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On May 12, 2016, ABC cancelled the series after four seasons. On June 10, 2016, it was announced that CMT had picked up the series for a fifth season of 22 episodes. [1] The pick-up was assisted by $11 million in economic incentives: $8.5 million comes via the State of Tennessee Film Office, $1 million from the City of Nashville, $1 million from the Nashville Convention & Visitor Corp and ...
Date Event Ref. 2 The 67th Annual Grammy Awards airs on CBS with streaming on Paramount+ from Crypto.com Arena in Los Angeles. [25]4 Ending a six-year-long blackout, Comcast and sports channel Altitude announce a carriage agreement that adds the Denver-based Altitude, TV home of the NHL's Colorado Avalanche and NBA's Denver Nuggets, to a higher-priced "sports and entertainment" tier of Comcast ...
WTVF-DT2, branded as NewsChannel 5 Plus or NewsChannel 5+, is the second digital subchannel of WTVF, operating as an independent station. It broadcasts in standard definition on channel 5.2. NewsChannel 5+ was introduced and launched in September 1996 as an all-news and information cable-only channel for the Nashville area. [16]
"A TV series like this will go out to 500-plus vendors across the city," he continued. "The show ' Nashville ' used 500 to 1,000 vendors on each season. And because this is '9-1-1: Nashville,' it ...
Scout Taylor-Compton as Erin, (season 4; 6 episodes), a roadie for Juliette's tour who has a fling with Gunnar. Katie Callaway as Christel, (season 4; 5 episodes), Luke's intern for his new label. Mark Collie as Frankie (season 4; 14 episodes), a failing bar owner who Deacon buys out to start The Beverly who ends up hurting the family.
Longtime Nashville reporter and anchor Amy Watson is retiring. The NewsChannel 5 veteran announced on social media she will be retiring on Friday, Oct. 25, after nearly 30 years in journalism.
In responding to a rude Facebook comment, Watson said she is retiring to take care of her mother, who's battling dementia.
From 2006 to 2010, Telemundo was broadcast as a second digital subchannel of WSMV-TV, making it the first full-power Spanish-language TV service in the city. [2] However, after five years on the air, the subchannel went defunct on December 31, 2010, leaving Nashville at the time with only one Spanish-language television station, WLLC-LP (channel 42), the area's Telefutura (now UniMás) outlet ...