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WFQX-TV

WFQX-TV (channel 32) is a television station licensed to Cadillac, Michigan, United States, serving the northern Lower and eastern Upper peninsulas of Michigan as an affiliate of Fox and The CW Plus. It is owned by Cadillac Telecasting Company, which maintains a shared services agreement (SSA) with 910 Media Group, owner of Cadillac-licensed CBS affiliate WWTV, channel 9 (and its Sault Ste. Marie–licensed full-time satellite, WWUP-TV, channel 10), for the provision of certain services. Both stations share studios on Broadcast Way (near US 131) in Cadillac, while WFQX-TV's transmitter is located on 130th Avenue in unincorporated Osceola County, just northeast of Tustin.

WFQX-TV

CityCadillac, Michigan
Channels
BrandingLocal 32 (general)
9&10 News on Local 32 (news)
The CW Northern Michigan (on DT2)
Programming
Affiliations
Ownership
OwnerCadillac Telecasting Company
Operator910 Media Group
(via SSA)
WWTV/WWUP-TV
History
FoundedFebruary 9, 1987
First air date
October 6, 1989 (34 years ago) (1989-10-06)
Former call signs
WGKI (1989–2000)
Former channel number(s)
Analog:
33 (UHF, 1989–2009)
Translators:
31 W31BO Alpena
64 W43CM Pickford/Hessell (2005)
43 W43CM Pickford (2007–2008)
54 W54CR Traverse City
61 W61CR Sault Ste. Marie (1995–2008)
UPN (secondary, 1995–2006)
Call sign meaning
refers to Fox
Technical information[1]
Licensing authority
FCC
Facility ID25396
ERP200 kW
1,000 kW (CP)
HAAT422 m (1,385 ft)
428.5 m (1,406 ft) (CP)
Transmitter coordinates44°8′12″N 85°20′33″W / 44.13667°N 85.34250°W / 44.13667; -85.34250
Translator(s)WWTV-DT 9.2 (VHF) Cadillac
WWUP-DT 10.2 (VHF) Sault Ste. Marie
W23FL-D 23 (UHF) Traverse City
Links
Public license information
  • Public file
  • LMS
Websitewww.9and10news.com/wfqx/
Satellite station
WFUP
Channels
Programming
Affiliations
Ownership
OwnerCadillac Telecasting Company
Operator910 Media Group
(via SSA)
WWTV/WWUP-TV
History
FoundedApril 9, 1992
First air date
January 11, 1993 (30 years ago) (1993-01-11)
Former call signs
WGKU (1992–2000)
WFVX (2000–2003)
Former channel number(s)
Analog:
45 (UHF, 1993–2009)
Digital:
59 (UHF, 1995–2009)
see WFQX-TV infobox
Call sign meaning
Fox Upper Peninsula
Technical information[2]
Facility ID25395
ERP100 kW
HAAT324.7 m (1,065 ft)
Transmitter coordinates45°10′12″N 84°45′4″W / 45.17000°N 84.75111°W / 45.17000; -84.75111 (WFUP)
Links
Public license information
  • Public file
  • LMS

As with other network affiliates in this vast and mainly rural area, WFQX-TV operates a full-time, full-power satellite in Vanderbilt, WFUP (channel 45), whose transmitter is located on Hudson Lookout in southeastern Charlevoix County. Unlike other network affiliates in Northern Michigan, the WFQX and WFUP combination does not incorporate the satellite station's channel number in its branding; the stations are simply referred to as Local 32. Except for required hourly legal identification, there is no on-air mention that WFUP exists, and aside from the transmitter, WFUP does not maintain any physical presence locally in Vanderbilt. Unlike its parent station, WFUP does not carry any of WFQX-TV's subchannels and has a different subchannel lineup.

History Edit

The station first signed on the air as WGKI on UHF channel 33 on October 6, 1989. Its transmitter was just north of the current location in northern Osceola County. The original call letters referred to founder Gary Knapp, a former DJ and television personality. Despite its limited reach, WGKI was available on local cable systems. Prior to WGKI, Northern Michigan received Fox programming on cable from WKBD in Detroit.

In the station's early years, the channel was extremely low-budget. This was evident in the station's use of 1970s-era electronic graphics for the first few years of broadcasting. Due to the growing popularity of the Fox network and shows such as The Simpsons and Married... with Children, the station quickly grew. The on-screen graphics were modernized and it started to use higher-quality video equipment.

