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Interstate 94 (I-94) is an east–west Interstate Highway connecting the Great Lakes and northern Great Plains regions of the United States.Its western terminus is just east of Billings, Montana, at a junction with I-90; its eastern terminus is in Port Huron, Michigan, where it meets with I-69 and crosses the Blue Water Bridge into Sarnia, Ontario, Canada, where the route becomes Ontario ...
KMAX-TV: 31 (digital 24) Independent: CBS News and Stations (Paramount Global) KCSO-LD: 33 (digital 3) Telemundo: NBC Owned Television Stations (NBC Telemundo License, LLC) KTXL: 40 (digital 22) Fox: Nexstar Media Group: Known as "Fox 40", the channel is owned by Nexstar, the largest local station owner in the United States. [2] KQCA: 58 ...
The station became a primary ABC affiliate by 1955, after KCRA-TV (channel 3) and KBET-TV (channel 10, now KXTV) signed on, respectively taking over NBC and CBS full-time; and dropped DuMont after that network folded in 1956. [3] It was the Sacramento–Stockton–Modesto area's first television station.
Television stations in the Sacramento / Stockton / Modesto media market of California. Serving the southern Sacramento Valley and northern San Joaquin Valley , and based in Sacramento County . Subcategories
State Route 94 (SR 94) is a state highway in the U.S. state of California that is 63.324 miles (101.910 km) long. The western portion, known as the Martin Luther King Jr. Freeway , begins at Interstate 5 (I-5) in downtown San Diego and continues to the end of the freeway portion past SR 125 in Spring Valley .
Area served City of license VC RF Callsign Network Notes Bakersfield: 8 15 KTLD-CD: 3ABN: Audio on 8.4, 3ABN Radio on 8.5, 3ABN Radio Latino on 8.6, Radio 74 on 8.7 12
KCCC-TV was a television station on ultra high frequency (UHF) channel 40 in Sacramento, California, United States.Owned by the Capital City TV Corporation, KCCC-TV was Sacramento's first television outlet and broadcast from 1953 to 1957.
KVUE was a television station on ultra high frequency (UHF) channel 40 in Sacramento, California, United States. It operated for less than five months, from November 9, 1959, to March 18, 1960. The independent station was founded by employees of the previous channel 40, KCCC-TV, and bore that call sign until it began broadcasting. It was ...