Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
KRTV was the second television station to sign on in Great Falls, doing so in 1958. Its purchase by Joe Sample in 1969 led to the foundation of MTN. From 1971 to 1984, the station was MTN's hub and produced statewide newscasts for air across the state. Since the 1990s, the station has generally been the Great Falls market leader for local news.
All five emergency alert hijackings took place on February 11, 2013, in Great Falls, Montana, Marquette, Michigan, La Crosse, Wisconsin, and Portales, New Mexico.The hijackings primarily compromised the television stations of KRTV, WKBT-DT, WBUP, WNMU, and KENW; however, the incident also led to stations ABC10 and its sister station CW 5 to disconnect their networks from the EAS system to ...
This caused KRTV's news ratings to swoon; after several years with KRTV on top, KFBB took the lead in the market and was able to market itself as a more local newscast than its competitor. [9] Conversely, KTVQ made some inroads on dominant KULR-TV. [15] KULR-TV anchor Dave Rye argued that the Lilly approach to news was too "big-city" for ...
Great Falls residents voted in favor of a Park Maintenance District after the Park and Recreation Department submitted a Master Plan in 2016 with the vision of creating a new rec facility with an ...
KJJC-TV (channel 16) is a television station in Great Falls, Montana, United States, affiliated with MeTV and owned by Northwest Capital Corporation. The station's transmitter is located on 47th Avenue SW in unincorporated Cascade County, near the Great Falls International Airport.
In 1984, production of the MTN network news moved from Great Falls to Billings. [32] While KPAX and KRTV began offering full-length local news programs in 1986, upon the Evening Post purchase, KXLF continued to produce inserts into KTVQ's newscasts in an arrangement that was set to expire in December 1988. The station's news ratings declined as ...
Norma Rae Beatty Ashby (born December 27, 1935) was the co-host for 26 years of Today in Montana, broadcast live on KRTV in Great Falls, Montana.Her career with the station began in February 1962, and she was inducted into the Montana Broadcaster's Hall of Fame in 2010 [1] A fourth-generation Montanan, she produced more than 21 television documentaries and interviewed over 26,000 individuals ...
The night before the election, Gianforte physically assaulted Ben Jacobs, a reporter from The Guardian, in front of multiple witnesses, knocking him down, punching him, and breaking his glasses. [55] Gianforte was subsequently charged with misdemeanor assault.