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The mast atop the Westward Ho was built for and served as the first transmitter site of KPHO-TV.. On March 4, 1948, a consortium of four men doing business as the Phoenix Television Company—R. L. Wheelock, W. L. Pickens, H. H. Coffield, and John B. Mills—filed an application with the Federal Communications Commission for a construction permit to build a new television station on channel 5 ...
He contributed to NBC Weather Plus+, NBC Nightly News, and other NBC News/MSNBC/CNBC programs. McLaughlin's prior stint in Phoenix was as the longtime Chief Meteorologist, as well as anchor and general assignment reporter at NBC affiliate KPNX Channel 12. Currently he is a meteorologist, news anchor and reporter for KPHO CBS 5 in Phoenix ...
KTVK (channel 3) is an independent television station in Phoenix, Arizona, United States.It is owned by Gray Media alongside CBS affiliate KPHO-TV (channel 5) and low-power station KPHE-LD (channel 44), a grouping known as "Arizona's Family".
Ace TV on 31.2, The Walk TV on 31.3, Retro TV on 31.4, Heartland on 31.5, The Family Channel on 31.6, One America News Network on 31.7, PurpleTV on 31.8 Phoenix 40
On January 29, 2014, [5] he joined KTVK 3 (3TV), based in Phoenix as an anchor of the show Good Evening Arizona. [6] In Phoenix he's known as Brandon Lee. He co-anchored the 6:30 p.m.and 10:00 p.m. news broadcasts on Phoenix-based Arizona Family channels KTVK (3TV) and KPHO (CBS5), with Yetta Gibson.
The CEO of the Phoenix Suns and Mercury, Josh Bartelstein, had previously cited a "goal of wide distribution" for the teams in the face of cord cutting affecting the availability of RSNs. [23] Gray announced, in conjunction with the Suns deal, that Arizona's Family Sports and Entertainment Network would be broadcast on the 13.5 subchannel of ...
KOBI in Medford, Oregon (primary from 1953 to 1978 and secondary from 1978 to 1983); KSL-TV in Salt Lake City, Utah (1949 to 1995); WAGA-TV in Atlanta, Georgia (1949 to 1994) ...
While the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) worked its way toward ending a years-long freeze on new television station grants initiated in 1948, it issued a near-final version of the table of allocations for Arizona in 1951 that gave Phoenix channels 4 (changed to 3 the next year), 5 (KPHO-TV, the only pre-freeze station in the state), 8, and 10.