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514 Sentences With "telecasting"

How to use telecasting in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "telecasting" and check conjugation/comparative form for "telecasting". Mastering all the usages of "telecasting" from sentence examples published by news publications.

India's film censorship board has barred Sony Pictures' channel from telecasting Oscar-recognized film, The Danish Girl.
"I will say I'm a bit surprised that CCTV canceled the telecasting of preseason games, and specifically named me as the cause," Silver said.
A federal appeals court on Tuesday revived a putative class action alleging the National Football League's telecasting agreement with AT&T Inc's DirecTV unit unlawfully blocked competition.
Additionally, if you are tuning in from India, dozens of channels, including Doordarshan (DD201), Disney India, Colors Infinity, National Geographic, Star Plus, Star Bharat and DD News are live telecasting India's mission to the Moon.
Those efforts have been underway all along, and before Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell's eyes had dried early Friday morning, in the wake of his failed repeal vote, Trump was predictably telecasting his low-cunning intentions.
"DuMont network to quit in telecasting 'spin-off.'" Broadcasting - Telecasting, August 15, 1955, pg. 64. "DuMont completes spin-off, separates broadcasting, labs.'" Broadcasting - Telecasting, December 5, 1955, pg. 7.
"WDAR to ABC", Broadcasting — Telecasting. July 29, 1946. p. 104. Retrieved May 23, 2019.Broadcasting — Telecasting Yearbook Number 1948. Broadcasting — Telecasting. 1948. p. 114. Retrieved May 23, 2019.1952 Broadcasting Yearbook.
"TV coverage; RTMA predicts expansion." Broadcasting – Telecasting, May 19, 1952, pg. 78."WNHC-TV switches from six to eight." Broadcasting – Telecasting.
September 16, 1950. p. 8. Retrieved December 1, 2018.Broadcasting - Telecasting Yearbook 1951, Broadcasting - Telecasting, 1951. p. 96. Retrieved December 1, 2018.
WSJV's final logo as an ABC affiliate. WSJV began broadcasting on March 15, 1954 on channel 52.1954 Telecasting Yearbook–Marketbook. Broadcasting – Telecasting. 1954. p. 115. Retrieved June 12, 2019.
The station first signed on the air on December 21, 1952, and was owned by the South Bend Tribune.1954 Telecasting Yearbook–Marketbook. Broadcasting – Telecasting. 1954. p. 119. Retrieved June 13, 2019.
Corpus Christi Caller-Times, April 16, 1962. South Texas Telecasting was awarded channel 3 in December 1962,"FCC Examiner Recommends that KVDO Get Channel 3". Corpus Christi Caller-Times, December 4, 1962. but Nueces Telecasting then filed a protest alleging that awarding the channel to South Texas Telecasting would violate the FCC's regulations on concentration of media ownership.
"Ambitious ABC planning initiated under new merged ownership." Broadcasting - Telecasting, February 16, 1953, pp. 27-29."It's now WABC-AM-FM-TV; ABC also changes slides." Broadcasting - Telecasting, March 2, 1953, pg. 70.
DD Lakshadweep is a state owned TV channel telecasting from Doordarshan.
DD Manipur is a state owned TV channel telecasting from Doordarshan.
DD Sikkim is a state owned television channel telecasting from Doordarshan.
"TV finds a haven." Broadcasting – Telecasting, September 20, 1948, pp. 42–47. In October 1948, the station added CBS programming to its schedule,"WNHC-TV is new CBS-TV affiliate." Broadcasting – Telecasting, October 11, 1948, pg. 22.
"Westinghouse buys WPTZ (TV) for record $8.5 million." Broadcasting - Telecasting, February 23, 1953, pg. 27. KPIX in San Francisco was bought in 1954;"Six stations being sold for nearly $15 million." Broadcasting - Telecasting, March 8, 1954, pp. 27-28.
Broadcasting—Telecasting Yearbook Number 1950, Broadcasting—Telecasting, 1950. p. 130. Retrieved February 15, 2019. WOAK generally aired pop music, but also featured classical music programs and dramas."Rita Jacobs Willens, Radio Pioneer, 62, In the Chicago Area", Associated Press.
DD Mizoram is a state owned TV channel telecasting from Doordarshan Kendra Mizoram.
DD Himachal is a state owned TV channel telecasting from Doordarshan Kendra Shimla.
DD Chhattisgarh is a state owned TV channel telecasting from Doordarshan Kendra Chhattisgarh.
DD Odia is a state owned TV channel telecasting from Doordarshan Kendra Cuttack.
"NTA Newark purchase gets FCC's approval."Broadcasting & Telecasting, April 7, 1958, pg. 64.
"Time Inc. buy gets green light." Broadcasting – Telecasting, April 22, 1957, pg. 56.
DD Andaman and Nicobar is a state owned television channel telecasting from Doordarshan.
DD Daman and Diu is a state owned television channel telecasting from Doordarshan.
DD Gyan Darshan 2 is a state owned television channel telecasting from Doordarshan.
DD Jharkhand is a state-owned TV channel telecasting from Doordarshan Kendra Jharkhand, India.
Television broadcasting in the Malayalam tongue began 1985 with the beginning of Doordarshan telecasting.
"Miss U.S. Television of 1950: Edythe Adams," Broadcasting-Telecasting, 5 February 1951, 66-67.
"KTSL now KNXT; moves to Mt. Wilson." Broadcasting — Telecasting, October 29, 1951, pg. 81.
The station's call letters were changed to WABC-TV on March 1, 1953"It's now WABC-AM-FM-TV; ABC also changes slides." Broadcasting – Telecasting, March 2, 1953, pg. 70.WABC- AM-FM-TV advertisement. Broadcasting – Telecasting, March 2, 1953, pg. 37.
The five TV networks are represented by Asahi Broadcasting Corporation (ANN), Kansai Telecasting Corporation (FNN), Mainichi Broadcasting System, Inc. (JNN), Television Osaka, Inc. (TXN) and Yomiuri Telecasting Corporation (NNN), headquartered in Osaka. NHK has also its regional station based in the city.
DD Tripura is a state owned TV channel telecasting from Doordarshan Kendra Agartala in Tripura.
21, 30. "Don Lee sale; General Tire purchase approved." Broadcasting – Telecasting, January 1, 1951, pp.
The station began broadcasting on May 16, 1948, and originally held the call sign WOAK. WOAK broadcast from Chicago's Guyon Hotel, and operated at 98.3 MHz with an ERP of 770 watts.Broadcasting—Telecasting Yearbook Number 1949, Broadcasting—Telecasting, 1949. p. 303. Retrieved February 14, 2019.
Initial programming for the station is unknown. Less than one month after licensing, Pappas Telecasting acquired the station, eventually making it a Univision affiliate. In December 1996, the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) granted Pappas Telecasting a permit to move the station to UHF channel 68.
NBC sold its Denver stations to a group that included one of its radio stars, Bob Hope, in 1952."NBC's KOA Sale; Now Seeks L.A. Outlet", Broadcasting - Telecasting, June 30, 1952, pg. 27."KOA Sale: NBC Approves; Transfer in Month", Broadcasting - Telecasting, September 1, 1952, pg. 27.
"Fox, Wells buys KFSD-AM-TV control." Broadcasting – Telecasting, August 23, 1954, pg. 52. The publishers of Newsweek magazine took a minority (about 46 percent) share of the stations in 1957,"'Newsweek' buys 46% of KFSD-AM-FM-TV." Broadcasting – Telecasting, July 29, 1957, pg. 74.
The Pappas Telecasting Tower, with a height of , is one of the tallest masts in the world.
"Court issues temporary stay in St. Louis ch. 11 situation." Broadcasting – Telecasting, January 6, 1958, pg. 74.
The station originally held the call sign WLEY and broadcast at 107.1 MHz.Broadcasting–Telecasting Yearbook Number 1950, Broadcasting–Telecasting, 1950. p. 133. Retrieved February 2, 2019.History Cards for WCFS-FM, fcc.gov. Retrieved February 2, 2019. WLEY was founded in February 1948, with commercial broadcasts beginning in April.
"For the Record." Broadcasting – Telecasting, Oct. 31, 1955, p. 108. and a year later the community of license was moved back to Newark from West Paterson."For the Record." Broadcasting – Telecasting, Dec. 17, 1956, p. 119. Once again, the owners failed to put the station on the air.
"KFMB sale; Kennedys to buy." Broadcasting - Telecasting, November 20, 1950, pg. 68. Three years later, Kennedy divested KFMB to a partnership of television producer Jack Wrather and industry executive Helen Alvarez."$7 1/2 million mark passed in bumper transfer crop." Broadcasting - Telecasting, February 2, 1953, pp. 27-28.
DD Chennai, formerly known as DD Madras, is a state-owned television channel telecasting from Doordarshan Kendra, Chennai.
"UHF is television too." Broadcasting – Telecasting, July 6, 1953, pp. 84, 86, 88, 90. Accessed January 5, 2019.
"More deintermixure cleared." Broadcasting – Telecasting, March 25, 1957, pg. 48."Three areas get V's; New Bern shift made." Broadcasting – Telecasting, April 29, 1957; pg. 72. The channel was reallocated to the city of South Miami when Coral Television was awarded a construction permit to build channel 6 in April 1964.
The CBC said that the policy of telecasting each Stanley Cup playoff game to its conclusion would be enforced.
"Time Inc. gets Bitner properties, pays $15,750,000 for 3 TVs, 3 AMs." Broadcasting – Telecasting, December 24, 1956, pg. 7.
In 1956, Radio Augusta was sold to the Morris family and their company, Southeastern Newspapers, publishers of the Augusta Chronicle."WRDW-AM-TV sold Friday to newspaper for $1 Million." Broadcasting - Telecasting, December 5, 1955, pg. 7."WRDW-AM-TV purchase goes up for FCC approval." Broadcasting - Telecasting, January 2, 1956, pg. 58.
"KFRE-TV Fresno goes on the air." Broadcasting - Telecasting, May 14, 1956, pg. 9. It is the third-oldest television station in the Fresno market and upon signing on, KFRE-TV took the CBS affiliation from KJEO (channel 47, now KGPE)."KFRE-TV joins CBS-TV." Broadcasting - Telecasting, March 12, 1956, pg. 84.
Zee Tamil telecasting high budget, fantasy, and romance serials. Among other serials Sembaruthi recorded in TRP serial ratings at 1st place while Yaaradi Nee Mohini and Oru Orula Oru Rajakumar at Top 10. Zee Tamil also telecasting reality and fun shows like Dance Jodi Dance, Genes, Sa Re Ga Ma Pa and Tamizha Tamizha.
Surya TV Surya Television started operation from Thiruvananthapuram in 1998 as the second private channel of the state. Though Surya has a production facility in Thiruvananthapuram, telecasting is done from Chennai. Kairali TV Kairali Television, which went on air in 2000, also has its studio and production facilities in Thiruvananthapuram. The telecasting is from Ernakulam.
TuVisión was an American Spanish-language broadcasting network, which is owned by Pappas Telecasting. TuVisión is a portmanteau of tu (your) and televisión. During the latter part of 2007, Pappas hired Moelis & Company to develop long- term objectives to identify which television assets it should retain.Firm Hired to Help Restructure Pappas Telecasting Retrieved: 2010-04-01.
"KFRE-TV to join CBS-TV." Broadcasting - Telecasting, May 7, 1956, pg. 88. The KFRE stations were acquired by Triangle Publications in 1959.
South Texas Telecasting was one of three applicants for the channel, alongside Nueces Telecasting and the Corpus Christi Caller-Times,"Oilman Is Principal In TV Application". Corpus Christi Caller-Times, July 28, 1960. but the Caller-Times withdrew its application in 1962 after its owner, Harte-Hanks Newspapers, acquired the San Antonio Express-News."Caller-Times Will Drop TV Station Application".
The Chūgoku Shimbun is the local newspaper serving Hiroshima. It publishes both morning paper and evening editions. Television stations include Hiroshima Home Television, Hiroshima Telecasting, Shinhiroshima Telecasting, and the RCC Broadcasting. Radio stations include Hiroshima FM, Chugoku Communication Network, FM Fukuyama, FM Nanami, and Onomichi FM. Hiroshima is also served by NHK, Japan's public broadcaster, with television and radio broadcasting.
Pappas Telecasting sold the station to Jaco Communications in 2011.Bakersfield Class A TV changed hands, rbr.com, 11 July 2011. Retrieved 21 June 2014.
"AM Histories", Broadcasting — Telecasting. A Continuing Study of Major Radio Markets: Study No. 7: Chicago. October 25, 1948. p. 18. Retrieved January 18, 2020.
"FM Outlet Histories", Broadcasting — Telecasting. A Continuing Study of Major Radio Markets: Study No. 7: Chicago. October 25, 1948. p. 21. Retrieved February 14, 2019.
The BBC routinely used multiple cameras for their live television shows from 1936 onward."Telecasting a Play", New York Times, March 10, 1940, p. 163.
Under the same decree, WAVE-TV relocated from channel 5 to channel 3."TV coverage; RTMA predicts expansion." Broadcasting – Telecasting, May 19, 1952, pg. 78.
The new owner, Professional Telecasting, adopted the WBKO (an acronym for Bowling Green, Kentucky's Own) call sign and instituted color telecasting for local in-studio programming and newscasts in 1971. By this time, the station had moved to studios on East 10th Street in downtown Bowling Green. In 1976, a local group known as Bluegrass Media bought WBKO from Professional Telecasting.Television & Cable Factbook 1988 , page A-451.
" Broadcasting - Telecasting, June 15, 1953, pg. 68. the channel switch took place on April 25, 1954."WNBK (TV) goes to ch. 3; using new Parma plant.
Valley Voices: A Radio History. Crossroads Communications. pp. 353-354."FM Outlet Histories", Broadcasting — Telecasting. A Continuing Study of Major Radio Markets: Study No. 7: Chicago.
Between 2007 and 2014, when Seven had the telecasting rights to the V8 Supercars, Weekend Sunrise did not air on the day of the Bathurst 1000.
"Actions of the FCC", Broadcasting — Telecasting. March 29, 1948. p. 84. Retrieved June 28, 2020.1958 Broadcasting Yearbook, Broadcasting, 1958. p. A-291. Retrieved June 28, 2020.
"Closed circuit: Roanoke merger." Broadcasting – Telecasting, January 31, 1955, pg. 5. The Times-World Corp. would be awarded the channel 7 construction permit two months later.
Maasranga Television (; ) is an HDTV television channel in Bangladesh. The channel got permission from Bangladeshi Government to telecast broadly in 2010. On 30 July 2011 this channel telecasting.
DD Bharati is a state owned TV channel telecasting from Doordarshan Kendra, Delhi. It telecasts various cultural programmes and is dedicated to show India's vast culture and traditions.
Logo as Recuerdo 107.5. Logo for KRDA as 107.5 Más Variedad until August 2016. In October 2005, Pappas Telecasting Cos. sold KVBE to Univision Radio for $10 million.
The station also began to air the entire Fox lineup nightly. In May 2005, Waitt Broadcasting (owner of KMEG) entered into a shared services agreement with Pappas Telecasting.
In 1955, after two years off the air, it was reborn as WBAI (after then-owners Broadcast Associates, Inc.).CALL LETTERS ASSIGNED Broadcasting – Telecasting. July 4, 1955. pg. 83.
"Metropolitan buying KMBC." Broadcasting, December 26, 1960, pp. 51-52. Later that year the company's name was changed to Metromedia;"It's Metromedia." Broadcasting - Telecasting, April 3, 1961, pg. 56.
The paper's owners diversified in 1971 by founding "State Telecasting Company." State Telecasting purchased three television stations in New Mexico, South Carolina and Texas. KCBD-TV in Lubbock, Texas and its full-time satellite KSWS-TV Roswell, NM were acquired in 1971 for 6 million dollars from the Joe Bryant estate. WUSN-TV in Charleston, SC was acquired and the call letters changed to WCBD-TV to conform with those of KCBD.
The U.S. Supreme Court ultimately upheld the decision in November of that year."Supreme Court refuses plea to upset St. Louis TV grant." Broadcasting – Telecasting, November 24, 1958, pg. 79.
In 2008, several affiliates filed for Chapter 11 protection.PAPPAS TELECASTING ANNOUNCED TODAY THAT CERTAIN AFFILIATES HAVE FILED FOR CHAPTER 11 PROTECTION Retrieved: 2010-04-01. and TuVisión ceased broadcasting in 2009.
"TV starter pace seems sluggish so far in '54." Broadcasting - Telecasting, February 8, 1954, pg. 52. During the late 1950s, WILK-TV was also briefly affiliated with the NTA Film Network.
In 1954, WHOT was sold to the University of Notre Dame for $140,000."WSIX-AM-TV Among Four Sales Asked", Broadcasting — Telecasting. August 16, 1954. p. 58. Retrieved April 10, 2019.
Crosley sold the station to J. Elroy McCaw's Gotham Broadcasting Corporation in 1953 for $450,000."McCaw group pays $450,000 for WINS". Broadcasting – Telecasting, August 10, 1953, pg. 70."For the record".
KIVA, VHF analog channel 11, was an NBC-affiliated television station licensed to Yuma, Arizona, United States. It was the first local television station in Yuma, and for more than half of its existence, the only local station. It signed on October 8, 1953 and signed off January 31, 1970. For most of its existence, KIVA was licensed to Valley Telecasting under control of several owners until 1967, and was licensed to Merrill Telecasting from 1967 until sign-off.
These sales ended all of Overmyer's interest in the U.S. Communications subsidiaries, while WDHO-TV remained on the air as Toledo's ABC network affiliate (affiliated in 1969). The Toledo station was then the only operational TV station owned by D.H. Overmyer. The D.H. Overmyer Telecasting Company, founded in 1966, was the holding company for WDHO-TV. Overmyer pledged the stock of Telecasting to the First National Bank of Boston as security for a $6 million loan in 1971.
There cannot be copyright in telecasting live events because there is insufficient fixation. The result of the case became a major factor in the following growth of the Canadian cable television industry.
DD Uttarakhand is a state-owned TV channel telecasting from Doordarshan Kendra Uttarakhand, India. It was inaugurated by Venkaiah Naidu. The first news bulletin of DD Uttarakhand was read by Ms. Shikha Tyagi.
"CBS Mystery Series", Broadcasting (Washington, D.C.), advertised on cover as "The Newsweekly of Television and Radio Telecasting", June 13, 1949, p. 58, col. 3. Internet Archive, San Francisco, California. Retrieved November 26, 2018.
DD Assam is a state owned TV channel telecasting from Doordarshan Kendra Assam situated at Guwahati. DD Assam an Exclusive for the state available on DD Free dish DTH, at channel no.0052.
WHEC-TV/WVET-TV advertisement. Broadcasting - Telecasting, October 26, 1953, pg. 75. The WHEC stations moved from the Bank of Rochester building to WHEC-TV's present location, on East Avenue, in May 1958.
KVIQ-LP signed on the air as KVIQ-TV on VHF channel 6 as Eureka's second television station on April 1, 1958. It was owned by Shasta Telecasting, as a satellite station of KVIP-TV (now KRCR-TV) in Redding, California; Shasta Telecasting sold the station to California Northwest Broadcasting in 1960. California Oregon Broadcasting subsequently acquired KIEM-TV (channel 3), which it operated separately from KRCR. KVIQ-TV initially broadcast from studios located on Humboldt Hill Road in Eureka.
In 1956, the station was sold to Coastal Broadcasting for $55,000, and its call sign was changed to WSGA (Savannah, GA)."Ownership Changes", Broadcasting — Telecasting. May 14, 1956. p. 115. Retrieved May 24, 2019.
October 25, 1948. p. 19-20. Retrieved September 14, 2018. In Summer 1952, the station was granted authority to remain silent, and on December 23, 1952 its license was cancelled."FCC Actions", Broadcasting-Telecasting.
In 1957, Storer sold the WBRC stations to Radio Cincinnati Inc., the forerunner of what would become Taft Broadcasting, for $2.3 million."This week's receipts: $26 million." Broadcasting - Telecasting, April 8, 1957, pp. 31-32.
The station began broadcasting on January 26, 1947, and held the call sign KHUM."KHUM Takes Air as 250-w Outlet at Eureka, Calif", Broadcasting – Telecasting. January 27, 1947. p. 26. Retrieved June 18, 2019.
Harvest TV is a 24x7 Christian devotional satellite channel in Malayalam language. Harvest TV started as a cable TV channel in 2011 in Thiruvananthapuram, Kerala. By 2013, Harvest TV started telecasting on various DTH networks.
" Broadcasting - Telecasting, April 13, 1953, pg. 52. In 1953, Radio Cincinnati purchased WTVN-TV (now WSYX) in Columbus, Ohio, from Picture-Waves, Inc., controlled by Toledo attorney and broadcaster Edward Lamb."TV station is purchased.
"WNAO-TV to go black, joins WTOB-TV in Ch. 8 shift plea." Broadcasting – Telecasting, December 30, 1957, pg. 10. During the late 1950s, the station was also briefly affiliated with the NTA Film Network. On May 22, 1957, the station's original owners sold their interest in WTVD to Albany, New York-based Hudson Valley Broadcasting Company, owners of WCDA-TV (now WTEN), to form Capital Cities Television Corporation (predecessor of Capital Cities Communications)."This week's receipts: $26 million." Broadcasting – Telecasting, April 8, 1957, pp. 31–32.
On May 12, 1983, the FCC rejected the petition and issued an order transferring control of WDHO-TV from D.H. Overmyer Telecasting, a debtor in possession, to the First National Bank of Boston. The Bank of Boston eventually sold WDHO-TV through bankruptcy to a local group, Toledo Television Investors, Ltd., for $19.6 million in 1986. On August 7, 1981, the Overmyer leasing company, operating as Hadar, which also was in Chapter 11, filed a proof of claim for $859,481.80 in the Telecasting bankruptcy proceedings.
Hiroshima Telecasting Co., Ltd. (HTV, 広島テレビ放送株式会社, callsign: JONX-TV) is a TV station in Hiroshima. It is affiliated with NNN and NNS. It is broadcast in Hiroshima Prefecture.
"WOAK (FM) in Oak Park Starts on Channel 252", Broadcasting — Telecasting. June 7, 1948. p. 73. Retrieved February 15, 2019."Launch New FM Station on West Side", Chicago Tribune. February 1, 1948. Part 3, p. 2.
SuperSport Premier League is a 24-hour football/soccer channel. SuperSport has the exclusive rights of telecasting the Premier League, UEFA Champions League and other major football tournaments. It is available on the Dstv Compact package.
"Channel 3 Deadline For Reply Extended". Corpus Christi Caller-Times, February 11, 1963. Nueces withdrew its petition in June 1963 after South Texas Telecasting agreed to pay the company $40,000."Channel 3 TV Competitor Withdraws Its Application".
The oldest television station in West Virginia, WSAZ-TV began regular broadcasting November 15, 1949, on VHF channel 5."WSAZ-TV; Folsom, McConnell attend opening event". Broadcasting - Telecasting, November 21, 1949, pg. 57. Retrieved August 8, 2018.
"Martin named Gen. Mgr. for WMVT (TV), WCAX." Broadcasting - Telecasting, October 30, 1954, pg. 72. Red Martin continued to own the station until his death in 2005, and was succeeded by his oldest son, Peter R. Martin.
The network formed in October 1966 comprised 7 television stations: Fuji TV (the flagship station), Sendai Television, Tōkai TV, Kansai TV, Hiroshima Telecasting (now affiliated with NNN and NNS), Nihonkai Telecasting, and Television Nishinippon Corporation. Presently the network has 26 full members, and two (Television Oita System Co., Ltd and TV Miyazaki). In terms of the number of participating stations, it is the third largest in Japan, following NNN (NTN group) and JNN (TBS-group). FNS does not currently have any affiliates in four prefectures: Aomori, Yamanashi, Yamaguchi, and Tokushima.
At the age of 3, Verxina won the Daily Hai Queen Cup in Japan. She also placed second at the Yushun Himba, Oka Sho, Shuka Sho, Queen Elizabeth II Commemorative Cup, and Kansai Telecasting Corporation Sho Rose Stakes.
In 1957, the station was sold to Evelyn Chauvin Schoonfield, a school teacher from Detroit, for $22,500, and its call sign was changed to WXFM."Ownership Changes", Broadcasting – Telecasting. January 28, 1957. p. 104. Retrieved February 3, 2019.
The station began broadcasting on September 29, 1947, and held the call sign WNMP. WNMP operated during daytime hours only, with a power of 1,000 watts. Block programming was aired in its early years."AM Histories", Broadcasting — Telecasting.
"WINS sale to Crosley approved by FCC". Broadcasting - Telecasting, July 23, 1946, pg. 17. Retrieved August 26, 2018. Sportscaster Mel Allen was an early disc jockey on the station, hosting an afternoon popular music program beginning in 1947.
In 1951, the station's call sign was changed to WFMT."FCC roundup", Broadcasting — Telecasting. May 14, 1951. p. 103. Retrieved February 15, 2019. Bernard and Rita Jacobs launched WFMT's classical music/fine arts radio format on December 13, 1951.
In 1955 the FCC awarded a new permit for 102.7 FM to a group called Fidelity Radio Corporation, based in West Paterson, New Jersey."Three AM, two FM permits granted by FCC." Broadcasting – Telecasting, September 26, 1955, p. 102.
In 1986, he was awarded PTV best sports commentator. He won the Radio Pakistan best cricket commentator award in 1999 and excellence award in 2001. Chishty is the recipient of Pride of Performance 2003 for cricket broadcasting and telecasting.
An animated television series based on Angel Heart was developed as a co-production between TMS Entertainment (the producers of the Cat's Eye anime), Yomiuri Telecasting Corporation, and Aniplex. Fifty episodes were broadcast between October 4, 2005 and September 26, 2006.
KYW acquired a television counterpart in 1953, when Westinghouse bought WPTZ (channel 3), the nation's third commercial television station and NBC's second television affiliate, from Philco."Westinghouse buys WPTZ (TV) for record $8.5 million", Broadcasting - Telecasting, February 23, 1953, page 27.
The station began operations on September 29, 1949, as WTVN, Columbus' second television station."WTVN (TV) start; Lamb station bows September 29." Broadcasting - Telecasting, October 3, 1949, pg. 61. At its launch, the station was owned by Picture Waves Inc.
In Sri Lanka, the show was telecasted by ITN. It started telecasting it from August 2013. It aired on every Saturday and Sunday from 6.00 to 7.00pm local time. It was dubbed in Sinhala and renamed as "සත්‍ය ගවේෂක" (Sathya Gaveshaka).
Major League Baseball staggered the times of first-round games to provide a full-day feast for viewers: ESPN could air games at 1 p.m., 4 p.m., and 11 p.m. EDT, with the broadcast networks telecasting the prime time game.
In 1951, the station's studios were moved to its transmitter site in Elmhurst. In 1954, it was sold to Robert Oscar Miller and family."Our Respects to Robert Oscar Miller", Broadcasting/Telecasting. October 4, 1954. p. 20. Retrieved October 3, 2018.
