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KTVU, along with Cox-owned WKBD-TV in Detroit and KDNL-TV in St. Louis, agreed to become charter affiliates of Fox upon their October 9, 1986, launch. [15] KTVU was a rarity among the new network's affiliate base as it broadcast on VHF and had an established news department; general manager Kevin O'Brien saw Fox's backing with the 20th Century Fox studio as an advantage, providing the station ...
KICU-TV (channel 36), branded as KTVU Plus, is a television station licensed to San Jose, California, United States, serving the San Francisco Bay Area.It is owned and operated by Fox Television Stations alongside Oakland-licensed Fox outlet KTVU (channel 2).
Dennis Richmond, a beloved Bay Area newsman and trailblazing Black journalist, died Wednesday, his former news channel, KTVU announced.He was 81. "Dennis was a strong presence in the KTVU newsroom ...
Better Health Channel on 30.2, Nature Channel on 30.3, Vida Mejor TV on 30.4 ~Yuma, AZ: Calexico: 42 29 K29LS-D: Cadena Tres (rebroadcasts XHILA-TDT) Cadena Tres on 42.2, Milenio TV on 42.3, Once Niños on 42.4 ~Laughlin, NV: Needles: 26 26 K26PR-D: Good News TV GNTV Latino on 26.2, GNTV Kids on 26.3, Amazing Facts TV on 26.4
Pat McCormick (born c. 1933) [1] is a retired American local television personality and puppeteer who worked for San Francisco's KGO-TV, and Oakland's KTVU channel 2, where among many jobs he was the nightly news' weatherman, hosted the midday movie Dialing for Dollars program, and co-hosted the local edition of the Jerry Lewis Labor Day Telethon.
During Richmond's years as a news anchor, his wife operated a beauty salon. [3] Richmond was living in Grass Valley, California when he died on February 5, 2025, at the age of 81. [ 4 ] [ 8 ] Former co-anchor Julie Haener shared on the noon newscast that he suffered a heart attack and a fall weeks before.
After graduation he worked at local stations in Santa Rosa, California; Minneapolis, Minnesota; and Providence, Rhode Island, before returning to the San Francisco Bay Area. He became co-anchor of KTVU's morning news program in 1992 and was the first anchor of the 5 p.m. newscast when it launched in 2005.
In 1970, he joined then-independent station KTVU in Oakland/San Francisco where he joined with Ron Fortner to form The Tuck-Fortner Report. After their news program was cancelled in 1974, Tuck left KTVU and joined WCAU in Philadelphia to anchor their TV-10 News alongside Jack Jones.