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WCCO-TV (channel 4), branded CBS Minnesota, is a television station licensed to Minneapolis, Minnesota, United States, serving as the CBS outlet for the Twin Cities area. It is owned and operated by the network's CBS News and Stations division, and maintains studios on South 11th Street along Nicollet Mall in downtown Minneapolis; its transmitter is located at the Telefarm complex in Shoreview ...
Area served City of license VC RF Callsign Network Notes Alexandria: 1 16 K16CO-D: Selective TV Guide on 1.2, NASA TV on 1.3 4 33 K33DB-D: CBS () : Start TV on 4.2, Dabl on 4.3, Fave TV on 4.4
At the time, the station was known as WTCN-TV, but it was purchased by WCCO radio in 1952 and became WCCO-TV, with the WTCN-TV call sign being recycled a few years later for channel 11, which eventually became KARE. Moore had a variety of jobs in the early years of channel 4, announcing and hosting for multiple programs.
All of them are labeled in virtual channel number and cable channel number. Current affiliates. City of ... WCCO-TV: 4.3 32: CBS: CBS News and Stations: September 9 ...
WCCO (AM), a radio station (830 AM) licensed to serve Minneapolis, Minnesota, United States WCCO-TV , a television station (channel 32, virtual channel 4) licensed to serve Minneapolis, Minnesota KMNB , a radio station (102.9 FM) licensed to serve Minneapolis, Minnesota, which used the call sign WCCO-FM from May 1969 to November 1983
Fifteen digital and streaming producers and assignment desk editors at Minnesota’s WCCO-TV have been officially recognized as a bargaining unit of SAG-AFTRA after a unanimous vote sanctioned by ...
Midwest also owned the Midwest Sports Channel, which was originally associated with WCCO-TV. MSC became a CBS owned and operated network following its acquisition of WCCO. In 1999, shortly after CBS was acquired by Viacom, MSC was sold to News Corporation and operated as Fox Sports North (now Bally Sports North).
The channel originated sometime in 1982 as WCCO II, a local cable channel owned by Midwest Radio and Television (later Midwest Communications), and created as a project by CBS affiliate WCCO-TV (channel 4, now an owned-and-operated station of the network) that broadcast a slate of local and general entertainment programming. [1]