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WHAS-TV (channel 11) is a television station in Louisville, Kentucky, United States, affiliated with ABC. Owned by Tegna Inc. , the station maintains studios on West Chestnut Street in Downtown Louisville , and its transmitter is located in rural northeastern Floyd County, Indiana (northeast of Floyds Knobs ).
KCBD (channel 11) is a television station licensed to Lubbock, Texas, United States, affiliated with NBC.It is owned by Gray Media alongside Wolfforth-licensed CW+ affiliate KLCW-TV (channel 22) and four low-power stations—MyNetworkTV affiliate KMYL-LD (channel 14), Snyder-licensed Heroes & Icons affiliate KABI-LD (channel 42), Class A Telemundo affiliate KXTQ-CD (channel 46) and MeTV ...
Pearson's career started in Louisville while working for Brown Forman Distiller in public relations and Louisville Times as a reporter before joining WHAS-TV as an anchor and reporter. [2] After moving to Atlanta in 1975, Pearson worked at WSB-TV for 37 years [ 1 ] and was the first female and first African-American to anchor the daily evening ...
11 11 WDNZ-LD: MyNet/Antenna TV/Biz TV The Nest on 11.2, The Country Network on 11.3, Antenna TV on 11.4, Estrella TV on 12.1, Talk 104.1 on 9.30 Bowling Green: 25 20 WKUT-LD: Oxygen: 26 26 W26FM-D: 34 34 WBGS-LD: Telemundo: ABC/WBKO simulcast on 34.2 35 35 WCTZ-LD Buzzr
WAVE-TV lost CBS programming when WHAS-TV (channel 11, now an ABC affiliate) signed on in March 1950; it later lost DuMont when the network folded in August 1956. Channel 3 continued to share ABC programming with WHAS-TV until WLKY (channel 32) signed on as a full-time affiliate in September 1961. It has remained with NBC since then, and as ...
This coverage was aired live in the Louisville market and sent to NBC as a kinescope newsreel recording for national broadcast. This broadcast was the first time Zoomar lenses were used on a broadcast TV sports show. On May 3, 1952, the first national television coverage of the Kentucky Derby took place, aired from then-CBS affiliate WHAS-TV. [36]
Radio personality Terry Meiners, who has also worked in TV, also noted her death. RIP Melissa Forsythe, iconic @WHAS11 and @wave3news anchor. She won a 1979 landmark non-competition legal case in ...
Secondary affiliation, with NBC as its primary affiliation. Lost CBS affiliation upon the sign-on of WHAS-TV. WHAS-TV 11: 1950–1990 ABC Swapped affiliations with ABC affiliate WLKY-TV because of concerns by ABC over WLKY-TV's ratings. Lubbock, Texas: KKBC-TV 34: 1967-1969 (secondary) Defunct KLBK-TV 13