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The first Fresno intentional train wreck was in 1919 and was attended by 35,000 people. [7] [8] In 1919, both the Fresno District Fair organization and the California Raisin Association (the organizer of a popular annual spring festival) were disbanded as the result of a lawsuit and both groups were taken over by the Fresno Chamber of Commerce. [9]
KGPE's Eyewitness News logo since 2013. KGPE presently broadcasts 31 hours, 35 minutes of locally produced newscasts each week (with 6 hours, 5 minutes each weekday and 35 minutes each on Saturdays and Sundays); unlike most CBS affiliates in the Pacific Time Zone, the station does not broadcast a newscast in the 5:30 p.m. timeslot on weekdays (the station instead fills that half-hour with ...
On September 3, 2002, KSEE launched a half-hour 4 p.m. newscast, the market's first; [73] the program was retooled in 2011 into a lifestyle and news program, We Are Fresno Live. [74] Between 2006 and 2009, KSEE produced a newscast at 10 p.m. for MyNetworkTV affiliate KAIL .
The Fall TV season — or at least some version of it — is upon us! And to help you keep tabs on it all, TVLine presents its famously handy calendar (and it is a calendar) of premiere dates ...
KFTV-DT (channel 21) is a television station licensed to Hanford, California, United States, broadcasting the Spanish-language Univision network to the Fresno area. It is owned and operated by TelevisaUnivision alongside Porterville-licensed UniMás outlet KTFF-DT (channel 61).
KFSN-TV (channel 30) is a television station in Fresno, California, United States, serving as the market's ABC network outlet. It is owned and operated by the network's ABC Owned Television Stations division, and maintains studios on G Street in downtown Fresno; its transmitter is located on Bear Mountain, near Meadow Lakes, California.
The Tower Theatre for the Performing Arts is a historic Streamline Moderne mixed-use theater in Fresno, California.Built in 1939, it opened to the public on December 15, 1939, under the management of Fox West Coast Theater Corporation.
In 1985, the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) granted an application by the Roman Catholic Diocese of Fresno—which learned of the channel a week before the deadline to file [3] —to build a new non-commercial educational television station on the channel 49 allocation in Visalia, beating out a bid from the Trinity Broadcasting Network and the Tulare County board of education.