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KXMC-TV (channel 13) is a television station in Minot, North Dakota, United States, serving as an affiliate of CBS and an owned-and-operated station of The CW Plus. Owned by Nexstar Media Group , the station has studios at the intersection of 2nd Street SE and 18th Avenue SE in Minot, and its transmitter is located near South Prairie.
Boler and Reiten then teamed up to buy North Dakota's oldest station, KCJB-TV in Minot (founded in 1953), and changed its call letters to KXMC-TV. The two stations formed a mini-network, with KXMC as the flagship station even though KBMB was the larger station. A year later, KBMB changed its calls to KXMB. KXMD in Williston signed on in 1969.
KXMD-TV (channel 11) is a television station in Williston, North Dakota, United States, serving as an affiliate of CBS and an owned-and-operated station of The CW Plus.Owned by Nexstar Media Group, the station maintains a news bureau and advertising sales office at the intersection of 13th Avenue West and 18th Street West (near US 2/85) in Williston, and its transmitter is located west of the ...
Minot: 6 15 KSRE: PBS: satellite of KFME. World/PBS Encore on 6.2, Minnesota Channel on 6.3, PBS Kids on 6.4 10 10 KMOT: NBC: semi-satellite of KFYR-TV. Fox on 10.2, MeTV on 10.3, Circle on 10.4 13 13 KXMC-TV: CBS: semi-satellite of KXMB-TV. CW+ on 13.2, Laff on 13.3, Ion Mystery on 13.4 14 14 KMCY: ABC: semi-satellite of KBMY. True Crime ...
Minot has 15 radio stations (12 FM, 3 AM). Bottineau-based Programmers Broadcasting owns KTZU and KWGO, along with KBTO of Bottineau. North Dakota Public Radio operates a full power FM station, a community broadcaster based in nearby Burlington, ND operates a low-power FM station, and the remainder are nonprofit Christian stations, of which only KHRT is based locally.
Get the Minot, ND local weather forecast by the hour and the next 10 days.
WDAY-TV went on the air for the first time on June 1, 1953, as the second television station in North Dakota (after KCJB-TV, now KXMC-TV, in Minot) and the first in Fargo and the eastern part of the state. [4] It was owned by a group of Fargo investors led by Norman Black, owner and publisher of The Forum.
The Minot train derailment occurred just west of Minot, North Dakota, United States, on January 18, 2002, when a Canadian Pacific Railway freight train derailed, spreading ammonia gas across the city, delaying rescue operations. The cause was found to be small fatigue cracks in the rails and joint bars, not detectable by the inspection routines ...