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KVOA (channel 4) is a television station in Tucson, Arizona, United States, affiliated with NBC and owned by Allen Media Group.The station's studios are located on West Elm Street north of downtown Tucson, and its primary transmitter is located atop Mount Bigelow, northeast of the city, supplemented by translators in the Tucson Mountains and in Sierra Vista.
(The Center Square) — John McLean, the Democratic Senate nominee in Arizona’s 17th Legislative District, died in a vehicle crash on Friday morning, according to the Tucson Police Department.
Historically, KVOA (from 1980 to the mid-2000s) and KOLD (prior to then and since) have led the news ratings in Tucson. [17] However, KGUN became more competitive in the 1990s and 2000s, most notably under Forrest Carr, a news director who instituted a "Viewer's Bill of Rights" and also established an ombudsman position, making KGUN one of just ...
Jimmy Stewart (born 1941) is an American retired television meteorologist and photographer. He was the chief meteorologist for KVOA-TV 4 in Tucson, Arizona from 1998 until his retirement in 2011, and is among the most well-known television personalities in the area. [1]
Tuesday’s Arizona Supreme Court ruling upholding a 160-year-old, near-total ban on abortion cemented the state's place at the center of politics in 2024.
Sean Edmund Mooney (born May 21, 1959) [1] is an American news anchor and former World Wrestling Federation (WWF, now WWE) play-by-play announcer. He now works as an anchor for KVOA, the NBC affiliate in Tucson, Arizona and the National Wrestling Alliance. [2] He was born in Rochester, New York.
KTVK was also involved with news production and simulcasts for the Tucson market when Belo owned and operated KMSB, Tucson's Fox affiliate. In 2003, KMSB began a 9 p.m. newscast, which originally was produced in Phoenix and used news reporting from KMSB-employed reporters and from Tucson NBC affiliate KVOA.
However, by the 1960s, the station was leading the news ratings in the Tucson market, a status it would hold until the late 1970s, when KVOA took the lead. [40] The station continued in second or third place for the next quarter-century, with the station reaching a nadir after being acquired by News-Press & Gazette.