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Wikipedia

WDSI-TV

WDSI-TV (channel 61) is a television station in Chattanooga, Tennessee, United States, affiliated with True Crime Network and Comet. The station is owned by New Age Media, which also operates Cleveland-licensed dual CW/MyNetworkTV affiliate WFLI-TV (channel 53) under a local marketing agreement (LMA) with MPS Media. Sinclair Broadcast Group, owner of dual ABC/Fox affiliate WTVC (channel 9), provides some engineering functions for both stations under LMAs and also programs WFLI-TV.

WDSI-TV
Channels
BrandingTrue Crime Network
Comet (on DT2)
Programming
Affiliations
Ownership
Owner
  • New Age Media, LLC
  • (New Age Media of Tennessee License, LLC)
OperatorSinclair Broadcast Group (select engineering functions via LMA)
WFLI-TV, WTVC
History
First air date
January 24, 1972 (51 years ago) (1972-01-24)
Former call signs
WRIP-TV (1972–1983)
Former channel number(s)
  • Analog: 61 (UHF, 1972–2009)
  • Digital: 40 (UHF, 1999–2018)
Technical information[1]
Licensing authority
FCC
Facility ID71353
ERP120 kW
HAAT306 m (1,004 ft)
Transmitter coordinates35°9′38.7″N 85°19′5.8″W / 35.160750°N 85.318278°W / 35.160750; -85.318278
Links
Public license information
  • Public file
  • LMS

WDSI-TV and WFLI-TV share studios on East Main Street (SR 8/US 41/US 76) in Chattanooga's Highland Park section; master control and some internal operations for the two stations are based at WTVC's facilities on Benton Drive in Chattanooga.[2] WDSI-TV's transmitter is located on Signal Mountain in the town of Walden.

Established in 1972 as independent station WRIP-TV, channel 61 later became WDSI-TV in 1983. The station was a Fox affiliate from 1986 to 2015, when Sinclair purchased the programming assets of New Age Media's Chattanooga stations but did not assume program control of WDSI-TV.

History Edit

WRIP-TV Edit

The station signed on the air on January 24, 1972, with the call letters WRIP-TV. It aired an analog signal on UHF channel 61, and was sister station to WRIP radio in Rossville, Georgia (AM 980, now WDYN and FM 105.5, now WRXR). Signing on nearly five years after the construction permit was granted in March 1967,[3] it was Tennessee's second independent station, having launched a little over nine months after the state's first independent, WMCV in Nashville, went off the air but only to return in 1976 as WZTV. It is the state's oldest television station in continuous operation to have never had affiliation with any of the big three networks (ABC, CBS, and NBC). The station was owned by Jay Sadow.

Initially, WRIP was positioned as an all-movie station. Therefore, early programming on WRIP included older movies from the 1930s to early 1960s for most of its broadcast day along with some theatrical cartoons and shorts. These selections included Little Rascals, Three Stooges, and Looney Tunes. The station was on-the-air for about twelve hours a day signing on at noon. By the summer the station was on 19 hours a day signing on at 7 a.m.

The station was plagued by financial problems for several reasons. It was a UHF station serving a small market in a very mountainous area. In analog days, UHF stations, especially those on high channel numbers, usually did not get good reception more than about 30 miles (48 km) away in rugged terrain. Also, the station was losing money because it overspent on movie packages. The station was locally owned and its owner did not have the money to spend on any other programming investments. In the course of 1973, WRIP-TV gradually shifted to a somewhat traditional independent station schedule of programs but with a low-budget approach.

By 1974, it added low-budget cartoons, low-budget syndicated shows such as wildlife and sporting shows, and locally based religious shows. That year, the station eliminated movies as well as cutting hours on the air, signing on at 3 p.m. and off the air by midnight. In the fall of 1974 it expanded the broadcast day slightly and added a run of the ninety-minute edition of The 700 Club in 1975 and two runs of the two-hour version of the PTL Club. The station then began selling huge blocks of time to mostly churches in the local area cutting back more on low-budget secular shows.

