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The station first signed on the air on July 1, 1954 [4] at 6 p.m. Founded by C. Bruce McConnell—owner of WISH radio (1310 AM, now WTLC)—it was the third television station to sign on in the Indianapolis market, after WFBM-TV (channel 6, now WRTV), which signed on in May 1949 and Bloomington-licensed WTTV (channel 10, now on channel 4), which signed on six months later in November 1949.
On March 16, 1996, WTHR began producing a nightly half-hour 10 p.m. newscast for UPN affiliate WNDY-TV (now a MyNetworkTV affiliate). The news share agreement with WNDY was terminated after that station was acquired by WISH-TV owner LIN TV Corporation in February 2005; on February 28 of that year, when WISH assumed production responsibilities ...
In 2006, the station picked up the rights to the Indianapolis Colts coaches' shows; [50] The shows later returned to WISH-TV. Beginning in 2015, WXIN and WTTV acquired the rights to all Colts preseason games and coaches' shows. [51] WTTV became a CBS affiliate on January 1, 2015, with dedicated local newscasts but using some of the same staff. [52]
CBS News on Monday finally returned confidential files belonging to fired investigative reporter Catherine Herridge amid mounting pressure from the House Judiciary Committee and the union ...
TV news insiders can tell you the moment that the world changed for high-priced anchor talent: Nov. 29, 2017, the day Matt Lauer was fired from NBC’s “Today” amid shocking allegations of ...
The CBS News producer who was fired for supposedly leaking damning ... Kelly asked whether this was the first time Bianco had clipped footage of anchors on hot mics, to which she replied, "No, we ...
Disaffiliated from NBC as a result of a three-way swap where WTTV affiliated with ABC, CBS affiliate WFBM-TV joined NBC, and ABC affiliate WISH-TV switched to CBS. Indianapolis, Indiana: WISH-TV 8: 1954–1956 (secondary) The CW Carried NBC programming WTTV declined to carry, with ABC as its primary affiliation. Disaffiliated from NBC as a ...
All these exits take place amid a not-so-gradual shrinking of the TV-news sector. CBS News, ABC News, NBC News, CNN and CNBC all shed staffers last year, and the fiscal terrain is likely to be ...