TuVisión began operations on July 1, 2007,Pappas Telecasting Launches “TuVisión” Network Retrieved: 2010-04-01 after Pappas dropped the Azteca America network from the Spanish-language stations that Pappas owned. The only exception was Los Angeles' KAZA-TV, which retained the network until its 2018 sale to Weigel Broadcasting; Pappas was under contract to carry Azteca América through December 2012 and its later bankruptcy effectively kept the affiliation after 2012 on creditor's orders.KAZH-TV to lose Azteca America affiliation Retrieved: 2010-04-01.Azteca America Closes 5-Year Pact With Pappas Telecasting Retrieved: 2010-04-01.
"CBS buys KWK-TV for $4 million." Broadcasting – Telecasting, September 30, 1957, pg. 48. The agreement required CBS to give up its construction permit for channel 11, and the Federal Communications Commission transferred it to one of the failed applicants, a group led by St. Louis hotelier Harold Koplar, for no financial consideration."New alignment set for St. Louis TV." Broadcasting – Telecasting, October 28, 1957, pg. 73. Almost immediately, the deal was held up after the St. Louis Amusement Company, another of the original applicants for channel 11, protested to the United States Court of Appeals in January 1958.
Miyazaki Telecasting Co., Ltd. (abbreviation: UMK, Japanese name: 株式会社テレビ宮崎) is a Japanese TV station in Miyazaki. It is known as "TV Miyazaki" (テレビ宮崎). It is a network TV station of NNN, FNN/FNS, and ANN.
The station began broadcasting April 1, 1947, holding the call sign WTRC-FM, and was a sister station to 1340 WTRC.Broadcasting Telecasting Yearbook Number 1950, Broadcasting, 1950. p. 138. Retrieved August 11, 2018.History Cards for WBYT, fcc.gov. Retrieved August 11, 2018.
The state of his audition was broadcast on BS Fuji on 11 January 2015 and Kansai Telecasting Corporation on 2 May 2015 in Maido! Johnny, and on 18 January and 5 May broadcast of the studio Show Time. His special skill is Aikido.
The station was licensed by the FCC on April 7, 1922. It was one of the first radio stations licensed. It was owned by the Chicago Daily Drover's Journal, with its transmitter and studios at the Union Stock Yards."AM Histories", Broadcasting - Telecasting.
She made regular appearances in the Kansai Telecasting Corporation series Sata Uma! Because of that, Rokusha did more work related to horse racing, including the Television Nishinippon Corporation series Dream Keiba, where she appeared as a quasi-regular guest with Rica Imai.
Nihonkai Telecasting Co., Ltd. (日本海テレビジョン放送株式会社, NKT) is a Japanese TV station broadcast in Tottori Prefecture and Shimane Prefecture. NKT is a TV station of Nippon News Network(NNN) and Nippon Television Network System (NNS).
WBNS-TV began operations on October 5, 1949."WBNS-TV opens; Tele-Center dedicated." Broadcasting – Telecasting, October 24, 1949, pg. 48. WBNS radio had been a CBS Radio Network affiliate for almost 20 years, so channel 10 immediately joined the CBS television network.
Their studios were located at 34 E. Bryan Street, a second floor suite of offices, located over the Georgia State Bank building. By 1948, Neff had built WDAR-FM, at 96.5 MHz with 12,000 watts ERP."FM Stations", Broadcasting — Telecasting. October 11, 1948.
DD Gyan Darshan 1 is a state owned television channel telecasting from Doordarshan, Kendra, IGNOU. It is an educational media initiative of MHRD in collaboration with the Ministry of Information and Broadcasting (MIB), Prasar Bharati and ISRO with IGNOU as the nodal agency.
"Time sells KOB-AM-TV stations." Broadcasting - Telecasting, January 14, 1957, pp. 96-97. KOB's radio cousins were sold off in 1986 and are now known as KKOB and KOBQ. Despite the change, many people still confuse the television and radio stations today.
" Broadcasting — Telecasting, October 30, 1950, pp. 21, 30. Subsequently, CBS sold its share in KTTV to the station's majority partner, the Los Angeles Times, and all CBS programming moved to KTSL on January 1, 1951."Don Lee sale; General Tire purchase approved.
On October 18, 1954, the television station's callsign changed to the present WRC-TV to match its radio sisters."RCA replaces NBC in O&O; calls." Broadcasting – Telecasting, October 4, 1954, pg. 78. The new calls reflected NBC's ownership at the time by RCA.
Facing financial difficulty and the loss of its transmitter site, the station shut down in 1979. The channel 21 license was sold to Pappas Telecasting, which began the lengthy reconstruction of the station as WHNS, a general-market independent station which launched in 1984.
"TV coverage; RTMA predicts expansion." WLWT was reassigned to channel 5, as the previous channel 4 allocation was shifted north to Columbus and given to sister station WLWC (now WCMH-TV), which began operations in April 1949.Broadcasting - Telecasting, December 15, 1952, pg. 41.
KFRE-TV logo from 2011 to 2018. On May 10, 2008, thirteen Pappas stations, including KFRE, filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection. As a result of the bankruptcy, Pappas Telecasting Companies was given until February 15, 2009 to sell these stations to other owners.
"WTVN (TV) joins ABC-TV Oct. 1." Broadcasting - Telecasting, September 5, 1949, pg. 60. Channel 6 became a full-time ABC affiliate in 1955, after DuMont closed down its operations. During the late 1950s, the station was also briefly affiliated with the NTA Film Network.
It aired in other cities before it appeared on WCBS-TV in New York City on December 5, 1952.Broadcasting, Telecasting, Oct. 20, 1952., leading earlier reference works to erroneously presume that the show was carried nationally on the CBS network starting on that date.
Film: Gross-Krasne Expands With 'O. Henry' Success. Broadcasting, Telecasting (Archive: 1945-1957) 51.22 (Nov 26, 1956):66.Gross-Krasne Productions on the Internet Movie Database In 1952, Gross-Krasne bought the California Studios (now the Raleigh Studios) where many of their productions were filmed.
In 1986, Doordarshan started telecasting tele-films in Malayalam-language under their own production. Kunjayyappan was one of the first Malayalam tele-films produced and telecasted by Doordarshan. Gopakumar played the title role. In 1988, Doordarshan aired a 13-episode television serial Mandan Kunchu.
All of Merrill's petitions were denied, and on the evening of November 2, 1963, one hour after receiving notice of program test authority, KBLU-TV began broadcasting. The station expanded its coverage to El Centro in 1965 with another increase in power, and relocation of its transmitter from within the city of Yuma to a site atop Black Mountain, northwest of Yuma, at a much greater height above average terrain. It also opened an office and studio in El Centro to better serve the Imperial Valley. On December 7, 1966, Desert Telecasting filed an application to transfer the stations to Eller Telecasting, part of Eller Outdoor Advertising Company.
He starred in The Jeffersonian Heritage, a 1952 series of 13 half-hour radio programmes recorded by the National Association of Educational Broadcasters and syndicated for commercial broadcast on a sustaining (i.e., commercial-free) basis."The Jeffersonian Heritage," Broadcasting-Telecasting, 8 September 1952, 36 (trade advertisement).
Around the same time as the VHF stations were launched, as well, the DuMont network collapsed. KVDO carried on as an independent station, and was sold to H. J. Schmidt's South Texas Telecasting Company in April 1957."TV Sale Okayed". Austin American-Statesman, April 5, 1957.
TSS-TV Co., Ltd. (株式会社テレビ新広島, Television Shin-Hiroshima System), named Shinhiroshima Telecasting Co., Ltd. until 2008, is a TV station serving in Hiroshima Prefecture and eastern Yamaguchi Prefecture, affiliated with of Fuji News Network (FNN) and Fuji Network System (FNS).
Crosley also owned WLW radio and WLWT television in Cincinnati, as well as WLWD television (now WDTN) in Dayton. Together these stations comprised the "WLW Television Network", a regional group of inter-connected stations."Television transmission; Crosley plans interconnection facilities." Broadcasting - Telecasting, March 14, 1949, pg. 35.
Columbus' first television station began operations on April 3, 1949 as WLWC on channel 3."WLWC starts; Columbus video outlet opened by Crosley." Broadcasting - Telecasting, April 4, 1949, pg. 41. The station's original owner was the Cincinnati-based Crosley Broadcasting Corporation, a division of the Avco Company.
In 1956, WROW-TV moved from channel 41 to channel 10 and became WCDA. In 1957, Hudson Valley Broadcasting merged with Durham Broadcasting Enterprises, the owners of WTVD television in Durham, North Carolina."This week's receipts: $26 million." Broadcasting - Telecasting, April 8, 1957, pp. 31-32.
Each of the station's part- owners had competed individually for the channel 4 construction permit before agreeing to merge their interests only three months before the station went on the air."St. Louis Ch. 4 grant proposed after merger." Broadcasting – Telecasting, April 19, 1954, pg. 60.
19, 68. A few months later, channel 11 agreed to become the new Los Angeles outlet of the DuMont Television Network, which had been affiliated with KTSL and, before that, KTLA (channel 5)."KTTV-DuMont; affiliation planned April 11." Broadcasting – Telecasting, March 19, 1951, pg. 61.
In 1954, DuMont moved its programming to KHJ-TV (channel 9, now KCAL-TV),"KHJ-TV DuMont affiliate." Broadcasting – Telecasting, March 22, 1954, pg. 9. and KTTV became an independent station. During the late 1950s, the station was also briefly affiliated with the NTA Film Network.
"TV applications." Broadcasting – Telecasting. June 9, 1952, pg. 73. Following the move to channel 11, the station became to first to increase its effective radiated power to 316,000 watts, the maximum allowed for a high-band VHF station, resulting in a greatly increased signal coverage area.
WJBF-TV was a primary NBC affiliate, but picked up programs from CBS, ABC and DuMont on a secondary basis. Sister station WJBF radio was sold by Fuqua in 1954 (it is now WEZO)."Fountain firm buys WJBF for $125,000." Broadcasting - Telecasting, July 5, 1954, pg. 66.
Due to the COVID-19 outbreak in India, Barathi Kannamma, and all other Vijay TV shows were suspended as of 27 March 2020.. Months later, TV Serial shooting was permitted and the team commenced filming immediately. The show commenced telecasting new episodes from July 27, 2020.
Vijay TV gained fame through this reality show. Now Vijay channel is considered to be telecasting best reality shows. Jodi No. 1 - Season 1 was launched in October 2006. The show witnessed four real life couples and 4 fictional (real) life couples engage in a 13-week dancing competition.
DD Rajasthan is a state-owned TV channel telecasting from Doordarshan Kendra Rajasthan. It is to be revamped as DD Aravali soon. The proposed DD Aravali Channel will be telecasted from DDK Jaipur. It will be 24 hours channel and will be available on DTH and Cable Networks.
Doordarshan Uttar Pradesh often abbreviated as DD Uttar Pradesh (Hindi: दूरदर्शन उत्तर प्रदेश) is a 24-hour regional satellite TV channel primarily telecasting from Doordarshan Kendra Lucknow (DDK Lucknow) and is a part of the state-owned Doordarshan TV Network. It majorly serves the Indian state of Uttar Pradesh.
Doordarshan Madhya Pradesh often abbreviated as DD Madhya Pradesh (Hindi: दूरदर्शन मध्यप्रदेश) is a 24-hour regional satellite TV channel primarily telecasting from Doordarshan Kendra Bhopal (DDK Bhopal) and is a part of the state-owned Doordarshan television network. It primarily serves the Indian state of Madhya Pradesh.
Three years later, Kennedy sold the trio to a partnership of television producer Jack Wrather and industry executive Helen Alvarez."$7 1/2 million mark passed in bumper transfer crop." Broadcasting - Telecasting, February 2, 1953, pp. 27-28. On December 7, 1954, KFMB moved from 550 to 540 kHz.
In 1953, the station's power was increased to 1,000 watts. In 1957, the station was sold to Andrew B. Letson for $60,000, and the station's call sign was changed to WZRO."Storz Sells KOWH for $822,500; Seven Other AM Stations Sold", Broadcasting-Telecasting. April 1, 1957. p. 128.
In 1941, the station's frequency was changed to 950 kHz. In the 1940s, the station aired orchestral music and popular music. In 1948, the station's studios were moved to the LaSalle-Wacker Building."WAAF: A New Home For Chicago's Oldest Call Letters", Broadcasting - Telecasting. October 25, 1948. p. 15.
This deal came because WKRC-TV's owner, Taft Broadcasting, had developed very good relations with ABC. Following the release of the FCC's Sixth Report and Order in 1952, all of Cincinnati's VHF stations changed channel positions."TV coverage; RTMA predicts expansion." Broadcasting – Telecasting, May 19, 1952, pg. 78.
Thiruvananthapuram has numerous newspaper publications, television and radio stations. Most of the media houses in Kerala are based in Thiruvananthapuram. The first Malayalam channel, Doordarshan Malayalam began broadcasting from the city in 1981. Asianet, the first private channel in Malayalam, also started its telecasting from the city in 1993.
The station commenced operations on September 10, 1953 as WATR- TV on channel 53, the second UHF station in Connecticut."4 UHFs, 3 VHFs start commercial." Broadcasting - Telecasting, September 21, 1953, pg. 66. It was owned by the Thomas and Gilmore families, along with WATR radio (1320 AM).
But eight months later, CBS decided instead to purchase its existing St. Louis affiliate, KWK-TV (channel 4)."St. Louis handshake." Broadcasting - Telecasting, September 9, 1957, pg. 5. As a condition of the channel 4 purchase, the FCC required CBS to relinquish the channel 11 license and construction permit.
CBS had planned to have a corporate-owned and operated television station in St. Louis, to pair with KMOX 1120. In 1957, the network originally won an FCC construction permit to build a new station on Channel 11, the last remaining commercial VHF channel in St. Louis."FCC acts to clear key market V's." Broadcasting – Telecasting, January 21, 1957, pp. 35-37. But after being approached with an offer, CBS decided in August of that year to instead buy the existing KWK-TV for $4 million."CBS buys KWK-TV for $4 million." Broadcasting – Telecasting, September 30, 1957, pg. 48. KWK-TV was owned by a group including the publisher of the St. Louis Globe-Democrat.
Codel left the magazine in January 1943, to work in public relations for the Red Cross in the North African theater of the war, but remained on the masthead as publisher until June 1944, at which point Taishoff and his wife bought out the Codels' interest in the magazine. Taishoff then assumed the post of the publisher in addition to editor. Broadcasting merged with Broadcast Advertising in 1932, with the Broadcast Reporter in 1933, and with Telecast in 1953. The title was changed to Broadcasting-Telecasting beginning with the November 26, 1945, issue; Telecasting was dropped from the cover page on October 14, 1957, but remained on the masthead through January 5, 1959.
On August 23, 2007 the Ministry of Information of Bangladesh had asked the Ekushey Television (ETV) and Focus Multimedia Company Limited (CSB) to refrain from telecasting any provocative news, documentaries, talk shows and discussions against the government.Bangladesh news channel off air, BBC News. September 6, 2007. Retrieved November 26, 2007.
The manga appeared in Weekly Shōnen Magazine about the actual baseball team Yomiuri Giants using fictional characters. It was launched by the "Yomiuri Group" which at the time owned not only the actual baseball team, but the TV network Nippon Television, the newspaper Yomiuri Shimbun, as well as Yomiuri Telecasting Corporation.
As of , a number of television shows announced that production was either delayed or stopped completely. Some shows continue with production but without a studio audience, and some shows would have reruns, since some shows could finish their seasons earlier than expected due to being unable to finish production for telecasting.
Ishq Gumshuda () is an Urdu language Pakistani telenovela which was first broadcast in Pakistan in 2010 by Hum TV, premiering on 25 June 2010. Directed by Haissam Hussain and written by Noor-ul-Hada Shah, Ishq Gumshuda, which ended its run after telecasting 17 episodes, has been produced by Momina Duraid.
"Lost Cinderella Footage On View at NYC's Museum of TV & Radio" , Playbill.com, June 20, 2002, accessed December 22, 2012Julie Andrews: Awards & Nominees, Emmys.com, accessed December 22, 2012The Nielsen TV rating for the program was 18,864,000 "homes reached during an average minute" of the broadcast. "Ratings", Broadcasting-Telecasting, 6 May 1957, p.
KOMO-TV began operating on December 10, 1953, as an NBC affiliate, owing to KOMO radio's long-time relationship with the NBC Radio Network."Nine more TV stations take to air." Broadcasting - Telecasting, December 21, 1953, pg. 58. It is the fourth-oldest television station in the Seattle–Tacoma area.
Broadcasting – Telecasting, January 4, 1954, pg. 98. Retrieved August 26, 2018. Soon after, WINS became one of the first stations in the United States to play rock and roll music full time. In autumn of 1954, Alan Freed was hired as a disc jockey on WINS.Sterling, Christopher H.; O'Dell, Cary (2010).
Shekinah TV is a 24-hour Indian satellite channel, airing Christian spiritual programs , current affairs and news. Live telecasting The channel airs programs in Malayalam and English. The channel is managed by Shekinah Communications Limited, controlled by catholic church in kerala. The channel is headquartered in Thalikode, Thrissur, Kerala, India.
WNYE-TV operates on New York City's original educational television allocation, one of ten awarded by the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) in 1952 to the University of the State of New York, the state's overall educational governing body."State of New York: Educational Reservations." Broadcasting - Telecasting, April 14, 1952, pt. 2, pg. 37.
"Media reports...", Broadcasting, August 24, 1964, pg. 79. During this period NBC Radio purchased three additional stations: WKNB in New Britain, Connecticut in late 1956; and WJAS and WJAS-FM in Pittsburgh, in 1957."Hearst Acquires WTVW (TV) Milwaukee; NBC buys WKNB-TV New Britain, Conn.", Broadcasting - Telecasting, January 10, 1955, pg. 7.
In 1956, WFMT aired a live recording of a folk concert with Pete Seeger and Big Bill Broonzy at Northwestern University. In 1957, the station received an Alfred I. DuPont Award as the country's best broadcaster in the small-station category."Huntley, Stations Get duPont Awards", Broadcasting — Telecasting. April 1, 1957. p. 137.
Laikin is a Pakistani television series aired on A-Plus TV. It features Ali Abbas, Sara Khan and Farhan Malhi. Premiering on 27 April 2017, Laikin ended its run on 5 October 2017 after telecasting 24 episodes. The series marks the second appearance of Indian actress Sara Khan after Bay Khudi (2016).
"MALAYSIA: Why Parliament sessions can't go live on TV". (6 May 2004). Straits Times. In 2006, Information Minister Zainuddin Maidin cited the controversy over speeches made at the United Malays National Organisation (UMNO) — the leading party in the ruling Barisan Nasional coalition – annual general assembly as a reason to avoid telecasting Parliamentary debates.
''''' ''''' Romedy Now is an India based English language television channel showing romantic comedy Hollywood films and shows. The channel, owned by the Bennett, Coleman and Co. Ltd, went on air and began telecasting from 22 September 2013. Its HD counterpart is called Romedy Now HD. Its tag line is "Love Laugh Live".
Its daytime power was increased to 5,000 watts in 1947."Five AM Stations, Two Increases in Power Are Granted By Commission", Broadcasting — Telecasting. March 17, 1947. p. 86. Retrieved June 28, 2020. In 1948, its FM sister KALB-FM 96.9 MHz (now KZMZ) began broadcasting, and simulcast the programming of KALB 580.
Suresh Gopi was the hero of this movie. Her role in Ranjith's Ammakkilikkoodu was widely appreciated. Recently she has judged the popular reality show Amma Ammmayiyamma, telecasting on Kairali TV. She has acted in some advertisements also. She sang the song Ormayundo in PP Govindan's 1977 film Saritha, along with P Jayachandran.
Love Game is a 2009 Japanese TV series by Yomiuri Telecasting Corporation. The 13 episodes take the premise of a game organized by the lead character Himuro Sae (played by Yumiko Shaku), with the supporting role of the "mystery woman" (played by Japanese actress Yuki) in a different persona in each episode.
CBS had already taken control of channel 4's operations that March, and changed its call letters to KMOX-TV in reference to its new radio sister."CBS- TV takes over KWK-TV." Broadcasting – Telecasting, March 3, 1958, pg. 10. The following April, channel 11 signed on as independent station KPLR-TV.
"Seven TVs win FCC approval; Augusta gets its first grants." Broadcasting - Telecasting, September 21, 1953, pg. 48. WRDW-TV has been Augusta's CBS affiliate for its entire history, owing to its radio sister's long affiliation with the CBS Radio Network. However, it shared ABC with then-primary NBC affiliate WJBF (channel 6).
"At deadline: CBS signs Roanoke outlet." Broadcasting – Telecasting, July 18, 1955, pg. 7. WDBJ- TV was the third television station to sign-on from Roanoke, after NBC affiliate WSLS-TV (channel 10) and WROV-TV (channel 27, frequency later occupied by WFXR), which operated as an independent station from February to July 1953.
Chi La Sow Sravanthi was a long-running serial on Gemini TV in India which ran originally from 2006-May 2011. The show was re-telecasted in 2015 on Vanitha TV under the title Sathamanam Bhavathi. Again it has been re-telecasting on GeminiTV from 22 June 2020 to 24 October 2020.
The initial critical reaction to the half-hour sitcom Honeymooners was mixed. The New York Times and Broadcasting & Telecasting Magazine wrote that it was "labored" and lacked the spontaneity of the live sketches. But TV Guide praised it as "rollicking," "slapsticky" and "fast-paced." In February 1956, the show was moved to the 8 p.m.
WTNH first went on the air on June 15, 1948 as WNHC-TV, originally broadcasting on channel 6. The station was founded by the Elm City Broadcasting Corporation, owners of WNHC radio (1340 AM, now WYBC; and 99.1 FM, now WPLR)."WNHC-TV programs to start this week." Broadcasting – Telecasting, June 14, 1948, pg. 58.
During the 1950s, musical shorts were revived for telecasting on local stations. Feature films in that decade were usually not edited to fit. Instead, if a feature ended 20 minutes before the hour, footage from musical shorts was used to fill the gap. Snader Telescriptions were musical shorts made for television from 1950 to 1954.
DD Sports is a state-owned TV channel telecasting from Central Production Centre Delhi. DD Sports was launched on 18 March 1998. In the beginning, it broadcast sports programmes for six hours a day, which was increased to 12 hours in 1999. From 1 June 2000, DD Sports became a "round-the-clock" satellite channel.
In 1958, WCHS swapped affiliations with WHTN and became an ABC affiliate. The WCHS stations were sold to Rollins Telecasting in 1960. The station reversed the swap and went back to CBS in 1962. For reasons that remain unknown, WCHS did not carry the CBS Evening News for several years after returning to CBS.
Hughes was a member of the board and secretary-treasurer of Mid-Continent Telecasting, Inc., which founded the television station KOAM-TV, the first television station in the Joplin, Missouri / Pittsburg, Kansas market. At the time of the sale of the Globe, Hughes and H. Lang Rogers purchased the Globe’s interest in the station.
WRDW-TV commenced operations in February 1954; it is the second-oldest television station in Augusta."TV starter pace seems sluggish so far in '54." Broadcasting - Telecasting, February 8, 1954, pg. 52. The station was originally owned by Radio Augusta, the parent company of the original WRDW radio (1480 AM, later WCHZ and now defunct).
The San Diego area's third- oldest television station first went on the air on September 13, 1953 as NBC affiliate KFSD-TV."4 UHFs, 3 VHFs start commercial." Broadcasting – Telecasting, September 21, 1953, pg. 66. The station's original owner was Airfan Radio Corporation, which also owned NBC Radio Network affiliate KFSD (600 AM, now KOGO).
The station first signed on the air on November 1, 1952 as KLZ-TV."Eight stations, 5 VHF, 3 UHF, begin commercial operation." Broadcasting – Telecasting, November 2, 1952, pg. 64. It was founded by the Oklahoma City-based Oklahoma Publishing Company (operated by Edward K. Gaylord), which also owned KLZ radio (560 AM and 106.7 FM, now KWBL).
The cover of the first DVD compilation for season seventeen of Detective Conan released by Shogakukan. The seventeenth season of the Case Closed anime was directed by Kenji Kodama and Yasuichiro Yamamoto and produced by TMS Entertainment and Yomiuri Telecasting Corporation. The series is based on Gosho Aoyama's Case Closed manga series. In Japan, the series is titled .
Westinghouse entered television on June 9, 1948 with the sign-on of WBZ-TV in Boston; it is the only television station to have been built by the company."WBZ-TV formally opened in Boston." Broadcasting - Telecasting, June 14, 1948, pg. 27. Westinghouse's first station purchase was with WPTZ (now KYW-TV) in Philadelphia, in 1953.
After the closure of WNAO-TV, the former studios on Western Boulevard housed a furniture store. A fire on the morning of February 23, 1964, gutted the store, causing $175,000 in damage. Channel 28 in the Triangle was reactivated when WRDU-TV, licensed to Durham, began telecasting in November 1968, initially airing programming from CBS and NBC.
KEYT-TV first signed on the air on May 31, 1953, after obtaining a construction permit from the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) on November 13, 1952.Telecasting Yearbook 1953-1954 page 66. It was owned by the Santa Barbara Broadcasting & Television Corporation. Harry Butcher, who owned KIST (1340 AM), was a 14% owner of the new TV station.
He was a contestant on Idea Star Singer 2007, which was telecast on Asianet. He handled in-house music production for Flowers (TV channel), Zee Keralam (TV channel) and other media houses. Top works include Comedy Utsavam and Uppum Mulakum telecasting on Flowers (TV channel). He started his career by doing ads, jingles, short films and music albums.
Shalom TV was developed by Rabbi Mark S. Golub in 2003 and began telecasting on August 31, 2006.Kristin E. Holmes, "New cable channel says 'Shalom': Shalom TV hopes a focus on Jewish culture as well as religion will draw a wide audience.", The Philadelphia Inquirer, September 23, 2006. In 2008, Comcast launched Shalom TV On Demand nationally.
Rockfleet Broadcasting is a broadcasting company based in New York City. The company has three stations in its family. A fourth station in Cadillac, Michigan (within the Traverse City market) is no longer under Rockfleet ownership. On May 10, 2007, it was announced that Rockfleet Broadcasting was planning to sell Fox affiliate WFQX-TV/WFUP to Cadillac Telecasting.
" Broadcasting – Telecasting, June 14, 1954, pg. 110. Typographical error; new call letters misspelled "WTDV (TV)" instead of WTVD (TV). Ten months after being granted its permit, on September 2, 1954, WTVD began broadcasting with a black-and-white film of "The Star Spangled Banner", followed by You Bet Your Life."WTVD (TV), KOVR (TV) begin operations.
He acquired the rights to O. Henry's The Cisco Kid and filmed the half-hour Cisco Kid television shows in color."Cisco Kid" for TV Via Pact With Ziv. The Billboard (Archive: 1894-1960)61.39 (Sep 24, 1949): 47Film: Gross-Krasne Expands With 'O. Henry' Success. Broadcasting, Telecasting (Archive: 1945-1957) 51.22 (Nov 26, 1956):66.