By 1976, the station was running mostly Christian programs about twelve hours a day along with some low-budget secular programs such as children's programs (including The New Zoo Revue, Devlin, and Gigantor), outdoor sporting and hunting shows, The Mike Douglas Show, as well as some low budget instructional shows about four hours a day. The station was basically profitable by selling thirty- and sixty-minute blocks of time most of the day to local religious broadcasters.

By 1978, WRIP was running Christian programs (both local and syndicated) for all except a couple of hours a day. The station produced and scheduled many hours per day of programs from local churches. By 1980, it was running nearly all religious shows (again half local and half syndicated) with an hour or so a day set aside for a couple of secular shows. In fall 1981, it began adding additional secular shows in the 3 to 6 p.m. time slot, bringing back Gigantor and Bullwinkle as well as youth-appeal shows such as Super Friends, Little Rascals, McHale's Navy, Make Room For Daddy, The Brady Bunch, and Leave It To Beaver, among others. Weekends, the station added shows like The Hardy Boys, Those Amazing Animals, America's Top 10, and others. In winter 1982, the station expanded secular programming to the 2 to 8 p.m. weekday timeslots as well as the 11 p.m. to 1 a.m. time slot. Shows added included off network dramas such as Kojak, Star Trek; sitcoms such as I Love Lucy, and The Munsters along with some movies. The station was about half religious and half secular. That summer, the station added a prime time movie and was secular from about 1 p.m. to 1 a.m. That fall, more cartoons such as Scooby-Doo, Bugs Bunny and The Flintstones were added along with some more movies and by now the station was two-thirds secular and one-third religious. For the first time since the mid-1970s, the station was secular a few hours a day on Sundays as well.

WDSI-TV Edit

In January 1983, Jay Sadow sold the station to Roy Hess. The station immediately changed its call sign to the current WDSI-TV. It modified its then-hybrid religious/general entertainment format (which was leaning more on entertainment for the first time since about 1975) adding cartoons in the 7 to 9 a.m. time slot. The religious shows remained in the late mornings, but in the early afternoons, more old movies were added along with holdover classic sitcoms. Cartoons, older sitcoms, and drama shows continued in the late afternoons and early evenings. A prime-time movie was also added along with some older shows late at night. The station was on-the-air about twenty hours a day by then. Its on-air branding at that time was "Watch What We're Doing Now".

WDSI provided, free of charge, UHF antennas (which customers could obtain at local convenience stores) so viewers could watch the station. At that time, many households in the Chattanooga media market were still not wired for cable. After the overhaul in programming, the station was sold to Donatelli and Klein in 1985. Stronger, more recent sitcoms such as Benson, M*A*S*H, and better movies were added to the schedule and the religious shows were scaled back even more becoming relegated only to Sunday mornings. On October 9, 1986, WDSI became a charter affiliate of Fox beginning with The Late Show Starring Joan Rivers, remaining with the network until October 2015. It was a typical Fox station at that time running a blend of newer cartoons, recent off network sitcoms, classic cartoons, old sitcoms, old movies, and drama shows. The station was becoming one of the strongest independents in Tennessee, the polar opposite of what it was just five years before.

In 1993, the station was sold to Pegasus Communications. As time went on due to changes in the industry, classic sitcoms and movies were gradually replaced by more modern talk/reality programs and court shows. Cartoons began to fall off the schedule from 1999 until 2002 and replaced by more first run reality programs. WFLI-TV dropped UPN in 2001, at which time it moved to air in late nights on WDSI,[4] doing so until WYHB-LP became the affiliate the next year.[5] In 2002, WDSI began broadcasting a digital signal on UHF channel 40. On September 5, 2006, the station launched Fox's new sister network MyNetworkTV on a new second digital subchannel. It was not until March 2009 that WDSI-DT2 was added to area digital cable systems.

After filing for bankruptcy in 2004, Pegasus sold most of its stations, including WDSI, to investment group CP Media, LLC, on January 4, 2007;[6] with the sale consummated on March 31.[7] CP then formed New Age Media as the parent company for the former Pegasus stations.

Move of Fox to WTVC-DT2 Edit

 
WDSI-TV's logo as a This TV affiliate, from October 31, 2015, until November 13, 2022.