In the early 1990s, WGKI launched several repeaters in the Eastern Upper Peninsula unreached by the station's analog signal. By the mid-1990s, the station moved into permanent studios southeast of Cadillac along US 131. On January 11, 1993, the station launched WGKU in Vanderbilt on channel 40 as a full-time satellite of WGKI reaching the Gaylord and Petoskey areas. (As mentioned above, unlike the other network affiliates in the market, the station was simply known as "Fox 33" and didn't include any of the other satellites and repeaters used in the branding; they were simply listed under the graphic on the legal ID.)

When CBS affiliate WJBK-TV in Detroit switched its affiliation to Fox in December 1994 (which caused WGPR-TV to become the new CBS affiliate for Detroit), WGKI started using that station's resources. The move also disallowed rival WKBD from distributing Detroit Red Wings and Tigers games to WGKI. Knapp made a station promo explaining the situation between the three stations. When the Fox affiliation switch in Detroit was made, WGKI replaced WKBD on cable systems in Mid-Michigan and the Eastern Upper Peninsula. This was done so viewers without a local Fox station would maintain access to the network's programming. As a consequence, WGKI also expanded into parts of the Flint, Lansing, Grand Rapids, and Detroit markets via cable carriage. As a result, some cable viewers (especially in Bay City, Saginaw, and Michigan's Thumb area) found out that most of WGKI's programming, especially those from Fox, were being blacked out by request of the local affiliate. Soon after, many systems outside Northern Michigan and the Upper Peninsula dropped WGKI and/or brought back WKBD.

On January 15, 1995, WGKI became a secondary affiliate of UPN. It aired the network's shows outside of prime time. WGKI continued to air UPN programming until 2006, when UPN merged with The WB to form The CW, at which point WGKI ended its affiliation.

In 1999, the channel increased its ERP from 219 kW to 774 kW, significantly increasing its coverage area. In 2000, Knapp retired and sold his stations to Rockfleet Broadcasting for $12 million. Part of the deal called for both channels to change call letters. WGKI became WFQX-TV and WGKU became WFVX. In 2003, Rockfleet moved the WFVX call sign to a low-power station it had acquired in Bangor, Maine, and changed the Vanderbilt station's call letters to WFUP.

On February 10, 2007, WFQX upgraded its digital signal on UHF channel 47 (from a transmitter shared with WGTU east of Kalkaska) to begin airing all Fox programming in high definition for over-the-air viewers. (Prior to then, the station offered a low-power digital and HDTV signal near its studios southeast of Cadillac.) WFQX is available on Charter digital channel 783. On May 10, Rockfleet Broadcasting announced its intentions to sell WFQX/WFUP to Cadillac Telecasting. The Federal Communications Commission (FCC) approved the sale in late October. After this approval, the new owner entered into its SSA with Heritage Broadcasting Group.

It had been announced with the switch to digital broadcasting (then scheduled for February 17, 2009), WFUP would shut down. However, that channel had an application to perform a flash-cut to digital-only broadcasting on June 12. At one point, the station operated a digital signal on UHF channel 59 from its tower on Hudson Lookout. WFQX had an FCC-issued construction permit to air a digital signal on UHF channel 32 using the previous analog channel 33 equipment but based from the WWTV tower at its studios. That spot is the highest point in Michigan's Lower Peninsula.

On August 4, 2009, WFQX switched its longtime moniker "Fox 33" to "Fox 32" while adding a logo matching Fox owned-and-operated stations. The station made the channel move with its PSIP also being adjusted to match the new signal. WFUP's digital signal remained the same. The previous allotment is now used for WPBN-TV's digital broadcasts.

WFQX/WFUP are affiliates of the Detroit Lions Television Network which airs pre-season games and the weekly syndicated show The Ford Lions Report during the regular season. Also, because it is outside of the Lions' blackout area, it airs all regular season NFL on Fox Lions games. WFQX and PBS member station WCMU-TV were the only stations in the Northern Michigan market that offered analog translator stations. There had been one on channel 31 in Alpena but this was shut down with WFUP serving the area.

At one point, WFQX operated a repeater on channel 40 in Traverse City. That signal was shut down with the addition of one on channel 54. This too has since been shut off. Two translators that served the eastern Upper Peninsula were replaced with digital signals on new digital subchannels of WWTV and WWUP. WFQX also operated a repeater in Alpena, W31BO on channel 31. This would be shut down in November 2009 when WBKB-TV added a new digital subchannel featuring primary Fox and secondary MyNetworkTV programming on 11.2.

