Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Because of the amount of news programming on the station, channel 9 is known for showing the most police chases among the Los Angeles market's news-producing stations. Often regular news programming on KCAL is suspended to cover a police chase, and programs that follow the newscast are sometimes preempted to show the chase's conclusion.
6 KLBS Burbank/Los Angeles (Lexington Broadcasting Services, Warner Bros. Programming, Movies!, religious, Heroes & Icons, Sports, Events, News)* 6 KHTV-CD Los Angeles * 7 KABC-TV Los Angeles * 8 KSLA-TV Los Angeles (Disney, Buena Vista Broadcasting, The Walt Disney Company, GoldStar Broadcasting Company, Independent)*
An early KECA-TV logo slide from the 1950s. Channel 7 first signed on the air under the call sign KECA-TV on September 16, 1949. [2] It was the last television station licensed to Los Angeles operating on the VHF band to debut and the last of ABC's five original owned-and-operated stations to make its debut, after San Francisco's KGO-TV, which signed on four months earlier.
AOL latest headlines, entertainment, sports, articles for business, health and world news.
Television news anchors — Current and former journalists presenting broadcasts in Los Angeles and Los Angeles County, ...
Reporting outdoors, news anchor Kyle Clark and weather meteorologist Kathy Sabine at 9news Denver got into a heated exchange that was, to say the least, some of the most awkward TV in recent memory.
Harold Greene (born December 1, 1943) is a journalist and news anchor at KCAL 9 News and CBS 2 News in Los Angeles. Before joining the CBS duopoly, Greene had a television news career, mostly in Southern California. Greene began his career in 1970 as a reporter and producer for KABC-TV in Los Angeles.
The facility was also originally home to two of Los Angeles' first television stations—KTSL (channel 2; now KCBS-TV), and KFI/KHJ-TV (channel 9; now KCAL-TV, which both signed-on the air in May, and August 1948 respectively. Both stations eventually moved out by the early 1960s, just a couple of years before KCET officially took to the air.