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Wikipedia

WGBH-TV

WGBH-TV (channel 2), branded on-air as GBH or GBH 2 since 2020,[1] is the primary PBS member television station in Boston, Massachusetts, United States. It is the flagship property of the WGBH Educational Foundation, which also owns Boston's secondary PBS member WGBX-TV (channel 44) and Springfield, Massachusetts PBS member WGBY-TV (channel 57, operated by New England Public Media), Class A Biz TV affiliate WFXZ-CD (channel 24) and public radio stations WGBH (89.7 FM) and WCRB (99.5 FM) in the Boston area, and WCAI radio (and satellites WZAI and WNAN) on Cape Cod. WGBH-TV also effectively, but unofficially serves as one of three flagship stations of PBS, along with WNET in New York City and WETA-TV in Washington, D.C.

WGBH-TV
Channels
BrandingGBH 2
Programming
Affiliations2.1/44.1: PBS
Ownership
OwnerWGBH Educational Foundation
History
First air date
May 2, 1955 (67 years ago) (1955-05-02)
Former channel number(s)
  • Analog:
  • 2 (VHF, 1955–2009)
  • Digital:
  • 19 (UHF, 2002–2019)
NET (1955–1970)
Call sign meaning
Great Blue Hill
(original location of transmitter)
Technical information
Licensing authority
FCC
Facility ID72099
ERP34 kW
HAAT362.7 m (1,190.0 ft)
Transmitter coordinates42°18′10.7″N 71°13′4.9″W / 42.302972°N 71.218028°W / 42.302972; -71.218028Coordinates: 42°18′10.7″N 71°13′4.9″W / 42.302972°N 71.218028°W / 42.302972; -71.218028
Links
Public license information
  • Public file
  • LMS
Websitewww.wgbh.org

WGBH-TV, WGBX-TV, and the WGBH and WCRB radio stations share studios on Guest Street in northwest Boston's Brighton neighborhood; WGBH-TV's transmitter is located on Cabot Street (east of I-95/MA 128) in Needham, Massachusetts, on the former candelabra tower, which is shared with Fox affiliate WFXT and serves as a full power backup facility for sister station WGBX-TV as well as CBS owned-and-operated station WBZ-TV, ABC affiliate WCVB-TV, NBC owned-and-operated station WBTS-CD (which itself shares spectrum with WGBX) and MyNetworkTV affiliate WSBK-TV.

History

 
WGBH Guest Street studios (with "digital mural" LED screen)

The WGBH Educational Foundation received its first broadcast license for radio in April 1951 under the auspices of the Lowell Institute Cooperative Broadcasting Council, a consortium of local universities and cultural institutions, whose collaboration stems from an 1836 bequest by textile manufacturer John Lowell, Jr. that called for free public lectures for the citizens of Boston. WGBH first signed on the air on October 6, 1951, with a live broadcast of a performance by the Boston Symphony Orchestra.

The Federal Communications Commission (FCC) originally awarded a construction permit to Waltham-based electronics company Raytheon to build a television station that would transmit on VHF channel 2 in Boston. Raytheon planned to launch a commercial television station using the call letters WRTB-TV (for "Raytheon Television Broadcasting"). However, after some setbacks and the cancellation of the construction permit license, WRTB never made it on the air, paving the way for the FCC to allocate channel 2 for non-commercial educational use. WGBH subsequently applied for and received a license to operate on that channel. The WGBH Educational Foundation obtained initial start-up funds for WGBH-TV from the Lincoln and Therese Filene Foundation.[2]

WGBH-TV first signed on the air at 5:20 p.m. on May 2, 1955, becoming the first public television station in Boston and the first non-commercial television station to sign on in New England. The first program to air on the station was Come and See, a children's program hosted by Tony Saletan and Mary Lou Adams, which was filmed at Tufts Nursery Training School.[3] Channel 2 originally served as a member station of the National Educational Television and Radio Center (NETRC), which evolved into National Educational Television (NET) in 1963; for its first few years on the air, channel 2 only broadcast on Monday through Fridays between 5:30 and 9:00 p.m.

For the first six years, operations were based out of studio facilities located at 84 Massachusetts Avenue in Cambridge, Massachusetts, directly across from the Rogers Building main entrance to MIT.[4] The first television studios were located in second-floor space which originally housed a roller skating rink.[4] The uneven and rippled maple floors caused difficulties moving the heavy TV cameras, and loud creaking noises plagued the sound engineers.[4]

The station's callsign refers to Great Blue Hill (the highest point in the Boston area at an elevation of 635 feet (194 m)), a location in Milton that served as the original location of WGBH-TV's transmitter facility and where the transmitter for WGBH radio continues to operate to this day (the callsign is occasionally jokingly referred as "God Bless Harvard", although the station's connections with the university are at best indirect; Harvard was one of several Boston-area universities which took part in the Lowell Institute Cooperative Broadcasting Council and rented space to WGBH on Western Avenue in Allston for the station's studio operations).

