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YurView Oklahoma (formerly known as The Cox Channel from 2004 to 2017 and as Cox Channel 3 from 1999 to 2004) is a local origination cable television channel based in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, United States, owned by Cox Communications. The channel is available throughout Cox's Oklahoma City and Tulsa-area cable television systems on channel 3.
The concept of the channel dates back to the August 1993 extension of a retransmission consent agreement made between KWTV and Oklahoma City area cable providers Cox Cable (which rebranded as Cox Communications in 1996) and Multimedia Cablevision (whose systems in suburban areas of the city were acquired by Cox in 2000) to continue carriage of the station's signal; as part of the deal, KWTV ...
Oklahoma City: Oklahoma City: 5 7 KOCO-TV: ABC: MeTV on 5.2, Story Television on 5.4, TheGrio on 5.5, getTV on 5.6 Oklahoma City: Oklahoma City: 9 25 KWTV-DT: CBS: News 9 Now (continuous replay of local news) on 9.2 Oklahoma City: Oklahoma City: 13 13 KETA-TV: PBS: World on 13.2, Create 13.3, PBS Kids 13.4 Oklahoma City: Oklahoma City: 14 15 ...
This eventually grew into Cox Business, which now represents $1 billion in annual revenue. In 1995, Cox acquired the Times-Mirror cable properties and as a result became a publicly traded company once again. [8] [9] In 1997, Cox became the first multiple system cable operator to offer phone services to customers following the 1996 Telecom Act.
Southern Arizona News Network: Tucson, Arizona: Cox Communications/KVOA Communications, Inc. March 31, 2010 [21] Launched on September 27, 1953. Northwest Cable News: Pacific Northwest: Tegna: January 6, 2017 [22] Launched on December 18, 1995. Used news resources from co-owned Tegna outlets KING-TV, KREM, KGW and KTVB. Texas Cable News: Texas ...
Oklahoma City: KOCO-TV: 5.2: 7: Hearst Television: December 2012: KOCO-DT2 preempts network programming for a KOCO-produced, half-hour 9:00 p.m. newscast that airs seven nights a week, and day-of-air repeats of Hearst-distributed political newsmagazine Matter of Fact airing after that newscast on Sunday nights. Tulsa: KOKI-TV: 23.2: 22: Fox ...
The station was exclusively available over-the-air in the market until June 1993, when must-carry rules passed by the FCC that allowed broadcast stations to request mandatory carriage on cable providers went into effect. Cox Cable—whose Oklahoma City system, at the time, only served the city proper and select inner-city suburbs—began ...
The deal closed on August 22, 2019, thus placing Fox Sports Oklahoma in common ownership with Sinclair stations KOKH-TV/KOCB in the network's homebase of Oklahoma City, and KTUL in Tulsa. [4] It was subsequently renamed Bally Sports Oklahoma on March 31, 2021.