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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]
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 Stations: TeleXitos on 19.2 Hartford/New Haven: Waterbury: 20 33 WCCT-TV ...
The station features local newsbreaks, as well as updates from CBS News Radio. WTIC's newsroom is staffed 24 hours a day with a team of local newscasters and reporters. It shares some news and weather forecasts with WFSB, the CBS TV affiliate in Hartford. Listeners have been setting their watches to WTIC for many years.
City of license / Market Station Years owned Current status Albany, Georgia: WALB 1590 1946–1960 [M]: WALG, owned by First Media Services : Quincy, Illinois: WGEM 1440 : 2021–2023 [G]
After leaving WFSB, in addition to being an independent TV producer, Baughns-Wallace was the host of Essence, a program for black women that was broadcast on WPIX in New York City. [6] In 1983, Baughns-Wallace joined the staff of WTNH in New Haven, Connecticut, tasked with helping to begin Newscope, a program that blended local stories with ...
Denise D'Ascenzo Cooke (January 30, 1958 – December 7, 2019) was an American television news anchorwoman at WFSB-TV in Hartford, Connecticut. She worked there for 33 years (1986–2019), becoming the longest-serving anchor at WFSB-TV. D'Ascenzo was also the longest-serving news anchor at any Connecticut television station. [1]
Pat Sheehan, born c. 1945, is a retired American television news anchor from Connecticut.. Sheehan spent most of his TV journalism career at WTNH-TV from 1971-74 and from 1979-83, WFSB-TV from 1974-79 and from 1983-88, and WTIC-TV from 1989-99, as a reporter, and then an anchor, that made him a Connecticut Television icon.
Eventually, live NOAA National Weather Service radar data from several regional sites began to be used interchangeably with WFSB's radar and was branded on WSHM as "Pinpoint Doppler". Following Meredith's purchase of WGGB, the news operations of WGGB and WSHM were merged under the Western Mass News branding on April 21, 2015