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WHAS-TV (channel 11) is a television station in Louisville, Kentucky, United States, affiliated with ABC. Owned by Tegna Inc. , the station maintains studios on West Chestnut Street in Downtown Louisville , and its transmitter is located in rural northeastern Floyd County, Indiana (northeast of Floyds Knobs ).
KCBD (channel 11) is a television station licensed to Lubbock, Texas, United States, affiliated with NBC.It is owned by Gray Media alongside Wolfforth-licensed CW+ affiliate KLCW-TV (channel 22) and four low-power stations—MyNetworkTV affiliate KMYL-LD (channel 14), Snyder-licensed Heroes & Icons affiliate KABI-LD (channel 42), Class A Telemundo affiliate KXTQ-CD (channel 46) and MeTV ...
WESH in Daytona Beach, Florida, an ATSC 3.0 station, on virtual channel 2; WGVU-TV in Grand Rapids, Michigan; WHAS-TV in Louisville, Kentucky; WISC-TV in Madison, Wisconsin; WJDP-LD in Pigeon Forge, Tennessee; WJKF-CD in Jacksonville, Florida; WJZ-TV in Baltimore, Maryland, on virtual channel 13; WLFI-TV in Lafayette, Indiana, on virtual channel 18
Meiners co-hosted Great Day Live (news, knowledge, and nonsense) for 8 years with news anchor Rachel Platt weekday mornings on WHAS-TV. Pat Forde , a veteran sportswriter and Louisville resident now with Sports Illustrated , has called Meiners "a skilled smart aleck, a local legend who is able to skewer almost everyone without making too many ...
WHAS may refer to: WHAS (AM) , a radio station (840 AM) licensed to Louisville, Kentucky, United States WHAS-TV , a television station (channel 11 analog/55 digital) licensed to Louisville, Kentucky, United States
Pearson's career started in Louisville while working for Brown Forman Distiller in public relations and Louisville Times as a reporter before joining WHAS-TV as an anchor and reporter. [2] After moving to Atlanta in 1975, Pearson worked at WSB-TV for 37 years [ 1 ] and was the first female and first African-American to anchor the daily evening ...
This coverage was aired live in the Louisville market and sent to NBC as a kinescope newsreel recording for national broadcast. This broadcast was the first time Zoomar lenses were used on a broadcast TV sports show. On May 3, 1952, the first national television coverage of the Kentucky Derby took place, aired from then-CBS affiliate WHAS-TV. [36]
An hour-long program that aired in a magazine-type format, the program aired weekdays at 10:00 a.m. In late 2005, WBKI-TV entered into a news share agreement with ABC affiliate WHAS-TV (channel 11) to produce a nightly prime time newscast for the station; the program, known as WHAS 11 News at 10:00 on WBKI, [30] premiered