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WFSB (channel 3) is a television station licensed to Hartford, Connecticut, United States, serving the Hartford– New Haven market as an affiliate of CBS. Owned by Gray Television, the station maintains studios on Denise D'Ascenzo Way in Rocky Hill and a transmitter on Talcott Mountain in Avon, Connecticut . Most of WFSB's programs are seen in ...
Area served City of license VC RF Callsign Network Notes Hartford/New Haven: Allingtown: 16 16 WETN-LD: Retro TV Sonlife on 16.2 SanabiaTV Local on 16.3 ExtremePower TV on 16.4 Quest on 16.5 Shop LC on 16.6 ShopHQ on 16.7 Estrella TV on 16.8 UNH TV 24/7 and on 16.9
Identified as Channel 6 Eyewitness News during the 1990s; currently known as KPVI News 6; was a clone of WKBW-TV's Eyewitness News format. KIDK: Dabl (formerly CBS) No Identified as Channel 3 Eyewitness News from 2007 to 2023 (now airing on KIFI-DT2). KIDK-DT2, a simulcast of Fox affiliate KXPI-LD, now known as Local News 8. Indianapolis: WTHR ...
Hartford senior gets a second chance at life. Fox local. Brandon Cruz. April 16, 2024 at 7:30 PM. HARTFORD, Wis. - The comfortable surroundings of Hartford High School will soon be a memory for ...
Adrianne Eugene Thomas. 1944. Nationality. American. Education. University at Albany, SUNY Majored in communications. Honours. Connecticut Women's Hall of Fame (2000) Adrianne Baughns-Wallace (born in 1944) was a television journalist, the first African-American television anchor in New England, and a member of the Connecticut Women's Hall of Fame.
Years active. 1981–2019. Denise D'Ascenzo Cooke (January 30, 1958 – December 7, 2019) was an American television news anchorwoman at WFSB -TV in Hartford, Connecticut. She worked there for 33 years (1986–2019), becoming the longest-serving anchor at WFSB-TV. D'Ascenzo was also the longest-serving news anchor at any Connecticut television ...
History. The network's first station, WEDH in Hartford, signed on with a black and white signal in 1962, operating from a Trinity College library basement. It was the fourth educational television station in New England, following WGBH-TV in Boston, WENH-TV in Durham, New Hampshire (now part of New Hampshire Public Television), and WCBB in Augusta, Maine (now part of the Maine Public ...
During the 1960s, WCBS-TV battled WNBC-TV (channel 4) for the top-rated news department in New York City. After WABC-TV (channel 7) introduced Eyewitness News in the late 1960s, WCBS-TV went back and forth in first place with Channel 7, in a rivalry that continued through the 1970s. For much of the early 1980s, New York's "Big Three" stations ...