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WTVC (channel 9) is a television station in Chattanooga, Tennessee, United States, affiliated with ABC and Fox. The station is owned by Sinclair Broadcast Group , and maintains studios on Benton Drive in Chattanooga; its transmitter is located on Signal Mountain in the town of Walden .
Temptation, Nine News & Hey Hey It's Saturday: 1997 – Peter Overton: 60 Minutes (2001-2009) & Nine News: 2001 – Bruce Paige: Nine News (1993-2009) & Nine Gold Coast News: 1993 – Matthew Pavlich: Nine News: 2018 – Catriona Rowntree: Getaway & The Chopping Block: 1993 – Belinda Russell: Nine News & Today Extra: 2007 – Amber Sherlock
A beloved Tennessee news anchor has lost her job amid her battle with a rare form of pediatric bone cancer, the Times Free Press reports.. Alex George, a reporter with Chattanooga's WTVC, a local ...
It took the CBS affiliation from WROM-TV (channel 9, now WTVC). It lost NBC to WRGP-TV (now WRCB-TV) in 1956, and lost ABC to WTVC (the former WROM) in 1958. During the late 1950s, the station was also briefly affiliated with the NTA Film Network. [3] Roy H. Park bought WDEF-TV in 1963 as well as WDEF 1370 AM (now WXCT) and WDEF-FM 92.3. [4]
WDSI-TV (channel 61) is a television station in Chattanooga, Tennessee, United States, affiliated with True Crime Network and Comet. The station is owned by New Age Media, which also operates Cleveland -licensed dual CW / MyNetworkTV affiliate WFLI-TV (channel 53) under a local marketing agreement (LMA) with MPS Media.
TV News’ Big Squeeze: Suddenly, Local and National Anchors All Play for Same Team, Stream and Screen. Brian Steinberg. October 15, 2024 at 11:25 AM.
It would have been the fourth-oldest in Georgia, had WROM-TV, channel 9 in Rome not moved to Chattanooga, Tennessee, in 1958, rebranded as WTVC. WRBL-TV was owned by Jim Woodruff along with WRBL radio (AM 1420, now WRCG, and FM 102.9, now WVRK). Originally on channel 4, it moved to channel 3 in 1960 as part of a regional frequency reallocation ...
In 1995 she began anchoring the afternoon news, and in May 1997, following the controversial hiring of Jerry Springer as commentator and the resignations of Ron Magers and Carol Marin, Rosati was promoted to co-anchor of NBC 5's 10 p.m. newscast, making her as a longest-reigning tenured late-evening news anchor in Chicago.