Ktla

align="center" bgcolor="#66FFCC" colspan="3"|KTLA (WB)
lign="center" colspan="3" style="padding:10px;"|
lign="center" colspan="3" style="border-bottom:3px solid gray; font-size: smaller"|Slogan: (None)
lign="center" bgcolor="#66FFCC" colspan="3"|Los Angeles
lign="center" colspan="3"|Channel 5
Digital channel 31
lign="left" valign="top"|Founded colspan="2" valign="top"|1948
lign="left" valign="top"|Owner colspan="2" valign="top"|Tribune Company
lign="left" valign="top"|Signal Radius colspan="2" valign="top"|Southern California
lign="left" valign="top"|Callsign Meaning colspan="2" valign="top"|K
Television
Los
Angeles
KTLA (Channel 5) is a television station in the Los Angeles and Orange County area. It first broadcast on January 22, 1947, becoming the first commercial television station to be broadcast west of the Mississippi River. It is based on Sunset Boulevard in Hollywood. According to the historical archives of the Los Angeles fire departmenthttp://www.lafire.com/famous_fires/470220_ElectroPlatingExplosion/022047_ElectroPlating.htm, KTLA received its commercial license on February 22, two days after the station covered the February 20 explosion at O'Connor Electro-Plating, and it had formerly been W6XYZ. But according to KTLA's own historical timeline http://ktla.trb.com/extras/ktla/virtual/historical.htm, the explosion occurred on February 27, a little over a month after the station's January 22 founding. In 1991, KTLA was the first station to air the infamous video of the Rodney King beating by Los Angeles police. In the mid-1990s, KTLA became an affiliate of the WB Network. KTLA also broadcasts the annual Tournament of Roses Parade live from the city of Pasadena as well. Several of its well-known evening news anchors include Hal Fishman and the late Larry McCormick, who died after a long illness in September 2004. Its veteran field reporters are Stan Chambers and Warren Wilson. Stu Nahan and Ed Arnold (who now anchors KOCE's Real Orange) were formerly the sports anchors. Accompanying with his news anchoring career, McCormick also hosted KTLA's own public affairs production called MAKING IT!, which featured stories on the entrepreneurial successes of ethnic minorities. The station is owned by the Tribune Company. KTLA News has a special partnership with the Los Angeles Times, which has been co-owned with the station since 2000.

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