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KIRO-TV (channel 7) is a television station in Seattle, Washington, United States, affiliated with CBS and Telemundo. Owned by Cox Media Group , the station maintains studios on Third Avenue in the Belltown section of Downtown Seattle , and its transmitter is located in the city's Queen Anne neighborhood, adjacent to the station's original studios.
TV stations formerly owned by Sinclair Broadcast Group; City of license / Market Station Channel Years owned Current ownership status Anniston, AL: WJSU-TV [ρ] 40: 2014–2015 [o] WGWW; Howard Stirk Holdings: Tuscaloosa, AL: WCFT-TV [ρ] 33: 2014–2015 [o] WSES; Howard Stirk Holdings Stockton–Sacramento, CA: KOVR: 13: 1997–2005: CBS News ...
Area served City of license VC RF Callsign Network Notes Bellingham: Bellingham: 12 14 KVOS-TV: UNI: Movies! on 12.2, MeTV on 12.3, Catchy Comedy on 12.4, Start TV on 12.5, MeTV+ on 12.6, Story on 12.7, H&I on 12.8, MeTV Toons on 12.9
CBS agreed to settle the suit in 1960 by taking on both KIRO-TV and KTNT-TV as primary affiliates. [5] This arrangement lasted until September 1962, when channel 7 became the sole CBS station for western Washington. [6] Channel 11 was left to once again become an independent station, the second in the market after KTVW (channel 13, now KCPQ).
KIRO-TV (DRT) in Issaquah, Washington, on virtual channel 7; KIRO-TV (DRT) in Olympia, Washington, on virtual channel 7; KKDJ-CD in Visalia, California; KMYA-DT in Camden, Arkansas; KNIC-DT in Blanco, Texas; KOCE-TV in Huntington Beach, California, uses KSCI's spectrum, on virtual channel 50; KOHD in Bend, Oregon; KOPX-TV in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma
The station's virtual channel number follows the call letters. For the table for the owned-and-operated outlets, the number in parentheses that follows is the station's actual digital channel number; the digital channel number is listed as a separate column in the list of private affiliates. The article also includes a list of its former ...
During her tenure at KIRO, she won multiple local Emmy Awards for broadcasting; locals also still remember her for hosting the Big Money Movie in the afternoon. Because of her success in Seattle, Hill was approached to co-anchor the Channel 2 News at CBS owned-and-operated KNXT (now KCBS-TV) in Los Angeles in 1974. [4]
This peak was already home to the KING-TV transmitter and would soon be the site for KOMO-TV as well. Queen City Broadcasting was awarded Seattle's last remaining VHF TV license in 1958, and signed on as CBS affiliate KIRO-TV on February 8. Aside from a short two-and-a-half year period from 1995 to 1997 when it served as a UPN station, KIRO-TV ...