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WCNC-TV (channel 36) is a television station in Charlotte, North Carolina, United States, affiliated with NBC.The station is owned by Tegna Inc. WCNC-TV's studios are located in the Wood Ridge Center office complex off Billy Graham Parkway (), just east of the Billy Graham Library in south Charlotte, and its transmitter is located in north-central Gaston County.
She began her on-camera career in 2005 as the host of WCCB-TV's morning show Fox News Rising in Charlotte, NC. In 2015, Troutman left Right This Minute to become the main anchor at WCNC-TV in Charlotte. [1] She made the decision to return to her hometown so that she could care for her mother who was battling ovarian cancer.
Channel 3 took on secondary affiliations with NBC and ABC until Charlotte's second VHF station, WSOC-TV (channel 9), took the NBC affiliation when it signed on in April 1957. Channel 36 returned to the air in November 1964 as WCCB (later moving to channel 18 in November 1966), carrying whatever CBS programs that WBTV turned down in order to ...
WCNC TV news anchor Fred Shropshire is leaving the Charlotte NBC affiliate for a station in a larger market.. Shropshire will join NBC 10 in Philadelphia, WCAU, as a weekday anchor and reporter on ...
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.
Raiford later taught Communications at the University of North Carolina at Charlotte. From 1978 to 1986, Raiford was a news anchor and talk show host for Charlotte's NBC television affiliate, known as WRET-TV and later WPCQ-TV during his tenure there (it is now WCNC-TV). [2]
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).
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