The station first signed on the air on March 27, 1950. Originally broadcasting on VHF channel 9; it was the second television station to sign on in the Louisville market and the state of Kentucky (after NBC affiliate WAVE- TV, which signed on in November 1948)."WHAS-TV bows; second Louisville outlet." Broadcasting – Telecasting. March 27, 1950, pg. 68.
Transmission was from the WOR TV Tower in North Bergen, New Jersey, until 1953, and from the Empire State Building thereafter. In 1952, General Tire acquired General Teleradio from Macy's, merging it with the Don Lee Network to form General Tire's broadcasting division."WOR merger; General Tire gets MBS control." Broadcasting – Telecasting, January 21, 1952, pg. 25.
WJBF-TV began operations on November 23, 1953 as Augusta's first television station."Seven new TV outlets go on the air." Broadcasting - Telecasting, November 30, 1953, pg. 68. The station was founded by the Georgia-Carolina Broadcasting Company, the broadcasting arm of local entrepreneur J. B. Fuqua, who also owned NBC Radio Network affiliate WJBF (1230 AM).
On March 1, 1967, the Baltimore station, with the call letters WMET-TV and having been moved to channel 24 in a 1961 allocation revision, began telecasting, with plans to carry 80 percent of WOOK-TV's programming. An attempted 1971 sale of WMET-TV to the Christian Broadcasting Network never closed, and channel 24 folded on January 14, 1972.
The station went on the air on May 4, 1948 under the call sign WJZ-FM."WJZ-FM in New York operating at 95.5 mc." Broadcasting - Telecasting, May 10, 1948, pg. 80. In March 1953, the station's call letters were changed to WABC-FM following the merger of the American Broadcasting Company (ABC) with United Paramount Theatres.
Under terms of the initial construction permit award, Airfan sold one-third ownership of the stations to two other firms who competed separately for channel 10."Merged San Diego, Las Vegas bids are approved by FCC." Broadcasting – Telecasting, March 23, 1953, pg. 62. In 1954 the KFSD stations were purchased by investment firm, Fox, Wells & Rogers.
WJAS, which is one of Pittsburgh's five original AM stations, first signed on the air on August 4, 1922 and became an NBC owned-and-operated station in 1957"NBC buys WJAS Pittsburgh." Broadcasting - Telecasting, August 12, 1957, pg. 9. (after briefly operating as WAMP in the 1950s). During the 1930s and 1940s, WJAS was home to the Wilkens Amateur Hour.
KNTV"For the record: Actions of the FCC–Existing TV stations–Call letters assigned." Broadcasting – Telecasting, May 2, 1955, pg. 97: Station was originally assigned call letters KQXI; calls were changed to KNTV in May 1955. signed on the air on September 12, 1955, originally operating as an independent station covering the entire north-central California coast from Monterey to San Francisco.
Dhee The Ultimate Dance Show (changes in name can be seen over the seasons) is an Indian dance reality show telecasting in ETV (India). The show is produced by Mallemalla Productions and is often referred to as South India's biggest dance show. First season of the show was presented by Prabhu Deva. Rambha was the judge of the show in Season 4.
Of the early Westinghouse FMs, only the original KDKA-FM (now WLTJ) and the second WBZ-FM facility (now WMJX) proved to be worth keeping, and Westinghouse sold those outlets in the early 1980s. Moving back to AM radio, Westinghouse returned to Chicago with its 1956 purchase of WIND."WIND sold for record $5.3 million." Broadcasting - Telecasting, September 3, 1956, pp. 27-28.
"Justice Dept. hauls NBC into court", Broadcasting - Telecasting, December 10, 1956, pp. 27-32. In August 1964 NBC's license for WRCV radio and television was renewed by the FCC—but only on the condition that the 1956 station swap be reversed."Philadelphia circle is complete" and "Nine-year history of that trade in Philadelphia", Broadcasting, August 3, 1964, pp. 23-25.
The former WBAI studios on the 10th floor of 120 Wall Street, Manhattan The station began as WABF, which first went on the air in 1941 as W75NY, of Metropolitan Television, Inc. (W75NY indicating an eastern station at 47.5 MHz in New York), and moved to the 99.5 frequency in 1948.WABF (FM) Broadcasting – Telecasting. October 27, 1947. pg. 48.
Almost immediately after the NBC- Westinghouse trade was finalized, Westinghouse complained to the FCC and the United States Department of Justice that it had been coerced into making the station swap, including a threat by NBC to revoke Westinghouse's NBC-TV affiliations. A lengthy investigation was launched."NBC-Westinghouse swap approved; FCC stirs Justice Dept. interest", Broadcasting - Telecasting, January 2, 1956, page 58.
The channel started its broadcasting activity by telecasting the first and second episode of serial Sultan Suleiman as the channels opening program. Mostly through this program, the channel as well as the show acquired 2nd highest TRP by the first week of January and rapidly rose to 1st place in the TV ratings of viewers (TRP) among local Bangladeshi TV channels.
On June 1, 1986, the station swapped affiliations once again with channel 13, now known as WOWK-TV. In 1987, Rollins Telecasting merged with Heritage Broadcasting to form Heritage Media. In December 1987, the station relocated from its longtime studios on Virginia Street East to their current location on Piedmont Road in Charleston. The company sold off WCHS-AM in 1991.
In 2010 a new teledrama in the same name started telecasting on Sirasa TV. The plot is identical to that of original film at many scenes. This teledrama stars Saranga Disasekara and Shalani Tharaka. Also a new version of original movie's Ganga Addara song was produced for this teledrama by the original composer Nimal Mendis. This new version is sung by Surendra Perera.
The twenty-seventh season of the Case Closed anime was directed by Kenji Kodama and Yasuichiro Yamamoto and produced by TMS Entertainment and Yomiuri Telecasting Corporation. The series is based on Gosho Aoyama's Case Closed manga series. In Japan, the series is titled but was changed due to legal issues with the title Detective Conan. The episodes' plot follows Conan Edogawa's daily adventures.
Case Closed, known as in Japan, is a Japanese detective manga series written and illustrated by Gosho Aoyama. The series is serialized in Shogakukan's Weekly Shōnen Sunday since February 2, 1994. It was adapted into an anime series produced by Yomiuri Telecasting Corporation (YTV) and TMS Entertainment where it premiered on YTV. The first episode premiered on January 8, 1996.
He acted as Chairman of the National Board of Revenue and retired in 1999. In early 1960s, still a student, he worked as a casual announcer and newscaster in the Dhaka centre of the then Radio Pakistan and later in Pakistan Television at Lahore Center. He later continued his interests in broadcasting and telecasting and anchors literary programmers and talk shows.
The station began broadcasting on October 13, 1923 as WTAY in Oak Park, Illinois. It originally operated on 1330 kHz running 15 watts, and broadcasting on Tuesday, Thursday, and Saturday evenings. It was owned by a community newspaper called Oak Leaves."AM Histories", Broadcasting — Telecasting. A Continuing Study of Major Radio Markets: Study No. 7: Chicago. October 25, 1948. p. 18.
Novik and LaGuardia, in Talk of the Town, The New Yorker, August 28, 1989, pp. 24-26. Waves of Opposition: Labor and the Struggle for Democratic Radio by Elizabeth Fones-Wolf, 2006, University of Illinois Press, pp. 42-44 Labor Turns to Radio, by Morris S. Novik, Broadcasting-Telecasting, September 19, 1955. M.S. Novik: Radio’s Conscience by Richard J. Mayer.
The play had been performed in theatres in Australia in the early 1950s. It had been performed on Australian radio in 1957 with Ray Barrett. It was the first presentation at the ABC's new studio at Rippon Lea, Melbourne. At that point, the ABC were using a small studio at Rippon Lea and telecasting its bigger productions from Coppin Hall.
DD Arunachal Pradesh is a state owned TV channel station telecasting from Doordarshan Kendra Arunachal Pradesh. A new channel was launched by Doordarshan, DD Arunprabha on 9 February 2019, a 24 hrs satellite channel, DD Itanagar was replaced by DD Arun Prabha. DD Arun Prabha is the 2nd 24x7 Doordarshan TV Channel of North Eastern India after DD North East a.k.a. DD Assam.
Kya Qusoor Hai Amala Ka? (What is Amala's fault?) is an Indian Hindi-language drama finite television series, which started telecasting from 3 April 2017 on Star Plus. Kya Qusoor Hai Amala Ka is an adaptation of the Turkish drama series Fatmagül'ün Suçu Ne?, which tackles the complex emotions and a sensitive subject of violation of the innocence of a woman.
In the United States, ESPN and the MLB Network shared the rights, with ESPN broadcasting 23 of the games, including the Finals, while MLB Network showed the remaining 16. Spanish language telecasts in the U.S. were handled by ESPN Deportes telecasting all games. Internationally, it was broadcast to 167 countries by ESPN International. In Canada, Rogers Sportsnet aired all 39 games.
After telecasting the special two-part episode on the respective channel, the episodes had made Crime Patrol the number one show on 21 and 22 September 2013 on Indian television. Sneha Rajani, executive vice president and business head of Sony TV, told IANS, "We had a total of 10.4 million TVTs (Television Viewership in Thousands)." The channel had decided to repeat the episode.
General Teleradio, the broadcasting arm of the General Tire and Rubber Company, purchased the WHBQ stations in March 1954."Six stations being sold for nearly $15 million." Broadcasting - Telecasting, March 8, 1954, pp. 27-28. In 1955, General Tire purchased RKO Radio Pictures in order to give its television stations a programming source outside of network content and locally produced shows.
The channel 11 allocation in Provo was first intended to be built as a commercial station. In October 1955, the Beehive Telecasting Corporation, owned by Samuel B. Nissley, filed to build channel 11, with studios in Orem and a transmitter on Lake Mountain. The permit was granted in December 1957. Two months later, ground was broken on studio facilities for the station.
In the interim, D.H. Overmyer operated WDHO-TV in a debtor in possession arrangement with the court. On March 25, 1981, the Cleveland bankruptcy court awarded control of Telecasting to FNBB (First National Bank of Boston). Overmyer filed objections with the FCC claiming that the court-ordered transfer violated the FCC rules regarding the transfer of control of broadcast station licenses.
In May 1955, WMVT moved its community of license from Montpelier to Burlington, the state's largest city,"For the record: Actions of the FCC–Hearing cases–Other actions." Broadcasting - Telecasting, May 16, 1955, pg. 144. and just a few miles from Mount Mansfield. One month later, the station's call letters were changed to WCAX-TV to match its radio sister station.
When the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) lifted the freeze on new television station applications in 1952, they allocated VHF channels 11 and 13 for broadcast television service in Yuma. Valley Telecasting quickly applied for and opened KIVA on channel 11, becoming the city's first television station in October 1953. Wrather-Alvarez Broadcasting, owners of KFMB-TV in San Diego, followed with a January 1956 application to build KYAT on channel 13, but failed, and in September 1958, the construction permit was dismissed. By November 1961, more than eight years after the arrival of local television, Yuma was still a one-station town. In November 1961, Robert Crites, owner and manager of local CBS-affiliated radio station KBLU, formed a partnership, called Desert Telecasting, and applied to the FCC on November 30, 1961 for a construction permit to build a station on channel 13.
Jai Akash and debutante Dharshana, a doctor, play the lead roles in the television series. The series marks the television debut for Akash and Dharshana. Akash, who is busy shooting for films, has allotted 15 days every month for the series, which is expected to run for the next two years. On 27 March 2020, due to COVID-19 pandemic situation this series have stopped telecasting.
Weekend KAZR Spanish language newscasts were canceled, but the weekday KAZR news shows remained an hour long. On March 11, 2008, KREN and KAZR canceled all newscasts, and dismissed the entire news staff. Pappas Telecasting cited low advertising revenue as the reason for the cancellation. After Entravision took over in April 2009, a local Spanish-language newscast was initially expected to return to KREN.
Sky Racing (previously Sky Channel) is an Australian broadcaster primarily telecasting live thoroughbred, harness and greyhound racing. It is owned by Tabcorp Holdings and operates a number of television channels and a radio service. Sky Racing launched on the Aussat A1 satellite in 1985.About Sky Racing; Sky Racing The broadcaster generally telecasts all race meetings that are covered by the various Australian TABs.
March 1953 advertisement announcing the call letter change from WJZ-TV to WABC-TV. The station signed on August 10, 1948, as WJZ-TV,"WJZ-TV starts; elaborate inaugural program." Broadcasting – Telecasting, August 16, 1948, pg. 23. the first of three television stations signed on by ABC during that same year, with WENR-TV in Chicago and WXYZ-TV in Detroit being the other two.
DD Bihar is a state owned TV channel telecasting from Doordarshan Kendra Bihar. Doordarshan Kendra, Patna was inaugurated on 13 October 1990 with an interim set up converting a Government Quarter located at Chhajubagh, Patna. Adjacent area was demarcated for the construction of a full-fledged studio. The new studio building with all the modern equipment and accessories was finally inaugurated on 15 March 1996.
The 2007 season was the start of a new television package. The contracts are for eight seasons, running until 2014. NBC and FX both egressed after the 2006 season, and ESPN and ABC have returned after a six-year absence, with ESPN last broadcasting the series' NAPA 500 from Atlanta in November 2000, and ABC telecasting the Brickyard 400 in August of that same year.
NTV is a Malayalam production house founded by the Kerala production house. Since its founding over two decades ago, NTV has functioned as a major producer and broadcaster of Malayalam programs. The name NTV has largely grown synonymous with major Malayalam telecasting. Serving all Malayalam channels including the state owned Dooradarshan, NTV continues to direct and produce a wide array of Malayalam-language programs.
"TV coverage; RTMA predicts expansion." Broadcasting - Telecasting, May 19, 1952, pg. 78. The channel move also created an opening for a new channel 5 station in Weston, which signed on as WJPB-TV (now WDTV) in March 1954. As part of the frequency switch, the FCC granted WSAZ a boost in broadcast power, which at the time, was the highest ever authorized for a television station.
Among the features on the new station was a KBAK-produced 10 p.m. newscast, "Fox 58 News @ 10". It was so successful that KBAK's then-owner Westwind Communications bought the station in 2005 from KMPH's owners, Pappas Telecasting. On August 6, 2007, Westwind Communications announced the sale of KBAK and KBFX-CA to Fisher Communications of Seattle, with the sale closing on January 1, 2008.
"WTVD (TV) solves the housing problem." Broadcasting – Telecasting, October 4, 1954, pg. 64. WRAL- TV (channel 5), based in Raleigh and locally owned by the Capitol Broadcasting Company, debuted in December 1956 and took over as the Triangle's NBC affiliate, leaving channel 11 with only ABC. WNAO-TV ceased operations at the end of 1957 due to financial difficulties, and CBS moved its primary affiliation to WTVD.
Crosley Broadcasting Corp. advertisement Broadcasting - Telecasting, April 11, 1949, pg. 193. Until the mid-1960s, the stations emphasized their connection to each other within their on-air branding; the Columbus station was known as WLW-C. The station's studios were originally located in the Seneca Hotel in downtown Columbus before WLWC moved into their present facility on Olentangy River Road, five months after the station signed on.
The Hopman Cup was originally broadcast by the Seven Network until 1994, then by the Australian Broadcasting Corporation (1995–2010). From 2011, a five-year deal to broadcast the competition was signed by Network Ten, a deal which ended abruptly in November 2013. The Seven Network's 7mate channel subsequently picked up the telecasting rights."7mate to serve up Hopman Cup action" , The West Australian, 19 November 2013.
KTTV converted the Nassour Studios into a major production house for television, producing programs locally and for the emerging syndication market. Prior to the move, KTTV operated out of several different facilities, including the former headquarters of Capitol Records (which was later the longtime home of KHJ radio and what is now KCAL-TV) on Melrose Avenue."KTTV leases studios." Broadcasting – Telecasting, July 11, 1950, pg. 57.
Kaminuma is one of the leading broadcast personalities in the Kansai region. She has often appeared in Kansai local programmes, and has garnered high ratings from around the late 1990s. She is married with two children. Kaminuma's husband is Shinpei Kaminuma, a Kansai Telecasting Corporation (KTV) television director, producer, executive director, and production director, as well as Media Pulpo (KTV's subsidiary) representative director and chairman.
NDTV in association with Aircel embarked upon a unique programming initiative to support its ongoing "Save our Tiger" campaign by telecasting a 12-hour nonstop program from 11 am to 11 pm, in March 20101. Malhotra was among the many generous donors like Amitabh Bachchan, Diya Mirza, Priya Dutt etc. the campaign raised about Rs. 10 crore and had a great impact on the policies.
On February 10, 1961, owner Dyer announced that the station would cease telecasting at the end of the day due to financial troubles. In a statement, Dyer noted that he had spent $500,000—more than the projected $250,000—and wanted investors to help shoulder the burden. Several viewers were frustrated to have bought UHF converters to receive WTVI, only for the station to fail.
The local chapter of the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) challenged the station's license in 1973 alleging that Gross, whose company was by then renamed Gross Telecasting, Inc., prevented a number of prominent political figures from appearing on WJIM-TV. A Federal Communications Commission (FCC) judge ordered the license revoked in 1981. WJIM kept its license when the initial revocation was reversed by the FCC in 1982.
In 2002, KAZH affiliated with Spanish-language network Azteca América. Early in 2007, then- owner Pappas Telecasting terminated KAZH's affiliation agreement with Azteca América, effective July 1.KAZH-TV to lose Azteca America affiliation, Houston Business Journal, April 3, 2007. Azteca América programming moved to a low- powered station, KUVM-CA; and later, to another full-powered station, KYAZ (channel 51) on date to June 30, 2007.
Despite losing in his quest to build the station from the ground up, Koplar acquired the station's license in 1958 through controversial circumstances. CBS was originally granted a construction permit by the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) to build channel 11 in January 1957, prevailing over three other locally based competitors."FCC acts to clear key market V's." Broadcasting - Telecasting, January 21, 1957, pp. 35-37.
The grant required the FCC to waive minimum distance requirements to KATU. Channel 3 selected the call letters KVDO-TV for its station and began building on Prospect Hill; the station leased a building on Portland Road for studios and offices. KVDO-TV began telecasting February 24, 1970. The station went on the air as an independent, airing syndicated fare and a 10 p.m.
In 2017 he was appointed channel head of Sri Lanka Cricket (SLC). In February 2018 he resigned from the post by citing personal reasons. Several reports informed that the resignation was due to disputes over match telecasting rights with SLC deputy secretary, Ravin Wickramaratne. He also worked as a co-coordinating secretary of National Movement Against Terrorism (NMAT) and as the Sihala Urumaya Spokesman.
A KWKH microphone. Horace Logan continued to produce Louisiana Hayride until 1957. In 1999, Logan published a book about the Hayride that received acclaim from reviewers such as Publishers Weekly and Kirkus Reviews. Beginning with the successful first show on April 3, 1948, Louisiana Hayride ranked second only to Nashville's Grand Ole Opry in terms of importance until ABC began telecasting Ozark Jubilee in 1955.
In August 1956 WBIR-TV in Knoxville began broadcasting, under the same ownership structure as the WBIR radio stations. In 1957, Radio Cincinnati purchased WBRC-AM-FM-TV in Birmingham, Alabama, from Storer Broadcasting."This week's receipts: $26 million." Broadcasting - Telecasting, April 8, 1957, pp. 31-32. In 1958, the Cincinnati Times-Star was merged into the Cincinnati Post, published by the E.W. Scripps Company.
The is a Japanese symphony orchestra administratively based in Tokyo. The orchestra primarily performs concerts in Tokyo at the Suntory Hall, but also gives concerts at the Tokyo Opera City Concert Hall. The orchestra also performs in Yokohama at the Yokohama Minato Mirai Hall. The orchestra was founded in 1962 by the Yomiuri Shimbun newspaper group, the Nippon Television Network Corporation, and the Yomiuri Telecasting Corporation.
"For the record: Actions of the FCC–Existing TV stations–Call letters assigned." Broadcasting - Telecasting, June 27, 1955, pg. 114. In 1958, Hasbrook turned over the station's ownership to his stepson, Dr. Stuart T. "Red" Martin Jr., an engineer by trade who assisted his stepfather in building the station from the ground-up. Red Martin had already been serving as general manager since the station signed on.
During its early years, it was a daytimer, powered at 2,500 watts and required to go off the air at night.Broadcasting Yearbook 1935 page 40 In the 1940s, the station was allowed to stay on the air around the clock, powered at 5,000 watts.Broadcasting Yearbook 1943 page 108 It was an NBC Blue Network affiliate, running its schedule of comedies, dramas, news and sports during the "Golden Age of Radio." The Blue Network became ABC in 1945. KFEQ also had a TV station for a time, Channel 2 KFEQ-TV, which went on the air on September 27, 1953.Telecasting Yearbook 1957-58 page 158 Even though it was based in St. Joseph, KFEQ-TV took out an advertisement in the 1957-58 Telecasting Yearbook to say it was powered at 100,000 watts and covered 37 counties, including part of the Kansas City media market.
It was the first television station in San Jose, and was originally operated by Standard Radio and Television Corporation, which was owned by Allen T. Gilliland."KNTV (TV) starts next week." Broadcasting – Telecasting, September 5, 1955, pg. 9. The station's studios and offices were located at 645 Park Avenue, a short distance from the Caltrain railroad tracks and adjacent to the Gilliland-owned Sunlite Baking Company in downtown San Jose.
Doordarshan Kendra Chennai has transformed from the initial setup of television base production center during 1975. Television Base Production Center was established for SITE (Satellite Instructional Television Experiment) Project conducted from 1975 to 1976. This Experiment was envisaged by Govt. of India to Educate rural population by producing and telecasting area-specific programmes on the subjects ranging from agriculture, animal husbandry, health and nutrition, and adult education through satellite.
Nagasaki Culture Telecasting Corporation. 2016年10月05日. 大村湾にイルカはいるか?. Retrieved on March 13, 2017 Another special inhabitant – sometimes characterised as a living fossil – is the horseshoe crab species Tachypleus tridentatus. Despite being nearly separated from the sea, and the large cities along its shore, the bay is full of fish. About 60 species of marine animals are fished.
The series was produced by Fuji TV, Aniplex, Kyoraku Industrial Holdings, Kansai Telecasting Corporation, Kobunsha, Dentsu, and Zexcs. It premiered in the Noitamina programming block on Fuji TV on October 14, 2016, and finished airing on December 23, 2016 with a total of 11 episodes. The opening theme was by Taiiku Okazaki, and the ending theme was "I&I;" by Leola. Amazon simulcasted the series on their Amazon Video service.
In December 1987 Videon Cable-TV and Westman Cable's application to the CRTC to telecast live horse racing from Assiniboia Downs was approved. On January 23, 1988, Videon Cable-tv began telecasting Assiniboia Downs live harness racing to allow for off-track betting via telephone (Telephone Account Betting). Twenty phone lines were installed to handle incoming calls and they were frequently full. The signal was uplinked to the Anik C3 satellite.
There were originally two ABC network affiliates in northeastern Pennsylvania. WILK-TV, operating on channel 34 and owned by WILK radio took to the air from Wilkes- Barre on September 16, 1953."4 UHFs, 3 VHFs start commercial." Broadcasting - Telecasting, September 21, 1953, pg. 66. It was followed by Scranton-licensed WARM-TV, broadcasting on channel 16 and owned by future Governor William Scranton along with WARM radio, in February 1954.
Ranbir Rano is a Hindi television series produced by Diamond Pictures that aired on Zee TV channel between 22 September 2008 – 28 May 2009. The show was very popular in that time and TRP was 5.9 when it was telecasting in Zee TV. The story summary is: two young souls in search of love, as and a natural view of the Punjab and an unconditional belief in the power of destiny.
WABC-AM-FM-TV advertisement. Broadcasting - Telecasting, March 2, 1953, pg. 37. As most FM stations did during the medium's formative years, 95.5 FM simulcast the programming of its AM sister station, WJZ/WABC (770 AM). In the early 1960s, however, WABC-FM began to program itself separately from WABC (AM). During the 1962–63 New York City newspaper strike, the station programmed news for 17 hours daily.
"KOB-AM-TV sale; official announcement made." Broadcasting - Telecasting, March 10, 1952, pg. 30. In 1953, two new TV stations signed on within a week—KGGM-TV (channel 13, now KRQE) signed on and took CBS, followed by KOAT which took ABC; DuMont shut down in 1956. Stanley E. Hubbard, founder of Hubbard Broadcasting, bought KOB-AM-TV from Time-Life in 1957, and has owned the station since.
While working on with theatre works and journalism, his fellow mate Jayantha Chandrasiri invited him to take part in his teledrama Akala Sandhya, which is Thirimadura's first television screen. Since then, he acted more than 50 teledramas across genre. Thirimadura presented program Maarai Hirai telecasted on TV Derana and program Rasoghaya telecasting on Siyatha TV accompany with Mihira Sirithilaka. On ITN, he currently presents the program called Thirimadura Oba Amathai.
The station signed on August 18, 1946 as WKNB (for Kensington-New Britain), under the ownership of the New Britain Broadcasting Company. NBC bought the station in 1956;"Hearst acquires WTVW (TV) Milwaukee; NBC buys WKNB-TV New Britain, Conn." Broadcasting - Telecasting, January 10, 1955, pg. 7. however, its main purpose in acquiring WKNB was to obtain its sister television station, WKNB-TV (which it renamed WNBC; it is now WVIT).
"Triangle makes 4th purchase in year, buys WNHC-AM-FM-TV for $5.4 million." Broadcasting – Telecasting, May 28, 1956, pg. 82. Also that same year, WNHC-TV lost its CBS affiliation when that network purchased WGTH-TV in Hartford (channel 18, later WHCT and now Univision affiliate WUVN). This left channel 8 as a sole ABC affiliate, although it shared ABC programming with WATR-TV (channel 20, now WCCT-TV) in nearby Waterbury until 1966.
Beyond the United States, it was carried by CBS affiliates in the U.S. territories of Alaska, Hawaii and Puerto Rico; in Canada it was broadcast on CBC. It was produced for $376,000 and was heavily promoted by its sponsors Pepsi-Cola and the Shulton Company (then maker of Old Spice). The Nielsen TV rating for the program was 18,864,000 "homes reached during an average minute" of the broadcast."Ratings", Broadcasting-Telecasting, 6 May 1957, p.
EDT, with the broadcast networks telecasting the prime time game. On November 7, 1995, Major League Baseball reached a television deal with Fox and NBC, allowing the former to obtain MLB game rights (assuming ABC's end of the contract). Fox paid $575 million for the five-year contract, a fraction less of the amount of money that CBS had paid for the Major League Baseball television rights for the 1990–1993 seasons.
After an investigation by the FCC, the license was ultimately renewed. A few years later, Haus and other partners decided to form United Christian Broadcasting, with KFCB as the flagship station. The network was intended to bring KFCB's programming to a national audience. The venture would prove to be a financial disaster, and by 1996, Haus was forced to sell the station to Pappas Telecasting, who adopted the KTNC-TV callsign on September 20.
CW, originally titled In Conversation, debuted on April 28, 1996. , National Library Board (Singapore). The show initially aired on Singapore domestic television, on Singapore's English-language station Mediacorp Channel 5 and was produced by the then Television Corporation of Singapore, which was renamed Mediacorp TV in February 2001. CW began airing on CNA when the network was launched on March 1, 1999,, TCS Channel NewsAsia starts telecasting, The Straits Times, March 2, 1999.
