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An early KECA-TV logo slide from the 1950s. Channel 7 first signed on the air under the call sign KECA-TV on September 16, 1949. [2] It was the last television station licensed to Los Angeles operating on the VHF band to debut and the last of ABC's five original owned-and-operated stations to make its debut, after San Francisco's KGO-TV, which signed on four months earlier.
6 KHTV-CD Los Angeles * 7 KABC-TV Los Angeles * 8 KFLA-LD Los Angeles ; 9 KCAL-TV Los Angeles (Independent) 10 KIIO-LD Los Angeles (Armenian independent) 11 KTTV Los Angeles * 12 KZNO-LD Los Angeles ; 13 KCOP-TV Los Angeles (MyNetworkTV)* 14 KPOM-CD Ontario (Catchy Comedy)* 18 KSCI Long Beach ; 20 KVME-TV Bishop ; 22 KWHY-TV Los Angeles ...
Los Angeles: Riverside: 10 10 KZSW-LD: 3ABN: 3ABN Proclaim on 10.2, 3ABN Latino on 10.4, 3ABN Radio on 10.5, 3ABN Radio Latino on 10.6, Radio 74 on 10.7 Ontario: 14 27 KPOM-CD: Catchy Comedy: Pomona: 16 26 KMRZ-LD Silent Los Angeles: 12 27 KZNO-LD: Jewelry TV: Los Angeles: Riverside: 21 21 K21MO-D: Diya TV Los Angeles: 25 32 KNET-CD Daystar
In addition to running KABC-TV Los Angeles, Van Amburg worked for ABC O&O stations in New York, Chicago and San Francisco. His brother, Fred Van Amburg, was a staple of San Francisco’s KGO-TV in ...
KCBS-TV is the oldest continuously operating television station in the Western United States. [citation needed] It was signed on by Don Lee Broadcasting, which owned a chain of radio stations on the Pacific coast, and was first licensed by the Federal Radio Commission (FRC), forerunner of the Federal Communications Commission (FCC), as experimental television station W6XAO in June 1931.
KDOC-TV (channel 56) is a religious television station licensed to Anaheim, California, United States, serving the Los Angeles area as an owned-and-operated station of Tri-State Christian Television (TCT). The station maintains studios on East First Street in Santa Ana, and its transmitter is located atop Mount Wilson.
Television. Television coverage of the World Series began in 1947. Since that time, eight different men have called eight or more different World Series telecasts as either a play-by-play announcer or color commentator. They are (through 2023) Joe Buck (24), Tim McCarver (24), Curt Gowdy (12), Mel Allen (11), Vin Scully (11), Joe Garagiola (10 ...
The Circle 7 logo, designed in 1962, is also commonly associated with ABC affiliates who broadcast on channel 7, including its flagship local stations WABC-TV (New York City), KABC-TV (Los Angeles), KGO-TV (San Francisco) and WLS-TV (Chicago). This logo was intended to be used somewhat interchangeably by these stations with the main circular ...