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WAGA-TV (channel 5) is a television station in Atlanta, Georgia, United States, serving as the market's Fox network outlet. Owned and operated by the network's Fox Television Stations division, the station maintains studios and transmitter facilities on Briarcliff Road Northeast in the Druid Hills area of unincorporated DeKalb County, just outside the Atlanta city limits.
The inaugural WSB-TV program, which began with a recording of "The Star-Spangled Banner" and a close-up shot of a tiny American flag waving in the wind powered by an electric fan, featured announcer John Cone ("WSB-TV is on the air!"), newscaster Jimmy Bridges, and a host of local dignitaries. WSB-TV originally broadcast from the Biltmore Hotel.
The news director of Atlanta's then-CBS affiliate saw how talented he was and hired him; he was still full-time at his radio job. Sawyer moved into commercial television with Atlanta's WAGA-TV where he shared a Peabody Award in 1982 for Paradise Saved, a documentary on Cumberland Island.
The Manitou is a 1978 American supernatural body horror film produced and directed by William Girdler, and starring Tony Curtis, Michael Ansara, and Susan Strasberg. It follows a woman in San Francisco who begins developing a fast-growing tumor on the back of her neck which is discovered to be supernatural in origin.
The logo of Fox Broadcasting Company from 1987 to 1993. Between 1994 and 1996, a wide-ranging realignment of television network affiliations took place in the United States as the result of a multimillion-dollar deal between the Fox Broadcasting Company and New World Communications, announced on May 23, 1994.
Between 2020 and 2022, insurers canceled 2.8 million home coverage policies in the state.
Three decades later that had jumped to five million thanks, say industry experts, in large part to a certain TV show with a catchy theme tune. The cruise industry was very different in 1970 ...
WIHS-TV (channel 38) in Boston was purchased in 1966, and renamed WSBK-TV; [92] like WBRC and WAGA, WSBK received a new studio building in 1969 with an Antebellum design. [93] [94] Storer sought to upgrade KGBS, which was a daytime-only station, including a power increase to 50,000 watts that saw billing increase by 100 percent year-over-year. [95]