"Justice Dept. hauls NBC into court", Broadcasting - Telecasting, December 10, 1956, pages 27, 28, 29, 30, 31, 32. It was discovered that Westinghouse only agreed to the trade when NBC made implications that it would pull its television programming from WPTZ and Westinghouse's other NBC affiliate, WBZ-TV in Boston. In 1964, after a protracted legal battle, the FCC ordered the swap of stations reversed without NBC realizing any profit on the deal.
The Viridian Edition of the first season DVD boxset of the series Case Closed released by Funimation Entertainment The first season of the Case Closed anime was directed by Kenji Kodama. It was produced by TMS Entertainment in cooperation with Yomiuri Telecasting Corporation. The series is based on Gosho Aoyama's Case Closed manga series. In Japan, the manga series is titled but Case Closed was adopted for the anime version to avoid legal issues.
The digital signal remained on channel 18 following the end of analog broadcasting in 2009, using PSIP to display its virtual channel as 19. On March 30, 2009, KEPR launched a digital subchannel affiliated with The CW, filling the void left by KCWK (channel 9) going dark at the end of May 2008 due to the Pappas Telecasting bankruptcy. The subchannel subsequently took KCWK's former channel 9 position on local cable systems.
On English-language television the first newscast, part of CBC Newsmagazine, was given on September 8, 1952 on CBLT (Toronto), the only English station then telecasting. Later that year CBC National News was introduced (anchors: Larry Henderson, Earl Cameron, Stanley Burke), then changing its name to The National in 1970.Colombo, John Robert: CBC began delivering news online in 1996 via the Newsworld Online website. The CBC News Online site launched in 1998.
WRAL-TV began broadcasting on December 15, 1956. The first program aired was the movie Miracle on 34th Street. A. J. Fletcher’s Capitol Broadcasting Company, which first licensed WRAL Radio (AM 1240, now WPJL) in 1938, won the TV license in an upset over the much larger Durham Life Insurance Company, then-owners of radio station WPTF."Peoria, Springfield, Raleigh TV grants Issued by FCC" Broadcasting – Telecasting, July 2, 1956, pg. 9.
Kishore Namit Kapoor was born in Delhi in post-independence India. In 1958, he joined All India Radio (AIR) as a child artist. When Doordarshan, India's first public service broadcaster, began telecasting live plays in 1962, Kapoor was one of the first child actors to feature in their weekly plays. He joined K.M. College in 1964, which was prominent in Delhi as the alumni institute of Amitabh Bachchan, Kulbushan Kharbanda and Dinesh Thakur.
The station was then owned by Scripps-Howard Newspapers."DuMont signs 3 in Ohio." Broadcasting - Telecasting, August 1, 1949, pg. 82. It was the third television station to be founded by the E. W. Scripps Company, as sister station WEWS-TV in Cleveland signed on over a year-and-a-half before, and WMC-TV in Memphis signed on the year before, although Scripps would divest that station to Ellis Communications in 1993.
Selected contestants are required to participate in a number of competition rounds, often based on a theme for a given week, and aim to be selected to perform in the show's grand finale each season. Winners and finalists of the competition have been offered chances to sing a song in upcoming Tamil movies, and other prizes such as sums of money, gold, and real estate property. Super Singer Season is currently telecasting in Vijay television.
1973 Broadcasting Yearbook: The Facilities of TV KMPH carried Operation Prime Time programming at least in 1978. That year, Harry Pappas formed a new company, Pappas Telecasting, to buy full control of the station for $3.1 million. In 1979, KMPH changed its city of license from Tulare to Visalia. Soon after signing on, KMPH had passed KAIL (then on channel 53, now on channel 7) as the leading independent in the Central Valley.
The Episode starts with a documentary show on Korea during the war, Korea during the year he was born in (1975)-riots and crowded streets in South Korea. The narrator talked about the population census taken on September 18, 1995. The population stood at 37,680,000 male and female sex ratio (1740:1124, males to females), as well as family events in 1982. The episode proceeds on showing a television telecasting a baseball match.
The 102.7 FM frequency was first assigned in the mid-1940s as WNJR-FM from Newark, New Jersey. Intended to be a simulcasting sister to WNJR (1430 AM), the FM station never made it to the air despite being granted several extensions of its construction permit. WNJR gave up and turned in the FM license to the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) in 1953."For the Record" Broadcasting – Telecasting, Nov. 2, 1953, pg. 110.
Six months after signing on, the station almost faced calamity when a small plane clipped one of the guy wires supporting the WHUM-TV tower. After striking the wire, the plane crashed and burst into flames; both occupants died. A second outlet joined WHUM-TV two months later, when WEEU-TV (channel 33) began telecasting with NBC and ABC programs. WEEU-TV closed on June 30, 1955; (also republished in Broadcasting, July 4, 1955, p.
Both stations–Veterans-owned WVET-TV, based at the Central Trust Building; and Gannett-owned WHEC-TV, with studios at the Bank of Rochester building, both in downtown Rochester–commenced operations on November 1, 1953."Eight stations, 5 VHF, 3 UHF, begin commercial operation." Broadcasting - Telecasting, November 2, 1953, pg. 64. The combined channel 10 operation carried a primary affiliation with the CBS Television Network, and also carried ABC programs on a secondary basis.
Intelsat II F-1 provided a transpacific communications link for 240 telephone channels or two television channels. Provision was made for 180 hours of telecasting per year (an average of 30 minutes per day) via the satellite. A 50-minute programme was relayed between Tokyo and Washington, D.C. via Intelsat II F-1 on 27 January 1967. It was the first newscast and the first colour programme to be telecast across the Pacific.
After affiliating with ABC, the station moved to new studios located on Morgantown Road in downtown Bowling Green. After spending some time off the air in late 1969 due to an explosion destroying its transmitter, Argus Broadcasting sold the station to Professional Telecasting Systems on June 11, 1970.Broadcasting Yearbook 1977 , page 335-b. The explosion was due to an estimated 48 sticks of dynamite being placed at the bottom of the tower.
It remains available on Charter's systems in the Omaha market. , KPTM is still carried in standard definition on channel 9 on Spectrum's Lincoln-area systems. Titan TV Broadcast Group announced the sale of most of its stations, including KPTM, to the Sinclair Broadcast Group on June 3, 2013; the purchase includes the local marketing agreement with KXVO, which will remain under Mitts Telecasting LLC ownership after the sale. Sinclair announced the closing of the sale on October 3.
KFXP had begun showing a still announcing the shutdown on June 24, 2013. On January 31, 2014, Compass Communications reached a deal to sell KFXP, along with two commonly-owned low-power stations in Beaumont, Texas, to Abraham Telecasting Company, however, the sale fell through. On June 12, 2015, Compass agreed to sell KFXP to Buckalew Media for $450,000. The sale was completed on October 30;Consummation Notice CDBS Public Access, Federal Communications Commission, Retrieved 2 November 2015.
The opposition party BNP initially claimed thousands of Hefazat activists were killed during the operation, but this was disputed by the government. Human Rights Watch and other human rights organizations put the total death toll at above 50, but rights groups have termed the events as a massacre. Initial attempts to dispute the chain of events were thwarted due to the government closure of two television channels, Diganta Television and Islamic TV, which were live telecasting the operation.
"NBC buys WJAS Pittsburgh", Broadcasting - Telecasting, August 12, 1957, pg. 9. The acquisition of WJAS was made to offset the defection of KDKA from the network several years earlier, while WKNB was included as part of the sale of its sister television station. NBC had no interest in owning a daytime-only station in the shadow of its powerful Hartford, Connecticut affiliate, WTIC, so the network sold WKNB in 1960, while the Pittsburgh outlets were sold in 1972.
Texas Monthly (via Google Books): "Down in the Valley: Why Can't Juan Watch TV?", August 1979. KZLN would also be beset by several years of delays in tower construction and facilities. (The transmitter tower was shared with another 1982 sign-on, KVEO-TV, whose owner contributed $96,000.) By the time KZLN began telecasting on May 5, 1982, the climate was poor for PBS due to major cutbacks by the Reagan administration that affected funding for public broadcasting.
The cover of the first DVD compilation for season fifteen of Detective Conan released by Shogakukan The fifteenth season of the Case Closed anime was directed by Kenji Kodama and Yasuichiro Yamamoto and produced by TMS Entertainment and Yomiuri Telecasting Corporation. The series is based on Gosho Aoyama's Case Closed manga series. In Japan, the series is titled but was changed due to legal issues with the title Detective Conan. The episodes' plot follows Conan Edogawa's daily adventures.
The cover of the first DVD compilation for season sixteenth of Detective Conan released by Shogakukan The sixteenth season of the Case Closed anime was directed by Kenji Kodama and Yasuichiro Yamamoto and produced by TMS Entertainment and Yomiuri Telecasting Corporation. The series is based on Gosho Aoyama's Case Closed manga series. In Japan, the series is titled but was changed due to legal issues with the title Detective Conan. The episodes' plot follows Conan Edogawa's daily adventures.
KCEN-TV signed on the air for the first time on November 1, 1953,"Eight stations, 5 VHF, 3 UHF, begin commercial operation." Broadcasting - Telecasting, November 2, 1953, pg. 64. originally owned by Frank W. Mayborn, publisher of the Temple Daily Telegram and owner of KTEM radio (1400 AM) in Temple. Early on, Mayborn realized that Temple/Killeen and Waco were going to be a single television market (although, then as now, they are separate radio markets).
The station currently operating as WDWR began broadcasting as WEAR at 1490 kilohertz on April 1, 1947. It was Pensacola's third radio station, carrying programs of the Mutual Broadcasting System and owned by Gulfport Broadcasting Company, consisting of investors from Pensacola and Texas. The 250-watt outlet moved to 1230 on February 1, 1950. WEAR's affiliation soon changed to ABC, in time for WEAR to spawn a television station: WEAR-TV channel 3, which began telecasting January 13, 1954.
WRAL was originally an NBC affiliate, taking that network from Durham-based WTVD (channel 11, which included Fletcher's son, Floyd, among its founders). When WNAO-TV (channel 28), the Triangle's ABC affiliate, went dark at the end of 1957,"WNAO-TV to go black, joins WTOB-TV in Ch. 8 shift plea." Broadcasting – Telecasting, December 30, 1957, pg. 10. WRAL shared ABC with WTVD until August 1, 1962, when channel 5 took the ABC affiliation full-time.
"FCC approves two sales." Broadcasting – Telecasting, May 27, 1957, pg. 10. Around 1958, WTVD built a tower at its present transmitter site in Auburn to increase its signal coverage for the entire Raleigh-Durham-Fayetteville market; at the time this was the tallest man-made structure in the U.S. That same year, the station first began broadcasting network programs in color, although it would not be until 1966 before the same was true for local programming.
The time brokerage agreement between Pappas Telecasting and Colins Broadcasting expired on November 30, 2009. As a result, KSNB and its two translators were removed from the Fox Nebraska network and shut down on December 1 (a third Colins-owned translator, K17CI in Beatrice, Nebraska, had left the air on June 12, 2009). KTVG soon followed in April 2010, leaving KFXL as the market's sole Fox station. In 2010, Colins put the dormant KSNB license up for sale.northpine.
WTVI began telecasting on November 21, 1960. The signal was also available on the cable system; subscribers to Florida Cablevision would not need a UHF converter to see WTVI. The station was an exclusive CBS affiliate and aired network programming as well as local newscasts and a children's show known as Uncle Harry's Fun Club, hosted by Harry Heritage, who doubled as Santa Claus in Fort Pierce. However, channel 19's first incarnation would not last three months.
On May 28, 1959, KATO became KBET. Later that year, tragedy struck when 43-year-old newscaster and account executive Ernie Ferguson committed suicide on Thanksgiving. Stoddard's Comstock Telecasting Corporation made an application for television channel 4 in Reno in 1960; while it was not selected, KBET did increase its power to 1,000 watts in 1961. It broadcast from studios at the Mapes Hotel downtown after having gone on the air from the basement of an Elks lodge.
But when the priest informs Rudra that his sister, Kesar (Lara Dutta) and Karan (Kanji) are in love, Rudra makes a threat to destroy Karan and all of the village in the presence of a TV crew filming the whole drama and telecasting it live worldwide. The plot comes to a culmination when, angered by Karan's antics, Rudra arrives to destroy the village. The villagers stand up to the exploitation and fight Rudra and his goons.
Of late, a lot of mainstream media channels have been accused of printing and telecasting unverified and biased news which they retracted later. In a few instances content from Twitter's parody accounts were cited as a source. Indian mainstream media has often been accused of showing sensationalized news items. In March 2018, the then Chief Justice of India Dipak Misra said that, "journalists cannot write anything they imagine and behave as if they are sitting in some pulpit".
WDBJ-TV first signed on the air on October 3, 1955."New TVs take air in Roanoke, Detroit." Broadcasting – Telecasting, October 10, 1955, pg. 95. It was owned by the Times-World Corporation, publishers of the Roanoke Times and Roanoke World-News, alongside WDBJ radio (960 AM, now WFIR; and 94.9 FM, now WSLC-FM). Channel 7 has been a CBS affiliate since its sign-on, owing to WDBJ radio's longtime affiliation with the CBS Radio Network.
The ring beam is supported by forty circular columns and four stiff pylons, all visible in the arenas facade. The pylons consist of radially oriented concrete walls, with a length of 3.5 meters (11.5 ft), which stores ventilation equipment. The video board, lights, and sound system is suspended in a radially oriented cable system anchored in the four pylons. It was not consider stable enough for colour telecasting to attach these components directly to the roof.
The cover of the DVD compilation released by Funimation of the fourth season The fourth season of the Case Closed anime was directed by Kenji Kodama and produced by TMS Entertainment and Yomiuri Telecasting Corporation. The series is based on Gosho Aoyama's Case Closed manga series. In Japan, the series is titled but was changed due to legal issues with the title Detective Conan. The episodes' plot continues Jimmy Kudo's life as a young child named Conan Edogawa.
The cover of the first DVD compilation for season six of Detective Conan released by Shogakukan The sixth season of the Case Closed anime was directed by Kenji Kodama and Yasuichiro Yamamoto and produced by TMS Entertainment and Yomiuri Telecasting Corporation. The series is based on Gosho Aoyama's Case Closed manga series. In Japan, the series is titled but was changed due to legal issues with the title Detective Conan. The episodes' plot follows the adventures of Conan Edogawa.
The cover of the first DVD compilation for season nine of Detective Conan released by Shogakukan The ninth season of the Case Closed anime was directed by Kenji Kodama and Yasuichiro Yamamoto and produced by TMS Entertainment and Yomiuri Telecasting Corporation. The series is based on Gosho Aoyama's Case Closed manga series. In Japan, the series is titled but was changed due to legal issues with the title Detective Conan. The episodes' plot follows Conan Edogawa's daily adventures.
The cover of the first DVD compilation for season eight of Detective Conan released by Shogakukan The eighth season of the Case Closed anime was directed by Kenji Kodama and Yasuichiro Yamamoto and produced by TMS Entertainment and Yomiuri Telecasting Corporation. The series is based on Gosho Aoyama's Case Closed manga series. In Japan, the series is titled but was changed due to legal issues with the title Detective Conan. The episodes' plot follows Conan Edogawa's daily adventures.
The cover of the first DVD compilation for season thirteen of Detective Conan released by Shogakukan The thirteenth season of the Case Closed anime was directed by Kenji Kodama and Yasuichiro Yamamoto and produced by TMS Entertainment and Yomiuri Telecasting Corporation. The series is based on Gosho Aoyama's Case Closed manga series. In Japan, the series is titled but was changed due to legal issues with the title Detective Conan. The episodes' plot follows Conan Edogawa's daily adventures.
The cover of the first DVD compilation for season eleven of Detective Conan released by Shogakukan The eleventh season of the Case Closed anime was directed by Kenji Kodama and Yasuichiro Yamamoto and produced by TMS Entertainment and Yomiuri Telecasting Corporation. The series is based on Gosho Aoyama's Case Closed manga series. In Japan, the series is titled but was changed due to legal issues with the title Detective Conan. The episodes' plot follows Conan Edogawa's daily adventures.
The cover of the first DVD compilation for season twelve of Detective Conan released by Shogakukan The twelfth season of the Case Closed anime was directed by Kenji Kodama and Yasuichiro Yamamoto and produced by TMS Entertainment and Yomiuri Telecasting Corporation. The series is based on Gosho Aoyama's Case Closed manga series. In Japan, the series is titled but was changed due to legal issues with the title Detective Conan. The episodes' plot follows Conan Edogawa's daily adventures.
The cover of the first DVD compilation for season ten of Detective Conan released by Shogakukan The tenth season of the Case Closed anime was directed by Kenji Kodama and Yasuichiro Yamamoto and produced by TMS Entertainment and Yomiuri Telecasting Corporation. The series is based on Gosho Aoyama's Case Closed manga series. In Japan, the series is titled but was changed due to legal issues with the title Detective Conan. The episodes' plot follows Conan Edogawa's daily adventures.
This event would lead to the indictment of Overmyer and attorney Edmund M. Connery.Hadar purchased broadcasting equipment, which it then leased to Overmyer Telecasting Co. for use by WDHO-TV. The Government charged that aspects of the leases were falsified to the bankruptcy court to inflate the Hadar claim and unjustly enrich Overmyer. On January 28, 1986, Overmyer and Edmund M. Connery were indicted in the United States District Court for the Northern District of Ohio.
Logo used from January 1, 2001 until September 17, 2006, when KFRE was affiliated with The WB. In 2000, KNSO (channel 51, then an affiliate of The WB) signed a deal to become the Fresno market's new Telemundo affiliate; as a result, Pappas Telecasting terminated a local marketing agreement (LMA) between KNSO and Fox affiliate KMPH (channel 26). On January 1, 2001, the LMA with KMPH was transferred to KMSG, which also resulted in the WB affiliation moving to the station from KNSO (becoming the network's third affiliate in the market; The WB's original Fresno affiliate was Clovis-based KGMC (channel 43), which was with the network from its launch in 1995 until 1997); channel 59 also changed its call letters to KFRE-TV (the KFRE calls were originally used in the market on what is now ABC owned-and- operated station KFSN-TV (channel 30) from 1956 to 1971). With the affiliation switch, the station changed its on-air branding to "WB 59". Pappas Telecasting purchased KFRE outright in 2002, creating the first television duopoly in the market with KMPH.
WWYC signed on in 1946 as WTOD under the ownership of local labor rights attorney Edward Lamb. The station was notable at its launch for having been among the fastest radio stations to sign-on after being awarded a construction permit. WTOD's initial staff was composed largely of veterans returning from World War II."WTOD on air June 15, three months after CP." eBroadcasting - Telecasting, June 24, 1946, pg. 58. Lamb sold WTOD in 1957 to Detroit-based Booth Broadcasting.
KDZA-TV began telecasting March 16, 1953. It was owned by Dee B. Collins alongside independent AM outlet KDZA (1230 AM). Much of its programming, including network fare, was fed to it by a microwave relay between Pueblo and KFEL-TV (channel 2) at Denver. Gene O'Fallon, who owned KFEL-TV, filed to buy KDZA radio and television from Collins for $350,000, including the assumption of $100,000 in payments to DuMont Laboratories for the channel 3 transmitter, at the end of July.
At the start of 1950, Bamberger Broadcasting changed its name to General Teleradio."Bamberger change; name is now General Teleradio." Broadcasting – Telecasting, January 2, 1950, pg. 26. In June 1950, a joint venture of CBS and The Washington Post purchased WOIC from Bamberger/Macy's for $1.4 million. The new owners, WTOP Incorporated (the Post owned 55%, with CBS holding the remaining 45% stake), changed the station's call sign to WTOP-TV, after its new sister station WTOP radio (then at 1500 AM).
To reflect RCA's ownership, in October 1954 some of NBC's radio and television stations' call letters were changed to "RCA"-derived callsigns. WNBC/WNBT in New York became WRCA-AM-FM-TV, WNBW television in Washington became WRC-TV, and KNBH television in Los Angeles became KRCA."RCA Replaces NBC in O&O; Calls", Broadcasting - Telecasting, October 4, 1954, pg. 78. By 1960, the New York flagship radio outlets reverted to WNBC-AM-FM and the television station became WNBC-TV.
In July 1961, WHEN-TV moved to channel 5, swapping channel locations with WROC-TV in Rochester as the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) revised its Upstate New York allocation table to provide more VHF service in the two cities."Final orders add vhf to three markets." Broadcasting - Telecasting, August 7, 1961, pg. 55. In 1963, the WHEN stations moved from their original Court Street studios into a new state-of-the-art facility on James Street near WSYR (AM)-FM-TV's studios.
Following the demise of the original KVDO, South Texas Telecasting petitioned the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) to add a third VHF allocation on Channel 3 at Corpus Christi due to KVDO's failure as a UHF station. Other cities also wanted the Channel 3 allocation; however, following a lot of struggle, channel 3 was ultimately allocated to Corpus Christi, and hearings to award the channel began in 1961."FCC To Begin Oral Hearings Monday on Channel Three". Corpus Christi Caller-Times, November 12, 1961.
The Viridian edition of the second season DVD boxset of the series Case Closed released by Funimation Entertainment The second season of the Case Closed anime was directed by Kenji Kodama and produced by TMS Entertainment and Yomiuri Telecasting Corporation. The series is based on Gosho Aoyama's Case Closed manga series. In Japan, the series is titled but was changed due to legal issues with the title Detective Conan. The episodes' plot continues Jimmy Kudo's life as a young child named Conan Edogawa.
Bari Aapa (Lit: Older Sister)is an Urdu language Pakistani telenovela first broadcast in Pakistan by Hum TV. Written by Samira Fazal and directed by Saife Hasan, the telenovela, which premiered on 1 September 2012, has been produced by Momina Duraid and ended its run in Pakistan on 16 February 2013 after telecasting 22 episodes. Featuring actors Savera Nadeem, Noman Ejaz, Ayesha Khan, Arjumand Rahim, Sajida Syed, Waqas Khan, Fahad Mirza, Mustafa Changazi, Sarah Khan, Syed Jibran and Madiha Rizvi.
Rajya Sabha TV (RSTV) is a cable television network channel owned and operated by Rajya Sabha that covers the proceedings of Rajya Sabha (the Upper House of the Parliament of India). Apart from telecasting live coverage of Rajya Sabha proceedings, RSTV also brings incisive analysis of parliamentary affairs. While focusing on current national and international affairs, it provides a platform for knowledge-based programmes for the discerning viewer. The channel offers special attention to legislative business undertaken by the Parliament.
He presided over the 1928 reallocation known as General Order 40, although he opposed it as too favorable to network radio stations.Telecommunications, Mass Media, and Democracy: The Battle for the Control of U.S. Broadcasting, 1928-1935, Robert W. McChesney, Oxford University Press, 1995, p. 35 He helped mold much of the early regulation of radio in the US.Broadcasting Telecasting, November 5, 1951, Robinson obituary, p. 60 Robinson was forced to sell Adaland later in life and died in considerable financial difficulties.
Telecasting Yearbook 1955-56 page 186 Irv Rose served as WKNY-TV's program director. But in the 1950s, few people owned television sets that could receive UHF stations, above Channel 13. UHF signals were also considered weaker than conventional VHF signals, a problem in the sparsely populated region between New York City and Albany, New York. WKNY-TV left the air on July 25, 1956, leaving Kingston without a TV station for almost three decades, until WRNN began broadcasting in 1985.
Channel 51's news moved to 10 p.m. in July 1969, making it the only local newscast in that time slot in South Florida. Engineering difficulties forced WSMS-TV to suspend operations on February 6, 1970; while local news reports only mentioned engineering problems, in its request for silence with the Federal Communications Commission, WSMS-TV also cited financial difficulties. In April, the station announced it would remain off air, citing the financial condition of Gold Coast Telecasting, the licensee.
The station first signed on as KRKD-FM, owned by Radio Broadcasters, Incorporated.Broadcasting Yearbook 1951 page 88 It was the FM sister station to AM 1150 KRKD (now KEIB). Continental Telecasting Corporation bought the station in 1955, followed by Trans American Broadcasting Corporation in 1959. Two years later, Trans American sold the station to the International Church of the Foursquare Gospel as part of the consolidation of KRKD and its time share partner, KFSG, which both took turns broadcasting on 1150 kHz.
In November 2001, Pappas Telecasting dropped the Univision network for a fledgling Spanish-language network starting up in the United States, controlled in part by Pappas. The new network was called Azteca América and was an offshoot of the Mexican broadcaster TV Azteca. Pappas also obtained a Class A license for KUVR-LP, granted March 25, 2002, giving the station a measure of protection during the switchover to digital television that was beginning. The station changed call letters, this time to KUVR-CA.
KFAZ, channel 43, was a television station in Monroe, Louisiana."Telecasting Yearbook", 1954-55 edition, Page 149 The station was owned by J. O. "Red" Willett, owner of a natural gas pipeline stringing company and Howard E. Griffith (later owner of AM radio station KUZN in West Monroe). KFAZ was the first TV station in the Monroe area, the third TV station in Louisiana (behind WDSU in New Orleans and WAFB in Baton Rouge), and the first on-the-air between Dallas and Jackson.
"CBS sells interest in WTOP; WCCO bidding reported." Broadcasting – Telecasting, October 11, 1954, pg. 64. CBS opted to sell its share of WTOP, which it had purchased in whole in 1932 before selling controlling interest to the Post in 1949. After the sale closed, the Post merged the WTOP stations with its other broadcast property, WMBR-AM-TV in Jacksonville, Florida and changed the name of the licensee from "WTOP Inc." to "Post Stations, Inc." WMBR radio was sold off in 1958, and WMBR-TV became WJXT.
A case was filed by Endemol Group, the makers of the popular reality TV show Bigg Boss, against the Malayalee House makers (Sun TV and Vedartha Entertainment Pvt. Ltd.) for copying the production format of Bigg Boss. Endemol filed a suit in Bombay High Court against Sun TV Network Ltd. and four others, seeking an injunction to restrain them from exploiting, telecasting, publicizing or continuing to telecast the reality show Malayalee House which had allegedly infringing the Group's copyright in the production format of Bigg Boss.
"Justice Dept. hauls NBC into court", Broadcasting - Telecasting, December 10, 1956, pages 27-32. In September 1959 the Justice Department issued a decision which, in part, instructed NBC to divest WRCV-AM- TV by the end of 1962."Now TV has a consent decree" and "What RCA-NBC consented to", Broadcasting, September 28, 1959, pages 35-36, 38, 40. Several months later in early 1960, NBC announced it would trade its Philadelphia stations to RKO General in exchange for that company's Boston outlets, WNAC- AM-FM-TV.
The station first signed on the air on December 18, 1968 as WBBH-TV. Before its existence, NBC programming in the market was relegated to off-hours clearances through a secondary affiliation with CBS affiliate WINK-TV (channel 11). As the second television station in Southwest Florida (after WINK-TV), WBBH shared ABC programming with that station until WEVU (channel 26, now WZVN-TV) signed on the air on August 21, 1974. Founded by a consortium of local businessmen named Broadcast Telecasting Services, Inc.
