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Pages in category "Television personalities from Louisville, Kentucky" The following 24 pages are in this category, out of 24 total. This list may not reflect recent changes .
WCHS-TV (channel 8) is a television station licensed to Charleston, West Virginia, United States, serving the Charleston–Huntington market as an affiliate of ABC and Fox.It is owned by Sinclair Broadcast Group, which provides certain services to WVAH-TV (channel 11, also licensed to Charleston) under a local marketing agreement (LMA) with Cunningham Broadcasting.
ZZ Packer, writer; born in Chicago; lived in Louisville in her teens and graduated from Seneca High School in 1990; Bill Plaschke, Los Angeles sports columnist, panelist on ESPN's Around the Horn; George Dennison Prentice, newspaper editor and journalist for the Louisville Journal; Scott Ritcher, magazine publisher of K Composite Magazine, musician
As a Fox affiliate, WVAH had aired newscasts produced by sister station WCHS under the Eyewitness News branding. This included Eyewitness News This Morning on Fox 11 , which was seen weekday mornings from 6 to 8 a.m., along with a 6:30 p.m. half-hour newscast weeknights, and an hour-long 10 p.m. newscast every night until the Fox affiliation ...
She began her broadcasting career at WCHS-TV as a news producer and fill-in sports anchor/reporter in Charleston, West Virginia, [2] and also worked in Manchester, New Hampshire, and Bangor, Maine. She then was a sports anchor/reporter at KRIV in Houston from 1997 to 1999. Bonner was the main sports anchor at Los Angeles' KCOP-TV from 1999 to 2002.
The local daily newspaper in Louisville is The Courier-Journal, a property of the Gannett chain. Local weekly newspapers include Business First of Louisville, Louisville Defender (African American paper published since 1933), Louisville Eccentric Observer (or LEO, a free alternative paper) and The Voice-Tribune.
On March 31, 2014, concurrent with Gray's purchase of WQCW, WSAZ-TV moved its 10 p.m. newscast from WSAZ-DT2, its second digital subchannel, to WQCW. The newscast was also expanded from thirty minutes to one hour, putting it in direct competition with the 10 p.m. newscast on WVAH that is produced by ABC affiliate WCHS-TV (channel 8).
In 2009, WKMJ-DT2 began broadcasting the Kentucky Channel, simulcasting the DT3 subchannel of KET's other stations. [ citation needed ] At the same time, KET ED, the Education Channel became available on WKMJ-DT3 on a 24-hour-a-day basis; this ended in September 2009, when WKMJ-DT3 went silent for four years following that linear service's ...