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Grants Pass: Grants Pass: 5 33 K33PM-D: KOBI: NBC: Cozi TV on 5.2, Quest on 5.3 Grants Pass: Grants Pass: 8 19 K19HS-D: KSYS: PBS: World on 8.2, Create on 8.3, PBS Kids on 8.4 Grants Pass: Grants Pass: 12 15 K15BP-D: KDRV: ABC: Antenna TV on 12.2, True Crime Network on 12.3 Grants Pass: Grants Pass: 26 34 K34NO-D: KMVU-DT: Fox: MeTV on 26.2 ...
Grants Pass is a city in and the county seat of Josephine County, Oregon, United States. [8] The city is located on Interstate 5 , northwest of Medford , along the Rogue River . The population is 39,194 according to the 2020 census , making it the 15th most populous city in Oregon .
KBLN-TV (channel 30) is a religious television station licensed to Grants Pass, Oregon, United States, serving the Medford area as an affiliate of the Three Angels Broadcasting Network (3ABN). Owned by Better Life Television, the station maintains studios on Northeast 9th Street in Grants Pass and a transmitter on Grants Pass Peak.
News/Talk: KACI-FM: ... Grants Pass Broadcasting Corp: Classic country ... Asian Pacific American Network of Oregon: Variety KVBL: 103.1 FM: Union: KJDY, LLC:
In September 2011, KTMT and Radio Medford started a working relationship with KDRV NewsWatch 12+ (Channel 12.2 over-the-air and channel 291 on Charter Cable in the Rogue Valley) with simulcast coverage of the "Friday Night Blitz Game Of The Week" during the high school football season and the "Roundball Wrap Game Of The Week" during the high school basketball season.
[3] [5] When the Courier became a daily in 1910, Grants Pass was the smallest city in the world to have leased wire service from the United Press. [5] The Daily Courier received the 2018 Baker Public Service Award from the Oregon Newspaper Publishers Association for its coverage of the Taylor Creek and Klondike wildfires. [6]
The earliest newspaper in Oregon was the Oregon Spectator, published in Oregon City from 1846, by a press association headed by George Abernethy. [4] This was joined in November 1850 by the Milwaukie Western Star and two partisan papers – the Whig Oregonian, published in Portland beginning on December 4, 1850, and the Democratic Statesman ...
Licensed to Harbeck-Fruitdale, Oregon, United States, the station serves Southern Oregon, including Grants Pass, Medford, and the Illinois Valley. The station is currently owned by Grants Pass Broadcasting Corp. [3]