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KUSI-TV (channel 51) is an independent television station in San Diego, California, United States. It is owned by Nexstar Media Group alongside Fox affiliate KSWB-TV (channel 69). KUSI-TV's studios are located on Viewridge Avenue (near I-15 ) in the Kearny Mesa section of San Diego, and its transmitter is located southeast of Spring Valley .
Nexstar Media Group, Inc. is an American publicly traded media company with headquarters in Irving, Texas, Midtown Manhattan, and Chicago.The company is the largest television station owner in the United States, owning 197 television stations across the U.S., most of which are affiliated with the four "major" U.S. television networks and MyNetworkTV in markets as large as New York City and as ...
It was the second prime time newscast in San Diego, with KUSI-TV having aired one since 1990; both stations were joined three months later by a startup 10 p.m. newscast from XETV, which was bolstered by its Fox affiliation to beat KSWB's offering in the ratings. [42] KUSI's ratings generally compared to XETV's and KSWB's combined. [43]
San Diego, CA: KUSI-TV 1: 51 1982–2023 Independent station owned by Nexstar Media Group: Beaumont–Port Arthur, TX: KBMT: 12 1977–2009 ABC and NBC affiliate owned by Tegna Inc. Corpus Christi, TX: KIII ** 3 1964–2010 ABC affiliate owned by Tegna Inc. Victoria, TX: KXIX ** 19 1969–1976 Fox affiliate KVCT owned by SagamoreHill ...
This page was last edited on 21 December 2024, at 16:44 (UTC).; Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License; additional terms may apply.
In San Diego, UPN affiliate KUSI-TV tried unsuccessfully to take the Fox affiliation away from Tijuana, Baja California, Mexico-licensed XETV, citing FCC regulations preventing any foreign station from airing live programming from the United States to U.S. audiences without an FCC-approved permit. Fox was eventually granted the permit allowing ...
Denton started his career as a Radio DJ after high school. He spent the next 11 years in this profession and as a newscaster.From 1981 to 2019, he was a television journalist on various channels, such as the Gray Television stations WBKO-TV, WAVE-TV and WTVK-TV (now WVLT-TV), and the Nexstar Media Group stations WTVW and WSPA-TV, as well as the NBC stations WCNC-TV and KNTV.
After being forced out of TWC a year later, [2] Coleman became weather anchor at WCBS-TV in New York and then at WMAQ-TV in Chicago, before moving to Southern California to join the independent television station, KUSI-TV in San Diego in 1994, [7] in what Coleman fondly calls "his retirement job."