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WFSB presently broadcasts 41 + 1 ⁄ 2 hours of news per week (with 6 + 1 ⁄ 2 hours each weekday and 4 + 1 ⁄ 2 hours each on Saturdays and Sundays). WFSB has been far and away the ratings leader in the Hartford–New Haven television market for as long as it has been a CBS affiliate, [16] with WTNH and WVIT regularly switching between a distant second and third place. [17]
The channel 3 branding remained to encourage longtime WFSB viewers to stay with WSHM after the switch, and to entirely avoid the ignominy of branding with their analog allocation on a high-band UHF channel, as in technicality, WSHM's analog channel held the highest number allocation of all CBS affiliates, with WWJ-TV in Detroit's channel 62 the ...
3 36 WFSB: CBS: Gray Television: Ion Mystery on 3.2, Laff on 3.3, WWAX-LD on 3.4 Hartford/New Haven: New Haven: 8 10 WTNH: ABC: Nexstar Media Group: Rewind TV on 8.2 Hartford/New Haven: Hartford: 19 31 WRDM-CD: Telemundo: NBC Owned Television Stations: TeleXitos on 19.2 Hartford/New Haven: Waterbury: 20 33 WCCT-TV: CW: Tegna Inc. Grit on 20.2 ...
The station was first licensed in 1972. [3] Originally called WFSB, the station received new calls on December 17, 1973, [3] after a donation from Post-Newsweek Stations, which asked for the calls to replace those of WTIC-TV in Hartford, Connecticut, to honor the president of their television station group as WFSB (Channel 3).
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Denise D'Ascenzo Cooke (January 30, 1958 – December 7, 2019) was an American television news anchorwoman at WFSB-TV in Hartford, Connecticut. She worked there for 33 years (1986–2019), becoming the longest-serving anchor at WFSB-TV. D'Ascenzo was also the longest-serving news anchor at any Connecticut television station. [1]
On most of Time Warner's Albany-area systems, TW3 occupied the channel 3 position though there were several exceptions, namely former Adelphia systems or systems where an "actual" channel 3 (WCAX in Burlington, Vermont or WFSB in Hartford, Connecticut) has that channel position. Those systems are: Pittsfield, Massachusetts: Channel 11
Pat Sheehan, born c. 1945, is a retired American television news anchor from Connecticut.. Sheehan spent most of his TV journalism career at WTNH-TV from 1971-74 and from 1979-83, WFSB-TV from 1974-79 and from 1983-88, and WTIC-TV from 1989-99, as a reporter, and then an anchor, that made him a Connecticut Television icon.