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WJFW-TV is broadcast from a primary transmitter in Starks, Wisconsin, and translator W27AU-D on Mosinee Hill, serving the immediate Wausau area. Channel 12 went on the air as WAEO-TV on October 20, 1966. It was built by and named for Alvin E. O'Konski, a United States congressman and broadcaster. The station was off the air for nearly 10 months ...
Garbaciak joined Channel 12 in 2006 as a contributing correspondent and became a news anchor in 2014. Before her time at Channel 12, she was a reporter and anchor at Milwaukee's WITI-TV (Channel 6 ...
The following year, he added co-anchoring duties at 10 p.m., and then co-anchor at 6 p.m. in 2018. Paolantonio's departure will come two months after the exit of another longtime Channel 12 news ...
The station first signed on the air on October 27, 1954, as WTVW (for its on-air slogan "Wisconsin's Television Window"). In early 1955, the station was purchased by the Hearst Corporation, publishers of The Milwaukee Sentinel and owners of WISN radio (1130 AM); the new owners changed channel 12's call letters to WISN-TV, after its radio sister (whose calls were derived from now-defunct ...
Gutiérrez joined Channel 12 in January 2021, from Chicago's WCIU-TV, as a "breaking news reporter" and 4:30 a.m. anchor on the Milwaukee station's morning newscasts, as well as anchor of Channel ...
After serving as lead male anchor for WISN-TV for 25 years, Taff retired on May 25, 2005. [7] [8] Taff was inducted into the Milwaukee Media Hall of Fame on October 23, 2009. [9] He lives in New Braunfels, Texas. [2] He has two daughters DiAnn Curtis and Denise McMahan.
WISN-TV (Channel 12) continued its news-lineup tweaking Monday with the announcement that morning co-anchor Gerron Jordan has been named anchor of the Milwaukee ABC affiliate's 11 a.m. newscast.
WAOW's arrangement with Fox came to an end in December 1999, when the Wittenberg-licensed WFXS (channel 55) signed on to become Central Wisconsin's first full-time Fox station. On June 25, 2002, WAOW became the first commercial television station in the Wausau–Rhinelander market to broadcast in high-definition; WYOW would join them on October 24.