enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. WSFA - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/WSFA

    Owing to WSFA radio's long affiliation with NBC, channel 12 has been Montgomery's NBC affiliate for its entire existence. Only two months later, in February 1955, Persons sold WSFA-AM-TV to the Gaylord family's Oklahoma Publishing Company, earning a handsome return on his original investment of a quarter-century earlier. At that time, WSFA-AM ...

  3. Tom Foreman - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tom_Foreman

    Tom Foreman (born December 6, 1959) is an American broadcast journalist for CNN whose reporting experience spans more than three decades. Beginning as a local television reporter in Montgomery, Alabama, at WSFA, he continued on to work for WWL-TV, the CBS affiliate in New Orleans, Louisiana.

  4. James Spann - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/James_Spann

    In the fall of 1978, Spann moved to WSFA in Montgomery as a weekend sports anchor and part-time weatherman. After spending the summer of 1979 as afternoon-drive announcer at Top 40 station WHHY-FM ("Y102") in Montgomery, he was hired at WAPI-TV in Birmingham as chief weatherman, despite having no formal weather education. At the age of 23, he ...

  5. KFOR-TV - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/KFOR-TV

    The television station's news department used WKY's news staff, including Frank McGee, who had joined WKY in 1947 and added duties on the TV side in 1950 under the air name "Mack Rogers"; [206] during this time, WKY and WKY-TV used stage names for their airstaff that could be retained as intellectual property in the event an on-air personality ...

  6. WSFA Journal - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/WSFA_Journal

    The WSFA Journal is a science-fiction fanzine that was published approximately once a month from 1965 to 2012 by the Washington Science Fiction Association (WSFA).. The journal typically contains reviews of books, movies, science fiction fanzines, science fiction conventions, TV shows, and websites; obituaries; minutes of WSFA meetings; humor; original fantasy and science fiction; cartoons ...

  7. Talk:WSFA - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Talk:WSFA

    The Washington Science Fiction Association is abbreviated to WSFA to the point that people often don't know what it stands for which is especially true of WSFA Press and the WSFA Small Press Award. People have been winding up here so I've added the links to the other WSFA. Kovar 19:04, 14 March 2012 (UTC)

  8. WCOV-TV - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/WCOV-TV

    WCOV-TV was the first television station to be built in Montgomery, beginning broadcasting on April 17, 1953. It was an affiliate of CBS; however, it was on the new ultra high frequency (UHF) band. When Montgomery's allocated very high frequency (VHF) station, WSFA-TV, began in late 1954, it immediately came to dominate the Montgomery market ...

  9. Frank McGee (journalist) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Frank_McGee_(journalist)

    McGee began his broadcast news career at KGFF in Shawnee, Oklahoma, in 1946 then moved to WKY-TV, now KFOR-TV, in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, under the stage name Mack Rogers. In 1955, the owners of WKY purchased WSFA-TV in Montgomery, Alabama, and sent McGee there as news director. WSFA was an affiliate of NBC.