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Present and former television anchors in the Sacamento-Stockton-Modesto DMA. Pages in category "Television anchors from Sacramento, California" The following 33 pages are in this category, out of 33 total.
It primarily competed opposite KMAX's Good Day Sacramento and the first hour of KQCA's morning newscast. On September 8, 2008, the newscast was reformatted to Fox 40 Live and was expanded to 4 + 1 ⁄ 2 hours from 4:30 to 9 a.m. The station hired well-known former Sacramento morning radio personality Paul Robins as anchor, and introduced a new ...
Until 1952, the FCC had allocated only 6 television channels to the Bay Area, but in 1954 KSAN [2] began transmitting on UHF channel 32 and KQED began educational programming on channel 9. By 1956, the Sacramento area had KCRA , KBET KOVR , and KCCC on the air, the San Jose area had KSBW and KNTV , and San Francisco had KRON , KPIX , KGO , KQED ...
Sacramento: Hearst Television: KVIE: 6 (digital 9) PBS: KVIE Inc. KBTV-CD: 8 (digital 27) Buzzr: Innovate Corp. (HC2 LPTV Holdings, Inc.) KXTV: Both virtual and digital channel 10 ABC: Tegna Inc. Known as "ABC 10", the channel was dropped from DirecTV in December 2023, but was still available over the air and on Comcast Xfinity, Wave, and ...
Sinclair Broadcast Group, a publicly traded American telecommunications conglomerate, owns or operates 294 television stations across the United States in 89 markets ranging in size from as large as Washington, D.C. to as small as Ottumwa, Iowa/Kirksville, Missouri. [1]
Gary Gerould – sports anchor (now radio play-by-play for the Sacramento Kings) John Gibson – Bay Area correspondent (now at Fox News Channel) David Gregory (moderator of Meet the Press from 2008–2014) Kristine Hanson – sports anchor/weather anchor/entertainment reporter (1980s; former Playboy Playmate)
Thompson hosted a daily 10 AM-to-noon radio show on San Francisco talk station KGO until October 6, 2022; his show ended on that station due to a sudden change in format, and he, in fact, was the final host on the format, being notified immediately before his show of the change and being notified mid- monologue to end the broadcast at approximately 10:16 AM that day.
Wilson's first broadcasting stint was at WTMJ in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, followed by stint as news anchor at KTXL in Sacramento, California [3] in 1979 and later at his first stint at ABC-owned KGO-TV in 1983 before moving to then-NBC affiliate KRON-TV in 1990.