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WSOC-TV presently broadcasts 37½ hours of locally produced newscasts each week (with 5½ hours each weekday and five hours each on Saturdays and Sundays); in addition, the station produces an additional 17 hours of newscasts each week for sister station WAXN-TV (in the form of a two-hour extension of WSOC's weekday morning newscast and an hour-long 10 p.m. newscast).
WSOC-TV produces 22 hours of locally produced newscasts each week for WAXN-TV (with four hours each weekday and a half-hour each on Saturdays and Sundays). [14] Although WSOC had operated WAXN since the station's inception, it did not produce a newscast for channel 64 until 1999, when it began producing a nightly 10 p.m. newscast.
WSOC may refer to: WSOC-TV, a television station (channel 9 virtual/19 digital) licensed to Charlotte, North Carolina, United States; WSOC-FM, a radio station (103.7 FM) licensed to Charlotte, North Carolina, United States; WYFQ, a radio station (930 AM) licensed to Charlotte, North Carolina, United States, which used the call sign WSOC until ...
The new channel 18 facility was capable of 1.35 million watts of power, giving WCCB a coverage area comparable to those of WBTV and WSOC-TV. In 1967, WSOC-TV dropped all ABC programming and became a full-time NBC affiliate, leaving WCCB-TV to be the exclusive ABC affiliate. It took Charlotte 18 years to finally gain full service from all three ...
The studios of ABC affiliate WSOC-TV/Charlotte are shut down for an hour and its 5PM newscast ends early after a woman enters the lobby with a gun and apparently intending to commit suicide. The woman is later apprehended and her gun is discovered to be unloaded.
The following is the 1976–77 network television schedule for the three major English language commercial broadcast networks in the United States.The schedule covers primetime hours from September 1976 through August 1977.
Harold Johnson (born c. 1941) [1] is an American sportscaster. He was sports director for WSOC-TV in Charlotte, North Carolina for 26 years, during which time he won four Emmy Awards and was nominated for two others. [2]
It gained a television sister in 1957, when WSOC-TV signed on as an NBC-TV affiliate. In 1960, WSOC moved from AM 1240 to AM 930. [2] As network programming moved from radio to television, WSOC-AM-FM began airing a local full service middle of the road format with hourly NBC Radio newscasts, sports and features.