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WBZ-TV and WBZ
WBZ has also been heavily involved in charitable work, with its annual Christmastime fund drive for Boston's Children's Hospital ( which it does along with sister TV station WBZ-TV ) being the most high-profile.
WBZ re-established an FM station on December 15, 1957, transmitting from the brand new WBZ-TV tower in Needham, operating at 106. 7 MHz ; this incarnation of WBZ-FM only provided limited simulcasts of the AM station and largely had its own programming, including classical music and Ed Beech's Just Jazz program from WRVR in New York City.
" Traffic on the 3s " provides a summary of traffic conditions in the area every ten minutes ( e. g., 03, 13, 23 ); " Weather on the 10s ", provided by AccuWeather ( except from 10 a. m .– 8 p. m. on weekdays, when it is provided by WBZ-TV ; the segments during this time nonetheless still carry the WBZ AccuWeather branding ), likewise provides a weather forecast at: 10,: 20,: 40, and: 50 past the hour.
As the only television station being built from the ground up by the Westinghouse Electric Corporation, WBZ-TV began operations on June 9, 1948 and immediately joined the NBC Television Network, owing to WBZ radio ( 1030 AM )' s long affiliation with NBC Radio.
WHDH stayed with CBS until January 2, 1995, when WBZ-TV took over the CBS affiliation as part of a group deal between CBS and WBZ's owner, Group W. Fox considered an affiliation deal with WHDH, but ultimately chose to acquire its existing affiliate, WFXT, and WHDH became Boston's NBC affiliate, replacing WBZ ( which had been with the network for 47 years ).
He became sports director at KDKA-TV in Pittsburgh in 1967, and moved to WBZ-TV and WBZ radio in Boston in 1971.
The shows then moved to WBZ-TV, swapping with The Insider and Entertainment Tonight, with management citing their older-skewing demographics as more closely fitting WBZ, and the younger audiences for the entertainment news programs more closely fitting WSBK.
On August 25, 2008, the newscast became known as WBZ News on TV 38 ( on occasion, it is also referred to as WBZ News at 9 ); it now mirrors the news programs that air on WBZ-TV, as had been the case with WBZ News 4 on TV 38 and WBZ 4 News at 7 O ' Clock.

WBZ-TV and radio
His son Steve Burton is a sports reporter for WBZ-TV in Boston and a frequent guest on WEEI sports radio.
She has been a Boston, Massachusetts-based radio and television host since the mid-1970s when she hosted Evening Magazine for WBZ-TV.

WBZ-TV and would
In December 2007, the Patriots and CBS announced plans to build a themed restaurant and nightclub, named " CBS Scene ," at the site, which would also include studios for CBS-owned WBZ-TV.
The transmission tower built at the studios for WBZ-TV would also replace the Hull site as WBZ-FM's transmitter, where it remained until Hurricane Carol destroyed the tower on August 31, 1954 ; a power outage caused by the storm would disrupt WBZ's programming for three minutes.
On January 3, 1983, when People Are Talking expanded to one hour, WBZ-TV dropped NBC's Another World, which would move to WQTV ( now WBPX ) until the fall of 1987, when the show moved to WHLL ( now WUNI-TV ) and later to WMFP in the early 1990s.
Motivated to cultivate an identity to the station that would indirectly help its last-place news ratings, WNEV acquired the lottery from WBZ-TV, which had announced late in 1986 that it would no longer show the games.
The station had launched WBZ-TV in Boston in 1948 and would purchase WPTZ-TV ( now KYW-TV ) in Philadelphia in 1952, but was unable to secure a license for a TV station in its home market.
NBC also reportedly promised to disaffiliate from Boston's WBZ-TV, and to withhold a primary affiliation from newly-acquired KDKA-TV in Pittsburgh ( that station would sign with CBS as a primary affiliate ) and any other major-market network affiliated station Westinghouse would purchase in the future.

WBZ-TV and into
The station expanded into television on June 9, 1948, when WBZ-TV ( channel 4 ) signed on as an NBC television affiliate.
Well into the 1960s, many viewers northeast of Hartford used outdoor VHF antennas to watch NBC programming via WBZ-TV in Boston, while viewers southwest of Hartford with outdoor TV antennas received NBC via network flagship WRCA-TV ( now WNBC ) in New York City ; reception was often spotty.

WBZ-TV and new
Rich and WBZ-TV reporter Dan Rea served as substitute hosts in the interim ; on October 1, Rea, who in the 1970s served as a weekend host for the station before moving to television in 1976, became the new host of the show, renamed NightSide with Dan Rea.
As a sidebar, a subsequent deal between NBC and a new Group W / CBS joint venture was made in 1995, with CBS selling the channel 6 facility to NBC as compensation for the loss of two Westinghouse-owned NBC affiliates, KYW-TV in Philadelphia and WBZ-TV in Boston.
However, the agreement with NECN expired in mid 2005, and as a result WUNI signed a new agreement with WBZ-TV.
During this silent period, Greater Media installed a new transmitter and increased the height of the antenna on the WBZ-TV tower.

