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KCRA-TV (channel 3) is a television station in Sacramento, California, United States, affiliated with NBC. It is owned by Hearst Television alongside Stockton -licensed dual CW / MyNetworkTV affiliate KQCA (channel 58).
Channel Network affiliation City of license Owner Status KCRA-TV: 3 (digital 35) NBC: Sacramento: Hearst Television: KVIE: 6 (digital 9) PBS: KVIE Inc. KBTV-CD: 8 (digital 27) Buzzr: Innovate Corp. (HC2 LPTV Holdings, Inc.) KXTV: Both virtual and digital channel 10 ABC: Tegna Inc.
Bob left KCRA on his own terms, with his last show broadcast on March 14, 1970. However, after starting a new show on KTVU, Bob returned to Sacramento television, this time at KTXL Channel 40 on May 9, 1970, with The Bob Wilkins Double Horror Show , an all-new production, which ran successfully for over a decade.
Weather segments with Mark Finan on KCRA-TV is something capital region viewers have all experienced since 1991. ... Sacramento’s chief meteorologist is retiring from Channel 3 with his final ...
Sacramento: 3 35 KCRA-TV: NBC: MeTV on 3.2, Story Television on 3.3, QVC2 on 3.4 6 9 KVIE: PBS: PBS KVIE 2 on 6.2, World on 6.3, PBS Kids on 6.4 10 10/36 KXTV: ABC: True Crime Network on 10.2, Grit on 10.3, Ion Mystery on 10.4, Quest on 10.5, The Nest on 10.6, Confess by Nosey on 10.7, Shop LC on 10.9 Sacramento: Stockton: 13 25 KOVR: CBS
Lambert currently resides in Sacramento with her husband, Lloyd E. Levine [7] whom she married on September 21, 2008, [8] and they have two children. Lambert and Levine, then the Assemblymember from California's 40th Assembly District, met on a flight from Seattle to Sacramento in November 2005. [9] Her first daughter was born in 2010. [8]
In 1955, it launched the television station KCRA-TV in Sacramento and purchased KCRA-AM (now KIFM), making it the pair of stations. It later purchased Seattle television station KCPQ from Clover Park School District, and became an independent station. [2] In 1994, KQCA entered a local marketing agreement with Kelly-owned KCRA-TV.
Until 1952, the FCC had allocated only 6 television channels to the Bay Area, but in 1954 KSAN [2] began transmitting on UHF channel 32 and KQED began educational programming on channel 9. By 1956, the Sacramento area had KCRA, KBET KOVR, and KCCC on the air, the San Jose area had KSBW and KNTV, and San Francisco had KRON, KPIX, KGO, KQED, and ...