![]() ![]() Unless you’re spending $250 on cable, you will not be able to watch at least one MSU football game (and a smattering of MSU hoops games) with your television package. If you’re confused, welcome to the human race. Two of those channels are not available on Xfinity’s basic package (FS1, BTN) with Peacock as a free add-on but not Peacock Premium. Two of those channels are not available on DirecTV’s basic package (BTN and Peacock). The first three games on the Spartans’ schedule are on three different networks: FS1, BTN, and Peacock. If they have the audacity to charge what they do for tickets to the game, at least make watching at home easier for the fans. Yes, watching my team on one channel I don’t get is annoying as heck, to put it politely.įor there to be close to 10 possible channels that any Big Ten team could play on is ludicrous. The Big Ten will now be shown on FOX, FS1 (just because your cable package has FOX doesn’t necessarily mean you have FS1), NBC, Peacock (just because your cable package has NBC doesn’t necessarily mean you have Peacock), CBS, Paramount Plus (just because your cable package has – well – you get the picture), Big Ten Network, ESPN family of networks, A&E, HGTV, and Music Choice Easy Listening (joking, of course). "It was her time to take that next step and go into that next chapter and we're happy to see her do it.It sure seems like the more the Big Ten releases times and which networks you can watch Michigan State football, the more I see why Kevin Warren left his job as commissioner. "We're obviously sad to see Molly go go from WBNS and leave the business but really excited for her next opportunity," Nickels said. WBNS News Director Jennifer Nickels said Friday morning is Brewer's last day at the station and that they will be prepared to talk about what's next for her position then. "It has a lot of purpose and urgency at a time when there's a lot going on," she said. She'll be a public relations specialist at the health department and looking forward to helping people understand the ravages of opioid addiction, infant mortality and other health issues. "I love news, and it's all I've known," she said, having worked jobs in Kansas after graduating from Loyola University in Chicago. ![]() "Now, I'm looking forward to taking those stories a step further as a member of their team," Brewer wrote on her Instagram 28, said she'll miss her newsroom, but not necessarily getting to work between 3 and 3:30 a.m. ![]() Her Instagram and Twitter posts state that she is going to work for Columbus Public Health after working with them as a reporter to share stories on different topics, such as the COVID-19 pandemic, race as a public health issue, addiction services and infant mortality. Viewers would see her in the mornings, doing the traffic report, and also reporting stories in the community. ![]() Molly Brewer, a WBNS-TV (Channel 10) Wake Up CBUS traffic anchor and reporter, announced on her social media Thursday morning that she is leaving the station.īrewer has been at the station since 2017 and grew up in Columbus, attending Bexley High School. ![]()
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