Sinclair Broadcast Group purchased the non-license assets of WDSI-TV and WFLI-TV from New Age Media for $1.25 million in September 2015.[2] While New Age would continue to own and program WDSI-TV, Sinclair acquired all of its existing programming and affiliations.[8]

During a transition process that was completed on October 31, 2015, WTVC's second digital channel simulcast WDSI. On that date, when Sinclair launched their new network Comet, the Fox schedule and the intellectual unit for WDSI's main signal moved permanently to WTVC-DT2 under the on-air moniker "Fox Chattanooga". The programming on This TV which had been on WTVC-DT2 moved to WDSI's main signal, with Comet launching on WDSI-DT2; the MyNetworkTV subchannel was moved to WFLI-DT2, with the MeTV signal which had been carried on that slot moved to WFLI-DT3. Cable, satellite, and EPB viewers saw no change, as WTVC-DT2 took over the former channel slots for WDSI's main signal.

News operation Edit

During the early 1990s, ABC affiliate WTVC produced Chattanooga's first nightly prime time newscast at 10 p.m. on then-independent station WFLI through a news outsourcing arrangement. After the WFLI newscast was canceled, WTVC established a second 10 p.m. broadcast on WDSI in 1996. The newscast, originating from WDSI-TV's studios, used WDSI's own news anchors alongside WTVC's meteorologists, sports anchors, and news reporters, though channel 61's own news staff totaled just four people.[9]

In 1999, WDSI severed the link with WTVC and began producing its own newscasts entirely,[10] later adding a 4 p.m. newscast in January 2001[4] and a 6:30 p.m. broadcast. This ended in 2004, when WDSI reduced its operations and re-established a news outsourcing arrangement with WTVC, citing the small market.[11] This agreement continued until Sinclair purchased WDSI's programming and non-license assets in 2015.

Even though Sinclair does not have any other programming involvement in WDSI-TV's operations, the station does air a repeat of the 7–9 a.m. component of WTVC's Good Morning Chattanooga in the early afternoon.

Technical information Edit

Subchannels Edit

The station's digital signal is multiplexed:

Subchannels of WDSI-TV[12]
Channel Res. Aspect Short name Programming
61.1 720p 16:9 ThisTV True Crime Network
61.2 480i COMET Comet

Analog-to-digital conversion Edit

WDSI-TV shut down its analog signal, over UHF channel 61, on January 19, 2008. The station's digital signal remained on its pre-transition UHF channel 40,[13] using virtual channel 61. WDSI moved to channel 14 on September 1, 2018.

References Edit

  1. ^ "Facility Technical Data for WDSI-TV". Licensing and Management System. Federal Communications Commission.
  2. ^ a b Flessner, Dave (September 11, 2015). "Sinclair buys Chattanooga TV stations WDSI-TV and WFLI-TV". Chattanooga Times Free Press. Chattanooga, Tennessee: WEHCO Media. Retrieved March 28, 2021.
  3. ^ FCC History Cards for WDSI-TV
  4. ^ a b Courter, Barry (January 21, 2001). "Fox 61 moves to be first with news on TV with 4 p.m. weekday show". Chattanooga Times Free Press. p. B1.
  5. ^ Courter, Barry (October 9, 2002). "UPN returning to Chattanooga". Chattanooga Times Free Press. p. 45.
  6. ^ . Federal Communications Commission. Archived from the original on January 15, 2016. Retrieved March 16, 2007.
  7. ^ . Federal Communications Commission. Archived from the original on January 15, 2016. Retrieved April 3, 2007.
  8. ^ "Sinclair Reports Third Quarter 2015 Financial Results". Sinclair Broadcast Group. November 4, 2015. Retrieved March 28, 2021.
  9. ^ Bornfeld, Steve (February 3, 1996). "Storm coverage tests resources of broadcasters". Chattanooga Times.
  10. ^ Pierce, Susan (January 11, 1999). "Fox chases ratings". Chattanooga Times Free Press. p. D1.
  11. ^ Gary, Bob (February 28, 2004). "WDSI to fold news department; 30 jobs eliminated". Chattanooga Times Free Press. p. 9.
  12. ^ "RabbitEars TV Query for WDSI". from the original on March 4, 2016. Retrieved July 31, 2014.
  13. ^ (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on August 29, 2013. Retrieved March 24, 2012.

