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The station's studios are located on Overland Avenue in the Homestead Business Park section of Billings, and its transmitter is located on Coburn Hill southeast of downtown. KULR-TV was the second TV station on the air in Billings; it began broadcasting as KGHL-TV, co-owned with KGHL radio, on March 15, 1958. The station was renamed KULR-TV in ...
This is a list of broadcast television stations that are ... TV on 6.4 Billings: Roundup: 8 31 K31PY-D: KULR-TV: NBC: ... 4.5, QVC on 4.6, HSN on 4.7 8 5 ...
KURL-AM began broadcasting a news/talk format. In 2013, the station celebrated its 50th year of broadcasting. [4] On May 7, 2019, Connoisseur Media announced that it would sell its Billings cluster to Desert Mountain Broadcasting, an entity formed by Connoisseur Billings general manager Cam Maxwell. [5] The sale closed on July 31, 2019.
The station has won awards in the past for its news coverage. [7] Logo before translator sign on. On May 7, 2019, Connoisseur Media announced that it would sell its Billings cluster to Desert Mountain Broadcasting, an entity formed by Connoisseur Billings general manager Cam Maxwell. [8] The sale closed on August 2, 2019. [9]
A combination of affiliation and ownership changes at the various Skyline outlets led to the network dissolving on September 30, 1969. [5] Sample then merged the three stations owned by his Garryowen Corporation-KOOK-TV, KRTV, and KXLF-TV-into the Montana Television Network. [6] The next year, KPAX-TV began in Missoula as a satellite of KXLF-TV ...
The channel airs over the secondary digital subchannels of Cowles' three NBC network affiliated stations in Eastern Washington, including KHQ-TV in Spokane, KNDO in Yakima and KNDU in Richland, as well as the third subchannel of KULR-TV in Billings, Montana. In addition, it is seen on most cable systems throughout the markets they serve.
Originally an independent station, it joined NBC in 1970. [6] In its early years, KYUS was known as the smallest network affiliate in America. [7] [1] The station's principal owner, David Rivenes, did the news, sports, weather and reporting himself [7] — he was also featured in the late-1970s on NBC's Real People and in TV Guide for his
Recently local Cherry Creek radio stations (KBLG-AM, KRZN-FM, KRKX-FM) were purchased by Connoisseur Media LLC. KWMY-FM MY-92-5 was moved to the 105.9 frequency replacing 105.9 The Bar and the longtime former Top-40 station KYYA-FM Y-93.3 (or Y93) went silent for a short period of time. [6] The KURL calls, then on 730 AM, moved to 93.3.