In December 2017, WFQX-TV/WFUP rebranded from "Fox 32" to "Local 32". Despite the name change, the station remains a Fox affiliate.

WFQX-DT2 Edit

WFQX-DT2, branded on-air as The CW Northern Michigan, is the CW+-affiliated second digital subchannel of WFQX-TV, broadcasting in 720p HD on channel 32.2. On cable, the subchannel is available on Spectrum channel 61 in Cadillac, Cheboygan, Gaylord, Manistee, Petoskey, Sault Ste. Marie, Traverse City, and surrounding areas. It is also seen on cable channel 17 in Big Rapids, Evart, Ludington, and Reed City and cable channel 13 in Grayling and Roscommon. DirecTV and Dish Network do not offer a CW affiliate. AcenTek in Mesick, which is one of very few non-Spectrum cable systems in the Traverse City market, gets The CW via Kalamazoo's WWMT-DT2.

History Edit

What would become WFQX-DT2 began in 1998 as "WBVC", a WB affiliate. It was part of The WB 100+ which was a similar operation to the current CW Plus service. "WBVC" was identified on-air as "Northern Michigan's WB 61" and the call sign was used in a fictional manner because it only aired on cable. WGTU provided promotional and advertising services for "WBVC" which was based at the ABC affiliate's studios on East Front Street in Downtown Traverse City. Prior to the cable-only "WBVC", Northern Michigan received WB programming on cable from WGN-TV in Chicago, which carried the network's lineup nationally via its superstation feed until 1999.

 
Former WFQX-DT2 logo, used under the fictitious "WBVC" call sign and "Northern Michigan's WB 61" branding, during its cable-exclusive years and also its days as WGTU-DT2

On January 24, 2006, Time Warner and CBS Corporation (the latter of which took over UPN after the split of Viacom into two companies occurred in December 2005) announced that they would shut down The WB and UPN in September 2006 and merge those two networks' resources to create The CW, a new television service whose initials represented the names of both of those respective companies. UPN aired in a delayed arrangement on Fox affiliates WFQX-TV/WFUP. On July 25, a new logo for "WBVC" appeared on WGTU's website. At that time, there were no announcements posted about its future as a CW affiliate. However, that changed a few weeks before the new network started. The CW began broadcasting on September 18. On that date, "WBVC" became known on-air as "Northern Michigan CW" and WFQX dropped its secondary affiliation with UPN. After the station was added to a new second digital subchannel of WGTU, it began to use the WGTU-DT2 call sign in an official manner.

On September 19, 2007, there was an application filed to the FCC by Max Media to sell WGTU to Tucker Broadcasting for $10 million. After approval in April 2008, Tucker entered into a shared services agreement with Barrington Broadcasting that resulted in WPBN operating WGTU. After the closing of the deal with Tucker Broadcasting, the CW subchannel went dark and the programming service became exclusively available via cable with no local affiliate selling advertising. It resumed using the fictitious "WBVC" call letters.

As WFQX-DT2 Edit

In 2018, WFQX-DT2 had assumed the CW affiliation from the once cable-exclusive "WBVC", allowing over-the-air access to the network for the first time in 10 years, rebranding it as "The CW Northern Michigan". By March 2020, the over-the-air feed of WFQX-DT2 was upgraded into 720p HD; it had been airing in the 16:9 widescreen standard definition picture format, before then.[3]

News operation Edit

As WGKI, the station simulcast WKBD's hour-long prime time newscast at 10 o'clock. In June 2000, WFQX launched a news department of its own and began producing a nightly 10 o'clock broadcast. Known as Northern Michigan's Fox News at 10, this was plagued from the start by a lack of basic resources such as reporters and engineering upkeep. The station initially had its own weather department, but later began outsourcing weather duties to AccuWeather in State College, Pennsylvania, which pre-taped weather segments and fed them to WFQX via satellite. As a result, WFQX was criticized for being too late when severe weather was an issue or choosing not to cover an event. At some point in time, the news title changed to Fox 33 News at 10 and weekend broadcasts ended.

On January 8, 2007, WFQX began to air a simulcast of the weekday morning show of WJBK, Detroit's Fox owned-and-operated station. Branded as Michigan's Fox News Morning and running from 6:00 a.m. to 8:00 a.m., it featured local weather cut-ins from AccuWeather, and was established as part of a cooperation between the two stations to provide advertising opportunities in Detroit to businesses of Northern Michigan. On February 5, WFQX also began simulcasting the second half of WJBK's 10:00 p.m. news.

