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WWMT (channel 3) is a television station licensed to Kalamazoo, Michigan, United States, serving West Michigan as an affiliate of CBS.The station is owned by Sinclair Broadcast Group, and maintains studios on West Maple Street in Kalamazoo; its transmitter is located in northwest Yankee Springs Township on Chief Noonday Road/M-179 near Patterson Road.
Kalamazoo: 3 8 WWMT: CBS: CW on 3.2, Comet on 3.3 52 5 WGVK: PBS: satellite of WGVU-TV ch. 35 Grand Rapids. PBS Kids on 52.2, Create on 52.3, World on 52.4 64 22 WLLA: My Family TV: MeTV on 64.2, Retro TV on 64.3 Muskegon: 54 24 WTLJ: TCT: SBN on 64.2, TheGrio on 54.3, Digi-TV on 54.5, Shop LC on 54.6 Lansing: East Lansing: 23 33 WKAR: PBS ...
NewsChannel 3 refers to: WREG-TV in Memphis, Tennessee; WSAZ in Huntington/Charleston, West Virginia; WWMT in Kalamazoo, Michigan This page was last edited on ...
In May 2001, Nielsen Media Research figures showed WOOD-TV, WZZM, and WWMT with the top three 6 and 11 p.m. newscasts in West Michigan. WOOD-TV attracted a 25 share—percent of households using TVs—at 6 and 28 percent at 11; WWMT, the primary competitor for Kalamazoo and Battle Creek news, had a 15 share at 6 and 17 at 11.
Grand Rapids-Kalamazoo-Battle Creek, Michigan: WLAV-TV/WOOD-TV 7/8: 1949-1960 (secondary) NBC WWMT 3 Secondary affiliation, with NBC as its primary affiliation. Disaffiliated from CBS in 1960 when the FCC combined the Grand Rapids and Kalamazoo markets (Kalamazoo already had WKZO-TV, now WWMT, as a CBS affiliate). Green Bay, Wisconsin: WBAY-TV ...
In 1950, a television station was added. Channel 3 WKZO-TV began broadcasting on in July. [4] Because WKZO was a CBS Radio affiliate, WKZO-TV was primarily a CBS outlet, although as the only TV station in Kalamazoo, it also carried shows from NBC, ABC and the DuMont Television Network in its early days. In 1960, Fetzer expanded WKZO-TV's signal ...
The third hour of Michigan This Morning, which had been running from 7 to 8 in the morning, was moved to WFQX and expanded to two hours. That evening on WFQX, WWTV/WWUP launched the market's first 7 o'clock newscast. In April 2013, WWTV and WFQX became the only television stations in the market to broadcast news in High Definition.
Cowan was a frequent correspondent for NBC Nightly News with Brian Williams. Prior to joining NBC News, he was a reporter for CBS News in the CBS NEWSPATH division. He previously worked for NBC affiliate WLWT in Cincinnati, CBS affiliate WWMT in Kalamazoo, Michigan, KCOY in Santa Maria, California and KIEM in Eureka, California. [citation needed]