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KWWL (channel 7) is a television station licensed to Waterloo, Iowa, United States, serving as the NBC affiliate for Eastern Iowa. Owned by Allen Media Broadcasting , KWWL maintains studios on East 5th Street in Waterloo, with news bureaus and advertising sales offices in Cedar Rapids , Dubuque and Iowa City .
KWWF was sold to Valley Bank at auction on April 16, 2009, as a part of Equity's bankruptcy. [1] Valley Bank, in turn, filed to sell KWWF to an ownership group connected to Fusion Communications in August.
YouTube opens for video uploads, and the first YouTube video uploaded on April 23, 2005, is titled Me at the zoo. [20] Between March and July 2006, YouTube grows from 30 to 100 million views of videos per day. 2006 May 14 Companies
It is believed that he filmed 1 or 2 episodes at KWWL in Waterloo, Iowa. [ citation needed ] By 1980, his 90-second Mr. Food segments were being syndicated to nine U.S. television markets, [ 2 ] including WKBN-TV in Youngstown, Ohio , which still airs the "Mr. Food's Test Kitchen" segments today. [ 5 ]
[1] [2] [3] Since 1974, he has been at KWWL, where he started as the sports director, and is Iowa's longest sitting anchor. KWWL-TV is the NBC affiliate for the Cedar Rapids–Waterloo–Iowa City–Dubuque television market. While he was still KWWL's sports director, he did play-by-play for NBC Sports and ESPN. He was the original play-by-play ...
Kylie Kelce, who is married to Jason Kelce, addressed all the backlash she's been getting since starting her own podcast "Not Gonna Lie."
Concurrently, KWKB switched to This TV, taking that affiliation from KWWL's second subchannel. [3] KWKB carried a mix of This TV programming along with its own syndicated programming. In February 2011, KWKB began carrying the Antenna TV network on digital subchannel 20.2 until January 2015 when Antenna TV moved to KCRG-TV's digital subchannel 9.3.
Raycom bought Aflac's broadcast division of five TV stations in August 1996, using, in part, a loan from the RSA. [2] [4] The three groups merged to form Raycom Media. John Hayes initially headed up the company until 2001. [3]:2. In 1998, Raycom took a 35% stake in Worldnow, an internet publishing provider for broadcast media.