After the sale of the channel to Cadillac Telecasting, the station's news department was shut down. On October 31, WWTV began producing the weeknight 10:00 p.m. newscast and the WJBK simulcast at 10:30 p.m. was dropped. On January 7, 2008, when CBS began requiring affiliates to carry The Early Show in its entirety, the third hour of WWTV's Michigan This Morning, which had been running from 7:00 a.m. to 8:00 a.m., was moved to WFQX/WFUP and expanded to two hours. That evening on WFQX, WWTV launched the area's first 7 o'clock news. In April 2013, WFQX (along with sister station WWTV) began airing its newscasts in high definition.

Notable former on-air staff Edit

Technical information Edit

The stations' digital signals are multiplexed:

WFQX subchannels Edit

Subchannels of WFQX-TV[4]
Channel Res. Aspect Short name Programming
32.1 720p 16:9 WFQX-DT Main WFQX programming / Fox
32.2 WFQX-CW The CW Northern Michigan
32.3 480i WFQX-IO Ion Television
32.4 WFQX-D4 Scripps News
32.5 WFQX-D5 Ion Mystery
32.6 WFQX-D6 Defy TV
32.7 WFQX-D7 Bounce TV
32.8 WFQX-D8 QVC

WFUP subchannels Edit

Subchannels of WFUP[5]
Channel Res. Aspect Short name Programming
45.1 720p 16:9 WFUP-FX Main WFUP programming / Fox
45.2 1080i WFUP-CB CBS (WWTV/WWUP-TV)
45.3 480i WFUP-ME MeTV
45.4 WFUP-LA Laff
45.5 WFUP-QV QVC
45.6 WFUP-HS HSN
  Simulcast of subchannels of another station

References Edit

  1. ^ "Facility Technical Data for WFQX-TV". Licensing and Management System. Federal Communications Commission.
  2. ^ "Facility Technical Data for WFUP". Licensing and Management System. Federal Communications Commission.
  3. ^ RabbitEars TV Query for WFQX
  4. ^ RabbitEars TV Query for WFQX
  5. ^ RabbitEars TV Query for WFUP

