Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
KAKE presently broadcasts 34 hours of locally produced newscasts each week (with 5 + 1 ⁄ 2 hours each weekday, 3 + 1 ⁄ 2 hours on Saturdays and three hours on Sundays). For 30 years, KAKE was the highest-rated station in the Wichita–Hutchinson market, even though it did not build an extensive translator/satellite network in central and western Kansas until the 1980s.
Lily Wu (born 1984) is an American politician and former television news anchor, serving as the 103rd mayor of Wichita, Kansas since 2024. A member of the Libertarian Party, she is the first Asian American mayor of Wichita and the only Libertarian mayor of one of the 100 largest cities in the United States.
In 1991, she moved to KFMB-TV in San Diego. She returned to Wichita in 1995 to work at KAKE until May 25, 2016. [2] [3] Peters returned to the air in late 2017, co-hosting Hatteberg's People on KPTS with former KAKE co-anchor Larry Hatteberg. In January 2007, the Wikipedia article on Peters was featured on the national public radio program ...
Since 1964, Steckline has produced agricultural news, information and commentary programs aired on television and radio stations throughout Kansas and into adjoining Nebraska, Colorado, and Oklahoma, particularly on KTVH-TV (Wichita, Kansas/Hutchinson, Kansas, and later the Kansas State Network (KSN), the state's main provider of television ...
NewsNet on 5.2, AMG TV on 5.3, InfoWars TV on 5.4, Urban Music/nPower Network on 5.5, Classic Shows on 5.6, Vibrant TV on 5.7, Right Now TV on 5.8, The Country Network on 5.9, RT on 5.10 15 29 K29NL-D: HSN affiliate 26 24 KAGW-CD: Cozi TV
[9] [10] In the interim, Gray took over WQCW and WOCW through a local marketing agreement on February 1. [10] The sale was completed on April 1. [11] On October 1, 2015, Gray announced that it would sell KAKE-TV in Wichita, Kansas to Lockwood in return for WBXX-TV and $11.2 million.
In 1954, KAKE-TV channel 10 signed on as the first VHF station in Wichita itself and took the ABC affiliation, but KEDD remained with NBC. [10] That December, the station dealt with a strike by engineers who were seeking to unionize. [11] In addition to network programs, KEDD produced several live and local shows.
The Smoky Hills Public Television Corporation was founded in 1978, with the intent to start a non-commercial educational television station in western Kansas. This region is part of the Wichita–Hutchinson Plus market, an unusually large market that covers over 70 counties stretching from the Flint Hills to the Colorado border–almost three-fourths of the state.