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KYW and other
Newspaper accounts of the era report on a number of other drama experiments by America's commercial radio stations: KYW broadcast a season of complete operas from Chicago starting in November 1921.
KYW is currently the easternmost station in the United States whose callsign begins with the letter K. It is also one of three such stations in Pennsylvania, the other ones being KQV and sister station KDKA, both in Pittsburgh.
Besides the main news stories, KYW also carries a variety of other features.
KYW assigns schools in the metropolitan area a number which is then announced when they are closed for a snow day or other event.
The system was originally created by the City of Philadelphia but was taken over by KYW when no other station volunteered to distribute the information.
While the Los Angeles stations made the switch within days of each other, WCAU in Philadelphia went to the format in 1975, giving KYW a ten-year headstart with the audience.
Westinghouse made similar format changes at two other stations: KYW in Philadelphia, in September 1965 ; and KFWB in Los Angeles, in March 1968.
Ashley is also a business news anchor on the CBS Morning news, WCBS in New York City, WBBM in Chicago, KYW in Philadelphia, WTSP in Tampa, KFMB in San Diego and many other CBS affilitates across the country.

KYW and Westinghouse
Channel 4 nearly lost its NBC affiliation in 1955 when Westinghouse balked at NBC's initial offer to trade sister stations KYW radio and WPTZ television ( now KYW-TV ) in Philadelphia in exchange for the network's radio and television combination in Cleveland, Ohio.
Though the partnership came to an end in 1926, with Westinghouse buying out Edison's interest in KYW, Insull's interest in broadcasting did not stop there.
In 1927 Westinghouse aligned its four radio stations ( KYW, KDKA in Pittsburgh, WBZ in Boston, and WBZA in Springfield, Massachusetts ) with the NBC Blue Network, which originated from former sister station WJZ ( the present-day WABC ) in New York City.
In 1934, the assignment of clear channels took a frequency away from Illinois and gave it to Pennsylvania, resulting in Westinghouse moving KYW to Philadelphia.
KYW acquired a television counterpart when Westinghouse bought WPTZ ( channel 3 ) -- the nation's third commercial television station and NBC's second television affiliate -- in 1953.
In June 1955, Westinghouse agreed to trade KYW and WPTZ to NBC in exchange for the network's properties in Cleveland, WNBK television and WTAM-AM-FM.
NBC took over the Philadelphia stations, rechristening 1060 AM as WRCV ( for the RCA-Victor record label ), and Westinghouse moved the KYW call letters to Cleveland.
Following nearly a year of appeals by NBC, Westinghouse regained control of WRCV-AM-TV on June 19, 1965 and subsequently restored the KYW call letters to the radio station ( the television station became KYW-TV at this point ).
On September 21, 1965, shortly after Westinghouse regained control of 1060 AM, the newly-rechristened KYW once again dropped its NBC radio affiliation and was converted into one of the first all-news stations in the country.
Westinghouse Electric announced it was purchasing CBS in 1995, and upon its completion KYW became a sister station to its long-time rival, CBS-owned WGMP ( 1210 AM, now WPHT ).
The Westinghouse Electric Corporation, owner of Philadelphia's NBC radio affiliate KYW ( 1060 AM ), purchased WPTZ in 1953 for a then-record price of $ 8. 5 million.
In June 1955 Westinghouse agreed to trade WPTZ and KYW radio to NBC in exchange for Cleveland's WNBK television and WTAM-AM-FM, and $ 3 million in cash compensation.
Westinghouse had moved the KYW call letters to Cleveland after the swap, and upon regaining control of the Philadelphia outlets channel 3 became KYW-TV.
Group W's parent, the Westinghouse Electric Corporation, purchased CBS in 1996, making CBS's Philadelphia radio stations sisters to WCAU-AM / WPHT's longtime rival, KYW radio.
It briefly succeeded in 1956, when it extorted Westinghouse into exchanging channel 3 ( then called WPTZ-TV ) and KYW radio for NBC's Cleveland stations, WTAM-AM-FM and WNBK television.
Westinghouse launched three more radio stations in 1921: WJZ, originally licensed to Newark, New Jersey, in September ; WBZ, first located in Springfield, Massachusetts, in October ; and KYW, originally based in Chicago, in November.
A decade later, the FCC forbade common ownership of two or more clear channel stations with overlapping nighttime coverage, though the commission allowed Westinghouse to keep WBZ, KYW, KDKA and WOWO together under a grandfather clause.
Westinghouse built FM sister stations for WBZ / WBZA, KDKA, KYW, KEX and WOWO, all of which were on the air by the end of the decade.
KYW went all-news six months later on September 12, three months after Westinghouse regained control of the station ( see The 1956 Trade with NBC, below ).
In June 1955 Westinghouse announced that it would sell its Philadelphia stations, KYW radio and WPTZ-TV, to NBC.
After the deal was approved in February 1956, Westinghouse moved the KYW call letters to Cleveland, NBC renamed the Philadelphia stations WRCV ( AM ) and WRCV-TV, and both companies also transferred much of their respective on-air personnel and management to their new cities.
When Westinghouse regained control of the Philadelphia stations on June 19, 1965, it restored the KYW calls to the radio station and renamed the television station KYW-TV.
A few of the former Westinghouse radio stations still use the former Group W font today ( e. g. KDKA, KYW, and WINS ).

KYW and radio
Donahue began his career in 1957 as a production assistant at KYW radio and television in Cleveland.
She stayed in Philadelphia after graduation, hired as a reporter at KYW radio.
But the network was seeking to purchase Westinghouse's Philadelphia stations, KYW radio and WPTZ-TV ( now KYW-TV ).
KYW is a class A AM radio station on 1060 kHz licensed to Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA.
In March 1941, KYW changed frequencies to 1060 kHz as part of a nationwide shift of radio frequencies mandated by the North American Radio Broadcasting Agreement.
KYW has been one of the highest-rated radio stations in the country since then and has been the market leader in Philadelphia for much of that time.
This is KYW, the newscenter on your radio dial, and now heard Online at the new cbsphilly. com on the CBS Philly app for iPhone and Android.
When NBC took over in February 1956, channel 3's call letters were changed to WRCV-TV ( for the RCA-Victor record label ; KYW radio adopted the WRCV calls as well ).
* KYW ( AM ), a radio station ( 1060 AM ) licensed to Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, United States, which carried the KYW callsign from 1921 to 1956 ; and has again since 1965
* WTAM, a radio station ( 1100 AM ) licensed to Cleveland, Ohio, United States, which carried the KYW callsign from 1956 to 1965

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