External links Edit

  • Official website
  • WWTV/WWUP-TV "9&10 News"
  • The CW Northern Michigan

wfqx, confused, with, wfxq, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, news, newspapers, books, scholar, jstor,. Not to be confused with WFXQ CD This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources WFQX TV news newspapers books scholar JSTOR November 2017 Learn how and when to remove this template message WFQX TV channel 32 is a television station licensed to Cadillac Michigan United States serving the northern Lower and eastern Upper peninsulas of Michigan as an affiliate of Fox and The CW Plus It is owned by Cadillac Telecasting Company which maintains a shared services agreement SSA with 910 Media Group owner of Cadillac licensed CBS affiliate WWTV channel 9 and its Sault Ste Marie licensed full time satellite WWUP TV channel 10 for the provision of certain services Both stations share studios on Broadcast Way near US 131 in Cadillac while WFQX TV s transmitter is located on 130th Avenue in unincorporated Osceola County just northeast of Tustin WFQX TVCadillac Traverse City MichiganUnited StatesCityCadillac MichiganChannelsDigital 32 UHF Virtual 32BrandingLocal 32 general 9 amp 10 News on Local 32 news The CW Northern Michigan on DT2 ProgrammingAffiliations32 1 Fox32 2 The CW Plusfor others see WFQX subchannelsOwnershipOwnerCadillac Telecasting CompanyOperator910 Media Group via SSA Sister stationsWWTV WWUP TVHistoryFoundedFebruary 9 1987First air dateOctober 6 1989 34 years ago 1989 10 06 Former call signsWGKI 1989 2000 Former channel number s Analog 33 UHF 1989 2009 Translators 31 W31BO Alpena64 W43CM Pickford Hessell 2005 43 W43CM Pickford 2007 2008 54 W54CR Traverse City61 W61CR Sault Ste Marie 1995 2008 Former affiliationsUPN secondary 1995 2006 Call sign meaningrefers to FoxTechnical information 1 Licensing authorityFCCFacility ID25396ERP200 kW1 000 kW CP HAAT422 m 1 385 ft 428 5 m 1 406 ft CP Transmitter coordinates44 8 12 N 85 20 33 W 44 13667 N 85 34250 W 44 13667 85 34250Translator s WWTV DT 9 2 VHF CadillacWWUP DT 10 2 VHF Sault Ste MarieW23FL D 23 UHF Traverse CityLinksPublic license informationPublic fileLMSWebsitewww wbr 9and10news wbr com wbr wfqx wbr Satellite stationWFUPVanderbilt MichiganUnited StatesChannelsDigital 21 UHF Virtual 45ProgrammingAffiliations45 1 Fox45 2 CBSfor others see WFUP subchannelsOwnershipOwnerCadillac Telecasting CompanyOperator910 Media Group via SSA Sister stationsWWTV WWUP TVHistoryFoundedApril 9 1992First air dateJanuary 11 1993 30 years ago 1993 01 11 Former call signsWGKU 1992 2000 WFVX 2000 2003 Former channel number s Analog 45 UHF 1993 2009 Digital 59 UHF 1995 2009 Former affiliationssee WFQX TV infoboxCall sign meaningFox Upper PeninsulaTechnical information 2 Facility ID25395ERP100 kWHAAT324 7 m 1 065 ft Transmitter coordinates45 10 12 N 84 45 4 W 45 17000 N 84 75111 W 45 17000 84 75111 WFUP LinksPublic license informationPublic fileLMSAs with other network affiliates in this vast and mainly rural area WFQX TV operates a full time full power satellite in Vanderbilt WFUP channel 45 whose transmitter is located on Hudson Lookout in southeastern Charlevoix County Unlike other network affiliates in Northern Michigan the WFQX and WFUP combination does not incorporate the satellite station s channel number in its branding the stations are simply referred to as Local 32 Except for required hourly legal identification there is no on air mention that WFUP exists and aside from the transmitter WFUP does not maintain any physical presence locally in Vanderbilt Unlike its parent station WFUP does not carry any of WFQX TV s subchannels and has a different subchannel lineup Contents 1 History 2 WFQX DT2 2 1 History 2 1 1 As WFQX DT2 3 News operation 3 1 Notable former on air staff 4 Technical information 4 1 WFQX subchannels 4 2 WFUP subchannels 5 References 6 External linksHistory EditThe station first signed on the air as WGKI on UHF channel 33 on October 6 1989 Its transmitter was just north of the current location in northern Osceola County The original call letters referred to founder Gary Knapp a former DJ and television personality Despite its limited reach WGKI was available on local cable systems Prior to WGKI Northern Michigan received Fox programming on cable from WKBD in Detroit In the station s early years the channel was extremely low budget This was evident in the station s use of 1970s era electronic graphics for the first few years of broadcasting Due to the growing popularity of the Fox network and shows such as The Simpsons and Married with Children the station quickly grew The on screen graphics were modernized and it started to use higher quality video equipment In the early 1990s WGKI launched several repeaters in the Eastern Upper Peninsula unreached by the station s analog signal By the mid 1990s the station moved into permanent studios southeast of Cadillac along US 131 On January 11 1993 the station launched WGKU in Vanderbilt on channel 40 as a full time satellite of WGKI reaching the Gaylord and Petoskey areas As mentioned above unlike the other network affiliates in the market the station was simply known as Fox 33 and didn t include any of the other satellites and repeaters used in the branding they were simply listed under the graphic on the legal ID When CBS affiliate WJBK TV in Detroit switched its affiliation to Fox in