Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
WTOL (channel 11) is a television station in Toledo, Ohio, United States, affiliated with CBS.It is owned by Tegna Inc., which provides certain services to Fox affiliate WUPW (channel 36) under a joint sales agreement (JSA) with American Spirit Media.
WTVG also received over 15 nominations for their news, a record for the station. [31] In June 2011, news anchors at WTVG began using iPads to read news stories instead of paper. WTVG is the first television station in Toledo to use the technology. WTOL began using iPads in late September 2011.
WUPW (channel 36) is a television station in Toledo, Ohio, United States, affiliated with the Fox network. It is owned by American Spirit Media, which maintains a joint sales agreement (JSA) with Tegna Inc., owner of CBS affiliate WTOL (channel 11), for the provision of certain services.
Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump will be campaigning in Ohio Thursday afternoon.. The billionaire businessman is making multiple appearances in the battleground state. The first of ...
The news was a surprise to station staffers and generated considerable uncertainty, particularly as Raycom already owned WUPW (channel 36) and could only keep one of the two stations. [96] Under news director Lou Hebert, who had worked at channel 24 in the late 1970s and returned in 2002, WNWO's newscasts made gains among ratings and critics.
When the two former Toledo Christian players take the field for the Northwest Ohio Regional All-Star Football Game at Perrysburg on June 18, they will be doing so in the 11-man football setting ...
Sep. 12—There was an almost jovial atmosphere as a small crowd gathered during the brisk early morning hours Saturday as Toledo police, firefighters, and honor-guard members in ceremonial ...
Programming on WTOL, until the mid-1960s, was a full-service format of news, information, sports, ABC network programs and various types of music, including pop, country, jazz, and, by the early 1960s, some rock and roll. The station started broadcasting 24 hours a day in 1962 with the new format "Demand Radio 123".