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The Tuscaloosa News offices were located west of downtown on a bluff overlooking the Black Warrior River. In October 2023, Mayor Walt Maddox announced that the former News office building is slated to be razed to make way for a new municipal recreation center. [100] The Planet Weekly is the largest of the several alternative weekly newspapers ...
Before the current Bama Theatre was built, there was a theater of that name in Tuscaloosa. This earlier Bama Theatre was built in 1924 on Broad Street (today's University Boulevard)—one block from the later Bama Theatre. [3] The early Bama featured silent films and vaudeville shows and operated during the transition from silent to sound films.
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The station's news department began operations at WVUA-CD's sign-on in 1998, providing local news coverage to west-central Alabama for the first time since WDBB and WCFT-TV (channel 33, now WSES) shifted focus to the Birmingham area during the mid-1990s (the latter being a byproduct of WBRC's conversion into a Fox owned-and-operated station ...
The Bill O’Brien-to-Alabama rumors are getting stronger as the former NFL head coach is reportedly back in Tuscaloosa today. On Monday night, FOX Sports’ Bruce Feldman reported that O’Brien ...
The Tuscaloosa News is a daily newspaper serving Tuscaloosa, Alabama, United States, and the surrounding area in west central Alabama. It is owned by Gannett. Tuscaloosa News headquarters seen from the Riverwalk. In 2012, Halifax Media Group acquired the Tuscaloosa News. Prior to that, the paper's owner was The New York Times Company. [2]
Ahead of the new year, TODAY anchors summarize their 2022 in a single world, with Hoda, Savannah, Willie, Jenna, Craig and more reflecting.
WACT signed on the air in 1958 as an AM only, but in 1964 added 105.5 WACT FM. Clyde Price founded the stations under New South Radio, Inc. He owned and worked on-air WACT until his retirement in 1993. He was relieved as morning man by his oldest son Wally Price, who has been a personality in Tuscaloosa radio since the early 1970s.