In 1957, Hartford N. Gunn Jr. was appointed general manager of WGBH; he would later earn the Corporation for Public Broadcasting's Ralph Lowell Award for his achievements in programming development.[5] Under Gunn, who resigned in February 1970 to become president of PBS, WGBH made significant investments in technology and programming to improve the station's profile and set out to make it a producer of public television programming. That February, WGBH expanded its programming to weekends for the first time, adding a four-hour schedule on Sunday afternoons from 2:30 to 6:30 p.m. (its sign-on time on Sundays was later extended to 11:00 a.m. that May). In March 1958, channel 2 began offering academic instructional television programs, with the debut of eight weekly science programs aimed at students in the sixth grade, which were televised "in some 48 separate school systems in and around the Boston area." In November of that year, the station installed a new full-power transmitter donated by Westinghouse, which increased channel 2's transmitting power to 100,000 watts.[3]

 
Guest Street entrance to the WGBH studios

During the early morning hours of October 14, 1961, a large fire devastated the Cambridge studios of WGBH-TV and WGBH radio.[6] Until the WGBH Educational Foundation was able to build a new studio complex to replace the destroyed former building, the two stations arranged to operate from temporary offices and had to produce their local programming from the studio facilities of various television stations in the Boston area and southern New Hampshire. WGBH-TV maintained a splintered operation, basing its master control operations at Newman Catholic Center at Boston University, production facilities (for which it was reserved to use late nights and on weekends) at the studios of then CBS affiliate WHDH-TV (channel 5, now defunct; allocation as of March 1972 operated by ABC affiliate WCVB-TV) on Morrissey Boulevard in Boston's Dorchester section, and its film and tape library (including those which were salvaged from the fire) was housed at the studios of fellow NET station WENH-TV (channel 11) in Durham, New Hampshire.[7][6][8]

WGBH was only off the air for one day after the fire.[6] Before the conflagration, WGBH had purchased a used Greyhound bus, and had begun refitting it as a mobile TV studio. It was parked behind the 84 Massachusetts Avenue building but somehow survived the disaster, and became a vital temporary facility for continued operations.[4]

Several area universities also chipped in to temporarily house other operations displaced by the fire: WGBH's scenic department was relocated to Northeastern University, its arts department was set up on the Boston University campus, and programming and production offices were based in Cambridge's Kendall Square neighborhood. WHDH, NBC affiliate WBZ-TV (channel 4, as of January 1995 a CBS owned-and-operated station) and ABC affiliate WNAC-TV (channel 7, now defunct; allocation now occupied by independent station WHDH that is unrelated to the above-mentioned WHDH which is now WCVB-TV) also provided technical and production assistance to the WGBH television and radio stations until a permanent facility was built to reintegrate the stations' operations.[3][9] On August 29, 1963, WGBH-TV and WGBH radio both began operating from a new studio facility for the stations that was built at 125 Western Avenue in Boston's Allston neighborhood (the post office box address that the station adopted at that time – P.O. Box 350, Boston, MA 02134 – would become associated with a jingle used on the WGBH-produced children's program, ZOOM, both in its 1972 and 1999 adaptations, exhorting viewers to send in ideas for use on the show[10]).

On June 18, 1966, WGBH-TV relocated its transmitter to a broadcast tower in Needham, Massachusetts, The following year on September 25, 1967, WGBH-TV gained a sister television station in the Boston area, WGBX-TV (channel 44), which has transmitted its signal from the Needham site since the station signed on (WGBX's digital signal on UHF channel 32 shares the master antenna at the very top of the tower with several commercial stations in the market, while WGBH-TV's channel 5 digital transmitter operates from a different tower on Cabot St, also in Needham).[11][12]. The launch of WGBX was one facet of a plan developed by the WGBH Educational Foundation in the late 1960s to operate a network of six non-commercial television stations around Massachusetts. However, these plans never materialized in their intended form; besides WGBX, the only other station that ultimately made it on the air was WGBY (channel 57) in Springfield, which launched in 1971. Three additional WGBH-owned stations were to have launched, all of which were slated to use the "WGB" prefix for their call letters; these included WGBW, which was to broadcast on channel 35 in Adams (the "W" in its callsign was to stand for "West"; the callsign has since been reassigned to a radio station in Two Rivers, Wisconsin), along with two stations in New Bedford and Worcester.

On the night of April 5, 1968, WGBH-TV (at roughly three hours' notice) broadcast a James Brown concert from the Boston Garden, the night after Martin Luther King Jr. was assassinated. Boston Mayor Kevin White, who was worried that the concert would set off a riot, and certain that cancellation would be worse, contacted WGBH to air the concert on TV, and told the public to stay home and watch, helping prevent boycotts in the region. The concert would later be seen numerous times in the following days, helping the Boston area stay in peace.[13]

 
WGBH newsroom

In 1970, WGBH-TV became a member station of the Public Broadcasting Service (PBS), which was launched as an independent entity to supersede NET (which itself was integrated into its Newark, New Jersey outlet, WNDT (now WNET), per request by the Corporation for Public Broadcasting) and assumed many of the functions of its predecessor network. Over time, WGBH became a pioneer in public television, producing many programs that were seen on NET and later, PBS, that either originated at the station's studio facilities or were otherwise produced by channel 2.

