Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
WMUR-TV (channel 9) is a television station licensed to Manchester, New Hampshire, United States, serving as the ABC affiliate to most of New Hampshire. Owned by Hearst Television, the station maintains studios on South Commercial Street in downtown Manchester, and its transmitter is located on the south peak of Mount Uncanoonuc in Goffstown.
The introductions of each segment and of the program itself are broadcast live, while on-location material is pre-recorded. On October 25, 2006, the WCVB edition of Chronicle began broadcasting in high definition, converting all story segments to a letterboxed format. It is unknown as to whether the WMUR New Hampshire edition will follow suit.
This is a list of broadcast television stations that are licensed in the U.S. state of New Hampshire. Note: The state of New Hampshire is also part of the Boston television market , with the exceptions of Grafton & Sullivan counties in the Burlington, VT market , along with Carroll & Coös counties in the Portland, ME market .
Marquette Radio broadcasts on campus via Cable radio channel 96 and to the world through the live stream online. Marquette Radio is open to all current Marquette University students and offers diverse programming including talk, sports, news and music intensive shows.
This is a list of United States television stations which broadcast using the ATSC 3.0 ... Norfolk/ Portsmouth/ Newport News, VA: WMTO-LD: 6 WNLO-CD: 14 WAVY-TV: NBC: 10:
AOL latest headlines, entertainment, sports, articles for business, health and world news.
The station signed on the air on October 2, 1941, as WMUR, owned by former New Hampshire Governor Francis P. Murphy. [4] WMUR was an NBC Blue Network affiliate. [5] WMUR carried the Blue Network line up of dramas, comedies, news and sports during the "Golden Age of Radio". The Blue Network later became ABC Radio. [6]
Hearst-Argyle was formed in 1997 with the merger of Hearst Corporation's broadcasting division and stations owned by Argyle Television Holdings II, [1] which is partially related to the company of the same name who (in 1994) sold its stations to New World Communications, stations that eventually became Fox-owned stations (Hearst itself, unusual for any American broadcast group, has never held ...