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WWOR-TV (channel 9) is a television station licensed to Secaucus, New Jersey, United States, serving the New York metropolitan area as the flagship of the MyNetworkTV programming service. It is owned and operated by Fox Television Stations alongside Fox flagship WNYW (channel 5).
10:00am–12:00pm ET/7:00am–9:00am PT Fox News Live: Various December 21, 2024: Weekend hard news and business program. Studio G, New York City 12:00pm–2:00pm ET/9:00am–11:00am ET Fox News Live: Griff Jenkins and Various 1999: Weekend hard news program. Studio 2, Washington, D.C. 2:00pm ET/11:00am PT Eric Shawn and Arthel Neville: Studio ...
After News Corporation split into two companies on June 28, 2013, spinning off its publishing assets (including the New York Post) into a new News Corp, WNYW became part of 21st Century Fox. [38] On December 14, 2017, The Walt Disney Company , owner of ABC owned-and-operated station WABC-TV (channel 7), announced its intent to buy the assets of ...
KZJO (channel 22), branded as Fox 13+, is a television station in Seattle, Washington, United States, broadcasting the MyNetworkTV programming service. It is owned and operated by Fox Television Stations alongside Tacoma -licensed Fox outlet KCPQ (channel 13).
(CBS News and Stations) WCBS-TV 2: New York City, New York CBS network flagship station WCCO-TV 4: Minneapolis–Saint Paul, Minnesota: WHP-TV 21 Harrisburg, Pennsylvania Sinclair Broadcast Group WRGB 6 Schenectady–Albany, New York: One of the first American television stations WROC-TV 8 Rochester, New York Nexstar Media Group (Nexstar ...
The KCPQ and KZJO studios in Seattle. The first local news service on channel 13 operated when the station was KMO-TV in 1953; [130] the next time channel 13 attempted a regular local newscast was in 1981, when the station aired regular news updates, expanding briefly by running a half-hour 10 p.m. newscast by the mid-1980s. This news operation ...
KCTS-TV (channel 9), branded Cascade PBS, is a PBS member television station in Seattle, Washington, United States, owned by Cascade Public Media.The station's studios are located at Broadway and Boren Avenue in Seattle's First Hill neighborhood, and its transmitter is located at 18th Avenue and E. Madison Street on the city's Capitol Hill.
With the exception of WCVB-TV (which was subsequently sold to the Hearst Corporation), all of the former Metromedia stations formed the nucleus of the Fox Broadcasting Company (which began operations on October 9, 1986), while MPC was folded into 20th Century Fox Television. The transactions became official on March 6, 1986.