
KRSC: Seattle's Radio and TV Pioneers - HistoryLink.org
2010年3月6日 · Of Seattle's earliest telecommunications pioneers, the long-gone KRSC radio and television media outlets could claim a most significant corporate history. One of the Pacific Northwest's first AM radio stations, KRSC ultimately expanded to include a trail-blazing sister station on the FM dial.
KRSC/KING - Seattle, Washington - Early Television
Seattle's first television broadcast, on November 25th,1948, was of the 1948 high school State Championship at Civic Field Memorial Stadium (located at the base of Queen Anne Hill, south of the KRSC transmitter/tower). It was called the T-Day …
KRSU-TV - Wikipedia
Operated by a paid staff with assistance from RSU students, it is the only full-power public television station in the state of Oklahoma that is licensed to a public university, and the only educational television station in Oklahoma that is not operated as a member station of PBS, either independently or as part of the Oklahoma Educational Tele...
Robert E. Priebe, Owned Seattle's First TV Station
1998年8月21日 · Robert E. Priebe, who made the Puget Sound area's first television broadcast in 1948, then sold his broadcast license to what became KING-TV in 1949, had a vision. He had followed the evolution of...
KING-TV | Logopedia | Fandom
KING-TV is an NBC-affiliated television station owned by Tegna, licensed to and located in Seattle, Washington. The call sign refers to King County, which is home to Seattle and its inner suburbs. The station was founded on November 25, 1948 as KRSC-TV which stood for Radio Sales Corporation...
King Broadcasting Company - Wikipedia
King Broadcasting Company is an American former media conglomerate founded in 1946 by Dorothy Bullitt. The company was owned by the Bullitt family until it was sold to the Providence Journal Company in 1991; it is currently a subsidiary of …
KING-TV - Wikipedia
KING-TV (channel 5) is a television station in Seattle, Washington, United States, affiliated with NBC. It is owned by Tegna Inc. alongside Everett -licensed KONG (channel 16), an independent station.
Pioneers In Broadcasting - The Seattle Times
1990年8月22日 · But KING-TV, which she began in 1949 after buying KRSC-TV for a little over $300,000 from P.K. Leberman, was the showcase of her empire. Indeed, for the first five years of its life - while the...
krscTV - YouTube
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Viewers watch Puget Sound's first wide-audience TV broadcast on ...
KRSC-FM, the region's first frequency-modulation radio station, brought in television technology at about the same time it was fine-tuning its FM transmitters. KRSC-TV became the 15th television station in the United States, and began training cameramen and engineers in preparation for the opening broadcast on Thanksgiving Day, 1948.