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Same call letters on O&Os of three or four networks?

...it just struck me that the call sign WJZ has appeared on the owned-and-operated stations of three different networks, NBC (radio only), ABC (radio and television) and CBS (television only). How many other call signs can make that claim?...
 
Ultimajock said:
...it just struck me that the call sign WJZ has appeared on the owned-and-operated stations of three different networks, NBC (radio only), ABC (radio and television) and CBS (television only). How many other call signs can make that claim?...

I can't think of another. There aren't many that appeared on two network O&Os.

WABC (CBS radio & ABC radio/TV in New York - two entirely different stations and meanings of "ABC")
WCAU (CBS radio/TV & NBC TV in Philly)
WMAQ (NBC radio/TV & CBS radio in Chicago)
WENR (NBC radio & ABC radio/TV in Chicago)
KTTV (CBS TV (partial ownership) and Fox TV in Los Angeles)
 
Don't forget KUTV Salt Lake City and KCNC Denver, which were both owned at various times in their histories by both NBC and CBS...
 
...as far as two networks go, if you're counting Du Mont and Fox as separate networks, WTTG Washington would qualify too...
 
KYW-AM 1060 and KYW-TV channel 3 are both presently with CBS. Channel 3 was an NBC affiliate in previous years. WBZ-AM 1030 is CBS primary/ABC secondary for radio. WBZ-TV channel 4 is CBS today, but was NBC for many years.
 
It's not an O&O, but XETV/6 in San Diego/Tijuana over the years has been affiliated with ABC, Fox, and will soon be joining up with the CW.
 
KML-224 said:
KYW-AM 1060 and KYW-TV channel 3 are both presently with CBS. Channel 3 was an NBC affiliate in previous years. WBZ-AM 1030 is CBS primary/ABC secondary for radio. WBZ-TV channel 4 is CBS today, but was NBC for many years.

...but the question wasn't about affiliates, it was about network owned and operated stations. The only network that owned either KYW or WBZ is their current owner, CBS (unless you consider Group W to somehow be more than a glorified syndication arm of Westinghouse; I don't)...
 
Did Westinghouse ever own anything outside of Boston (WBZ-AM and TV), New York City (WINS-AM), Philadelphia (KYW-AM and TV), Baltimore (WJZ-TV), Pittsburgh (KDKA-TV) and San Francisco (KPIX-TV)?
 
KML-224 said:
Did Westinghouse ever own anything outside of Boston (WBZ-AM and TV), New York City (WINS-AM), Philadelphia (KYW-AM and TV), Baltimore (WJZ-TV), Pittsburgh (KDKA-TV) and San Francisco (KPIX-TV)?

The ones I can think of off-hand are:

Los Angeles: KFWB radio
Charlotte, NC: WPCQ-TV (now WCNC)
Chicago: WIND radio
Fort Wayne: WOWO radio

Group W also owned a chain of cable systems during the 1980s.
 
KML-224 said:
Did Westinghouse ever own anything outside of Boston (WBZ-AM and TV), New York City (WINS-AM), Philadelphia (KYW-AM and TV), Baltimore (WJZ-TV), Pittsburgh (KDKA-TV) and San Francisco (KPIX-TV)?
They owned KYW-TV-AM-FM Cleveland (the TV was Formerly WNBK Currently WKYC) from 1956-65
 
azumanga said:
KML-224 said:
Did Westinghouse ever own anything outside of Boston (WBZ-AM and TV), New York City (WINS-AM), Philadelphia (KYW-AM and TV), Baltimore (WJZ-TV), Pittsburgh (KDKA-TV) and San Francisco (KPIX-TV)?

The ones I can think of off-hand are:

Los Angeles: KFWB radio
Charlotte, NC: WPCQ-TV (now WCNC)
Chicago: WIND radio
Fort Wayne: WOWO radio

Group W also owned a chain of cable systems during the 1980s.

Westinghouse back in the 80s owned Denver's KOSI-FM and KEZW-AM
 
Re; Westinghouse;
The construction permit for WIND-TV- channel 20, Chicago, originally held by WIND Inc. (a partnership formed by The Chicago Daily News and the Ralph L. Atlass Family, who began WBBM (AM) and included WIND (AM) radio) was sold on November 8, 1956 to Westinghouse Broadcasting Co. for $5.3 million.

However Westinghouse chose not to do anything and offered the permit to Edward L. Ryerson of The Chicago Educational Television Association, who made it WXXW and began educational telecasts late in 1965. The station would be sold in 1977 to the Chicago Metropolitan Higher Education Council for $65,000. The station would reappear on channel 20 in 1982 as WYCC as an outlet for the City Colleges of Chicago
 
azumanga said:
KML-224 said:
Did Westinghouse ever own anything outside of Boston (WBZ-AM and TV), New York City (WINS-AM), Philadelphia (KYW-AM and TV), Baltimore (WJZ-TV), Pittsburgh (KDKA-TV) and San Francisco (KPIX-TV)?

The ones I can think of off-hand are:

Los Angeles: KFWB radio
Charlotte, NC: WPCQ-TV (now WCNC)
Chicago: WIND radio
Fort Wayne: WOWO radio

Chicago: Westinghouse sold WIND in 1985 and bought WMAQ & WKQX in 1987, when NBC's new owner General Electric got out of the radio business. I believe they sold WKQX to Emmis in the early '90s but kept WMAQ, which is how it became a CBS-owned station (now WSCR).
 
KeithE4 said:
azumanga said:
KML-224 said:
Did Westinghouse ever own anything outside of Boston (WBZ-AM and TV), New York City (WINS-AM), Philadelphia (KYW-AM and TV), Baltimore (WJZ-TV), Pittsburgh (KDKA-TV) and San Francisco (KPIX-TV)?

The ones I can think of off-hand are:

Los Angeles: KFWB radio
Charlotte, NC: WPCQ-TV (now WCNC)
Chicago: WIND radio
Fort Wayne: WOWO radio

Chicago: Westinghouse sold WIND in 1985 and bought WMAQ & WKQX in 1987, when NBC's new owner General Electric got out of the radio business. I believe they sold WKQX to Emmis in the early '90s but kept WMAQ, which is how it became a CBS-owned station (now WSCR).

...there was also KFKX, which started out in Hastings, Nebraska, in 1923 (no relation to the college station there today with the same call sign). It was set up to relay some programs from KDKA mixed with local origination. In 1927, Westinghouse moved the station to Chicago, where it shared time on 570 kHz with KYW as a separate license. KFKX was eventually absorbed into KYW by the 1928 frequency reallocation, when KYW moved to 1020 kHz...
 
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