WCCO-TV

WCCO-TV, channel 4, is a CBS owned-and-operated television station, licensed to Minneapolis, Minnesota, USA and serving the Twin Cities television market. WCCO-TV's studios are located on South 11th Street in downtown Minneapolis, and its transmitter is located at the Telefarm complex in Shoreview, Minnesota.

WCCO-TV's programming is also seen on two full-power satellite stations: KCCO-TV (channel 7) in Alexandria, Minnesota; and KCCW-TV (channel 12) in Walker, Minnesota.

History

WCCO-TV's roots originate with a radio station, but not the one with which it is affiliated today. Radio station WRHM, which signed on the air in 1925, is the station to which WCCO-TV traces its lineage. In 1934, two newspapers – the Minneapolis Tribune and the Saint Paul Pioneer Press-Dispatch – formed a joint venture named "Twin Cities Newspapers", which purchased the radio station and changed its call letters to WTCN. Twin Cities Newspapers later expanded into the fledgling FM band with WTCN-FM, and shortly thereafter the then-new medium of television with the launch of WTCN-TV on July 1, 1949 as Minnesota's second television station, broadcasting from the Radio City Theater at 50 South 9th Street in downtown Minneapolis.

WCCO

WCCO may refer to:

  • WCCO (AM), a radio station (830 AM) licensed to serve Minneapolis, Minnesota, United States
  • WCCO-TV, a television station (channel 32, virtual channel 4) licensed to serve Minneapolis, Minnesota
  • KMNB, a radio station (102.9 FM) licensed to serve Minneapolis, Minnesota, which used the call sign WCCO-FM from May 1969 to November 1983
  • WCCO (AM)

    WCCO (830 kHz) is a Class A clear-channel radio station located in Minneapolis, Minnesota, USA and owned by CBS Radio. Its studios are located in the CBS Radio Building, 625 Second Avenue South, in downtown Minneapolis. WCCO features talk radio and news programming, with local hosts most hours of the day and night. Its transmitter is located in Coon Rapids, Minnesota. With 50,000 watts of power, and a non-directional signal, WCCO reaches a wide area of North America at night.

    From 1947 to 1996, WCCO radio and WCCO-TV (channel 4) won twelve George Foster Peabody Awards, more than any other Twin Cities broadcast outlet.

    History

    Early years

    WCCO began broadcasting in the region on September 4, 1922 as WLAG, known as "the Call of the North", from a hotel near Loring Park in Minneapolis. However, the station soon landed in financial trouble and closed down in 1924. Washburn Crosby Company, forerunner of General Mills, took over the station and renamed it WCCO for the company's initials. Broadcasts resumed less than two months later on October 2, 1924 from its current transmitter site in Coon Rapids.

    Podcasts:

    PLAYLIST TIME:

    I Bought A Flat Guitar Tutor

    by: 10cc

    I bought a flat
    Diminished responsibility
    You're de ninth person to see
    To be suspended in a seventh
    Major catastrophe
    It's a minor point but gee
    Augmented by the sharpness of your
    See what I'm going through
    A to be with you
    In a flat by the sea




    Latest News for: wcco

    Edit

    WCCO-AM cancels local evening programming, including ‘The Lake Show with Henry Lake’

    Pioneer Press 08 Mar 2025
    WCCO-AM has canceled its local programming on weekday evenings, including “The Lake Show with Henry Lake,” but not Minnesota Twins games ... (Courtesy of WCCO) ... The company purchased WCCO from CBS Corp.
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