December 1994 which caused WGPR TV to become the new CBS affiliate for Detroit WGKI started using that station s resources The move also disallowed rival WKBD from distributing Detroit Red Wings and Tigers games to WGKI Knapp made a station promo explaining the situation between the three stations When the Fox affiliation switch in Detroit was made WGKI replaced WKBD on cable systems in Mid Michigan and the Eastern Upper Peninsula This was done so viewers without a local Fox station would maintain access to the network s programming As a consequence WGKI also expanded into parts of the Flint Lansing Grand Rapids and Detroit markets via cable carriage As a result some cable viewers especially in Bay City Saginaw and Michigan s Thumb area found out that most of WGKI s programming especially those from Fox were being blacked out by request of the local affiliate Soon after many systems outside Northern Michigan and the Upper Peninsula dropped WGKI and or brought back WKBD On January 15 1995 WGKI became a secondary affiliate of UPN It aired the network s shows outside of prime time WGKI continued to air UPN programming until 2006 when UPN merged with The WB to form The CW at which point WGKI ended its affiliation In 1999 the channel increased its ERP from 219 kW to 774 kW significantly increasing its coverage area In 2000 Knapp retired and sold his stations to Rockfleet Broadcasting for 12 million Part of the deal called for both channels to change call letters WGKI became WFQX TV and WGKU became WFVX In 2003 Rockfleet moved the WFVX call sign to a low power station it had acquired in Bangor Maine and changed the Vanderbilt station s call letters to WFUP On February 10 2007 WFQX upgraded its digital signal on UHF channel 47 from a transmitter shared with WGTU east of Kalkaska to begin airing all Fox programming in high definition for over the air viewers Prior to then the station offered a low power digital and HDTV signal near its studios southeast of Cadillac WFQX is available on Charter digital channel 783 On May 10 Rockfleet Broadcasting announced its intentions to sell WFQX WFUP to Cadillac Telecasting The Federal Communications Commission FCC approved the sale in late October After this approval the new owner entered into its SSA with Heritage Broadcasting Group It had been announced with the switch to digital broadcasting then scheduled for February 17 2009 WFUP would shut down However that channel had an application to perform a flash cut to digital only broadcasting on June 12 At one point the station operated a digital signal on UHF channel 59 from its tower on Hudson Lookout WFQX had an FCC issued construction permit to air a digital signal on UHF channel 32 using the previous analog channel 33 equipment but based from the WWTV tower at its studios That spot is the highest point in Michigan s Lower Peninsula On August 4 2009 WFQX switched its longtime moniker Fox 33 to Fox 32 while adding a logo matching Fox owned and operated stations The station made the channel move with its PSIP also being adjusted to match the new signal WFUP s digital signal remained the same The previous allotment is now used for WPBN TV s digital broadcasts WFQX WFUP are affiliates of the Detroit Lions Television Network which airs pre season games and the weekly syndicated show The Ford Lions Report during the regular season Also because it is outside of the Lions blackout area it airs all regular season NFL on Fox Lions games WFQX and PBS member station WCMU TV were the only stations in the Northern Michigan market that offered analog translator stations There had been one on channel 31 in Alpena but this was shut down with WFUP serving the area At one point WFQX operated a repeater on channel 40 in Traverse City That signal was shut down with the addition of one on channel 54 This too has since been shut off Two translators that served the eastern Upper Peninsula were replaced with digital signals on new digital subchannels of WWTV and WWUP WFQX also operated a repeater in Alpena W31BO on channel 31 This would be shut down in November 2009 when WBKB TV added a new digital subchannel featuring primary Fox and secondary MyNetworkTV programming on 11 2 In December 2017 WFQX TV WFUP rebranded from Fox 32 to Local 32 Despite the name change the station remains a Fox affiliate WFQX DT2 EditWFQX DT2 branded on air as The CW Northern Michigan is the CW affiliated second digital subchannel of WFQX TV broadcasting in 720p HD on channel 32 2 On cable the subchannel is available on Spectrum channel 61 in Cadillac Cheboygan Gaylord Manistee Petoskey Sault Ste Marie Traverse City and surrounding areas It is also seen on cable channel 17 in Big Rapids Evart Ludington and Reed City and cable channel 13 in Grayling and Roscommon DirecTV and Dish Network do not offer a CW affiliate AcenTek in Mesick which is one of very few non Spectrum cable systems in the Traverse City market gets The CW via Kalamazoo s WWMT DT2 History Edit What would become WFQX DT2 began in 1998 as WBVC a WB affiliate It was part of The WB 100 which was a similar operation to the current CW Plus service WBVC was identified on air as Northern Michigan s WB 61 and the call sign was used in a fictional manner because it only aired on cable WGTU provided promotional and advertising services for WBVC which was based at the ABC affiliate s studios on East Front Street in Downtown Traverse