The twenty-third season of the Case Closed anime was directed by Yasuichiro Yamamoto and produced by TMS Entertainment and Yomiuri Telecasting Corporation. The series is based on Gosho Aoyama's Case Closed manga series. In Japan, the series is titled but was changed due to legal issues with the title Detective Conan. The series focuses on the adventures of teenage detective Shinichi Kudo who was turned into a child by a poison called APTX 4869, but continues working as a detective under the alias Conan Edogawa.
On April 1, 1991, KZZF dropped Z Rock in favor of adult contemporary, adopting new call letters KMMA on April 22. Six months later, in October 1991, the station became KCML, a country music outlet branded "Camel Country". In June 1992, Liggett Broadcasting sold KCML to Pappas Telecasting, owner of KMPH-TV in Visalia, for $550,000. The new owner installed a news/talk format the following year, using reporters from its TV sister station; new call letters KMPH-FM followed on February 22, 1993.
Retlaw Enterprises acquired the NWG stations for $17 million in 1986; the stations were operated as part of the Retlaw Broadcasting division. Fisher Communications purchased the Retlaw owned stations in 1999. On March 29, 2009, KIMA launched a digital subchannel affiliated with The CW to fill the void left by KCWK (channel 9) going dark at the end of May 2008 due to the Pappas Telecasting bankruptcy. The new channel took KCWK's former Channel 9 position on local cable systems and carries the CW Plus schedule.
The station began broadcasting on December 23, 1957, beginning its schedule at 6:00 pm, as a Christmas present to southern Saskatchewan. From start to finish, it was owned by Bill and Julie Forst and their company, Swift Current Telecasting. Many baby boomers fondly remember Uncle Gord's Cartoon Party which was broadcast in the 1960s and early 1970s. Hosted by longtime CJFB on-air personality Gordon Foth, the program was broadcast at noon on weekdays and featured cartoons such as "Popeye" which were elderly even then.
However, CBS was planning to operate its own television station in St. Louis alongside its powerhouse radio station, KMOX (1120 AM). The network originally won the permit to build a new station on channel 11 – the last remaining commercial VHF channel in St. Louis – in January 1957."FCC acts to clear key market V's." Broadcasting – Telecasting, January 21, 1957, pp. 35-37. But after being approached with an offer, CBS decided in August of that year to buy KWK-TV instead for $4 million.
Broadcasting Yearbook 1941 page 138 WHBQ moved its studios to Hotel Gayoso. In the 1940s, WHBQ became a network affiliate of the Mutual Broadcasting System. At the end of the 1940s, WHBQ moved to its current spot on the dial, 560 kHz.Broadcasting Yearbook 1950 page 278 It got a boost in power to 5,000 watts days and 1,000 watts nights. In 1954, WHBQ was acquired by RKO General,"Six stations being sold for nearly $15 million." Broadcasting - Telecasting, March 8, 1954, pp. 27-28.
"Roanoke VHF grant finalized; Flint stay petitions denied." Broadcasting – Telecasting, April 4, 1955, pg. 66. Channel 7, along with its radio sisters, originally operated from studio facilities located in the Mountain Trust Bank Building in downtown Roanoke. Its transmitter was located temporarily on Mill Mountain; the station originally planned to transmit its signal from Poor Mountain, but was not able to do so due to concerns regarding interference with the signal of WSPA-TV in Spartanburg, South Carolina, whose broadcasting facilities were under construction at the time.
The twenty-fourth season of the Case Closed anime was directed by Yasuichiro Yamamoto and produced by TMS Entertainment and Yomiuri Telecasting Corporation. The series is based on Gosho Aoyama's Case Closed manga series. In Japan, the series is titled but was changed due to legal issues with the title Detective Conan. The series focuses on the adventures of teenage detective Shinichi Kudo who was turned into a child by a poison called APTX 4869, but continues working as a detective under the alias Conan Edogawa.
The IATSE has represented workers in television broadcast for over sixty years. Initially IA members in broadcast were employed primarily at local television stations. Beginning in 1998 the IATSE began to organize technicians engaged in telecasting live sports events over regional cable sports networks. Today the Broadcast Department consists of numerous local unions that represent television station employees, locals that specialize in live sports broadcasting and thousands of members working in broadcast from stage, studio mechanics, wardrobe and make- up artists and hair stylist local unions.
Japan: B-Gram Records. JBCJ-1021. In beginning of autumn, the earlier formation of her band Garnet Crow began during recording of Mai Kuraki's English language single "Baby I Like." On November, the pre-recorded version of Mysterious Eyes was aired on Japanese TV Yomiuri Telecasting Corporation which was used as opening theme for Anime television series Detective Conan.Credits from On December they released their first mini album First Kaleidscope: Kimi no Uchi ni Tsuku made Zutto Hashitte Yuku under Giza Studio's indies label Tent House.
After the Federal Communications Commission (FCC)'s four-year-long freeze on awarding television station licenses was lifted in 1952, two radio stations—KARM (1430 AM, now KYNO) and KFRE (940 AM, now KFIG) competed for the construction permit to operate a station on channel 12, the sole VHF allocation given to Fresno. KFRE won the permit,"Lee breaks stalemate, KFRE gets Fresno Vhf." Broadcasting - Telecasting, January 16, 1956, pg. 67. and the station first signed on the air on May 10, 1956 as KFRE-TV.
After two years of successful operation of what he referred to as his "HIFAM" station, in 1948 he proposed that the FCC allocate a small high-frequency broadcast band, 400 kHz wide with 10 kHz spacing between frequency assignments. Tarzian promoted this as a low-cost alternative to expensive FM transmitters and receivers, saying that a $5.95 converter could be added to existing AM radios that would allow them to pick up the HIFAM stations."HIFAM" by Larry Christopher, Broadcasting/Telecasting, May 3, 1948, pages 22, 72.
The cover of the first DVD compilation for season seven of Detective Conan released by Shogakukan The seventh season of the Case Closed anime was directed by Kenji Kodama and Yasuichiro Yamamoto and produced by TMS Entertainment and Yomiuri Telecasting Corporation. The series is based on Gosho Aoyama's Case Closed manga series. In Japan, the series is titled but was changed due to legal issues with the title Detective Conan. The episodes' plot covers the arc where Conan Edogawa temporary returns as Jimmy Kudo.
Rollins Telecasting purchased channel 5 in 1956. The new owners changed the station's call letters to the present WPTZ (for PlatTZburgh); the WPTZ call had recently been dropped by the channel 3 facility in Philadelphia (which is now CBS-owned KYW-TV) following its controversial trade by Westinghouse Broadcasting to NBC earlier in that year. In 1979, the station relocated its studios to a new building located on Old Moffitt Road in Plattsburgh. Rollins merged with Heritage Broadcasting in 1987 to form Heritage Media.
The station first signed on the air on September 1, 1965. Founded by Illiana Telecasting, the first program ever broadcast on WTWO was NBC's morning news program Today, which aired at 7:00 that morning. WTWO, whose call letters were originally assigned to what is now fellow NBC affiliate WLBZ in Bangor, Maine, from 1954 to 1958, originally operated as a primary NBC affiliate with a secondary affiliation with ABC; it carried ABC network programs either on tape delay or by airing them live from the network feed through occasional preemptions of NBC programs (the most notable preemption being the 1967–1969 science fiction series Star Trek). WTWO logo, used from 1997 to 2006 Eleven days after its sign-on, on September 12, 1965, WTWO began broadcasting network programming in color. Illiana Telecasting sold the station to Booth Newspapers in 1968. ABC programming was split between channel 2 and primary CBS affiliate WTHI-TV (channel 10) until April 1973, when the network moved to upstart WIIL- TV (channel 38, now WAWV-TV, which would eventually drop ABC to join Fox in September 1995 and rejoin ABC in September 2011).
DD Saptagiri (Telugu: దూరదర్శన్ సప్తగిరి) is a state-owned television channel telecasting in the Telugu language from a studio at Doordarshan Kendra Vijayawada, Andhra Pradesh, India. This studio was inaugurated by the Chief Minister of Andhra Pradesh, Shri N. Chandrababu Naidu, on 27 September 2014. In addition to the terrestrial over-the-air transmission, the DD Vijayawada studio programmes are beamed through direct-broadcast satellite (DTH) and cable networks. Doordarshan Kendra Vijayawada’s Regional Network in Telugu took on a new identity as "DD Saptagiri", on 27 September 2014.
KPTM, virtual channel 42 (UHF digital channel 26), is a Fox-affiliated television station licensed to Omaha, Nebraska, United States and also serving Council Bluffs, Iowa. The station is owned by the Sinclair Broadcast Group, which also operates CW affiliate KXVO (channel 15) under a local marketing agreement (LMA) with owner Mitts Telecasting Company. The two stations share studios on Farnam Street in Omaha and transmitter facilities on Pflug Road, south of Gretna and I-80. On cable, the station is available on Cox Communications channel 10 in both standard and high definition.
92, 89 and they were also hit by Channel Seven telecasting the Round 17 versus match, breaching agreements to not telecast non-Eagles VFL matches to Perth.Christian, Geoff; ‘WAFL Demands Action over Telecast Breach’; The West Australian, 13 July 1987, p. 96 As small compensation, Claremont under captain-coach Gerard Neesham developed an innovation possession-oriented “chip and draw” style of football that allowed the Tigers to achieve the best record of any WA(N)FL team since East Fremantle’s unbeaten season of 1946.Devaney, John; Full Points Footy’s WA Football Companion; pp.
KGMC first signed on the air on September 11, 1992, as KSDI; the station was originally an affiliate of the viewer-request music video network The Box. That December, the station changed its call letters to KGMC (the calls were previously used by KOCB in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma from 1979 to 1989). In January 1995, the station entered into a local marketing agreement with Pappas Telecasting Companies, owner of Fox affiliate KMPH-TV (channel 26). Pappas programmed the station from 7:00 to 9:00 a.m. and again from 3:00 to 11:00 p.m.
KRSD-TV began telecasting the evening of January 21, 1958. It was co-owned with KRSD (1340 AM) in Rapid City and KDSJ (980 AM) in Deadwood and debuted from new radio and television studios located on Mountain View Road. KRSD-TV was the second station on air in Rapid City and was a primary NBC affiliate. With the Rapid City station on the air, Heart of the Black Hills Stations began construction the next year on the satellite station at Lead, which went into service on January 6, 1960.
Ironically, the game was not telecast by CBS' Chicago owned-and-operated station WBBM-TV, nor on CBS affiliates in most of Illinois, and parts of Indiana, Wisconsin and Iowa, due to Blackhawks' owner Arthur M. Wirtz policy of not telecasting home games. While Dan Kelly once again handled all of the play-by-play work, Jim Gordon replaced Bill Mazer in . For the CBS' Stanley Cup Finals coverage during this period, a third voice was added to the booth (Phil Esposito in 1971 and Harry Howell in 1972).
In 1995, PEN created another landmark by telecasting Sholay 20 years after its theatrical release on Doordarshan and creating a record with the highest ever Television viewing ratings (76 TRPs) with approximately 7.5 crore revenues. In 1996, Sony TV telecast Sholay to celebrate its 1st anniversary and gained No 1 position among satellite channels beating Zee TV for the first time. Daughter Bhavita Jayantilal Gada also joined PEN in 2006 and started an Animation Division with mega projects like MAHABHARAT. Nephew Kushal Kantilal Gada joined the group in 2007 after graduating in management studies.
KUAM-LP's previous logo. KUAM-LP began telecasting on November 20, 1995 with CBS programming, which had previously been shared between KTGM and sister station KUAM-TV, who wanted to focus more on their ABC and NBC affiliations, respectively. The move would result in adding more of their respective networks' programming for each station, as opposed to airing selected CBS shows for KUAM-TV and KTGM to air. KUAM-LP also carried programs from The WB on a secondary basis from their inception until June 2001, when it moved to KTGM.
WFME's logo in 2012, under Family Radio ownership. The 94.7 FM frequency signed on in 1947 as WAAT-FM, and was owned by the Bremer Broadcasting Company along with sister station WAAT (970 AM). The following year Bremer launched New Jersey's first television station, WATV on channel 13 transmitting from the WAAT-FM tower. In 1957 the three stations were sold by Bremer to National Telefilm Associates, who changed the operation's call letters to WNTA-FM."WAAT, WATV (TV) sold to NTA for $3.5 million."Broadcasting & Telecasting, October 7, 1957, pg. 9.
This was the first Grey Cup not to be broadcast on CBC Television since they started broadcasting the Grey Cup in 1952. In Canada, the game was telecast solely on the cable channel TSN and its French-language sister network RDS. Internationally, both Versus, telecasting in the United States, and Canadian Forces Radio and Television, broadcasting to Canadian forces internationally, used the TSN feed and graphics. The game was available in HD on both TSN HD and RDS HD and shown in HD in the United States on Voom HD Networks's WorldSport.
He produces special projects at WKYC, where he has won Emmys for his work on Dateline-Cleveland. Goulden is creating a new web site on which to air brand new documentaries on a variety of subjects. It is possible that some of these new documentaries will be picked up by broadcast outlets for telecasting purposes. Goulden is also writing a book about his adventures while producing documentaries for 50 years and this project will be followed closely by a book of photographs taken while on location around the world.
The mountain's surface is currently known as . Surrounded by a large levee, the park itself contains large hills (the deposits for earth dug up in constructing underground train tunnels) which have much higher elevations than the actual "peak" of the mountain. A stone memorial of the Meiji Emperor's first sea-borne military parade in 1876 is located next to the triangular peak of the mountain. The park's clock-tower was originally a prop for a television show produced by the Kansai Telecasting Corporation, but was later donated to the prefecture.
CBS took control of Channel 4's operations that March, and changed its call letters to KMOX-TV, sharing the call sign with AM 1120."CBS-TV takes over KWK-TV." Broadcasting – Telecasting, March 3, 1958, pg. 10. The original Viacom (not the current one) purchased Channel 4 from CBS in 1986, and because of an FCC law in place then that prohibited TV and radio stations in the same market, but with different ownership from sharing the same callsign, it subsequently amended its call sign to KMOV.
However, the station, which did not have a digital signal, subsequently changed its plans and chose to completely replace Azteca América with The CW, citing better marketing potential. Mike Angelos, Vice President of Corporate Communications for Pappas Telecasting, stated that while the Yakima Valley has a 40 percent Hispanic population, the numbers weren't high enough to reach the level needed for Azteca América. The call letters were changed to KCWK in August 2006 to reflect the new affiliation. On May 10, 2008, KCWK, along with several other Pappas stations, filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy.
WOSU-TV began broadcasting in color in 1968, telecasting the football game between Ohio State and Michigan. The color telecast helped to popularize the UHF band in Columbus, an otherwise all-VHF market at the time. In 1972, the station moved from its old studios at 2470 North Star Road in Upper Arlington to a new facility, the Fawcett Center for Tomorrow, on the banks of the Olentangy River near (now on) the campus of OSU. WPBO began broadcasting as a full-powered relay station in October 1973.
The deal reunited WOI with two of its former Citadel sister stations, WIVT in Binghamton, New York and WVNY in Burlington, Vermont. Nexstar then announced on November 4, 2014 that it would also buy CW affiliate KCWI from Pappas Telecasting for $3.5 million. The sale was finalized on March 14, 2016,Consummation Notice, CDBS Public Access, Federal Communications Commission, 16 March 2016, Retrieved 16 March 2016. with Nexstar announcing shortly after that KCWI would leave its downtown Des Moines studios and consolidate operations with WOI on Westown Parkway.
However, the station's sound remained much more conservative than most Top 40 stations. In 1955, the station began regular broadcasts of Pirate baseball games, a partnership that ended in 2006, but was restarted in 2012 when KDKA-FM began carrying the games. KDKA gained a television sister station in late 1954, when Westinghouse purchased WDTV (changing its call letters to KDKA-TV) from the DuMont Television Network for a then-record price of $9.75 million."Westinghouse pays record to buy DuMont's WDTV (TV)", Broadcasting - Telecasting, December 6, 1954, pp. 27-28.
In the late 1970s, citing age and health, the Ernsts put their last broadcast holdings, KWRB-TV and KRTR radio at Thermopolis, on the market. A deal was reached in January 1978 to sell KWRB-TV to Strang Telecasting for $650,000. However, a petition to deny filing from Associated Christian Broadcasters delayed approval of the sale; having not been concluded in a year, the Ernsts canceled the contract and sought another buyer. Strang sued the Ernsts, who won a unanimous decision in May 1980 from the Wyoming Supreme Court upholding their action.
Four Colby investors, including businessman Sam Lunsway, obtained a construction permit for a new television station to serve Colby on February 9, 1983. The original ownership of the station intended to operate KLBY as an ABC affiliate. Continual delays pushed back channel 4's launch throughout early 1984: bad weather at the end of late 1983 prevented the installation of the tower, while the original tower crew withdrew from the job after building all but the top after the spring brought more inclement conditions to the region. KLBY finally began telecasting July 4, 1984.
The official television host broadcaster of the Afro-Asian Games was DD Sports, India's first sports channel. The experience gained through broadcasting these Games would prove to be extremely helpful for its parent company Doordarshan, as they broadcast the 2004 Olympic Games live and will also be telecasting the 2010 Commonwealth Games. However, the schedule of the Games clashed with an ongoing Triangular Cricket Tournament, and the events were aired on DD Metro. Doordarshan deployed 350 personnel, 10 outdoor broadcasting vans and 86 cameras for obtaining coverage of the Games.
What today is WNYA can indirectly trace its history to WVUW, an un-built station on channel 51 in Pittsfield. WVUW was granted a construction permit in 1984, but was deleted by the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) in 1990. In October 1996, Pappas Telecasting applied for a new permit for this allocation; however, in 2001, the FCC placed the channel up for auction. In addition to Pappas, which by then planned to use the station as an Azteca América affiliate, bidders included Hubbard Broadcasting, Equity Broadcasting, the Trinity Broadcasting Network, and Venture Technologies Group.
The station first signed on the air on September 27, 1953.Telecasting Yearbook 1954-1955 page 100 It was the second TV station in Macon. WNEX-TV (channel 47) began operation in August 25, 1953, co-owned with WNEX (1400 AM). But in the 1950s, few people had TVs that received UHF channels and WNEX-TV ended operations in 1955. WMAZ-TV was originally owned by the Southeastern Broadcasting Company, and took its calls from co-owned WMAZ radio (940 AM, now WMAC, and 99.1 FM, now WLXF at 105.5).
The cover of the DVD compilation released by FUNimation Entertainment of the fifth season The fifth season of the Case Closed anime was directed by Kenji Kodama and Yasuichiro Yamamoto and produced by TMS Entertainment and Yomiuri Telecasting Corporation. The series is based on Gosho Aoyama's Case Closed manga series. In Japan, the series is titled but was changed due to legal issues with the title Detective Conan. The episodes' plot continues Jimmy Kudo's life as a young child named Conan Edogawa and introduces the character Ai Haibara/Vi Graythorn.
Karuthamuthu ( 'Black pearl') is a 2014 Indian television Malayalam language series, which premiered on 20 October 2014 on Asianet channel. It is the second longest running television soap opera in Malayalam television completing successful telecasting for five years with 1,450 episodes and four seasons. Karuthamuthu started off with story of a black-skinned lady, her life tribulations and story with Kishor Satya and Premi Viswanath in the leading cast. Kishor Satya and Akshara Kishor played the lead role of season 2 which portrays on the story of Balamol (Daughter of Dr.Balachandran and Karthika).
Milwaukee PBS, as part of the Milwaukee Area Technical College, also provides the student television station facility and production support for the Television and Video Production Division at MATC. TVP, formerly known as 'Telecasting', predates the stations and has produced several hundred broadcast video professionals over the years. The two-year program is unique in Wisconsin's technical college system, as well as nationwide. Stations licensed directly to a college are fairly rare in the PBS system, especially in larger markets, and even fewer are attached to a technical/two-year college.
Ownership of the station would pass to Karl Eller, but the station would continue to be managed by Crites, who became president of Eller Telecasting. KBLU-TV became part of Combined Communications in 1968, when its parent, Eller Outdoor Advertising Company, merged with KTAR Broadcasting Company. The sudden demise of KIVA on January 31, 1970, spelled more changes for KBLU-TV, which immediately moved to acquire the NBC affiliation, while the CBS affiliation passed to new station KECC-TV (now KECY-TV). KBLU-TV also took over the television studio facilities formerly occupied by KIVA.
Merrill, who believed that the market could not support multiple local television stations, fought KBLU-TV and the El Centro stations. He claimed that KIVA "would probably go out of business within a year if KBLU- TV were allowed to open." While the competition did hurt KIVA's profits, conditions were not quite as bleak as Merrill predicted, and the station continued to operate well after KBLU-TV's sign-on in December 1963. In 1967, Merrill spun off the cable television business and became sole proprietor of KIVA as Merrill Telecasting.
After KOMO-TV (channel 4) signed on in December 1953, Seattle's channel 7 was the last commercial VHF channel allocation available in the Puget Sound area. As such, its construction permit was heavily contested among several local broadcast interests. Three radio stations—KVI (570 AM), KXA (770 AM, now KTTH) and KIRO (710 AM)—were locked in a battle for the frequency over several years of comparative hearings at the Federal Communications Commission (FCC). Following an initial decision in 1955"FCC proposes 3 VHF grants." Broadcasting – Telecasting, April 11, 1955, pg. 96.
The station first signed on the air by Signal Hill Telecasting Corporation on August 10, 1953 as WTVI, broadcasting on UHF channel 54. It was originally licensed to Belleville, Illinois (across the Mississippi River from St. Louis) and was the second television station in the St. Louis market after KSDK on February 8, 1947. The station's first broadcast was a baseball game between the St. Louis Browns and Cincinnati Reds, announced by Buddy Blattner, Bill Durney and Milo Hamilton. It operated as a primary CBS affiliate, and held secondary affiliations with ABC and DuMont.
An anime television series adaptation aired from April 6 to September 28, 2019 on NTV and ytv. Produced by OLM, Yomiuri Telecasting Corporation and Shogakukan-Shueisha Productions, the series is directed by Toshinori Watabe, with Atsuhiro Tomioka handling series composition, Takao Mai designing the characters and Norihito Sumitomo composing the music. Sumika performs the series' opening theme song "Equal", while Little Glee Monster performs the series' ending theme song "Kimi ni Todoku Made." Porno Graffitti performs the series' second opening theme song, while Qyoto performs the series' second ending theme song.
However, Wood's arrangements of naval bugle calls from the start of the "Fantasia" were retained, and Sargent's arrangement of "Rule Britannia" returned with Bryn Terfel as soloist. As on his 1994 Last Night appearance,Teldec 4509-97868-2 CD, "Last Night of the Proms (The 100th Season)", 1994. he sang one verse in a Welsh translation, with the chorus also translated into Welsh. Additionally, 2008 saw the inclusion of Scottish composer Anna Meredith to the programme for her Proms premiere, froms, which involved five different groups of musicians telecasting in from around Britain.
Initially, the KFFX-TV license was owned by Communication Properties; Northwest Broadcasting, through its Mountain Broadcasting subsidiary, operated the station under a local marketing agreement. Northwest filed to acquire KFFX outright in November 1999; however, the sale, approved on September 27, 2000, was not completed until January 14, 2003 because Northwest was required to divest another full-power television station in the Tri-Cities market, KBKI (channel 9, later known as KCWK) in Walla Walla, in order to complete its purchase of KFFX. KBKI was ultimately acquired by Pappas Telecasting.
In 1973 an animated series based on the manga was made, produced by Yoshinobu Nishizaki and broadcast by Kansai Telecasting Corporation. As with the earlier Triton of the Sea, Tezuka had little-to-no involvement in this series and Wansa-kun ultimately ended up being the last series produced by the original Mushi Production before its bankruptcy. The anime series lasted 26 episodes. The first 21 episodes were very comedic in nature, but the final five episodes took a more dramatic turn, when Wansa began his search for his mother.
The cover of the first DVD compilation for season fourteen of Detective Conan released by Shogakukan The fourteenth season of the Case Closed anime was directed by Kenji Kodama and Yasuichiro Yamamoto and produced by TMS Entertainment and Yomiuri Telecasting Corporation. The series is based on Gosho Aoyama's Case Closed manga series. In Japan, the series is titled but was changed due to legal issues with the title Detective Conan. The episodes' plot follows Conan Edogawa's daily adventures, including an episode in where the Black Organization attempts to assassinate a political candidate.
Pappas Telecasting Companies was a diversely organized broadcasting company headquartered in Visalia, California, United States. Founded in 1971, it was one of the largest privately held broadcasting companies in the country, with its stations reaching over 15% of all U.S. households and over 32% of Hispanic households. Apart from owning and/or operating many television stations, the company formerly had two radio stations in its possession, KTRB AM 860 and KMPH-AM 840—changed from KPMP in June 2006 to reflect its nearby sister/flagship television station, Fox affiliate KMPH-TV, both in Fresno, California.
Neer Shah was first head and founder of Nepal Television (NTV), the first TV station in Nepal and is the chairman of Shangri-La TV (STV), a film production and microwave TV distribution company. STV produced many programmes for NTV and also provided the cable television network in Kathmandu valley. Shah holds 33 per cent equity in a United Kingdom-based firm, Galaxy, which is involved in telecasting Nepalese TV channels overseas. Along with Nirmal Nicholas Paul, he set up a production company called "888 Films", that produces Nepalese and Hindi films.
It includes reruns of IBC's old entertainment and cultural shows, introduction of documentary and current affairs programs airing from sister station People's Television Network, and other entertainment and sports content from SMAC Television Productions and ATC, among others. IBC also got two new slogans namely, "Iconic.Bold.Chill" and "Kaibigan Mo!" In March 2020, IBC announced the suspension of telecasting their selected regular programs, this is due to President Rodrigo Duterte implementing an enhanced community quarantine in Metro Manila and Luzon in line with the growing COVID-19 pandemic in the Philippines.
Broadcasting & Cable is a weekly telecommunications industry trade magazine published by Future US. Previous names included Broadcasting-Telecasting, Broadcasting and Broadcast Advertising, and Broadcasting. B&C;, which was published biweekly until January 1941, and weekly thereafter, covers the business of television in the U.S.—programming, advertising, regulation, technology, finance, and news. In addition to the newsweekly, B&C; operates a comprehensive website that provides a roadmap for readers in an industry that is in constant flux due to shifts in technology, culture and legislation, and offers a forum for industry debate and criticism.
WDHO-TV in Toledo was not involved in the sale and remained wholly owned by D.H. Overmyer Telecasting Company Inc. Overmyer had previously withdrawn his application for the Dallas station, which the FCC deleted on October 17, 1967. The FCC approval of the entire package was controversial because of the waiver of the FCC policy restricting ownership to seven TV stations with only three allowed in the top 50 markets. The FCC awarded Overmyer's permits in 1965 under the old policy that limited the applicant to seven TV stations with no restriction on market ranking.
