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KOMO-TV (channel 4) is a television station in Seattle, Washington, United States, affiliated with ABC. ... Lotus changed KOMO radio's call sign to KNWN, ...
This is a list of full-power television stations in the United States having call signs which begin with the letter K. Stations licensed to transmit under low-power specifications—ex., KAJN-CD, K35OY-D and KXJB-LD—have not been included.
Area served City of license VC RF Callsign Network Notes Bellingham: Bellingham: 12 14 KVOS-TV: UNI: Movies! on 12.2, MeTV on 12.3, Catchy Comedy on 12.4, Start TV on 12.5, MeTV+ on 12.6, Story on 12.7, H&I on 12.8, MeTV Toons on 12.9
KOMO-TV, Seattle, Washington television station; KTTH, Seattle, Washington radio station, which held the KOMO call sign during part of 1926; KNWN (AM), Seattle, Washington radio station, which held the KOMO call sign from 1926 until 2022; KNWN-FM, Oakville, Washington radio station (97.7 FM), known as KOMO-FM from 2009 until 2022
Sinclair retained KOMO-TV, as well as rights to the KOMO call letters. Lotus and Sinclair also agreed to allow Lotus to use Sinclair equipment and IT systems, including sub-leasing the current KOMO studios, for 18 months following the sale; with it, KOMO-TV and KOMO-AM-FM were separated after 68 years. [21]
TV and DT: Commercial television was introduced in the United States in July 1941, and initially TV stations were assigned standard unique four-letter call signs. In August 1946 the "-TV" suffix was introduced, [ 11 ] which, like "-FM", included the restriction that paired stations had to have the same owners and be in the same community.
Listed in local Windsor TV Guides, reception is fair to poor in downtown Windsor, dropped in early 2009 as part of the Digital Transition in the United States. Toledo, Ohio WTOL-DT 11.2: MeTV: Partial Added to Windsor-area TV Guides on October 17, 2009, replaces WJW from Cleveland. Dropped from listings in August of 2011 Toledo, Ohio WTVG
The last new three-letter call was assigned to station WIS (now WVOC) in Columbia, South Carolina on January 23, 1930. Since then, three-letter calls have only been assigned to stations, including FM (beginning in 1943) [1] and TV (beginning in 1946), [2] which are historically related to an AM station that was originally issued that call sign.