Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
KOIN. "Know Oregon's Independent Newspaper" (from The Portland News. Later purchased by The Oregon Journal) KOIN (channel 6) is a television station in Portland, Oregon, United States, affiliated with CBS. It is owned by Nexstar Media Group alongside Salem –licensed CW owned-and-operated station KRCW-TV (channel 32).
Jeff Gianola. Jeff Gianola (born October 2, 1955) is the head news anchor for KOIN 6, the CBS affiliate station in Portland, Oregon.
KRCW-TV. KRCW-TV (channel 32) is a television station licensed to Salem, Oregon, United States, serving as the Portland -area outlet for The CW. It is owned and operated by network majority owner Nexstar Media Group alongside CBS affiliate KOIN (channel 6). The two stations share studios in the basement of the KOIN Center skyscraper on ...
However, video emerged apparently showing a group of Portland protesters using an American flag and a Bible to kindle a bonfire outside the federal courthouse shortly after midnight; according to KOIN 6, the fire was subsequently put out by members of Moms United for Black Lives Matter. Protesters started another bonfire using plywood shortly ...
Area served City of license VC RF Callsign Translating Network Notes ~Boise, ID Ontario, etc. 13 30 K30QD-D: KTVR: PBS: satellite of KOPB-TV ch. 10 Portland OPB Plus on 13.2, PBS Kids on 13.3, OPB Radio on 13.4
KATU (1999–2016) Spouse. John Canzano. . (m. 2010) . Website. [1] Anna Song Canzano (née Song) is an American broadcast journalist who hosts That Expert Show [1] in partnership with the Portland, Oregon -based newspaper The Oregonian. She previously worked at KOIN television in Portland, and at Portland's KATU and Los Angeles' ABC NewsOne ...
KOIN Tower (formerly KOIN Center) is a 155.15 m (509.0 ft), 35-story, skyscraper in Portland, Oregon, United States. The building, the third-tallest in the city, [ 5 ] was designed by the firm of Zimmer Gunsul Frasca Partnership and opened in 1984 at a cost of US$48 million .
KOIN Center, completed in 1983 and rising 509 feet (155 m), is the third-tallest building in Portland. [ 6 ] Although The Oregonian Building , rising 194 feet (59 m) if its clock tower is included, was Portland's tallest building from 1892 until 1913, [ 7 ] the history of skyscrapers in the city is thought to have begun with the construction of ...