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[3] Cantore has been lauded for his ability to "break down" complicated weather events into terms the average viewer can understand. Cantore is often selected to go to report on severe weather events. Since the ratings for the Weather Channel increase during these events, Cantore has become a recognizable figure.
Channel 6: W06BP - New Haven - Now W09CZ-D Roslyn NY; Channel 10: W10BQ - New Haven; Channel 11: W11BJ - Hartford; Channel 12: W12BH - CPTV - Waterbury (launched in 1979, ceased <2009) Channel 17: W17CD - Stamford - Now W09CZ-D Roslyn NY; Channel 51: WNHX-LP - New Haven; Channel 59: W59AA: West Haven (signed off due to the launch of what is now ...
The following is a list of FCC-licensed radio stations in the U.S. state of Connecticut, which can be sorted by their call signs, frequencies, cities of license, licensees, and programming formats. List of radio stations
WFSB signed on the air on September 23, 1957, as WTIC-TV, owned by the Hartford-based Travelers Insurance Company, along with WTIC radio (1080 AM and 96.5 FM). [3] As Connecticut's second VHF station, WTIC-TV was one of the most powerful stations in New England, not only covering the entire state but a large chunk of western Massachusetts and eastern Long Island in New York.
Geoff Fox (born July 26, 1950) [1] is an American television broadcast meteorologist, with a career in the industry covering four decades.For 27 years he worked at the television station WTNH in New Haven, Connecticut, where he started in 1984 and was senior meteorologist until 2011.
In 1957, a television station was added, WTIC-TV on channel 3. As network programming moved from radio to television in the 1950s, WTIC-AM-FM switched to a full service, middle of the road format of popular music, talk, news and sports. In the 1960s, WTIC-FM started playing blocks of classical music in the afternoon and evening, eventually ...
On TV newscasts, he said, he was generally given about three minutes during a 30-minute newscast to give his forecast. If he went over that time, it cut into other segments of the show.
Pat Sheehan, born c. 1945, is a retired American television news anchor from Connecticut. Sheehan spent most of his TV journalism career at WTNH-TV from 1971-74 and from 1979-83, WFSB-TV from 1974-79 and from 1983-88, and WTIC-TV from 1989-99, as a reporter, and then an anchor, that made him a Connecticut Television icon.