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Pages in category "Television anchors from New York City" The following 178 pages are in this category, out of 178 total. This list may not reflect recent changes .
Channel 25: WNYE-TV - (Independent) - New York City, NYCTV Life; Channel 31: WPXN-TV - - New York City; Channel 33: WJLP - Me-TV - New York City/New Jersey WJLP New Jersey/New York Call letters changed mid-night 10/1/2014 from KVNV to WJLP. On March 16, 2015, the FCC ordered WJLP to move their broadcasts from channel 3.10 to channel 33.1 on an ...
WACP (channel 4) is a religious television station licensed to Atlantic City, New Jersey, United States, serving southern New Jersey and the Philadelphia television market as an owned-and-operated station of Tri-State Christian Television (TCT).
As W2XBS broadcasting on "Channel 1" (44–50 MHz), the station scored numerous "firsts". These included: the first televised Broadway drama (June 1938); the first live news event covered by a mobile unit (a fire in an abandoned building in November 1938); the first live telecast of a presidential speech (Franklin D. Roosevelt opening the 1939 New York World's Fair); [3] the first live ...
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For a while, WNBC moved its 5:30 newscast back to 5 p.m. (bumping Extra to the 5:30 slot), but did not return the Live at Five name to the newscast. Once again, Sue Simmons anchored the program, with David Ushery as co-anchor; the current 5 p.m. newscast continues to use the general News 4 New York brand rather than the Live at Five brand.
The ceremony begins at Rockefeller Center at 8 p.m. ET on Wednesday; it will be broadcast live on NBC and streamed on Peacock as part of the two-hour “Christmas in Rockefeller Center” special.
During the 1960s, WCBS-TV battled WNBC-TV (channel 4) for the top-rated news department in New York City. After WABC-TV (channel 7) introduced Eyewitness News in the late 1960s, WCBS-TV went back and forth in first place with Channel 7, in a rivalry that continued through the 1970s. For much of the early 1980s, New York's "Big Three" stations ...