In 1977, WSPA hired Annette Estes as anchor of its evening newscasts, becoming the station's first female news anchor; Estes left the station in 1987 to become the 6:00 and 11:00 p.m. co-anchor (alongside Carl Clark) at WYFF. In September 1996, WSPA-TV began to produce a nightly half-hour newscast at 10:00 p.m. for WHNS through a news share agreement with the stations' then-owner Pappas Telecasting Companies; the news share agreement was terminated in 1999 (two years after WHNS was sold to the Meredith Corporation), when channel 21 launched its own news department that fall.
JOIX-DTV, branded as , is the Kansai region flagship station of the Nippon Television Network System, owned-and-operated by the subsidiary of the eponymous Yomiuri Shimbun Holdings, Japan's largest media conglomerate; Yomiuri TV forms part of Yomiuri's main television broadcasting arm alongside Kantō region flagship Nippon TV, which owns a 15.89% share in the company. Founded as on February 13, 1958, and renamed Yomiuri Telecasting Corporation on August 1, the station started broadcasting on August 28 as the first TV station to be affiliated with Nippon Television Network Corporation. Its studios are located in the Osaka Business Park district of Osaka.
The cover of the first DVD compilation for season twenty-two of Detective Conan released by Shogakukan The twenty-second season of the Case Closed anime was directed by Yasuichiro Yamamoto and produced by TMS Entertainment and Yomiuri Telecasting Corporation. The series is based on Gosho Aoyama's Case Closed manga series. In Japan, the series is titled but was changed due to legal issues with the title Detective Conan. The series focuses on the adventures of teenage detective Shinichi Kudo who was turned into a child by a poison called APTX 4869, but continues working as a detective under the alias Conan Edogawa.
Specifically, it was determined that NBC threatened to drop its programming from both WPTZ and Boston's WBZ-TV; to withhold a primary affiliation from newly acquired KDKA-TV in Pittsburgh (that station would sign with CBS as a primary affiliate); and to withhold or pull an NBC affiliation from any other major-market station Westinghouse would purchase in the future. Based on these findings, a civil antitrust suit was filed against NBC and its parent company RCA, on behalf of Westinghouse in December 1956."Justice Dept. hauls NBC into court." Broadcasting - Telecasting, December 10, 1956, pp. 27-32.
In February 1922, the American Telephone & Telegraph Company (AT&T;) announced it planned to begin establishing stations that would be dedicated to selling their airtime to interested parties, which AT&T; called "toll broadcasting"."National Radio Broadcast By Bell System", Science & Invention, April 1922, pages 1144, 1173. Its primary station, WEAF in New York (now WFAN), aired its first paid radio commercial on August 28, 1922 for the Queensboro Corporation, advertising a new apartment complex in Jackson Heights, Queens, near the just-completed #7 subway line."And Now a Word From Our Sponsor", Broadcasting-Telecasting, October 15, 1956, page 110.
The (April 17, 1997 – March 17, 2005) was a Japanese cooking show produced by the Yomiuri Telecasting Corporation and known for its use of the highest quality and most expensive food ingredients available from both domestic and international sources. In the show two chefs prepare two competing dishes, each using a special premium ingredient, but the dish that is ultimately served at the end of the show is determined by majority vote of the panelists, and then served only to those who voted for that dish. The show is continued by the from April 14, 2005.
1320 AM began life as the original KBLU, signing on September 6, 1959. When Eller Telecasting and Combined Communications merged in 1969, the newly formed group had to divest one of KBLU or KYUM at 560, choosing to keep the latter and donate the former to Arizona Western College. On January 1, 1970, the donation took effect, and 1320 AM signed off with the callsign changing to KAWC; 560 AM changed to KBLU. Arizona Western College immediately relocated the transmitter to its campus and instituted a public radio format, which signed on for the first time on July 11, 1970.
The cover of the first DVD compilation for season nineteen of Detective Conan released by Shogakukan The nineteenth season of the Case Closed anime was directed by Koujin Ochi and produced by TMS Entertainment and Yomiuri Telecasting Corporation. The series is based on Gosho Aoyama's Case Closed manga series. In Japan, the series is titled but was changed due to legal issues with the title Detective Conan. The series focuses on the adventures of teenage detective Shinichi Kudo who was turned into a child by a poison called APTX 4869, but continues working as a detective under the alias Conan Edogawa.
Scripps-Howard Broadcasting Co ruled that the Ohio State Legislation gave an individual the right to possess autonomy over the dissemination of their performance. Accordingly the Court held that the unauthorized recording and live telecasting of an individual's "human cannonball" performance was in violation of the right of publicity. It is important to note that this did not imply an unambiguous Performer's Right as the Court found that the unauthorized performance of the Plaintiff's entire work, in the absence of fair remuneration, was the only situation in which the Performer's "right to publicity" was violated. Zacchini v.
After the sale to Carolina Christian Broadcasting collapsed, Thoms lost its lease on the channel 21 transmitter site, forcing the station to go off the air. It then reached a deal to sell WANC-TV to Pappas Telecasting of Visalia, California, for $206,000 in June 1979. The sale became effective September 14, and twelve days later, on September 26, the call letters were changed to WHNS. Pappas embarked on a multi-year project to build a new channel 21 transmitter atop Slick Rock Mountain in Transylvania County, accompanied by a primary base in Greenville and studios in Asheville.
The station first went on the air on January 11, 1949 as WOIC, and began full-time operations on January 16. The fourth-oldest station in the nation's capital, channel 9 was originally owned by the Bamberger Broadcasting Service, a subsidiary of R. H. Macy and Company."WOIC opens; Capital figures to take part in TV ceremonies." Broadcasting – Telecasting, January 17, 1949, pg. 35. Bamberger also owned WOR-AM-FM in New York City, and was working to put WOR-TV (channel 9, now WWOR-TV in Secaucus, New Jersey) on the air at the same time.
In June 1955 Westinghouse agreed to trade KYW and WPTZ to NBC in exchange for NBC's Cleveland properties, WTAM-AM-FM and WNBK television; Westinghouse also received $3 million in cash compensation."NBC, WBC trade properties in Cleveland, Philadelphia", Broadcasting - Telecasting, May 23, 1955, pages 65-66, 68. The main impetus for the trade was NBC's desire to acquire an owned-and-operated television station in the fourth-largest American television market. NBC had to receive a waiver for the swap because KYW and NBC Radio's New York City flagship, WRCA (now WFAN) were both clear channel stations.
Before the purchase, Westinghouse had attempted to purchase the channel 13 license allocated for public broadcasting, but eventually donated the tower to public interest groups and gave financial backing for the eventual WQED. In a somewhat surprising move, KDKA-TV affiliated with CBS, in contrast to KDKA's longtime NBC affiliation. KDKA radio remained affiliated with NBC radio until the network purchased WJAS in 1957 in order for WJAS's owners to gain a 50% ownership stake in WIIC-TV (now WPXI) with the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette."NBC buys WJAS Pittsburgh", Broadcasting - Telecasting, August 12, 1957, page 9.
More stations left the air than opened, and sixty percent of television industry losses from 1953 to 1956 losses came from UHF stations. TV network affiliations were difficult to get in many locations; the UHF stations with major-network affiliation would often lose these affiliations in favor of any viable new VHF TV station that entered the same market. Of the 82 new UHF-TV stations in the United States broadcasting as of June 1954, only 24 of them remained a year later. The majority of the 165 UHF stations to begin telecasting between 1952 and 1959 did not survive.
Sony TV was to air episodes based on Om Prakash Chautala teacher recruitment scam in the show. On 22 February 2013 Delhi High Court restrained Sony TV from telecasting the related episodes until 4 April 2013, upon the appeal by Chautala and others as the case was still in court and there was a possibility of bias of the show on the case. On 2 March 2013, show was given clearance by High Court. However, clearance was challenged in Supreme Court and on 6 March 2013, the episodes of this case were again put on hold.
Lupin III Part III is the third incarnation of TMS Entertainment's long- running anime television adaptation of the manga series written by Monkey Punch. The series aired on Yomiuri Telecasting Corporation between March 3, 1984 and November 6, 1985. Among English-speaking fans, this series is commonly known as the "Pink Jacket" series in reference to Lupin's outfit, which replaces Part I's green jacket and Part II's red jacket with a bright pink one. The feature film Legend of the Gold of Babylon, was released in theaters during the original broadcast run of this television series.
KFXL signed on June 26, 2006 as KOWH, an affiliate of The WB Television Network. The station was originally owned by the Omaha World-Herald, from which KOWH derived its call sign. The newspaper outsourced most of the station's operations to Pappas Telecasting, which provided marketing, sales and programming services to the station. Before KOWH signed on, The WB was seen either via another Pappas- operated station, KXVO in Omaha, or a cable-only WB 100+ station, KWBL; KOWH took KWBL's place on cable systems in central Nebraska, including Charter Communications in Hastings, Grand Island, and Kearney.
The Imperial Valley gained its first television station on March 25, 1953, when the FCC awarded a permit to Valley Telecasting to construct a television station on VHF channel 11. The original studios and transmitter would be located at Pilot Knob in California about ten miles west of Yuma. Their old studios are still standing, south of 8, north of Frontage Rd., south/east of the Winterhaven Agricultural Station. On October 6, 1953, the station, which had by that time acquired the call letters KIVA, sent out a very faint test pattern by accident, but it was received by several people.
On May 10, 2008, thirteen Pappas stations, including KMPH, filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection. As a result of the bankruptcy, Pappas Telecasting Companies was given until February 15, 2009 to sell these stations to other owners.Pappas Saga Turning Into Tragedy, TVNewsCheck, September 24, 2008. On January 16, 2009, Pappas announced that most of the stations, including KMPH, would be purchased by New World TV Group (no relation to the similarly named New World Communications, which switched most of its stations to Fox between September 1994 and July 1995), after the sale received United States bankruptcy court approval.
With Louis Hagen Jr. (the son of Reiniger's financier of Prince Achmed in Potsdam), they founded Primrose Productions in 1953 and, over the next two years, produced more than a dozen short silhouette films based on Grimms' Fairy Tales for the BBC and Telecasting America. Reiniger also provided illustrations for the 1953 book King Arthur and His Knights of the Round Table by Roger Lancelyn Green. After a period of seclusion after her husband's death in 1963, renewed interest in her work resulted in Reiniger's return to Germany. She later visited the United States, and began making films again soon after.
This was followed by a closing announcement by Chief Master Sergeant and Station Manager Bob Woodruff, ending with the U.S. national anthem: > Ladies and Gentlemen, I'm Chief Master Sargent Bob Woodruff Station Manager > of the American Forces Radio and Television Service in Tehran. After 22 > years of radio broadcasting and 17 years of telecasting in Tehran, AFRTS > Radio 1555 and TV Channel 7 cease all operations in this country at this > time. I bid you all goodbye and thank you for letting us serve you. And now > the national anthem of the United States of America.
The first "classic" Disney animated film to be broadcast on the channel, Alice in Wonderland, premiered on the network in January 1984. By January 1985, the channel's programming reached 1.75 million subscribers, at which time the channel had reached profitability. Sometime in 1986, (Colossal) Pictures produced on-air identification bumpers featuring Mickey Mouse (his gloved hands, and sometimes his feet, only visible) and the logo, be them animated or live action. In August 1989, the channel launched a series of interstitial segments called The Disney Channel Salutes The American Teacher; the channel subsequently began telecasting the American Teacher Awards in November 1991.
The three remaining board members, not including Castille, then made an attempt to sell the facility to the state-owned Louisiana Educational Television Authority; the state network opted not to purchase the facility, citing technical limitations and noting it may have taken as long as two years to begin operating. Channel 15 would not be used again in Lafayette until a new group activated it as KADN-TV, which began telecasting March 1, 1980. It would be more than 40 years before an NBC affiliate was launched again in the Lafayette market, when KLAF-LD affiliated with NBC on July 1, 2015.
In 1946, the Philadelphia Evening Bulletin secured a construction permit for channel 10,"Commercial video stations total 38." Broadcasting – Telecasting. October 7, 1946, pg. 39. naming its proposed station WPEN-TV after the newspaper's WPEN radio stations (950 AM, now WKDN, and 98.1 FM, later WCAU-FM and now WOGL). The picture changed dramatically in 1947, when The Philadelphia Record folded. The Bulletin inherited the Records "goodwill", along with the rights to buy the radio station WCAU (1210 AM, now WPHT) and the original WCAU-FM (102.9 FM) from their longtime owners, brothers Isaac and Leon Levy.
The construction permit for WXTV was granted to the Community Telecasting Company in November 1955, to telecast on channel 73, and the call letters WXTV were quickly granted. Still unbuilt, the station modified its application in December 1956 to specify channel 45. The Federal Communications Commission, however, instead let channel 45 remain in the hands of WKST-TV of New Castle, Pennsylvania, which at the time was not broadcasting; the FCC denied a protest by Community against the move. The next year, it considered, then dropped, a plan to move the channel 73 allotment to Pittsburgh and substitute channel 33 for WXTV's use.
Ultimately, the two stations' fight for lower channel positions was resolved by letting WKST-TV move to channel 33 (and change its city of license to Youngstown), giving WXTV permission to operate on channel 45 once it was vacated. In early 1960, an application to transfer the station's construction permit from Community Telecasting to WXTV, Inc., both owned by Sanford A. Schafitz and Guy W. Gully, was held up by the FCC when WKST-TV petitioned against the move, saying the permittees were not legally or financially qualified; while the FCC dismissed the petition as moot, it decided to look into the charges.
KFRE-CA was a low-power Class A television station licensed to Tulare, California, but serving Bakersfield per Special Temporary Authority (STA). Under the terms of the STA, the station, while licensed to broadcast in analog on UHF channel 40, actually broadcast on channel 27, having been displaced by the DTV companion channel for Fresno PBS member station KVPT. Founded November 19, 1992, KFRE-CA was an independent station owned by Pappas Telecasting Companies, with Harry J Pappas as its licensee. The station's license was cancelled and its call sign deleted from the Federal Communications Commission's database on July 27, 2011.
KPTM began broadcasting on April 6, 1986 as the third broadcasting property owned by Pappas Telecasting (after flagship KMPH-TV in Fresno, California and WHNS in Greenville, South Carolina). It was the second independent station in Nebraska, and the first new commercial station to sign on in Omaha in 29 years since KETV (channel 7) signed on in September 1957. At the time, Omaha was one of the few top-100 markets that did not have an independent station of its own. Shortly after signing on as an independent, it was approached by the founders of the fledgling Fox network to join the new network as a charter affiliate.
In 1985, The Nashville Network, co-owned by Gaylord, began airing an edited half-hour version of the program as Grand Ole Opry Live. The show moved to Country Music Television, also owned by Gaylord, where it expanded to an hour, and then to the Great American Country (GAC) cable network, which no longer televised its Opry Live show after both networks channel drifted towards generic Southern lifestyle programming. Circle, a new over-the-air digital subchannel network operated by Gray Television and Ryman Hospitality Properties, resumed telecasting the Opry as its flagship program when it launched in 2020. RFD-TV carries reruns of Opry telecasts under the title Opry Encore.
KQSL debuted in 1990 as KFWU, under the ownership of California Oregon Broadcasting. As a satellite of ABC affiliate KRCR-TV in Redding, the station was sold to Lamco Communications (along with KRCR) in 1995. It was then sold to Sainte Limited in 1996, and to Pappas Telecasting Companies in 1997, at which point KFWU became a satellite of KTNC-TV in Concord (however, at first, KFWU was considered the main station and KTNC the satellite). It became KUNO-TV in 2003.Digital TV Market Listing for KBQR Retrieved November 15, 2010 On November 7, 2008, KUNO was taken silent due to financial troubles.
WFQX-TV, virtual and UHF digital channel 32, is a dual Fox/CW+-affiliated television station licensed to Cadillac, Michigan, United States, serving the northern Lower and eastern Upper peninsulas of Michigan. Owned by Cadillac Telecasting Company, it is operated under a shared services agreement (SSA) by Heritage Broadcasting Group, making it a sister station to Cadillac-licensed CBS affiliate WWTV, channel 9 (and its Sault Ste. Marie-licensed full-time satellite, WWUP-TV, channel 10). The two stations share studios on Broadcast Way (near US 131) in Cadillac; WFQX-TV's transmitter is located on 130th Avenue in unincorporated Osceola County, just northeast of Tustin.
Ironically, the game was not telecast by CBS' Chicago owned-and- operated station WBBM-TV, nor on CBS affiliates in most of Illinois, and parts of Indiana, Wisconsin and Iowa, due to Blackhawks' owner Arthur M. Wirtz policy of not telecasting home games. While Dan Kelly once again handled all of the play-by-play work, Jim Gordon replaced Bill Mazer in . For the CBS' Stanley Cup Finals coverage during this period, a third voice was added to the booth (Phil Esposito in 1971 and Harry Howell in 1972). One trivial note however, on January 23, 1972, Jim Gordon was not in Boston for the Buffalo- Boston game.
In Bangladesh, Turkish series started becoming popular by the entrance of Muhteşem Yüzyıl. The show was renamed as Sultan Suleiman and it aired on the newcomer channel Deepto TV which was launched in November 2015 and started its broadcasting activity by telecasting first and second episode of this serial as the channels first opening program. It was the first Turkish drama series aired in Bangladeshi television. Through this program, the channel as well as the show acquired 2nd highest TRP by the first week of January and marvelously got the 1st place in the TRP ratings of viewers by the second week among all the Bangladeshi TV channels.
Thakan () is an Urdu language Pakistani telenovela directed by Ameen Iqbal and written by Faiza Iftikhar. First broadcast in Pakistan by ARY Digital, Thakan features actors Saba Qamar, Yumna Zaidi, Saba Hameed, Tauqeer Nasir, Saboor Ali, Farooq Zameer, Anusheh Asad, Farah Tufail and Jabran Shahid. Premiering on 10 May 2012, Thakan ended its run in Pakistan on 11 October 2012 after telecasting 22 episodes. Thakan has also been broadcast in India by Zindagi, premiering on 31 August 2014 at 8:55 pm (IST) under the title Kamaau Bitiya It ended its premier run in India on 21 September 2014 and was later re-aired, beginning from 27 October 2014.
She was born in Tokyo. In 2000, she worked for a company as an office lady, originally thought that she wanted to write something, because she liked her books originally, as a result of the screenplay version of the television drama Fuzoroi no Ringo-tachi taken from a bookstore she am was willing for her path of screenwriting. In the era of underwriting worked on plotting screenplay and stayed in the eyes of producers of television stations, she made her debut as a screenwriter at the 2002 TV drama Tentai Kansoku (Kansai Telecasting Corporation). Since then, she has worked numerous comedies and romantic dramas around television dramas.
Like in Phoenix, ON TV began operations on a new station, KECH-TV channel 22, which began telecasting from Salem, Oregon on November 21, 1981. Willamette Subscription Television, the local ON TV company which was commonly owned with the station by Arnold Brustin and Chris Desmond, rented evening airtime from KECH, but the operation never turned a profit. In its first year of operation, Willamette had lost $6.6 million, and by December 1982, the station was owed $300,000. The state of the operation was such that the limited partners in Willamette Subscription Television sued Brustin and Desmond for mismanagement in a case that was settled out of court.
On January 7, 1949, NBC station WNBQ commercially debuted its television broadcast schedule on channel 5, with a minimum of two hours of programming per day. April 15, 1956, is remembered as "C-Day" at WMAQ-TV, and was described by Broadcasting-Telecasting magazine as "a daring breakthrough the black-and-white curtain." With Mayor Richard J. Daley looking on, NBC President David Sarnoff operated the controls as Channel 5 became the world's first all-color TV station as "Wide, Wide World" was broadcast to 110 NBC-TV affiliated stations across the country. The color conversion project cost more than $1.25 million with advertising costing $175,000.
The cover of the first DVD compilation for season twenty of Detective Conan released by Shogakukan The twentieth season of the Case Closed anime was directed by Kenji Kodama and Yasuichiro Yamamoto and produced by TMS Entertainment and Yomiuri Telecasting Corporation. The series is based on Gosho Aoyama's Case Closed manga series. In Japan, the series is titled but was changed due to legal issues with the title Detective Conan. The series focuses on the adventures of teenage detective Shinichi Kudo who was turned into a child by a poison called APTX 4869, but continues working as a detective under the alias Conan Edogawa.
In May 2017, Bennett Coleman & Co. Ltd. (BCCL) lodged a complaint against Goswami and Prema Sridevi, a journalist with Republic TV, under the Indian Penal Code and Information Technology Act, 2000 accusing them of copyright infringement. BCCL alleged that the two, previously employed with Times Now, that it owns and operates, had used its intellectual property (IP) in telecasting certain audio tapes that were in their possession during their time at the former Channel. Alongside IP infringement, the complaint also alleged the commission of offences of theft, criminal breach of trust and misappropriation of property, on the two, on multiple occasions days after the channel's launch.
KSNB left the air in December 2009 (though it has since resumed operations as a separately-operated NBC and MyNetworkTV affiliate) and KTVG soon followed in April 2010, leaving KFXL as the market's Fox station. KTVG was owned by Hill Broadcasting Company, but was operated by Pappas Telecasting Companies under a local marketing agreement (LMA) until the expiration of the deal in April 2010. Pappas held the rights to Fox programming in the Lincoln–Hastings–Kearney market. Through this LMA, KTVG was a sister station to KPTM, the Omaha Fox affiliate, and the Nebraska Television Network (NTV), composed of ABC affiliates KHGI-TV in Kearney, KWNB-TV in Hayes Center, and KHGI-CA in North Platte.
The network eventually gained an affiliate in the lucrative Miami market in November 2002, when it affiliated with WPMF-LP (channel 31); this was followed later that year by WNYN-LP in New York City. By the next year, Azteca América was reaching 52% of the U.S. Hispanic population. In 2003, the network covered 69% of the Hispanic audience; that number increased to 77% by 2004. In the summer of 2006, the network relocated its corporate headquarters to the Los Angeles suburb of Glendale, California. Also in April 2007, Pappas Telecasting Companies announced that it would discontinue its relationship with Azteca América, and disaffiliate the network from stations it owned in several markets (such as Houston and San Francisco).
The Heart of the Black Hills stations were allowed to remain on the air until Dakota could start broadcasting, but their financial difficulties ultimately forced them to make an early exit. On February 18, 1976, the company announced that KRSD-TV and KDSJ-TV would leave the air on February 29, due to increased operational costs, but Dakota would not be ready to begin broadcasts until July. Rapid City was left with just one television station for more than four months, causing the local cable company to record a surge in new subscribers. Two-station service was restored when KEVN and KIVV, branded as "Action 7 & 5", began telecasting July 11, 1976 as primary ABC affiliates.
The FCC made a final decision in favor of Spartan on March 9, 1956, reaffirming many of the arguments made by the hearing examiner. When the appeals court gave its approval for WSPA-TV, WGVL and WAIM announced their intentions to leave the air. On Sunday, April 29, 1956, WSPA-TV signed on; the night before, WGVL-TV announced that Sunday would be their final day of telecasting, beginning a silence that would last at least 60 days, if not longer. The WGVL and WAIM appeals were heard in June 1956; the appeals court found that the FCC had erred in approving the Paris Mountain move for WSPA-TV and threw the case back to the FCC.
Ukmalayalee, by Rajesh Joseph] and later in 2010, the Judging Committee Member of the Indira Gandhi Paryavan Puraskar (Environmental Award) constituted by the Government of India He was the Chairman of Kerala Social Service Forum (KSSF) 2001-2010, an umbrella organisation of the Catholic Social Service organisations in the State of Kerala; Chairman of KCBC Commission for Justice, Peace and Development; Member of the CBCI Commission for Scheduled Caste, Tribes and Backward Classes and the Bishop representative of Functional Vocational Training Forum (FVTF) of the CBCI. In the Media, he previously served as Chairman of the Jeevan Telecasting Corporation Ltd and Chairman of Rashtra Deepika Ltd."Muslim businessman takes over Kerala's century-old Catholic daily". Catholic News Agency.
The Viridian Edition of the third season DVD boxset of the series Case Closed released by Funimation Entertainment The third season of the Case Closed anime was directed by Kenji Kodama and produced by TMS Entertainment and Yomiuri Telecasting Corporation. The series is based on Gosho Aoyama's Case Closed manga series, known as in Japan due to legal issues. The plot in these episodes continues Jimmy Kudo's life as a young child named Conan Edogawa and features the introduction of the gentleman thief, Phantom Thief Kid. The episodes use six pieces of theme music: one opening theme and two closing themes in the Japanese episodes and one opening theme and two ending themes in the English adaption.
One of the network's major affiliate groups, Pappas Telecasting Companies, filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy for thirteen of its television stations on May 10, 2008. Within the petition, Pappas specifically cited the network's low ratings and lackluster performance as one of many complications that had forced it to make the filing. Several of the stations have since been sold either in business transactions with representatives involved in Pappas's bankruptcy proceedings or via station auction processes as the company winds down operations. Although Pappas had originally stated that none of its stations would be affected at all by the closing, two stations owned by the company that were formerly affiliated with The CW have ceased operations.
The Federal Communications Commission (FCC) granted radio station WISE (1310 AM) a construction permit for a new television station to broadcast on channel 62 in Asheville on October 29, 1952. WISE was owned by Harold Thoms alongside stations in Charlotte (WAYS), Greensboro (WCOG), and Durham (WSSB); it was the only applicant for channel 62, whereas VHF channel 13 was being fought for by radio stations WLOS and WSKY. The station plans were almost abandoned amid the first proposals to build a cable television system to import signals from Charlotte, which Thoms charged would have made his proposed channel 62 unviable. WISE-TV began telecasting on August 2, 1953 as Asheville's first television station.
1969 Advertisement for The Bob Braun Show appearing in TV Guide. WLWT counts itself as the first television station outside the Eastern U.S. (other than network-owned stations) to become a primary NBC television affiliate, but originally carried programming from all the major television networks of the time: NBC, ABC, CBS and DuMont. WLWT later affiliated exclusively with NBC in 1949, after WKRC-TV (originally on channel 11, now on channel 12) and WCPO-TV (originally on channel 7, now on channel 9) signed on during that year. Following the release of the FCC's Sixth Report and Order in 1952, all of Cincinnati's VHF stations changed channel positions.Broadcasting - Telecasting, May 19, 1952, pg. 78.
MyNetworkTV was created in order to give UPN and WB-affiliated stations that were not selected to join The CW another option besides becoming an independent station.Fox to Launch My Network TV, News Corporation, February 22, 2006. It seemed very likely that KPWB would become The CW's Des Moines affiliate, as NBC affiliate WHO-TV (channel 13) had a secondary affiliation with UPN. On March 16, 2006, Pappas Telecasting signed an affiliation agreement to make KPWB the market's CW affiliate. A few months later, MyNetworkTV announced that it would affiliate with a new station also owned by Pappas, KDMI (then on channel 56), which began broadcasting that network on September 5, 2006.
On September 1, 2006, KCWL was added to the primary cable system in Lincoln, Time Warner Cable, on channel 18 in their low basic cable tier. Because it was granted an original construction permit after the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) finalized the DTV allotment plan on April 21, 1997, the station did not receive a companion digital channel. It was thus required to flash-cut to a digital signal when analog broadcasting formally ended on June 12, 2009. However, on June 3, 2009, Pappas Telecasting announced that KCWL would drop its CW affiliation upon the shutdown of the analog transmitter, leaving the Lincoln–Hastings–Kearney market without an over-the- air CW station.
