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YurView Oklahoma (formerly known as The Cox Channel from 2004 to 2017 and as Cox Channel 3 from 1999 to 2004) is a local origination cable television channel based in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, United States, owned by Cox Communications. The channel is available throughout Cox's Oklahoma City and Tulsa-area cable television systems on channel 3.
The concept of the channel dates back to the August 1993 extension of a retransmission consent agreement made between KWTV and Oklahoma City area cable providers Cox Cable (which rebranded as Cox Communications in 1996) and Multimedia Cablevision (whose systems in suburban areas of the city were acquired by Cox in 2000) to continue carriage of the station's signal; as part of the deal, KWTV ...
Cox 4 (2001-2017) YurView New England Hartford, Connecticut Providence, Rhode Island: Carries sporting events from Bryant University and the University of Rhode Island. Previously carried games from Providence College. YurView Oklahoma: Oklahoma City Tulsa: The Cox Channel (2004–2017) Carries St. Louis Cardinals games produced by Bally Sports ...
Oklahoma City: Oklahoma City: 5 7 KOCO-TV: ABC: MeTV on 5.2, Story Television on 5.4, TheGrio on 5.5, getTV on 5.6 Oklahoma City: Oklahoma City: 9 25 KWTV-DT: CBS: News 9 Now (continuous replay of local news) on 9.2 Oklahoma City: Oklahoma City: 13 13 KETA-TV: PBS: World on 13.2, Create 13.3, PBS Kids 13.4 Oklahoma City: Oklahoma City: 14 15 ...
TV stations formerly owned by Sinclair Broadcast Group; City of license / Market Station Channel Years owned Current ownership status Anniston, AL: WJSU-TV [ρ] 40: 2014–2015 [o] WGWW; Howard Stirk Holdings: Tuscaloosa, AL: WCFT-TV [ρ] 33: 2014–2015 [o] WSES; Howard Stirk Holdings Stockton–Sacramento, CA: KOVR: 13: 1997–2005: CBS News ...
Cox Media Group owns, operates or provides sales and marketing services to 50 stations in 10 markets. This radio portfolio includes nine AM stations and forty-one FM stations. [38] Cox Radio became a public company, majority owned by Cox Enterprises, in 1996. Around April 2009, Cox Enterprises proposed a US$69-million takeover offer of Cox Radio.
In 2007, Griffin New Media was established to manage the Griffin station websites, and later, social media. In 2009, Griffin and Oklahoma City-based OETA flagship KETA-TV (channel 13) decommissioned the original KWTV transmission tower due to the analog-to-digital transition. By 2013, it was announced that the tower would be dismantled in 2014 ...
It was the first commercial television station to sign on in the Tulsa market since NBC affiliate KVOO-TV (channel 2, now KJRH-TV) signed on 26 years earlier on December 5, 1954, and the first independent station to begin operation in a market that, on paper, had a large enough population to provide suitable viewership for an independent ...