WBZ-TV and Westinghouse
In response, NBC threatened to yank its programming from both WBZ-TV and WPTZ unless Westinghouse agreed to the trade.
When Westinghouse merged with CBS outright on November 24, 1995, WBZ-TV became a CBS-owned and operated station.
One of the instances was in the summer of 1994, when Westinghouse Broadcasting signed a deal to affiliate all of its stations with CBS, which caused WBZ-TV to drop NBC for CBS at the beginning of 1995.
After launching WBZ-TV in Boston in 1948 and purchasing two other TV stations, Westinghouse was growing impatient with not having a station in its own home market.
When Westinghouse balked, NBC threatened to pull its programming from WPTZ and Boston's WBZ-TV unless Westinghouse agreed to swap its Philadelphia stations for NBC's WTAM-AM-FM and WNBK in Cleveland.
After being rebuffed by Westinghouse on several occasions, NBC threatened to drop its affiliation from WPTZ and Westinghouse's other NBC television affiliate, WBZ-TV in Boston, unless Westinghouse agreed to the trade.
Westinghouse entered television on June 9, 1948 with the sign-on of WBZ-TV in Boston.
Westinghouse already owned WBZ-TV in Boston.

WBZ-TV and Broadcasting
Originally owned by Arlington Broadcasting, WBPX signed on in 1979 as WQTV, carrying programming from the Financial News Network, as well as public domain movies and most network shows that were pre-empted by WBZ-TV, WCVB-TV, and to a lesser extent WNAC-TV ( later WNEV-TV ; now WHDH ).

WBZ-TV and until
Besides the Braves ( 1948 until they moved to Milwaukee before the 1953 season ) and the Red Sox ( 1948 – 1957 ; 1972 – 1974, and a handful of games in 2003 and 2004, along with certain NBC-aired games ), WBZ-TV also broadcast the Boston Celtics from 1972 – 73 through 1984 – 85.
In addition to an increasingly-stronger lineup of syndicated programs and movies, WSBK continued to run some network programs that were preempted by the local NBC ( WBZ-TV ), ABC ( first WNAC-TV, then WCVB-TV ), and CBS ( first WHDH-TV, then WNAC-TV / WNEV-TV ) affiliates until 1981.
In 2007, WSBK revived Community Auditions, the local talent competition program that had run on WBZ-TV from 1965 until 1986.
After he left WBZ-TV, Vin, his wife and daughter moved to Los Angeles, Di Bona did not find a job for about eight months, until he became employed at CBS directing and producing documentaries for the network, which earned him four Emmys and a Peabody Award.
WWTV was also originally seen on the Cablevision systems in Rouyn-Noranda and Val-d ' Or, Quebec until the early-2000s when it was replaced with WBZ-TV from Boston, Massachusetts.

WBZ-TV and June
Channel 7 first went on the air on June 21, 1948 as WNAC-TV, the second television station in Boston ( twelve days after WBZ-TV ).
On June 21, 1948, the Yankee Network launched New England's third television station: Boston's WNAC-TV went on the air just days after WBZ-TV, also in Boston, and WNHC-TV, licensed to New Haven, Connecticut.

WBZ-TV and was
WBZ-TV ( sometimes informally referred to as " BZ " both on-and off-air ) was a pioneer in Boston television.
This was significant, since WBZ-TV was NBC's second-largest affiliate in the Eastern Time Zone.
Despite this, NBC was generally satisfied with WBZ-TV, which was one of NBC's strongest affiliates.
In the early 1980s, WBZ-TV lost its longtime spot as Boston's highest-rated news station to WCVB, but even then was a strong second for more than a decade.
WBZ-TV was a local television pioneer in lottery.
In 1980, WBZ-TV was the first Boston television station to broadcast live wire-to-wire coverage of the Boston Marathon ; the station has done so every year since, and has been the only Boston station to do so since 2007.
When the AFC package moved to CBS in 1998, this role was reclaimed by WBZ-TV.
The sale was approved by the FCC in late-November giving Boston its second television duopoly ( the other one being WBZ-TV and WSBK-TV ).
The first of the two was carried about by the media consortium ( which includes the Boston Globe, NECN, and WBUR, among others ) and moderated by former New Hampshire governor Jeanne Shaheen, while the second and final debate was held by WBZ-TV and moderated by their political analyst, Jon Keller.
KYW-TV, WBZ-TV, and WPCQ-TV were NBC affiliates, KPIX and KDKA-TV were aligned with CBS, and WJZ-TV was an ABC station.
The name was then adopted for use by Westinghouse's other television stations — KPIX in San Francisco, WJZ-TV in Baltimore, WBZ-TV in Boston and KDKA-TV in Pittsburgh — for its local newscasts.
INN did not do well in Boston ; part of the reason for the low ratings was that the newscast sometimes aired late due to Red Sox or Bruins games, putting it in direct competition with the 11 p. m. newscasts on WBZ-TV, WCVB-TV, and WNAC-TV / WNEV-TV.
WTAO was nominally affiliated with DuMont and ABC, though it was largely programmed as an independent station, especially after DuMont eliminated entertainment programming in 1955 and ABC opted to revert to secondary clearances on WNAC-TV ( now WHDH ) and, to a lesser extent, WBZ-TV — these moves effectively left WTAO reliant on movies and limited local programming to fill its airtime.
He was previously with WCBS-TV from 1979 – 1982, and before that at WBZ-TV in Boston from 1973 – 1978.

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