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The mast atop the Westward Ho was built for and served as the first transmitter site of KPHO-TV.. On March 4, 1948, a consortium of four men doing business as the Phoenix Television Company—R. L. Wheelock, W. L. Pickens, H. H. Coffield, and John B. Mills—filed an application with the Federal Communications Commission for a construction permit to build a new television station on channel 5 ...
Area served City of license VC RF Callsign Network Notes Douglas: 3 36 KFTU-DT: UniMas: Univision on 3.2 : Flagstaff: 2 22 KNAZ-TV: NBC: Satellite of KPNX ch. 12 Mesa/Phoenix: 13 13 KFPH-DT
Arizona's Family Sports (AZFS) is a broadcast television network in Arizona, United States.It is owned by Gray Media as part of the Arizona's Family group of stations, based in Phoenix, alongside CBS affiliate KPHO-TV (channel 5) and independent station KTVK (channel 3).
KTVK (channel 3) is an independent television station in Phoenix, Arizona, United States.It is owned by Gray Media alongside CBS affiliate KPHO-TV (channel 5) and low-power station KPHE-LD (channel 44), a grouping known as "Arizona's Family".
The three stations share studios on North Seventh Avenue in Uptown Phoenix; KPHO-TV's transmitter is located on South Mountain on the city's south side. KPHO-TV signed on in 1949 as Arizona's first television station and the only one approved prior to a nearly four-year freeze on new TV stations. It initially aired programming from all of the ...
KPHO-TV in Phoenix, Arizona, on virtual channel 5; KPJR-TV in Greeley, Colorado, on virtual channel 38; KPTS in Wichita, Kansas; KSBB-CD in Santa Barbara, California, an ATSC 3.0 station. KSNF in Joplin, Missouri; KTEN in Ada, Oklahoma; KTWO-TV in Casper, Wyoming; KUAN-LD in Poway, etc., California, uses KNSD's spectrum, on virtual channel 48 ...
On December 29, 1954, KOOL-TV announced it had secured the CBS affiliation in Phoenix, to begin on June 15, 1955. [18] KPHO-TV, whose two-year affiliation agreement ended at that time, was blindsided by the move, but it was a natural fit.
The service originated as Fox 10 News Now, a webcast that had been run by KSAZ-TV in 2014. [2] It gained a large following on YouTube in 2016 when it carried former president Donald Trump's rallies and other live events uninterrupted and in their entirety.