City Prior to the cable only WBVC Northern Michigan received WB programming on cable from WGN TV in Chicago which carried the network s lineup nationally via its superstation feed until 1999 nbsp Former WFQX DT2 logo used under the fictitious WBVC call sign and Northern Michigan s WB 61 branding during its cable exclusive years and also its days as WGTU DT2On January 24 2006 Time Warner and CBS Corporation the latter of which took over UPN after the split of Viacom into two companies occurred in December 2005 announced that they would shut down The WB and UPN in September 2006 and merge those two networks resources to create The CW a new television service whose initials represented the names of both of those respective companies UPN aired in a delayed arrangement on Fox affiliates WFQX TV WFUP On July 25 a new logo for WBVC appeared on WGTU s website At that time there were no announcements posted about its future as a CW affiliate However that changed a few weeks before the new network started The CW began broadcasting on September 18 On that date WBVC became known on air as Northern Michigan CW and WFQX dropped its secondary affiliation with UPN After the station was added to a new second digital subchannel of WGTU it began to use the WGTU DT2 call sign in an official manner On September 19 2007 there was an application filed to the FCC by Max Media to sell WGTU to Tucker Broadcasting for 10 million After approval in April 2008 Tucker entered into a shared services agreement with Barrington Broadcasting that resulted in WPBN operating WGTU After the closing of the deal with Tucker Broadcasting the CW subchannel went dark and the programming service became exclusively available via cable with no local affiliate selling advertising It resumed using the fictitious WBVC call letters As WFQX DT2 Edit In 2018 WFQX DT2 had assumed the CW affiliation from the once cable exclusive WBVC allowing over the air access to the network for the first time in 10 years rebranding it as The CW Northern Michigan By March 2020 the over the air feed of WFQX DT2 was upgraded into 720p HD it had been airing in the 16 9 widescreen standard definition picture format before then 3 News operation EditFurther information WWTV News operation As WGKI the station simulcast WKBD s hour long prime time newscast at 10 o clock In June 2000 WFQX launched a news department of its own and began producing a nightly 10 o clock broadcast Known as Northern Michigan s Fox News at 10 this was plagued from the start by a lack of basic resources such as reporters and engineering upkeep The station initially had its own weather department but later began outsourcing weather duties to AccuWeather in State College Pennsylvania which pre taped weather segments and fed them to WFQX via satellite As a result WFQX was criticized for being too late when severe weather was an issue or choosing not to cover an event At some point in time the news title changed to Fox 33 News at 10 and weekend broadcasts ended On January 8 2007 WFQX began to air a simulcast of the weekday morning show of WJBK Detroit s Fox owned and operated station Branded as Michigan s Fox News Morning and running from 6 00 a m to 8 00 a m it featured local weather cut ins from AccuWeather and was established as part of a cooperation between the two stations to provide advertising opportunities in Detroit to businesses of Northern Michigan On February 5 WFQX also began simulcasting the second half of WJBK s 10 00 p m news After the sale of the channel to Cadillac Telecasting the station s news department was shut down On October 31 WWTV began producing the weeknight 10 00 p m newscast and the WJBK simulcast at 10 30 p m was dropped On January 7 2008 when CBS began requiring affiliates to carry The Early Show in its entirety the third hour of WWTV s Michigan This Morning which had been running from 7 00 a m to 8 00 a m was moved to WFQX WFUP and expanded to two hours That evening on WFQX WWTV launched the area s first 7 o clock news In April 2013 WFQX along with sister station WWTV began airing its newscasts in high definition Notable former on air staff Edit Jim Kosek weeknightsTechnical information EditThe stations digital signals are multiplexed WFQX subchannels Edit Subchannels of WFQX TV 4 Channel Res Aspect Short name Programming32 1 720p 16 9 WFQX DT Main WFQX programming Fox32 2 WFQX CW The CW Northern Michigan32 3 480i WFQX IO Ion Television32 4 WFQX D4 Scripps News32 5 WFQX D5 Ion Mystery32 6 WFQX D6 Defy TV32 7 WFQX D7 Bounce TV32 8 WFQX D8 QVCWFUP subchannels Edit Subchannels of WFUP 5 Channel Res Aspect Short name Programming45 1 720p 16 9 WFUP FX Main WFUP programming Fox45 2 1080i WFUP CB CBS WWTV WWUP TV 45 3 480i WFUP ME MeTV45 4 WFUP LA Laff45 5 WFUP QV QVC45 6 WFUP HS HSN Simulcast of subchannels of another stationReferences Edit Facility Technical Data for WFQX TV Licensing and Management System Federal Communications Commission Facility Technical Data for WFUP Licensing and Management System Federal Communications Commission RabbitEars TV Query for WFQX RabbitEars TV Query for WFQX RabbitEars TV Query for WFUPExternal links EditOfficial website WWTV WWUP TV 9 amp 10 News The CW Northern Michigan Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title WFQX TV amp oldid 1163171974, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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