Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
KRTV (channel 3) is a television station in Great Falls, Montana, United States, affiliated with CBS. ... leading to its renaming as The Noon News in 1986. ...
This caused KRTV's news ratings to swoon; after several years with KRTV on top, KFBB took the lead in the market and was able to market itself as a more local newscast than its competitor. [9] Conversely, KTVQ made some inroads on dominant KULR-TV. [15] KULR-TV anchor Dave Rye argued that the Lilly approach to news was too "big-city" for ...
KRTV was a television station on ultra high frequency (UHF) channel 17 in Little Rock, Arkansas, United States. The first television station in Arkansas, KRTV operated from April 1953 to March 1954. The first television station in Arkansas, KRTV operated from April 1953 to March 1954.
SJL sold KXLF, KPAX-TV, and KRTV to the Evening Post Publishing Company, through its Cordillera Communications subsidiary, for $24 million in 1986. [37] While the stations were separated from KTVQ in ownership, the Montana Television Network continued much the way it had, and the stations continued to share news segments and stories. [38]
In 1984, KRTV (channel 3), which had served as a dual affiliate of NBC and CBS since 1968, [2] reduced its carriage of NBC programs as the Montana Television Network, of which it was a part, adopted primary CBS affiliation statewide. [3] KRTV and ABC affiliate KFBB-TV (channel 5) continued to air some NBC programs in the city. [4]
KFBB-TV (channel 5) is a television station in Great Falls, Montana, United States, affiliated with ABC, Fox and MyNetworkTV.Owned by the Cowles Company, the station maintains studios and transmitter facilities on Old Havre Highway in Black Eagle (with a Great Falls mailing address).
All five emergency alert hijackings took place on February 11, 2013, in Great Falls, Montana, Marquette, Michigan, La Crosse, Wisconsin, and Portales, New Mexico.The hijackings primarily compromised the television stations of KRTV, WKBT-DT, WBUP, WNMU, and KENW; however, the incident also led to stations ABC10 and its sister station CW 5 to disconnect their networks from the EAS system to ...
Sample's acquisitions of KXLF-TV in Butte 1961 and KRTV in Great Falls in 1969 formed the basis of the Montana Television Network; KOOK radio was sold off in 1973, and channel 2 changed its call sign to KTVQ. While the network was nominally headquartered in Billings, the network's split regional news format used Great Falls as a hub.