wdsi, channel, television, station, chattanooga, tennessee, united, states, affiliated, with, true, crime, network, comet, station, owned, media, which, also, operates, cleveland, licensed, dual, mynetworktv, affiliate, wfli, channel, under, local, marketing, . WDSI TV channel 61 is a television station in Chattanooga Tennessee United States affiliated with True Crime Network and Comet The station is owned by New Age Media which also operates Cleveland licensed dual CW MyNetworkTV affiliate WFLI TV channel 53 under a local marketing agreement LMA with MPS Media Sinclair Broadcast Group owner of dual ABC Fox affiliate WTVC channel 9 provides some engineering functions for both stations under LMAs and also programs WFLI TV WDSI TVChattanooga TennesseeUnited StatesChannelsDigital 14 UHF Virtual 61BrandingTrue Crime NetworkComet on DT2 ProgrammingAffiliations61 1 True Crime Network61 2 CometOwnershipOwnerNew Age Media LLC New Age Media of Tennessee License LLC OperatorSinclair Broadcast Group select engineering functions via LMA Sister stationsWFLI TV WTVCHistoryFirst air dateJanuary 24 1972 51 years ago 1972 01 24 Former call signsWRIP TV 1972 1983 Former channel number s Analog 61 UHF 1972 2009 Digital 40 UHF 1999 2018 Former affiliationsIndependent 1972 1986 Fox 1986 2015 UPN secondary 2001 2002 This TV 2015 2022 Technical information 1 Licensing authorityFCCFacility ID71353ERP120 kWHAAT306 m 1 004 ft Transmitter coordinates35 9 38 7 N 85 19 5 8 W 35 160750 N 85 318278 W 35 160750 85 318278LinksPublic license informationPublic fileLMSWDSI TV and WFLI TV share studios on East Main Street SR 8 US 41 US 76 in Chattanooga s Highland Park section master control and some internal operations for the two stations are based at WTVC s facilities on Benton Drive in Chattanooga 2 WDSI TV s transmitter is located on Signal Mountain in the town of Walden Established in 1972 as independent station WRIP TV channel 61 later became WDSI TV in 1983 The station was a Fox affiliate from 1986 to 2015 when Sinclair purchased the programming assets of New Age Media s Chattanooga stations but did not assume program control of WDSI TV Contents 1 History 1 1 WRIP TV 1 2 WDSI TV 1 3 Move of Fox to WTVC DT2 2 News operation 3 Technical information 3 1 Subchannels 3 2 Analog to digital conversion 4 ReferencesHistory EditWRIP TV Edit The station signed on the air on January 24 1972 with the call letters WRIP TV It aired an analog signal on UHF channel 61 and was sister station to WRIP radio in Rossville Georgia AM 980 now WDYN and FM 105 5 now WRXR Signing on nearly five years after the construction permit was granted in March 1967 3 it was Tennessee s second independent station having launched a little over nine months after the state s first independent WMCV in Nashville went off the air but only to return in 1976 as WZTV It is the state s oldest television station in continuous operation to have never had affiliation with any of the big three networks ABC CBS and NBC The station was owned by Jay Sadow Initially WRIP was positioned as an all movie station Therefore early programming on WRIP included older movies from the 1930s to early 1960s for most of its broadcast day along with some theatrical cartoons and shorts These selections included Little Rascals Three Stooges and Looney Tunes The station was on the air for about twelve hours a day signing on at noon By the summer the station was on 19 hours a day signing on at 7 a m The station was plagued by financial problems for several reasons It was a UHF station serving a small market in a very mountainous area In analog days UHF stations especially those on high channel numbers usually did not get good reception more than about 30 miles 48 km away in rugged terrain Also the station was losing money because it overspent on movie packages The station was locally owned and its owner did not have the money to spend on any other programming investments In the course of 1973 WRIP TV gradually shifted to a somewhat traditional independent station schedule of programs but with a low budget approach By 1974 it added low budget cartoons low budget syndicated shows such as wildlife and sporting shows and locally based religious shows That year the station eliminated movies as well as cutting hours on the air signing on at 3 p m and off the air by midnight In the fall of 1974 it expanded the broadcast day slightly and added a run of the ninety minute edition of The 700 Club in 1975 and two runs of the