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KOMO-TV began operating on December 11, 1953, as an NBC affiliate, owing to KOMO radio's long-time relationship with the NBC Radio Network. [2] It is the fourth-oldest television station in the Seattle–Tacoma area.
KOMO-TV, Seattle, Washington television station; KTTH, Seattle, Washington radio station, which held the KOMO call sign during part of 1926; KNWN (AM), Seattle, Washington radio station, which held the KOMO call sign from 1926 until 2022; KNWN-FM, Oakville, Washington radio station (97.7 FM), known as KOMO-FM from 2009 until 2022
Pool started his career at KOMO-TV as an intern while studying at the University of Washington. After graduating in 1978, Pool became a writer, reporter, and eventually a weathercaster. [1] [2] In the 1980s, Pool began hosting a program on KOMO-TV titled Front Runners which aired every Saturday. [2]
The station began broadcasting as KMO-TV on August 2, 1953, from studios in Tacoma and a transmitter near Ruston. [3] KMO-TV briefly carried NBC programs until Seattle's KOMO-TV began broadcasting on December 11. [4] After that, KMO-TV's output primarily consisted of local and syndicated programs. [5]
Stations are listed in alphabetical order by city of license. A blue background indicates an affiliate originating as a digital subchannel. A gray background indicates a low-power station or translator. A lavender blue background indicates an affiliate originating as a digital subchannel of a low-power station.
In 1993, Johnson initially started out as the KOMO 4 station's weekend sports anchor, replacing longtime KOMO sportscaster Rick Meeder and fill-in sports anchor Bob Rondeau. In 1994, Johnson created a popular segment titled "Eric's Little Heroes", which focuses on the athletic plight of Seattle-area children in Little League games across the ...
Fisher owned radio stations in Seattle and in Great Falls, Montana, as well as TV stations in Washington, Oregon, Idaho, California and other markets. Although Sinclair primarily owns television stations, the company said it would retain KPLZ, talk radio KVI , all-news radio KOMO and continued to lease KOMO-FM as a simulcast of KOMO (AM) (KOMO ...
On June 10, 2008 KOMO-TV announced that Northwest Afternoon was cancelled because of increased competition against first-run syndicated fare from Dr. Phil on KING-TV, Rachael Ray on KIRO-TV, and Maury on KCPQ. These shows had made inroads into Northwest Afternoon's once-comfortable ratings, making it difficult for station management to continue ...