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As of 2013, WGAL's dominance is primarily in Lancaster and York counties, which contain the majority of the market's population. Starting in 2012, WGAL began experiencing declines in news viewership, the largest occurring in May 2013 [10] That July, WHTM-TV beat WGAL for the first time at 5 p.m. among adults 25–54. WGAL lost ground in other ...
An explosion ripped through a hotel in Pennsylvania’s Amish country, leaving one person dead, police said. The blast occurred around 2:30 a.m. Dec. 18 at the Bird-in-Hand Family Inn in Lancaster ...
Souders said more tests than usual are being done to determine who the baby belongs to and the circumstances of its death, WGAL reported. Anyone with information is asked to call State Police at ...
WGAL's Kim Lemon has announced her retirement after 42 years at the Susquehanna Valley's No. 1 news station.
Area served City of license VC RF Callsign Network Notes Erie: 18 18 WXTM-LD: Silent 19 19 WEPA-LD: Silent 23 23 W23FH-D: Silent 28 24 W24EU-D: Silent 32
Wendall J. Woodbury (June 20, 1942 – October 20, 2010) was an American television journalist and news anchor.He spent much of his career as a reporter for WGAL-TV in Lancaster, Pennsylvania, from 1968 until his retirement from broadcast news in 1992 as a feature reporter. [1]
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WGAL-FM was a sister station to WGAL (1490 AM, now WRKY). In 1949, the region's first TV station also went on the air, WGAL-TV. The three stations were owned by the Steinman Family, which also owned two local daily newspapers, the Intelligencer Journal and the Lancaster New Era. [8] [9] At first WGAL-FM simulcast its AM counterpart.