two hour version of the PTL Club The station then began selling huge blocks of time to mostly churches in the local area cutting back more on low budget secular shows By 1976 the station was running mostly Christian programs about twelve hours a day along with some low budget secular programs such as children s programs including The New Zoo Revue Devlin and Gigantor outdoor sporting and hunting shows The Mike Douglas Show as well as some low budget instructional shows about four hours a day The station was basically profitable by selling thirty and sixty minute blocks of time most of the day to local religious broadcasters By 1978 WRIP was running Christian programs both local and syndicated for all except a couple of hours a day The station produced and scheduled many hours per day of programs from local churches By 1980 it was running nearly all religious shows again half local and half syndicated with an hour or so a day set aside for a couple of secular shows In fall 1981 it began adding additional secular shows in the 3 to 6 p m time slot bringing back Gigantor and Bullwinkle as well as youth appeal shows such as Super Friends Little Rascals McHale s Navy Make Room For Daddy The Brady Bunch andLeave It To Beaver among others Weekends the station added shows like The Hardy Boys Those Amazing Animals America s Top 10 and others In winter 1982 the station expanded secular programming to the 2 to 8 p m weekday timeslots as well as the 11 p m to 1 a m time slot Shows added included off network dramas such as Kojak Star Trek sitcoms such as I Love Lucy and The Munsters along with some movies The station was about half religious and half secular That summer the station added a prime time movie and was secular from about 1 p m to 1 a m That fall more cartoons such as Scooby Doo Bugs Bunny and The Flintstones were added along with some more movies and by now the station was two thirds secular and one third religious For the first time since the mid 1970s the station was secular a few hours a day on Sundays as well WDSI TV Edit In January 1983 Jay Sadow sold the station to Roy Hess The station immediately changed its call sign to the current WDSI TV It modified its then hybrid religious general entertainment format which was leaning more on entertainment for the first time since about 1975 adding cartoons in the 7 to 9 a m time slot The religious shows remained in the late mornings but in the early afternoons more old movies were added along with holdover classic sitcoms Cartoons older sitcoms and drama shows continued in the late afternoons and early evenings A prime time movie was also added along with some older shows late at night The station was on the air about twenty hours a day by then Its on air branding at that time was Watch What We re Doing Now WDSI provided free of charge UHF antennas which customers could obtain at local convenience stores so viewers could watch the station At that time many households in the Chattanooga media market were still not wired for cable After the overhaul in programming the station was sold to Donatelli and Klein in 1985 Stronger more recent sitcoms such as Benson M A S H and better movies were added to the schedule and the religious shows were scaled back even more becoming relegated only to Sunday mornings On October 9 1986 WDSI became a charter affiliate of Fox beginning with The Late Show Starring Joan Rivers remaining with the network until October 2015 It was a typical Fox station at that time running a blend of newer cartoons recent off network sitcoms classic cartoons old sitcoms old movies and drama shows The station was becoming one of the strongest independents in Tennessee the polar opposite of what it was just five years before In 1993 the station was sold to Pegasus Communications As time went on due to changes in the industry classic sitcoms and movies were gradually replaced by more modern talk reality programs and court shows Cartoons began to fall off the schedule from 1999 until 2002 and replaced by more first run reality programs WFLI TV dropped UPN in 2001 at which time it moved to air in late nights on WDSI 4 doing so until WYHB LP became the affiliate the next year 5 In 2002 WDSI began broadcasting a digital signal on UHF channel 40 On September 5 2006 the station launched Fox s new sister network MyNetworkTV on a new second digital subchannel It was not until March 2009 that WDSI DT2 was added to area digital cable systems After filing for bankruptcy in 