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Nina and Papi's Best Day Ever [23] Nina and the Yard Sale [24] Nina Cupcake [25] Nina Dog Sits [26] aka Nina Dogs Sits [27] is a short based on episode 14; Nina Good Night [28] Nina Shops with Abuelita [29] Nina Speaks Spanish [30] Nina with Something Completely Silly [31] Stretches with Abuelita [32] Tio Missing Party [33]
Couric and Lauer anchored a special report from 5 pm until 6:30 pm so Brokaw could prepare for a special, expanded edition of NBC Nightly News, airing from the observation deck atop 30 Rockefeller Plaza, and continuing NBC News live coverage throughout the evening.
Amy Jacobson is a Chicago radio talk show host. She was a reporter for WMAQ-TV in Chicago from 1996 to 2007, losing her job after a rival TV station broadcast a video of her in a bathing suit with her children at the home of a man she was investigating in connection with his wife's disappearance.
Moses Montefiore Academy (also known as Moses School or simply Montefiore) was a special school of the Chicago Public Schools (CPS). Established in 1929, [1] [2] The school was located Near West Side of Chicago, Illinois and served students with severe emotional disorders. [3] The school closed in 2016, with the building being torn down in 2024.
A holiday TV staple is switching channels this year from the first time in half a century: Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer will air on NBC this December after airing on CBS every year since 1972 ...
NBC Kids debuted on July 7, 2012, one week after the Qubo block ended its run on NBC on June 30 (which left Ion Television (and later Ion Plus) as the only network to retain a Qubo-branded children's block up until the closure of the Qubo Channel on February 28, 2021, as the E.W. Scripps Company is now the owner of Ion Media, which they ...
Laura Jarrett, senior legal correspondent for NBC News, has been named the next co-anchor of Saturday TODAY, replacing Kristen Welker. ... Jarrett, 37, was born and raised in Chicago, before she ...
The station first signed on the air on October 8, 1948, as WNBQ; it was the fourth television station to sign on in Chicago. [1] [3] It was also the third of NBC's five original owned-and-operated television stations to begin operations, after WNBC-TV in New York City and WRC-TV in Washington, D.C., and before WKYC in Cleveland and KNBC in Los Angeles.