In late 1966, the South Kane-Kendall Broadcasting Corporation was one of two applicants for channel 60 at Aurora; it won the station in 1968, initially proposing an educational-commercial hybrid schedule featuring credit courses from Waubonsee Community College. Investors in South Kane-Kendall included Roy Raymond, owner of a plastics company, and Ray Sherwood, general manager of Aurora radio station WMRO-FM. The station also won the favor of city councilmembers, who voted down a proposed cable system for Aurora largely because they feared it would harm the planned local station. WLXT-TV began telecasting May 18, 1969, from a former dance studio in Aurora and a transmitter in nearby Naperville.
The station first signed on the air on July 8, 1954 as KWK-TV. At its launch, channel 4 was owned by a consortium which included Robert T. Convey (28%) and the Newhouse Newspapers-published St. Louis Globe-Democrat (23%), who jointly operated KWK radio (1380 AM, now KXFN); Elzey M. Roberts Sr., former owner of KXOK radio (630 AM, frequency now occupied by KYFI), which had to be sold as a condition of the license grant (23%); and Missouri Valley Television Inc., made up of Saint Paul, Minnesota-based Hubbard Broadcasting (23%) and several St. Louis residents (combined 3%)."KWK-TV begins; six others ready." Broadcasting – Telecasting, July 12, 1954, pg. 68.
Bitter and overtaxed by years of litigation and mounting financial problems, Armstrong lashed out at his wife one day with a fireplace poker, striking her on the arm. She left their apartment to stay with her sister, Marjorie Tuttle, in Granby, Connecticut. Sometime during the night of January 31–February 1, 1954, with his wife in Connecticut and three servants having left for the day, Armstrong removed the air conditioner from a window in his 12-room apartment on the 13th floor of River House in Manhattan, New York City, and jumped to his death."Maj. Edwin Armstrong, Father of FM, Other Radio Inventions, Dead at 63", Broadcasting-Telecasting, February 8, 1954, pages 67-68.
Barrett, Damian (20 January 2007); Foxtel in footy twilight zone; Herald Sun The 2012-2017 rights were bought by Seven, Foxtel, and Telstra for $1.25 billion, the biggest sport telecasting deal in Australian history at the time. As part of the deal, Foxtel would show all home-and-away AFL matches live, as well as all Finals bar the Grand Final, via the resurrected Fox Footy. Telstra would broadcast all matches via mobile, and Seven would broadcast three live matches (Friday Night, Saturday Night, and Sunday Afternoon) and one delayed match (Saturday Afternoon). Seven also had the option to on-sell one game a week to either Nine or Ten; this did not happen.
Pappas Telecasting files for bankruptcy, blames CW ratings, Dow Jones May 10, 2008 Tribune, which operated the largest group of CW affiliates at the time of the network's launch, removed the network name from its stations' branding for a few years, until management changes returned the network branding to most of their affiliates.Tonight’s Top Story on Tribune’s TV Stations: Its Bankruptcy Filing, Brian Stelter, New York Times, December 8, 2008 In Canada, CTV attempted to move from a traditional network affiliation contract to a reverse compensation model in the early 2000s, which played a role in the disaffiliation of CHAN-TV in Vancouver, British Columbia and CJON-TV in St. John's, Newfoundland and Labrador from the network.
In 1960, WIBC added an FM station at 93.1, WIBC-FM, which initially aired an automated classical music format. While WIBC had been the exclusive Indianapolis carrier since 1946, The 1950s also saw WIBC establish a broadcasting tradition when the station struck a last-minute deal to provide coverage of the 1952 Indianapolis 500, with Sid Collins as the lead announcer, after Mutual pulled out of telecasting the 500. The next year, its coverage grew to include personalities from (and was simulcast on) all of the other stations in town: WFBM (1260 AM), WIRE (1430 AM), WISH (1310 AM), and WXLW (1590 AM). WIBC became the keystone in the Indianapolis Motor Speedway Radio Network and remains so as WFNI.
It included at least 12 still and television photographers, three microphones on the judge's bench, and several aimed at the jury's box and attorney's table. When it was time for the trial to be held, it was moved about 500 miles away and the judge had imposed rather severe restrictions on press coverage. However, the justices did mark the notion that cameras would return to courtrooms eventually: :It is said that the ever-advancing techniques of public communication and the adjustment of the public to its presence may bring about a change in the effect of telecasting upon the fairness of criminal trials. But we are not dealing here with future developments in the field of electronics.
Director and co-writer Kiyoshi Kurosawa was approached by the Kansai Telecasting Corporation with the idea of adapting Mark McShane's novel Seance on a Wet Afternoon. In a 2005 interview, Kurosawa explained, "What interested me about the narrative story in the book was that it featured a ghost, in other words, a dead human being, as well as an average couple who had been living very normal lives who, in fact, became criminals. These are the two elements of the original novel that interested me." When he made the film, Kurosawa had no idea the novel had already been adapted into a 1964 film directed by Bryan Forbes and starring Richard Attenborough and Kim Stanley.
In August 1954, WACH-TV returned to the air, simulcasting the associated radio station; it was the first time a UHF station that had suspended operations for economic reasons proceeded to resume telecasting. The station ended operation around July 1, 1955. Citing economic losses, the owners of WACH-TV asked the FCC to assign all future VHF channels in Hampton Roads for educational use only, which would have left just one commercial station (WTAR-TV) on VHF. By this time, the comparative proceeding for channel 10 was in progress; several months prior, in April, the station told the FCC that network affiliations in the area were unsettled pending action in the channel 10 hearings.
Former Nippon TV logo (2003-2012) JOAX-DTV, branded as , is the flagship station of the Nippon Television Network System, owned-and-operated by the which is a subsidiary of the certified broadcasting holding company itself a listed subdisiary of The Yomiuri Shimbun Holdings, Japan's largest media conglomerate by revenue and the second largest behind Sony; Nippon Television Holdings forms part of Yomiuri's main television broadcasting arm alongside Kansai region flagship Yomiuri Telecasting Corporation, which owns a 6.4% share in the company. Nippon TV's studios are located in the Shiodome area of Minato, Tokyo, Japan and its transmitters are located in the Tokyo Skytree. Broadcasting terrestrially across Japan, the network is sometimes contracted to , and abbreviated as "NTV" or "AX".
WWTV, virtual and VHF digital channel 9, is a CBS-affiliated television station licensed to Cadillac, Michigan, United States, serving the northern Lower and eastern Upper peninsulas of Michigan. The station is owned by Heritage Broadcasting Group, which also operates Cadillac-licensed dual Fox/CW+ affiliate WFQX-TV, channel 32 (and its Vanderbilt-licensed full-time satellite, WFUP, channel 45) under a shared services agreement (SSA) with owner Cadillac Telecasting. The two stations share studios on Broadcast Way (near US 131) in Cadillac; WWTV's transmitter is located on 130th Avenue in unincorporated Osceola County, just northeast of Tustin. Like other network affiliates serving this vast and mainly rural area, WWTV operates a full-time, full-power satellite in Sault Ste.
Perry would have been the first federal trial to be filmed and be shown live at public courthouses in San Francisco, Pasadena, Seattle, Portland, and Brooklyn, through an experimental new system developed by the Ninth Circuit Appeals Court. The trial would have also been shown on the video-sharing website YouTube. Walker noted that he had received 138,574 comments on the plans to broadcast the trial, and all but 32 were in favor. On January 11, 2010, two days before the trial, the defendant-intervenors filed emergency papers with Supreme Court Circuit Justice Anthony Kennedy to bar telecasting the trial, with the court ruling 8–1 to temporarily stay live streaming until January 13, with the lone dissenter being Stephen Breyer.
Today, most Vikings games are on KMSP-TV; since 1998, WCCO airs Vikings games (at least two each season) when the Vikings play host to an AFC team at the Metrodome/U.S. Bank Stadium, or, since 2014, with the institution of the new 'cross-flex' rules, any games that are moved from KMSP-TV. In 1992, WCCO provided coverage of Super Bowl XXVI, which was hosted at the Metrodome. On July 23, 1962, WCCO-TV was involved in the world's first live international broadcast via the Telstar satellite; the station's mobile units provided the feed for all three networks, ABC, CBS and NBC for a program originating from the Black Hills showing Mount Rushmore to the world. The station began telecasting color programs in 1966.
Over the next few months, the only offers to buy WTVJ came from companies that owned large groups of independent stations, such as Tribune Broadcasting, Pappas Telecasting Companies and Chris-Craft Industries/United Television. These and other companies wanted to convert WTVJ into an independent station or a Fox affiliate, for a price far lower than KKR's asking price. The only way that KKR could make such a large profit was to sell WTVJ to another network, as some potential buyers had no interest in keeping CBS while the only ones that could purchase the station for the asking price were ABC and NBC. CBS did not believe that KKR would sell WTVJ to another network, so it returned with a very low offer.
He has served as chairman of the Radio Advertising Bureau (US), chairman of the National Association of Broadcasters Radio Board, president of the Indiana Broadcasters Association, chairman of the Legislative Liaison Committee (LLC) program, director of Michiana Public Telecasting and chairman of the Indiana LLC. In 2000, John F. Dille III became an adjunct professor at Northern Arizona University, where he teaches broadcast management. In 2014, The Elkhart Truth re-launched Truth Radio 1340 under the call letters WTRC-AM, which hosted a news show weekday mornings that included stories reported by the publication. Another addition in 2014 was the creation of Flavor 574, a standalone digital magazine run by The Elkhart Truth's staff that was dedicated to covering Michiana's culinary scene.
The station's original call sign was WTAQ, with the letters meaning "Western Towns Along the Q.""Chicago Radio: Some facts, figures, and things you might not know", Chicago Tribune Magazine, March 4, 1979. p. 16. Accessed August 12, 2015 The "Q" referred to the Chicago, Burlington and Quincy Railroad, which ran through the center of the station's coverage area. WTAQ first went on the air on October 11, 1950."WTAQ Takes Air", Broadcasting – Telecasting, October 16, 1950. p. 27. Accessed August 11, 2015 The station was originally owned by La Grange Broadcasting Co."Open La Grange Station WTAQ After June 1", Chicago Tribune, February 23, 1985. Accessed August 10, 2015 The station initially ran 500 watts and operated during daytime hours only.
The time brokerage agreement between Pappas Telecasting and Colins Broadcasting Corporation (the licensee of KSNB) expired without renewal on November 30, 2009. As a result, KSNB was removed from Fox Nebraska and shut down on December 1, 2009. As of April 2010, KTVG-TV was no longer listed on KFXL ID screens. It was stated on a message board that parent station KHGI-TV announced during a newscast that KTVG-TV shut down on April 5, 2010; this was confirmed by a comment in the station's July DTV education quarterly activity report filed with the FCC. Until KTVG shut down in April 2010, that station fed programming to KFXL and the network's low-power analog repeaters even though KFXL was billed as the main station.
New England Industries had filed a competing application for the same channel nearly a month earlier, but on July 23, 1962, the FCC granted the construction permit to Desert Telecasting, and KBLU came into existence, to be the market's CBS television affiliate. It would not be an easy road to sign- on, as Bruce Merrill, owner of both KIVA and the local cable television system, was convinced that the market could not support a second local television station and fought to keep the new station from opening. Merrill opposed a KBLU-TV partnership restructure, an extension of time to construct the station, and a proposal to increase power, then, in September 1963, filed a "motion to stay" to prevent KBLU-TV from building its facilities.
KOMO would likely have held the distinction of being the first television station in Seattle, and perhaps the nation, if it were not for the occurrences of the Great Depression and World War II.Viewers watch Puget Sound's first wide-audience TV broadcast on 25 November 1948. The station was originally owned by the Fisher family, which had its start in the flour mill and lumber businesses. The Fishers branched into broadcasting with its founding of KOMO radio in 1926. In competing for the channel 4 construction permit, the Fishers faced off against the then- owners of KJR radio. KOMO was awarded the license in June 1953 after the KJR group dropped their bid,"FCC grants 1 VHF, 3 UHF." Broadcasting - Telecasting, June 15, 1953, pp. 52-53.
Smita Thackeray in 2001 was elected as the first female president of IMPPA. Video piracy was a major issue that was killing revenue for producers, she facilitated an MOU between Film Producers and Cable TV associations in December 2001 saving the filmmakers Rs 1 crore daily an amount lost to producers due to illegal telecasting For the first time in the history of IMPPA a fundraiser was hosted by the association called Ehsaas 2002 to raise funds for medical and education centres for spot boys and light men. In 2004, Indian Producers were invited to Switzerland by The Swiss Consulate to Promote Film Making, as a sign of welcome for the Indian Cinema by the Swiss President, Mr Joseph Deiss.
In March 2000, when FM frequency licenses were auctioned, the Ministry of Human Resource Development (MHRD) had been given a frequency for educational broadcasting in each of the 40 cities. The ministry handed the task to IGNOU as it already had some experience telecasting education on Gyan Darshan.The Hindu, 4 September 2000, IGNOU to launch FM channelThe Hindu, 30 June 2001, 'Gyan Vani' on FM in 9 cities soon IGNOU signed a MOU with Prasar Bharati with an understanding that Prasar Bharati shall provide its infrastructure and also set up and operate the FM stations for educational broadcasts. The signatory of MOU were Shri K. S. Prasada Rao Registrar, IGNOU and Hari Om Srivastava, Chief Engineer from All India radio.
In March 1953, the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) awarded the construction permit of Rochester's second VHF station to two local firms who competed for the open channel. In what was the first arrangement of its kind, the Gannett Company, then the Rochester-based publisher of the Democrat and Chronicle and the Times-Union and owners of CBS Radio Network affiliate WHEC (1460 AM); and the Veterans Broadcasting Company, owners of WVET radio (1280 AM, now WHTK), were granted shared operation of channel 10; the two separately owned stations would use the same broadcast license and transmitter, but broadcast from separate studios."Record 29 new TV grants puts FCC at end of 'A' and 'B' priorities." Broadcasting - Telecasting, March 16, 1953, pp. 42, 46, 48, 50.
Al Sabith appeared in front of the camera for the first time as an infant at the age of 2, for a Hindu devotional album where he enacted the role of Lord Ayyappan. After being part of few reality and chat shows, he was offered to do the role of Keshu in Uppum Mulakum serial telecasting in Flowers TV. Al Sabith appeared in various TV awards shows as performer and television commercials for the brands like Asianet broadband, Gold FM, RK Wedding centre, Flowers 94.7 FM, Maple tune, flowers TV and many others. After the success of Uppum Mulakum, he got numerous offers from film industry. In 2018, he acted in Sathyan Anthikkad’s film Njan Prakashan along with Fahadh Faasil and Sreenivasan.
On its first day on the air, WNBT broadcast the world's first official television advertisement before a baseball game between the Brooklyn Dodgers and Philadelphia Phillies. The announcement for Bulova watches, for which the company paid anywhere from $4.00 to $9.00 (reports vary), displayed a WNBT test pattern modified to look like a clock with the hands showing the time. The Bulova logo, with the phrase "Bulova Watch Time", was shown in the lower right-hand quadrant of the test pattern while the second hand swept around the dial for one minute. Although full commercial telecasting began on July 1, 1941, with the first paid advertisements on WNBT, there had been experimental, non-paid advertising on television as far back as 1930.
By 1985, the permittee was Manning Telecasting, who also held the construction permit for channel 11 in Yuma, but the permit vanished the next year, and KCCA never made it to air. The history of the current channel 58 began November 22, 1996 with a construction permit granted to KM Communications to serve Sierra Vista and Tucson on analog channel 58. The call letters were originally KAUC, but in August 1997, the station changed their call letters to KWBA to reflect their affiliation deal with The WB; the former superstation feed of Chicago's WGN-TV served as Tucson's de facto affiliate of The WB until KWBA signed on.Time Warner Takes Crucial Step Toward New Network Television: A pact with superstation WGN-TV gives it access to 73% of homes.
The Spartan TV station was originally approved to broadcast from Hogback Mountain, closer to Spartanburg, but sought to move to Paris Mountain, which was then home of WFBC-TV and WGVL and closer to Greenville. For Spartan, this was a necessary condition of obtaining the CBS television affiliation for channel 7; CBS had refused to grant it to a station on Hogback, which it reckoned too close to WBTV in Charlotte, North Carolina. By March 1954, WGVL had already lost $75,000; at that time, its petition to deny the Spartan move to Paris Mountain was denied by the Federal Communications Commission, as had been petitions from WAIM-TV (channel 40) in Anderson and the Sterling Telecasting Company of Spartanburg, which held the construction permit for WSCV (channel 17) in that city.
During the first three seasons of the Indian Super League, attendances across the competition had exceeded the expectations of pundits and of the domestic I-League mainly due to the timings at which the matches took place especially on working days and needs no mention sheer promotion. Television ratings were also strong for the competition, which is expected after better commentary, better telecasting, pre-match and post-match shows, as well as hourly reminders in various channels and social media interaction. However, despite the general success off the pitch, the competition drew criticism in other areas. Due to the need to accommodate the ISL into the Indian football calendar, the I-League season was shortened and went from having an October to May schedule to January to May schedule.
Art Greene (president) and Edward Baughn (general manager) were listed as both owning 50% of the station's stock (by 1957, Baughn would own 100% of the station); studios were located in downtown Ann Arbor, in the same building as the radio station. As of 1955, WPAG-TV broadcast during the evening hours only, from 6pm to 11:30pm,Broadcasting Magazine Telecasting Yearbook, 1954-55 although they did sometimes operate in the afternoon hours to carry Detroit Tigers games, apparently as a backup to WJBK-TV in Detroit. WPAG-TV was nominally an independent station, but is believed to have been at least a part-time DuMont affiliate.A trail of bleached bones, DuMont historical website After the demise of DuMont, the station allowed the University of Michigan to supply educational programming.
DD North-East is a state owned TV channel telecasting from Doordarshan Kendra in Guwahati, Agartala, Kohima, Imphal, Jorhat, Silchar, Dibrugarh, Tura, Aizawl, Itanagar and Shillong. On 4 August 2019 a particular 24x7 Doordarshan channel relaunched for Assam state named as DD Assam & it replaced DD North East & the channel was launched by Minister of Information & Broadcasting Shri Prakash Javadekar Ji through virtual event & CEO of Prasar Bharati Mr. Shashi Shekhar Vempati & other top levels of Doordarshan was present on the event. The event was also live telecasted on 11:00 A.M. at DD News DD National DD India DD Bharati & other North East DD channels The programmes are produced at Doordarshan studios in Guwahati, Agartala, Kohima, Imphal, Silchar, Dibrugarh, Tura, Aizwal, Itanagar, Shillong and Gangtok for DD North East.
KCWO began operations in 1956 as KBST-TV, owned by the Big Spring Herald along with KBST radio (1490 AM). The station carried programming from all three networks; however, it was hampered by the presence of KMID-TV (channel 2) in Midland, which carried NBC and some ABC programming, and KOSA- TV (channel 7) in Odessa, which carried CBS, which limited KBST's network programming. Consequently, the station had little success. The radio station was eventually sold to the Snyder Corporation (co-owned by Ted Snyder, who later acquired KARN in Little Rock, Arkansas, and B. Winston Wrinkle), while a half interest in KBST-TV was transferred to Dub Rogers' Texas Telecasting, owner of KDUB-TV in Lubbock (now KLBK-TV) and part-owner of KVER-TV in Clovis, New Mexico (now KVIH-TV).
The station was acquired from Ermita Electronics Corporation in July 1996, which initially owned the frequency of the station that began airing in May 1992 from a densely populated commercial area in Quezon City with a rebroadcast of MTV Asia, then telecasting from the STAR TV platform. It was later showing Channel [V] refeeds from 1994 onwards as MTV made the decision to split from STAR and form its own satellite TV portal in Asia. Just two years later in 1996, MTV Asia returned to the Philippine airwaves after establishing a new regional base in Singapore. ABS-CBN was picked as the broadcast arm of MTV Asia in the Philippines at the time, and Channel 23 started test broadcasts in September 1996 with rebroadcasts of the new MTV Asia from Singapore.
For more information, see Flower (Japanese band) § History On July 26, 2011, it was revealed during an E-Girls SHOW event in SHIBUYA-AX, that Nozomi passed the dance performance department of the Exile Presents VOCAL BATTLE AUDITION 3 ~For Girls~ and was added to Flower as a performer alongside Harumi Sato. On that same day, she was also added as a member to E-girls, having a concurrent position in the group and Flower. On August 30, she became an exclusive model for the fashion magazine Seventeen after winning the Miss Seventeen 2011 audition along with Yua Shinkawa, Ayami Nakajo and Ai Hashizume. On October 12, Flower made their debut with the single "Still". In July 2012, Nozomi made her acting debut in the Kansai Telecasting Corporation drama GTO.
Later in 1950, CBS chose to acquire its own station in Los Angeles – pioneer station KTSL (channel 2, renamed KNXT and now KCBS-TV) – which was being spun off by the Don Lee Broadcasting System as a result of its sale to General Tire and Rubber. The KTSL purchase forced CBS to divest its interest in KTTV due to FCC rules in effect at the time that barred the common ownership of two television stations in the same media market; the Los Angeles Times would regain full ownership of channel 11 when the sales were finalized on January 1, 1951. KTTV's relationship with CBS ended after exactly two years as the network moved its programming to KTSL."Don Lee sale; General Tire bid sets record."] Broadcasting – Telecasting, October 30, 1950, pp.
The station signed on May 9, 1999 as the market's fifth television outlet. Airing an analog signal on UHF channel 44, KPTH, originally owned by Pappas Telecasting, immediately joined Fox. Prior to KPTH's launch, future sister station KMEG carried a secondary affiliation with the network; additional coverage was provided via the network's affiliates in Sioux Falls, Omaha, and Des Moines, all of which carried the network's programs in pattern. Initially at its sign-on, channel 44 only covered the Sioux City metro area before increasing to full-power in October 1999. This upgrade extended the station's coverage to include the 23 counties that make up the Sioux City designated market area. KPTH quickly became Siouxland's most-watched station and was a member of the "Fox #1 Club" in 2004 and 2005.
Bamberger itself was a Macy's subsidiary. In the deal, General Tire acquired the rights to the name General Teleradio, under which the company merged its broadcasting interests as a new division."Earnings Fall 5% for Macy System; Television's High Cost for Subsidiary, General Teleradio, Cuts Consolidated Net," New York Times, October 11, 1950; Howard, Multiple Ownership, 150–152. The deal also gave General Tire majority control of the Mutual Broadcasting System."General Tire Gets Control of M. B. S.; Shareholders at Meeting Vote 2-for-1 Stock Split—Company Buys More TV Stations," New York Times, April 2, 1952. The company moved into Memphis, Tennessee in 1954 with its purchase of WHBQ radio and WHBQ-TV."Six stations being sold for nearly $15 million." Broadcasting - Telecasting, Mar. 8, 1954, pp. 27-28.
Eastern's venture into television resulted in a bankruptcy that, on February 1, 1956, forced the temporary suspension of operations for WACH radio. The WACH radio license and TV construction permit were sold to Richard Eaton's United Broadcasting later that year; the TV station construction permit, which remained in force, briefly took on the WYOU-TV call letters concurrent with the change of the radio station from WACH to WYOU. Eaton held on to the TV permit past the 1960 sale of WYOU; in November 1964, the FCC notified 29 permittees, including Eaton, that they had to put their dark UHF stations on the air. Channel 33 in the region would not be revived until WTVZ began telecasting on September 24, 1979, more than 24 years after WACH-TV's final broadcast.
Part of the deal called for both channels to change call letters. WGKI became WFQX- TV and WGKU became WFVX. In 2003, Rockfleet moved the WFVX call sign to a low- power station it had acquired in Bangor, Maine, and changed the Vanderbilt station's call letters to WFUP. On February 10, 2007, WFQX upgraded its digital signal on UHF channel 47 (from a transmitter shared with WGTU east of Kalkaska) to begin airing all Fox programming in high definition for over-the- air viewers. (Prior to then, the station offered a low-power digital and HDTV signal near its studios southeast of Cadillac.) WFQX is available on Charter digital channel 783. On May 10, Rockfleet Broadcasting announced its intentions to sell WFQX/WFUP to Cadillac Telecasting. The Federal Communications Commission (FCC) approved the sale in late October.
The station first signed on the air on August 1, 2009; prior to signing on KRBK, Koplar Communications served as the founding owner of KPLR-TV in St. Louis – which it sold to ACME Communications in 1997 (it is now a sister station to KRBK) – and formerly owned KMAX-TV in Sacramento – which once bore the KRBK-TV call letters and which Koplar sold to Pappas Telecasting in 1994 (it is now owned by CBS Television Stations). It immediately became the MyNetworkTV affiliate for the Ozarks. At the time KRBK signed on, MyNetworkTV programming had not been available in the market for several months, after Harrison-based KWBM (channel 31) switched to Daystar upon being sold to the network as part of Equity Media Holdings's auction of its television stations. The station originally branded as "KRBK-HD".
In May 1976, KFDA-TV was sold to the Panhandle Telecasting Company (originally known as Amarillo Telecasters, and under licensee to Midessa Television Inc.) – a partnership of Ray Herndon, majority owner of KMID-TV in Midland, and R.H. Drewry, owner of KSWO-TV in Lawton, Oklahoma – for $2.8 million; the sale was received FCC approval 3½ months later on August 20. The sale of KFDA did not include KFDW-TV, which was instead included in a sale of Bass's remaining stations to Mel Wheeler, Inc. a few months later in a $2.2-million deal. (After subsequent sales, KFDW would become KMCC-TV, a satellite of Lubbock ABC affiliate KAMC in 1979, and KVIH-TV, a satellite of KVII, in 1986; KVIH remains a KVII satellite to this day.) In October 1983, Drewry (through his Lawton Cablevision Inc.
Channel 23 first signed on the air on January 20, 2001 under the callsign KPWB-TV (the KPWB calls were originally used by KMAX-TV in Sacramento, California during that station's 1995 to 1998 tenure as a WB affiliate under Pappas Telecasting ownership, before later becoming a UPN owned-and-operated station and then joining The CW). The station originally maintained a primary affiliation with The WB and a secondary affiliation with UPN. KPWB dropped UPN programming in 2003, carrying the full WB primetime and Kids' WB lineups during the remainder of the station's tenure with the network. Prior to the station's launch, this area had been without programming from The WB; from 1995 to 1999, The WB programming was available on Des Moines-Ames cable systems via the former superstation feed of WGN-TV in Chicago.
The station first signed on the air on January 21, 1957, as KONO-TV; it was founded by the Mission Telecasting Corporation, which was owned by the Roth family, owners of KONO radio (860 AM and 101.1 FM). Channel 12 has been an ABC affiliate since its debut, taking the affiliation from WOAI-TV (channel 4) and KENS (channel 5), which each carried select programs from the network on a secondary basis (WOAI began carrying ABC programming when it signed on in December 1949, followed by KENS, when it signed on two months later in February 1950); from 1956 to 1961, it was also an affiliate of the NTA Film Network. The station originally operated from studio facilities located at 1408 North St. Mary's Street in downtown San Antonio. KSAT-TV logo, used from 1994 to 1998.