2004 Pegasus sold most of its stations including WDSI to investment group CP Media LLC on January 4 2007 6 with the sale consummated on March 31 7 CP then formed New Age Media as the parent company for the former Pegasus stations Move of Fox to WTVC DT2 Edit nbsp WDSI TV s logo as a This TV affiliate from October 31 2015 until November 13 2022 Sinclair Broadcast Group purchased the non license assets of WDSI TV and WFLI TV from New Age Media for 1 25 million in September 2015 2 While New Age would continue to own and program WDSI TV Sinclair acquired all of its existing programming and affiliations 8 During a transition process that was completed on October 31 2015 WTVC s second digital channel simulcast WDSI On that date when Sinclair launched their new network Comet the Fox schedule and the intellectual unit for WDSI s main signal moved permanently to WTVC DT2 under the on air moniker Fox Chattanooga The programming on This TV which had been on WTVC DT2 moved to WDSI s main signal with Comet launching on WDSI DT2 the MyNetworkTV subchannel was moved to WFLI DT2 with the MeTV signal which had been carried on that slot moved to WFLI DT3 Cable satellite and EPB viewers saw no change as WTVC DT2 took over the former channel slots for WDSI s main signal News operation EditDuring the early 1990s ABC affiliate WTVC produced Chattanooga s first nightly prime time newscast at 10 p m on then independent station WFLI through a news outsourcing arrangement After the WFLI newscast was canceled WTVC established a second 10 p m broadcast on WDSI in 1996 The newscast originating from WDSI TV s studios used WDSI s own news anchors alongside WTVC s meteorologists sports anchors and news reporters though channel 61 s own news staff totaled just four people 9 In 1999 WDSI severed the link with WTVC and began producing its own newscasts entirely 10 later adding a 4 p m newscast in January 2001 4 and a 6 30 p m broadcast This ended in 2004 when WDSI reduced its operations and re established a news outsourcing arrangement with WTVC citing the small market 11 This agreement continued until Sinclair purchased WDSI s programming and non license assets in 2015 Even though Sinclair does not have any other programming involvement in WDSI TV s operations the station does air a repeat of the 7 9 a m component of WTVC s Good Morning Chattanooga in the early afternoon Technical information EditSubchannels Edit The station s digital signal is multiplexed Subchannels of WDSI TV 12 Channel Res Aspect Short name Programming61 1 720p 16 9 ThisTV True Crime Network61 2 480i COMET CometAnalog to digital conversion Edit WDSI TV shut down its analog signal over UHF channel 61 on January 19 2008 The station s digital signal remained on its pre transition UHF channel 40 13 using virtual channel 61 WDSI moved to channel 14 on September 1 2018 References Edit Facility Technical Data for WDSI TV Licensing and Management System Federal Communications Commission a b Flessner Dave September 11 2015 Sinclair buys Chattanooga TV stations WDSI TV and WFLI TV Chattanooga Times Free Press Chattanooga Tennessee WEHCO Media Retrieved March 28 2021 FCC History Cards for WDSI TV a b Courter Barry January 21 2001 Fox 61 moves to be first with news on TV with 4 p m weekday show Chattanooga Times Free Press p B1 Courter Barry October 9 2002 UPN returning to Chattanooga Chattanooga Times Free Press p 45 Sale to CP Media Federal Communications Commission Archived from the original on January 15 2016 Retrieved March 16 2007 Sale consummation CP Media Federal Communications Commission Archived from the original on January 15 2016 Retrieved April 3 2007 Sinclair Reports Third Quarter 2015 Financial Results Sinclair Broadcast Group November 4 2015 Retrieved March 28 2021 Bornfeld Steve February 3 1996 Storm coverage tests resources of broadcasters Chattanooga Times Pierce Susan January 11 1999 Fox chases ratings Chattanooga Times Free Press p D1 Gary Bob February 28 2004 WDSI to fold news department 30 jobs eliminated Chattanooga Times Free Press p 9 RabbitEars TV Query for WDSI Archived from the original on March 4 2016 Retrieved July 31 2014 DTV Tentative Channel Designations for the First and the Second Rounds PDF Archived from the original PDF on August 29 2013 Retrieved March 24 2012 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title WDSI TV amp oldid 1180990113, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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