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The station returned to the air after more than a decade of inactivity on November 14, 1967, as WAJA-TV. [13] The call sign came from Finkel's AJA Corporation. [14] WAJA-TV presented daily stock market reporting during the business day using The Stock Market Observer format pioneered by WCIU-TV in Chicago. [12]
A number of new commercial networks airing specialty programming such as movies, reruns of classic series and lifestyle programs have been created from companies like Weigel Broadcasting, Sinclair Broadcast Group and even owners of the major networks such as Fox Corporation (through the Fox Entertainment subsidiary), Paramount Global (through ...
This "statement of policy" ad was published in newspapers on WLBW-TV's first day of operations. [19]As the temporary license granted to L. B. Wilson, Inc. was basically a "license by default", [13] replacement station WLBW-TV was quickly assembled by company president Charles Topmiller, who took over for the company's namesake upon his 1954 death (and which the call sign was selected in ...
The family of Hannah Kobayashi, 30, who has been missing since Friday, Nov. 8, said she felt “scared” in the text messages while staying in L.A. ahead of her scheduled connecting flight to New ...
The logo of Fox Broadcasting Company from 1987 to 1993. Between 1994 and 1996, a wide-ranging realignment of television network affiliations took place in the United States as the result of a multimillion-dollar deal between the Fox Broadcasting Company and New World Communications, announced on May 23, 1994.
Junior's Cheesecake is a New York City institution. Its known for its delicious crowd-pleasing desserts, like this massive strawberry cheesecake. If you dream of NYC mainstays, this one belongs on ...
By 2021, after carving out a role in and experiencing success with his new career, Nussbaum had developed a new dream, one built on the foundation of his love for construction, as well as a desire ...
On June 15, 1985, the new station launched using the 96X moniker and the WCJX call letters. (Within months of WMJX folding, a radio station in Boston picked up the call letters.) The $2.95 million investment [ 47 ] Wodlinger made paid off when Beasley Broadcast Group acquired WCJX in September for $10.6 million, entering the Miami market.