WHAS-TV was founded by the Bingham family, publishers of morning newspaper The Courier- Journal, afternoon newspaper The Louisville Times and operator of WHAS (840 AM), Louisville's oldest radio station. It operated from brand-new studios in the Courier-Journal/Times Building at 6th & Broadway, in downtown Louisville—even though WHAS-TV's construction permit (1946) was issued before WAVE-TV's (1947), the Bingham family waited until the new TV facility was finished to begin telecasting, 16 months after WAVE, who adapted an existing building at Preston and Broadway. The station originally operated as a primary CBS affiliate, owing to its sister radio station's longtime affiliation with the CBS Radio Network, with a secondary affiliation with ABC. It moved to VHF channel 11 on February 7, 1953, one of several channel shifts resulting from the Federal Communications Commission's 1952 Sixth Report and Order.
KAZA-TV signed on the air as Azteca América's lone station on July 28, 2001, as part of a phased rollout cited by lower viewership during the summer months; Pappas also announced that it would switch some of its existing stations to Azteca América and attempt to purchase additional stations with the intent of affiliating them with the network. In October 2001, TV Azteca announced that it would scrap plans to buy additional stations and instead distribute Azteca América's programming through agreements struck through prospective affiliates, with Pappas and TV Azteca sharing 50% ownership of the network. Pappas Telecasting Companies gave up its majority stake in Azteca America in early 2002. The network eventually grew to nine affiliates by that September, reaching 28% of the Hispanic market, with stations added in markets such as Reno, Nevada; Salt Lake City, Utah; San Francisco; and Sacramento, California.
When cable television began to proliferate across Canada in the early-1970s, viewers far from the Canada–US border began to obtain access to American television services that were once unobtainable. In 1972, in response to pressure from Canadian broadcasters, the CRTC introduced the simultaneous substitution regulation as a method to circumvent diminution of the value of Canadian networks' exclusive broadcast rights to American programs (within three years, KCND was effectively moved to Winnipeg and relicensed as CKND- TV). Through the 1990s, as direct-broadcast satellite television services gained popularity and then were granted licences in Canada, simultaneous substitution became a requirement on these as well. By the late 1990s and early 2000s, the simultaneous substitution regulation had reached its full potential, with Canadian broadcast networks telecasting nearly all of their American programming at the same time as the U.S. network's broadcasts to ensure maximum eligibility to request substitution.
The TV critic for the Sydney Morning Herald though the production showed the "remarkable grip that Australian television artists and technicians are getting upon the problems of telecasting live drama" with "many of the excitements that belong to a live- show as you might see it in a theatre... all the inimitably exciting bets and gambles and desperate prayers that a live show has." He thought the production did not "sink into sentimentality more than once or twice" but the one hour time limit did prevent them "from establishing some points needed for the integrity of the play as a whole", notably the superficial depiction of the rapist and the village gossip. He thought Gorham "played the main role sensitively" and "her mime was fascinating." The TV critic for the Australian Woman's Weekly said, "cheers and a long ovation are in order" for the production.
The Ed Sullivan Show. 3 episodes. All three episodes were released in their entirety on DVD format on November 21, 2006 by Image Entertainment, selling 100,000 copies during its first year alone.Broadcasting/Telecasting. 22 October 1956. p. 46; and 18 February 1957. p. 22. # September 9, 1956, live feed from CBS Television City in Fairfax District, CA, garnering some 60.7 million viewers and a 57.1 rating, both records up to that time. The % share, an 82.6% and also a record, remains the largest ever garnered, by any network or group of networks, for any single program in the history of US television. # October 28, 1956 from CBS Studio 50, New York City, drawing a 34.6 rating with a 57% share and an estimated audience of 56.5 million and.... # January 6, 1957, also from Studio 50, New York City, drawing a 47.4 share and reaching some 54.6 million viewers.
After the KGMC proposal was voted down by OETA's Board of Directors that September, Seraphim Media chose to sell KGMC to Cleveland, Ohio-based Maddox Broadcasting Corp.—which would have refocused that station to primarily refocus a mix of religious and Home Shopping Network (HSN) programming—for $3.6 million, including $2.6 million in intellectual assets (such as transmitter facilities, studio equipment and licenses) that would not be acquired by Pappas. Then on November 1, Heritage Media announced it would sell KAUT to the OETA for $9.25 million in assets, with Pappas agreeing to lease KAUT's transmitter facility to OETA for 25 years for an annual $1 operating fee plus an additional $1 million contribution should the acquisition be completed. On September 12, Pappas Telecasting announced that it would purchase KOKH from Busse for $9 million, plus the assumption of liabilities totaling up to $7 million.
In 2010, Express Tribune reported that a Karachi resident filed a petition against Shahid Masood and asked the court to take action against him for encouraging cultural hatred through his TV show. In 2013, Dawn reported that an anti-terrorism court in Pakistan ordered Shahid Masood to telecast an apology for telecasting derogatory remarks on the judiciary after which Shahid Masood submitted written apologies before the court. In March 2016, Finance Minister of Pakistan Ishaq Dar sent a legal notice to Dr Masood for allegedly leveling baseless allegations in his TV programme and demanded that Masood offer an apology and pay compensation. In August 2016, PEMRA imposed a 45-day ban on Shahid Masood's show airing on the ARY News after Masood alleged in a programme that the chief justice of Sindh High Court took a bribe and later did not fulfil his promises.
Not only anime series but also drama series have been silently refrained production to prevent the spread of infection, and most of telecasting stations are transmitting works from past years. In Nippon TV, the airing schedule of "The pride of the Temp", starring Ryoko Shinohara and Yo Oizumi, has been postponed, as well as the airing schedule of "Minwan Police", starring Kento Nakajima and Sho Hirano, has been postponed. In TBS Television, the airing schedule of "MIU404", starring Gen Hoshino and Gou Ayano, has been postponed, as well as the airing schedule for "Hanzawa Naoki 2", starring Masato Sakai and Mitsuhiro Oikawa, has been postponed. In Fuji TV, The schedule for airing the manga-based medical drama series in the second quarter, starring Satomi Ishihara and Nanase Nishino, has been postponed, as well as the airing schedule for "Suit Season 2", starring Yuto Nakajima and Yuko Araki, has been suspended.
Greig promised the station would operate in the black financially. As construction proceeded, WHUM-TV traveled the region with a mobile unit, giving demonstrations of television; promotional materials hyped the coming of the "world's most powerful television station" and boasted that channel 61 would have more power than all the TV stations in New York and Philadelphia combined. State police were necessary to manage the crowds who witnessed the erection of the mast, billed as taller than the Eiffel Tower. Tower construction was completed at the start of December. After delays in getting the station's wave guide transmission line—used instead of coaxial cable to avoid excessive line loss on the tall tower—to work to specifications, test patterns went out on February 9 and the station began telecasting as a CBS network affiliate—matching WHUM radio—on February 22, making it the 10th UHF television station to air.
KLZ-TV immediately took the CBS affiliation from KBTV (channel 9, now KUSA), owing to KLZ radio's longtime affiliation with the CBS Radio Network. In 1954, Gaylord sold the KLZ television and radio stations to Time- Life."Six stations being sold for nearly $15 million." Broadcasting - Telecasting, March 8, 1954, pp. 27-28. The station's original studio facilities were housed in a renovated former auto dealership on the east side of the block at East 6th Avenue and Sherman Street. Channel 7 moved to its present studio facilities, an eight-sided, five-story building called "The Communications Center," on the intersection of Speer Boulevard and Lincoln Street in 1969. The taping of a religious public affairs program at the station in 1968. Time-Life sold the station to McGraw-Hill in late October 1970, in a group deal that also involved the company's other radio and television combinations in Indianapolis, San Diego and Grand Rapids, Michigan; and KERO-TV in Bakersfield, California.
Despite just barely ranking as a top-40 Nielsen market at the time, the Oklahoma City market did not have enough television-viewing households to support what were essentially three independent stations, nor was there a supply of programming on the syndication market that could sufficiently fill their respective schedules. In the summer of 1988, Visalia, California-based Pappas Telecasting Companies proposed a deal with Busse to purchase KOKH. The complex $30-million asset transfer proposal would have resulted in Pappas acquiring the programming inventories of both KGMC and KAUT (including channel 43's Fox affiliation rights) and integrating many of their acquired programs onto channel 25's schedule, solidifying the station's status as Oklahoma City's dominant independent. Simultaneously, Seraphim Media would donate the license and certain intellectual assets of KGMC to the OETA—with the intent of converting it into a secondary PBS station—for $1 million, with Pappas acquiring equipment and property assets owned by the station for an additional $1 million.
This set forth a new ownership and programming transfer plan that borrowed elements from the failed Pappas Telecasting deal. On August 15, 1991, OETA converted channel 43 into a PBS member station, serving as a secondary outlet to KETA-TV; KOKH received from channel 43 the local rights to the Fox affiliation and some of KAUT's syndicated programming inventory, 30 former KAUT employees (including then-general manager Harlan Reams), and other equipment and intellectual property that belonged to KAUT. Five months later, on January 17, 1992, the OETA changed channel 43's callsign to KTLC in reflection of the on-air branding it adopted upon the switch to PBS, " _T_ he _L_ iteracy _C_ hannel," which intended to identify its commitment to telecourse programming (which, dating to the Pappas proposal, OETA had intended to increase by 250% through the conversion, with the bulk—making up 22 hours of the station's weekly schedule—being carried by channel 43).
In a ten-year deal with London Broadcasting, KBMT began to manage KUIL's programming as well. KBMT shut down its analog signal, over VHF channel 12, on June 12, 2009, the official date in which full-power television stations in the United States transitioned from analog to digital broadcasts under federal mandate. The station's digital signal relocated from its pre-transition UHF channel 50 to VHF channel 12 for post-transition operations. Texas Telecasting, Inc. sold the station to London Broadcasting in August 2009. That channel was dropped in early 2013 in favor of MundoFOX (now MundoMax). Due to a realignment, four digital channels are carried on the main 12 signal while the other two (12.5 MyTX and 12.6 MundoFOX) are carried via the low-power stations, KBMT-LD on 43 SW of Beaumont and K36ID-D on 36 in Orange. In Jasper, KVHP-LD on 44 and in Warren, K27JJ-D on 27 carries the main RF12 signal with ABC, NBC, COZI and MeTV.
Willis Patterson, John McCollum, Richard Cross as the Three Kings, with Kurt Yaghjian as Amahl and Martha King as his mother in the 1963 production For years, Amahl was presented live, but in 1963 it was videotaped by NBC with conductor Herbert Grossman and an all- new cast featuring Kurt Yaghjian as Amahl, Martha King as The Mother, and John McCollum, Willis Patterson, and Richard Cross as the Three Kings. When Menotti found out that NBC had scheduled the taping on a date when he was out of the country, he tried to get the date changed. The network refused and recorded the 1963 performance without the composer's presence or participation, telecasting it in December 1963, and twice more after that — in 1964 and 1965. Menotti never approved of the 1963 production, and in May 1966 when the rights to future broadcasts reverted to him, the composer refused to allow it to be shown again.
Concurrently, General Media announced it would sell KGMC to Cleveland, Ohio-based Maddox Broadcasting Corp.—an African American-owned group run by media executive Chesley Maddox, which intended to refocus that station to primarily feature a mix of religious and Home Shopping Network (HSN) programming—for $3.6 million, including certain intellectual assets that Pappas Telecasting would not acquire under the proposal (such as transmitter facilities, studio equipment and licenses) worth $2.6 million. Although OETA planned to fund the conversion of channel 43 partly through start-up grants—including a $75,000 award by management at ABC affiliate KOCO-TV (channel 5)—in a move that hamstrung its attempt to acquire KAUT, the Oklahoma Legislature incorporated stipulations into the bill appropriating OETA's funding for FY1990 that prohibited the use of state funds "for any operational or capital expense of the proposed second educational television channel in Oklahoma City" and from proposing any additional funding to finance the acquisition if it did not obtain sufficient funding from private sources.
Intan Sarafina was the first recording artiste to be voted off this season, leaving her out from the "50s to 70s" themed performances. Comedian and one-time recording artiste Afdlin Shauki became the first guest judge since the competitive performances commenced. #Ayu: Tari Tualang Tiga (Saloma) #Shila: I'll Be There (The Jackson 5) #Shone: Mustang Sally (Wilson Pickett) #Joni: Over the Rainbow (Judy Garland) #Mark: You Make Me Feel Brand New (The Stylistics) #Sarah: Always on My Mind (Willie Nelson) #Ab: Crazy Little Thing Called Love (Queen) Overall, the judges' criticisms reflected a lacklustre delivery from five of the seven contestants, leaving Sarah and Ab with the most positive comments, albeit still pointing out flaws. This was the last OIAM show to be aired live for the season, as 8TV has been stripped of its live and delayed telecasting rights in the aftermath of Season 1 runner-up Faizal Tahir's obscene stunt in the previous week's "live" concert.
Reynolds, Fiona (25 January 2001); Seven gives up AFL rights ; PM (ABC radio) The games were split between the networks, with Nine screening Friday Night Football, a live Sunday afternoon game in the east and, if needed, a doubleheader for WA and SA, Ten screened a Saturday afternoon and a Saturday night match, with the remaining four matches shown on Foxtel. Foxtel set up its own version of a dedicated AFL-only channel, the Fox Footy Channel, which showed every game on replay during the week as well as many news, talkback and general interest shows related to Australian rules football.Live and sweaty ; 22 August 2002 When the rights were offered again in January 2006 for the 2007 to 2011 seasons, Seven formed an alliance with Ten and used its guaranteed last bid rights to match Nine's offer of $780 million to win back the broadcast rights in what was the biggest sport telecasting deal in Australian history at the time.
Discussions to change the service's name took place during a later meeting of Dolan and the executive staff he hired for the project, who ultimately settled on calling it " _H_ ome _B_ ox _O_ ffice", which was meant to convey to potential customers that the service would be their "ticket" to movies and events. The moniker was intended as a placeholder name in order to meet deadlines to publish a memorandum and research brochures about the new service; management intended to come up with a permanent name as development continued, however, the "Home Box Office" name stuck. Multiple obstacles had to be overcome to get the service on the air. Because of a pay-television franchise agreement provision by the New York City Council that prohibited Sterling Manhattan and other local cable franchises from telecasting theatrical feature films directly to their customers, Dolan chose to scout another city with two competitive cable franchisees to serve as Home Box Office's inaugural distributor.
On April 2, 1981, Koplar Broadcasting (then-owner and founder of St. Louis' KPLR-TV) purchased channel 31 and relaunched it on April 6 of that year under the callsign KRBK-TV (named for company founder Harold Koplar's son, _R_ obert " _B_ ob" _K_ oplar), formatted as an English-language general entertainment independent to compete directly with KTXL. KMAX's first "UPN 31" logo, used from 1998 to 2002 Pappas Telecasting purchased the station in 1994. On January 11, 1995, the station changed its call letters to KPWB-TV (for Pappas WB) to reflect its affiliation with The WB Television Network, which launched the same day. Paramount Stations Group bought the station in March 1998, thus resulting in an affiliation swap with KQCA (channel 58) on January 5 of that year, that saw the UPN affiliation move to channel 31, which assumed the present call letters KMAX-TV, while The WB affiliation moved to KQCA.
The network also nullified all affiliation agreements to convert to a programming service, leading Ion Media Networks to end their carriage of the service on September 28, 2009 on three stations and resume carrying Ion Television full-time (those stations had been owned by another party which agreed to carry the network at the time of MyNetworkTV's launch, although they were managed by Ion directly). This led to MyNetworkTV's first agreement with CW affiliate WLMT in Memphis, Tennessee, where that station would only air WWE SmackDown and disregard the other four nights of their schedule in order to keep that program airing in one of WWE's strongest markets. Additionally, Pappas Telecasting-owned KDMI in Des Moines, Iowa also dropped MyNetworkTV and became a full-time This TV affiliate; sister station KCWI-TV, the market's CW affiliate, then began airing SmackDown in a similar arrangement to WLMT. The arrangements ended in October 2010 when the show moved to cable channel Syfy; thereafter, WLMT's Retro Television Network (RTV)-affiliated second digital subchannel picked up the entire MyNetworkTV lineup as a secondary affiliation.
Despite just barely ranking as a top-40 Nielsen market at the time, the Oklahoma City market did not have enough television-viewing households to support what were essentially three independent stations, nor was there a supply of programming on the syndication market that could sufficiently fill their respective schedules. By the late 1980s, channel 34 was suffering financially, having rarely turned a profit, and incurring debt on programming and operational expenses. In the summer of 1988, Visalia, California-based Pappas Telecasting Companies proposed a deal with Busse Broadcast Holdings (a trust company created independently of Gillett Holdings in the name of broadcasting executive George N. Gillett Jr.'s children) to purchase KOKH. KOCB's financial situation led it to get involved in the complex $30-million asset transfer proposal, in which Pappas would have acquired the programming inventories of both KGMC and KAUT (including channel 43's Fox affiliation rights) and integrate many of their acquired programs onto channel 25's schedule, solidifying KOKH's status as the market's dominant independent.
On April 1, 1994, Fant took over the operations of Hill Broadcasting Company's KTVG (channel 17), an upstart independent station in Grand Island in the process of joining Fox, under a local marketing agreement (LMA), making it a sister station to the NTV stations. Concurrently with KTVG's primary Fox affiliation, KHGI-TV, KWNB-TV, and KSNB-TV took on a secondary Fox affiliation to carry the network's NFL coverage. (preview of subscription content) In July 1995, Fant announced a deal to sell KHGI, KWNB, and KSNB to Blackstar, LLC, a minority-controlled company in which nonvoting equity interests were held by Fox Television Stations and Silver King Communications, for $13 million; although the deal, which would have seen the NTV stations switch to a full- time Fox affiliation, was approved by the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) on December 15, 1995, Fant cited delays in FCC approval in walking away from the deal in May 1996. (preview of subscription content) In July 1996, Fant agreed to sell KHGI-TV, KWNB-TV, and KSNB-TV to Pappas Telecasting Companies for $12.75 million.
Shortly after, NBC bought KNTV when the station's owner ran into financial difficulty.The Story At 11, Jeff Kearns, Metro (Bay Area), December 6, 2001 The practice played a role in the 2006 affiliation drives of two newly announced networks, The CW Television Network and My Network TV. The CW reportedly demanded reverse compensation from affiliates for an arguably proven, but still low-rated, primetime schedule; My Network made no such demand and also allowed stations to keep more ad time than a traditional network would.TV Station Execs Debate Choice..., MediaPost Publications, February 24, 2006 As a result, several stations that seemed to be good candidates to become CW affiliates, including most WB- and UPN-affiliated Sinclair Broadcast Group stations, announced affiliations with My Network instead, though in cases where Sinclair had market duopolies, eventually relented and affiliated the second stations with The CW before their launch.My Network TV Inks 17 Sinclair Affils, Katy Bachman, Mediaweek, March 6, 2006 Pappas Telecasting and Tribune Company, the two major station groups which did carry The CW, both filed for bankruptcy protection in 2008.
The network was formed through a programming alliance between Mexico-based broadcaster TV Azteca and Visalia, California-based television station owner Pappas Telecasting Companies announced on September 8, 2000; the two companies planned to launch a new Spanish language broadcast network during the second quarter of 2001, that would act as a competitor to established networks Univision and Telemundo. TV Azteca, which planned to own 20% of the network, contributed an exclusive programming agreement in the United States, Canada and Puerto Rico, while Pappas, which owned a majority 80% interest, planned to have stations it owned in ten markets – three already owned by the network, and seven that Pappas was in the process of acquiring in Nevada, Arizona and Texas (most of which were low-power stations) – serve as charter stations of the network, which was originally named Azteca América. Pappas and Azteca invested close to $500 million to start up the network, with an additional $450 million allocated for station acquisitions and a $129 million loan made by TV Azteca to Pappas. The network hoped to reach 65% to 70% of the Hispanic population in the U.S. by 2002.
The OETA corporation was involved in a 1987 proposal by Visalia, California-based Pappas Telecasting Companies, under which Heritage Media would have donated the license of its Oklahoma City-based Fox affiliate, KAUT (channel 43, now an independent station owned by Nexstar Media Group), to OETA for $1 million. In exchange, Pappas would acquire the programming inventories of both KAUT and rival independent KGMC (channel 34, now CW affiliate KOCB), including the rights to channel 43's Fox affiliation (which Pappas planned to transfer to channel 25), and enter into a 25-year lease to allow OETA to operate the KAUT transmitter facility for $1 per year; KGMC (then owned by Seraphim Media; as KOCB, it is now owned by Sinclair Broadcast Group) was to have become a Home Shopping Network affiliate and acquire some religious programs to fill certain ancillary timeslots. OETA planned to help fund the conversion of channel 43 into an educational station through start-up grants, including a $75,000 grant awarded by management from KOCO-TV. A later revision to the plan saw OETA file an application with the FCC to purchase KGMC as a contingency measure.
Since NBC resumed telecasting NFL games in September 2006, Chiefs games now only air on KSHB whenever the franchise is one of the featured teams participating in a Sunday Night Football telecast. On September 21, 2019, KSHB and its sister station KMCI replaced KCTV as the official broadcast partners of the Chiefs, giving the stations exclusive rights to team programming, including preseason contests, plus marketing opportunities. KSHB also aired select Major League Baseball (MLB) games involving the Kansas City Royals during the 1995 regular season, through the Baseball Network partnership initiated the season prior between NBC and ABC (WDAF carried a limited number of Royals games aired by NBC under the venture—with a few others airing on KMBC through ABC's end of the contract—during the 1994 season, prior to the league labor strike that resulted in the cancellation of the remainder of that year's regular season and entire postseason). On November 6, 2013, Scripps announced a broadcasting agreement between KSHB/KMCI and Sporting Kansas City, which gave KMCI the local broadcast television rights to the Major League Soccer (MLS) club's regular season games, and its pre-game and post-game shows beginning with the team's 2014 season.
Subsequently, the station's call letters were changed to KTVT (the last three letters meaning " _T_ ele _V_ ision for _T_ exans") on September 1; the change was made due to an FCC rule in effect at the time that prohibited separately owned broadcast stations in the same market from sharing the same base call letters. On February 23, 1962, NAFI Telecasting sold KTVT for $4 million to the WKY Television System subsidiary of the Oklahoma Publishing Company (OPUBCO), then owned by the family of Daily Oklahoman founder Edward K. Gaylord, who originally named the unit after its flagship television and radio stations—WKY-TV (now KFOR-TV) and WKY (AM)—in the company's headquarters of Oklahoma City. The transaction made KTVT the largest television station by market size to be owned by the media company, which OPUBCO would later rename Gaylord Broadcasting. Under the stewardship of Gaylord and James R. Terrell, whom the company appointed as the station's vice president and general manager, Channel 11 became the leading independent station in the Southwestern United States; at the time, it carried a broad range of cartoons, off-network sitcoms, Westerns and drama series, movies and public affairs programming.
Station groups that signed up a large number of their stations as CW affiliates included Pappas Telecasting Companies, ACME Communications and Sinclair Broadcast Group, although many other large groups, including Hearst-Argyle Television, Clear Channel Communications and Belo Corporation had signed up selected stations. Sinclair signed deals to carry the network in early May, despite reservations with The CW's reported demands for reverse compensation. While WGN-TV in Chicago became a charter affiliate of The CW, its former national counterpart WGN America never aired programs from The CW through a formal affiliation when it operated as WGN-TV's out-of-market superstation feed prior to December 2014 (although it did carry reruns of select CW series in marathon form in 2013), as the network has sufficient enough affiliate coverage that The CW did not need to use the national WGN feed to carry its programming; WGN America had previously carried WB programming from that network's January 1995 launch until October 1999, when Tribune Broadcasting and Time Warner mutually decided that The WB's national broadcast coverage had increased to a level that allowed the WGN national feed to discontinue carrying the network.
"WTOP buys WOIC (TV)." Broadcasting – Telecasting, June 26, 1950, pg. 57. Since WTOP took the callsign from the radio partners at the time, the callsign was a coincidence under ownership of the publisher, since they never stood for " _W_ ashing _TO_ n _P_ ost"; they instead stood for the fact that what was then known as WTOP was "at the _TOP_ of [the city's] radio dial" (WTOP has been known as WFED since 2006, and is now owned by Hubbard Broadcasting, not by the Post). In July 1950, WTOP-TV became the first television station in Washington authorized to broadcast color television in the 405-line field sequential color standard, which was incompatible with the black-and-white 525-line NTSC standard. Color broadcasts continued for nearly 30 months, when regulatory and commercial pressures forced the FCC to rescind its original color standard and begin the process of adopting the 525-line NTSC-3 standard, developed by RCA to be backwards compatible with the existing black-and-white televisions. In 1954, the WTOP stations moved into a new facility, known as "Broadcast House", at 40th and Brandywine Streets NW in Washington. The building was the first in the country designed as a unified radio and television facility.
Since 2006, The CW and MyNetworkTV have struggled significantly in the Nielsen ratings, despite The CW showing initial signs of promise. The CW has usually finished fifth in the Nielsen ratings, even falling behind Spanish-language network Univision at times, though it has come close to beating out NBC (which had similar ratings challenges beginning in the 2004–05 television season, before moderating in the 2012–13 season) on several occasions. However, The CW has had some successful series (by the standards of the network's viewership, which has rarely peaked above 4 million viewers for a single episode), such as Gossip Girl, The Vampire Diaries and Arrow. Additionally in 2008, concerns regarding the future of The CW led Tribune to begin rebranding its CW affiliates in a way that deemphasized its network affiliation, and another major CW affiliate ownership group, Pappas Telecasting Companies, cited The CW's poor performance as a factor in its Chapter 11 bankruptcy filing. Pappas has since wound down operations, while most of Tribune's CW stations (with the exceptions of WGN-TV and KTLA, the latter of which only includes network references in promos for CW shows) began reincorporating references to their CW affiliation beginning in 2011.
The station first signed on the air on March 22, 1996; originally operating as an independent station, it was originally owned by Sainte Partners II, L.P. During its first two years on the air, KNSO aired religious programming during the morning hours and Asian language programming in the afternoons, as well as programming from the California Music Channel. These programs were largely simulcast via San Francisco independent station KTSF-TV. In July 1998, KNSO entered into a local marketing agreement (LMA) with Pappas Telecasting Companies, then-owner of Fox affiliate KMPH-TV (channel 26); Pappas then signed an affiliation agreement to make KNSO the market's WB affiliate, taking the affiliation from Clovis-based KGMC (channel 43). On January 1, 2001, KNSO swapped affiliations with KFRE-TV (channel 59), becoming a Telemundo affiliate; shortly beforehand, Pappas entered into an LMA with KFRE, resulting in the WB affiliation being relocated to KFRE. The station became a Telemundo owned-and-operated station, when the network's then-new parent company NBC bought the station in May 2003. KNSO logo when NBC operated the station, used until 2009 In March 2004, KNSO vacated its McKinley Road studios and moved to a new facility in North Fresno at 30 River Park Place.

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