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The service, branded as WPXI 11 Weather Plus, offered local and national weather information 24 hours a day. Locally, WPXI's Scott Harbaugh served as the main meteorologist on the station's Weather Plus service. WPXI added an airwave digital channel on 11.3 on October 15, 2007, when it began an affiliation with Retro Television Network. [36]
Chicago: Chicago: 2 12 WBBM-TV: CBS: Start TV on 2.2, Dabl on 2.3, Fave TV on 2.4 Since February 5, 2024 the ATSC 1.0 broadcast is sharing RF 19 with WGN [1] Chicago: Chicago: 5 33 WMAQ-TV: NBC: Cozi TV on 5.2, Lx on 5.3, Oxygen on 5.4 Chicago: Chicago: 7 22 WLS-TV: ABC: Localish on 7.2, Charge! on 7.3 Chicago: Chicago: 9 19 WGN-TV: CW
PCNC first started broadcasting on January 1, 1994, created in a partnership between WPXI (Channel 11) and the region's largest cable TV company at the time, TCI. Comcast stopped carrying PCNC on January 1, 2020, [2] which significantly reduced the potential viewing audience. WPXI added PCNC to its digital subchannel lineup in early March 2023.
WJW's switch came with three months notice and altered more than 20 hours of programming per day, [280] or 87 percent of the schedule. [281] Ratings declined in all time slots but especially fell by half for the late-evening news after moving from 11 p.m.—a time slot WJW had won in since 1981—to 10 p.m., but still topped WUAB's newscast.
Mike Hambrick (born in Tyler, Texas) is an American television anchor, reporter, and correspondent who has worked on network television stations such as WJLA-TV in Washington, D.C., WRC-TV in Washington, D.C., KTVT-TV in Dallas, KTAR-TV (now KPNX) in Phoenix, WPXI-TV in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, and WBAL-TV in Baltimore in 1975.
In 2004, she left WPXI for a similar position with KTVT in Dallas-Fort Worth [5] before returning to WPXI in 2008. [6] Bologna left WPXI on July 13, 2011. [7] [better source needed] Bologna has received two local Emmys for her weather reporting. [8] She has also co-authored a book entitled The Complete Idiot's Guide to Extreme Weather.
[16] [17] NBC would then re-purchase the station in New Britain, the present-day WVIT, in 1997. [18] [19] General Electric bought NBC in 1986, resulting in GE's station in Denver, KCNC-TV, becoming part of NBC's owned-and-operated stations group. One year later, NBC won a bidding war to acquire WTVJ, the then-CBS affiliate in Miami. [20]
WJLA-TV 7 Washington, D.C. Sinclair Broadcast Group WKBW-TV 7 Buffalo, New York: E.W. Scripps Company WLS-TV 7: Chicago, Illinois: The Walt Disney Company (ABC Owned Television Stations) WMUR-TV 9 Manchester, New Hampshire: Hearst Communications (Hearst Television) WNEP-TV 16 Scranton, Pennsylvania: Tegna, Inc. WPVI-TV 6: Philadelphia, Pennsylvania