Ad
related to: buffalo 4 news
Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
WBEN-TV was the early news leader in Buffalo until approximately 1972, when (briefly) WGR-TV and then (more long-term) WKBW-TV overtook it. Channel 4 then spent most of the next 30 years as a solid, if usually distant, runner-up to WKBW-TV, well ahead of market laggard WGR-TV (later WGRZ).
AOL latest headlines, entertainment, sports, articles for business, health and world news.
O'Connell was chief weather anchor for WGRZ-TV, the NBC affiliate in Buffalo, New York, from the mid-1990s until 2018. [2] O'Connell also sub-hosted on The David Letterman Show on NBC, hosted the game show Go on NBC from October 1983 to January 1984, and presented the syndicated disco series Disco Step-by-Step from 1977 to 1980.
He is a WIVB Channel 4 NFL analyst and an adjunct professor at Canisius University. His work has appeared in the Best American Sports Writing anthology series. Graham had two stints at The Buffalo News , [ 2 ] the second beginning as an enterprise reporter in 2011 and leading to three Pulitzer Prize nominations from the newspaper.
Buffalo Irish Times (an Irish-American bimonthly) The Buffalo News (the region's main paper) The Buffalo Times (daily newspaper published in Buffalo & Erie County from 1921–1939) Buffalo Rising began as a monthly publication and is now solely online. Business First of Buffalo (a weekly business publication)
Channel 49 was added to Buffalo in lieu of channel 76 in February 1966 as part of a national overhaul of UHF channel allocations. [3] The Beta Television Corporation obtained the construction permit that June, [4] but despite attempts to sell the permit to Evans Broadcasting Corporation and New York City's WPIX, [5] [6] as well as a call sign change from WBAU-TV to WBBU-TV, [7] the ...
Fox then signed an agreement with WNYB-TV (channel 49, now WNYO-TV) to become its new Buffalo affiliate, and WUTV reverted to being an independent station full-time, effective September 1, 1989. [4] Ahead of the disaffiliation from Fox, Act III Broadcasting (a company controlled by Norman Lear) offered to buy WUTV, and Citadel accepted. [5]
Enjoy a classic game of Hearts and watch out for the Queen of Spades!