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KNSD (channel 39) is a television station in San Diego, California, United States, serving as the market's NBC outlet. It is owned and operated by the network's NBC Owned Television Stations alongside Poway -licensed Telemundo station KUAN-LD (channel 48). KNSD and KUAN-LD share studios on Granite Ridge Drive in the Serra Mesa section of San ...
Employer (s) NBC News and KNSD-TV. Height. 168 cm (5 ft 6 in) Dagmar Midcap (born Dagmar Gottschalk; March 12, 1969) is a Canadian-born American media personality, weathercaster, and actor originally based in Vancouver, British Columbia. She was the weekday evening weather anchor for KNSD-TV in San Diego, California from 2011 to August 2023 ...
Mark Edward Mullen (born 1961) is a television journalist and the anchorman for NBC owned-and-operated station KNSD-TV in San Diego. He joined the station in June, 2010 from ABC News, where he served as a Los Angeles-based correspondent. Prior to ABC, he was Chief Asia Correspondent for NBC News, [1] regularly reporting news on notable Chinese ...
Past and present television news anchors in the San Diego/Tijuana DMA in Southern California (U.S.) and Baja California (México). Pages in category "Television anchors from San Diego" The following 26 pages are in this category, out of 26 total.
He is best known for his 17-year broadcasting tenure as a meteorologist for KNSD-TV the NBC owned and operated television station in San Diego, California. Joe Lizura holds an American Meteorological Society Seal of Approval, #384 [1] and began his television career as a weekend weathercaster at WANE-TV in Fort Wayne, Indiana in 1984. In 2007 ...
News anchor. Years active. 1970-2008. Employer (s) KCBS-TV Ch. 2. KABC-TV Ch. 7. Harold Greene (born December 1, 1943) is a journalist and news anchor at KCAL 9 News and CBS 2 News in Los Angeles. Before joining the CBS duopoly, Greene had a television news career, mostly in Southern California. Greene began his career in 1970 as a reporter and ...
NBC then established four other owned-and-operated stations: WNBW (now WRC-TV) in Washington, D.C. in 1947, WNBQ (now WMAQ-TV) in Chicago and WNBK (now WKYC) in Cleveland in 1948, and KNBH (now KNBC) in Los Angeles in 1949. In May 1955, NBC agreed to trade WNBK and WTAM-AM-FM to Westinghouse in return for KYW radio and WPTZ television in ...
The following television stations in the United States brand as channel 7 (though neither using virtual channel 7 nor broadcasting on physical RF channel 7): KNSD in San Diego, California. KTGM in Tamuning, Guam. WDAY-DT2 in Fargo, North Dakota. WPTA-DT2 in Fort Wayne, Indiana.