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In 2007, DiversityInc magazine named Cox Communications #25 in its Top 50 Companies for Diversity. Cox climbed to the sixth position on Diversity Inc.'s 2008 list. [14] Also in 2008, Cox was named #8 on the Top 10 Companies for African Americans. [15]
Connecticut Public Broadcasting: Satellite of WEDH. Spirit on 49.3 Hartford/New Haven: Hartford: 3 36 WFSB: CBS: Gray Television: Ion Mystery on 3.2, Laff on 3.3, WWAX-LD on 3.4 Hartford/New Haven: New Haven: 8 10 WTNH: ABC: Nexstar Media Group: Rewind TV on 8.2 Hartford/New Haven: Hartford: 19 31 WRDM-CD: Telemundo: NBC Owned Television ...
The following is a list of stations owned or operated by Gray Television. Gray owns or operates 180 stations across 113 markets in the United States , ranging from as large as Atlanta, Georgia , to one of the smallest markets, North Platte, Nebraska .
Cox Media Group owns, operates or provides sales and marketing services to 50 stations in 10 markets. This radio portfolio includes nine AM stations and forty-one FM stations. [38] Cox Radio became a public company, majority owned by Cox Enterprises, in 1996. Around April 2009, Cox Enterprises proposed a US$69-million takeover offer of Cox Radio.
WFXT (channel 25) is a television station in Boston, Massachusetts, United States, affiliated with the Fox network and owned by Cox Media Group.Its studios are located on Fox Drive (near the Boston-Providence Turnpike) in Dedham, and its transmitter is located on Cabot Street in Needham.
WFSB presently broadcasts 41 + 1 ⁄ 2 hours of news per week (with 6 + 1 ⁄ 2 hours each weekday and 4 + 1 ⁄ 2 hours each on Saturdays and Sundays). WFSB has been far and away the ratings leader in the Hartford–New Haven television market for as long as it has been a CBS affiliate, [16] with WTNH and WVIT regularly switching between a distant second and third place. [17]
Cox Enterprises, a media and communications company Cox Communications, cable provider; Cox Media Group, a company that owns television and radio stations; Cox Automotive, an Atlanta-based business unit of Cox Enterprises; Cox Models, aka Cox Hobbies; Cox Sports, a regional sports network that served the United States New England region until 2012
This allowed David Chase to grant his son permission—with an FCC waiver [19] —to name the station WTIC-TV, allowing the new channel 61 to trade on the WTIC call letters' 60-year heritage in Connecticut. Arnold Chase had wanted to use the WTIC call letters for some time, knowing they would give his new station instant visibility and credibility.