHAI-TV.

In 1996, the station was sold to Paxson Communications from Craig L. WPXO originally began as a 24-hour music channel called The Box on channel 23 with the call letters W23BA. WPXO-LD's transmitter is located at the Empire State Building. The station is owned by Caribevision Holdings, Inc. WPXO-LD, virtual channel 34 (VHF digital channel 4), is a low-powered América TeVé-affiliated television station licensed to East Orange, New Jersey, United States, and serving the New York City television market.
