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KRON-TV (channel 4) is a television station licensed to San Francisco, California, United States, serving as the San Francisco Bay Area's outlet for The CW. [4] Owned and operated by The CW's majority owner, Nexstar Media Group, KRON-TV has studios on Front Street in the city's historic Northeast Waterfront, [5] in the same building as ABC owned-and-operated station KGO-TV, channel 7 (but with ...
Beginning at 11:30 p.m. Tuesday, KRON4 will be broadcasting “KRON4 New Year’s Live.” As in years past, the show will be hosted by KRON4’s Grant Lodes and Justine Waldman.
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 ...
Stephanie Lin (Chinese: 林奕帆; pinyin: lín yì fan) is an American news anchor working with KRON-TV in San Francisco, California. [1] Lin is recognized by the Associated Press Television and Radio Association for her work reporting from the frontlines of California's deadliest wildfire.
Catherine Heenan (full name Mary Catherine Elizabeth Heenan) is a television news anchor and reporter at KRON-TV in San Francisco. She grew up in Indiana and Illinois, and spent several summers in Northern Ireland and England. She graduated from Illinois State University, where she majored in communication and journalism.
[2] [5] [6] Subsequent to this, he returned to KGO-TV. Wilson hosted a talk radio show on the number-one rated 50,000-watt KGO (AM) weekdays 2–4 p.m. up until his death in 2007. He was the winner of five Emmy Awards and a Peabody. [7] Wilson also co-anchored the 6 p.m weekday editions of KGO-TV's ABC 7 News. [2]
Prior to this, in 1989, the station rebroadcast KRON-TV (channel 4)'s newscasts, branded as NewsCenter 4 on KOFY. The KRON-produced 10 p.m. newscast debuted in March 1991 with Pete Wilson and Pam Moore as co-anchors, but ended a year later when KRON-TV began the "early prime" experiment (in which it, and later, KPIX-TV, moved prime time ...
Ann Killion of the San Jose Mercury News called him "the biggest name in Bay Area Broadcasting." In 2006 and 2007, the SF Weekly named Radnich "Best Sportscaster", noting that his broadcasts are "spontaneous" and that he "knows sports". [7] In September 2018, Radnich retired from KRON TV, [8] and on June 22, 2019, at age 69, he retired from ...