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The arena was designed by the 2015 Driehaus Prize winner David M. Schwarz [3] and is owned by Fort Worth and managed by the not-for-profit Multipurpose Arena Fort Worth (MAFW). It hosts concerts, sporting events, and family entertainment, and serves as the home of the Fort Worth Stock Show & Rodeo .
The UHF channel 58 allocation in the Dallas–Fort Worth market was initially applied for broadcasting use by the Metroplex Broadcasting Company (owned by Adam Clayton Powell III (son of civil rights activist and congressman Adam Clayton Powell Jr.) and former KDFW (channel 4) anchor/reporter Barbara Harrison) for a television station under the call letters KDIA-TV; the call sign was assigned ...
Armenian calendar: 977 ԹՎ ՋՀԷ: Assyrian calendar: 6278: Balinese saka calendar: 1449–1450: Bengali calendar: 934–935: Berber calendar: 2478: English Regnal year: 19 Hen. 8 – 20 Hen. 8: Buddhist calendar: 2072: Burmese calendar: 890: Byzantine calendar: 7036–7037: Chinese calendar: 丁亥年 (Fire Pig) 4225 or 4018 — to ...
In May 1993, KDFW became the first television station in Dallas–Fort Worth to launch a weekend morning newscast, with the debut of a two-hour Saturday broadcast from 8 to 10 a.m. (the program—which, uniformly with the weekday morning newscasts and formerly titled News 4 Texas Morning Edition, was re-titled Good Day Dallas [now Fox 4 Good ...
Dallas Observer Music Awards, Best New Music Venue – 2015 [36] D Magazine Best of Big D, Best Local Music Venue – 2015 [37] Dallas Observer: The 5 Best New Concert Venues in Dallas/Fort Worth – 2015 [38] Consequence of Sound: The 100 Greatest American Music Venues, #86 – 2016 [39]
It is also the former home of the Fort Worth Texans ice hockey team, and it hosted a PBR Bud Light Cup Series (later Built Ford Tough Series) event annually from 1995 through 2004. [2] Events at the WRMC attract over two million visitors annually. The complex contains the following facilities: Will Rogers Coliseum (5,652 seats)
Billy Bob Barnett, a Texas A&M University graduate and professional football player, teamed up with nightclub owner and former car salesman, Spencer Taylor. While looking for a location to fit their idea, the men decided upon an abandoned 100,000-square-foot department store that was at one time an open-air cattle barn.