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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).
John Paul holds a microphone for one of his daughters not long after he joined WSOC-TV Channel 9 in Charlotte, NC, in 2015. Paul announced on July 25, 2022, that he will be leaving the station for ...
PBS Kids on 33.2, The Explorer Channel on 33.3, The North Carolina Channel on 33.4 Canton: 4 10 W10DF-D: WYFF: NBC: MeTV on 4.3 7 23 W23EY-D: WSPA-TV: CBS: Ion on 7.3 33 28 W28EE-D: WUNF-TV: PBS: satellite of WUNC-TV ch. 4 Chapel Hill PBS Kids on 33.2, The Explorer Channel on 33.3, The North Carolina Channel on 33.4 Charlotte: Marion: 18.11 34 ...
The American Broadcasting Company (ABC) is an American broadcast television television network owned by the Disney Media Networks subsidiary of The Walt Disney Company, which originated in 1927 as the NBC Blue radio network, and five years after its 1942 divorce from NBC and purchase by Edward J. Noble (adopting its current name the following year), expanded into television in April 1948.
With your AOL account you get features like AOL Mail, news, and weather for free! ... Should you need additional assistance we have experts available around the clock ...
SWANNANOA, N.C. — Flattened homes, impassable roads, swamped fields, downed power lines, raw emotions. Nearly a week after Hurricane Helene pummeled this small mountain town 20 miles east of ...
WAXN-TV (channel 64) is an independent television station licensed to Kannapolis, North Carolina, United States, serving the Charlotte area. It is owned by Cox Media Group alongside dual ABC / Telemundo affiliate WSOC-TV (channel 9).
In 1977, ABC announced that it had lured away WSOC-TV to be its new outlet in the Charlotte market beginning July 1, 1978, replacing WCCB. That decision set off a two-station showdown between WCCB and nine-year-old independent WRET-TV (channel 36, now WCNC-TV) for the NBC affiliation in Charlotte. [22] WCCB was initially seen as the favorite.