On October 31, 2003, WGBH launched Boston Kids & Family TV, a PBS Kids Channel-affiliated local cable service that was developed in partnership with the City of Boston. Available to Comcast and RCN subscribers, the service took over channel space previously occupied by one of the city's cable access channels, which carried a mix of public affairs programs, footage of city-sponsored events, and mayoral press conferences (some of the aforementioned content was moved to the city-managed Educational Channel). Boston Kids & Family carried a mix of children's programs produced by WGBH and other distributors—which were scheduled to avoid simulcasts with WGBH-TV or WGBX-TV—daily from 7:00 a.m. to 8:00 p.m., and a repeating block of telecourse programs aimed at adults from 8:00 p.m. to 7:00 a.m.[14][15] The channel intended to affiliate the subchannel with the planned PBS Kids Go! network, which was scheduled to launch in October 2006; however, PBS scuttled plans to launch the Kids Go! network prior to its launch (opting only to launch the brand as an afternoon-only sub-block within PBS's existing children's program lineup).[16] After PBS Kids ceased network operations, Boston Kids & Family was replaced by The Municipal Channel, which carried much of the programming offered by the service prior to the WGBH partnership.

As WGBH's operations grew, the 125 Western Avenue building proved inadequate to facilitate it and its sister stations; some administrative operations were moved across the street to 114 Western Avenue, with an overhead pedestrian bridge connecting the two buildings. By 2005, WGBH had facilities in more than a dozen buildings in the Allston area.[17] The station's need for more studio space dovetailed with Harvard Business School's desire to expand its adjacent campus; Harvard already owned the land on which the WGBH studios were located, which the university had donated to WGBH for use to construct the Western Avenue facility in 1962 at a value of $250,000.[18] WGBH built a new studio complex – designed by James Polshek & Partners – in nearby Brighton, which was inaugurated in June 2007. The building spans the block of Market Street from Guest Street to North Beacon Street (1 Guest Street, where the lobby entrance of the new studio building is located, is the building's postal address), with radio studios facing pedestrian traffic on Market Street. The outside of the building carries a 30-by-45-foot (9.1 m × 13.7 m) "digital mural" LED screen, which displays a different image each day to commuters on the passing Massachusetts Turnpike.[19] Television and radio programs continued to be recorded at the Western Avenue studios until the WGBH stations completed the migration of their operations into the new facility in September 2007.[20][21] The old Western Avenue studios were renovated by Harvard University in 2011 to house the Harvard Innovation Lab.[22]

WGBH-TV has been digital-only since June 12, 2009.[23][24]

 
WGBH 2 logo from 2010 to 2020. The main portion of the logo had been used since 1974 as a national and corporate logo.
 
Secondary logo used for station branding until the early 2000s used again until 2010.

On August 27, 2020, it was announced that the WGBH Educational Foundation would re-brand all of its operations as "GBH", with WGBH-TV subsequently re-branding from "WGBH 2" to "GBH 2". The organization felt that the inclusion of the "W" prefix was too synonymous with terrestrial broadcasting, and did not reflect its current multi-platform operations. WGBH also cited that "GBH" was already commonly-used as a shorthand name for the station.[1] Along with the rebrand came a modified version of its iconic wordmark logo, in use since 1974.

Soundmark

External video
  Original, full version
  Current version since 2020

Since the early 1970s, WGBH has used a distinctive soundmark created by composer Gershon Kingsley in conjunction with Creative Director Sylvia Davis and General Manager Michael Rice. It is an electronic sound using a Moog synthesizer described as a crescendo. The sound has been updated periodically by manipulating the original recording with modern tools through the years, most recently in 2020.[25][26]

Programming

As a PBS member station, much of WGBH-TV's program schedule consists of educational and entertainment programming distributed by PBS to its member stations, including non-WGBH productions such as the PBS NewsHour, the Nightly Business Report, Sesame Street, Peg + Cat and Nature; it also carries programs distributed by American Public Television and other sources to fill its schedule, alongside programs produced for exclusive local broadcast in the Boston market.

WGBH features a mix of live-action and animated children's programs produced by the station and other distributors between 6:00 a.m. and 5:00 p.m., as well as on Saturday and Sunday mornings. The remainder of its weekday lineup includes a two-hour block of news and travel programs leading into prime time, with documentary, arts and entertainment programs provided by PBS shown Sunday through Fridays during prime time (encores of WGBH national productions typically air on Saturday evenings). Programming on Saturday afternoons focuses heavily on cooking and home improvement how-to shows (at one point, the station's Saturday afternoon lineup was branded as "How 2 Saturday"), while Sunday afternoons focus mainly on travel shows along with some how-to programs.

Original productions

For the better part of its history, WGBH-TV has been a major producer of programming for PBS and its predecessor, NET. Channel 2 produces more than two-thirds of the programs that PBS distributes nationally to its member stations. Among them are longstanding PBS mainstays such as NOVA, Frontline, Masterpiece, American Experience, The Victory Garden, and This Old House.

Other notable programs originated by WGBH have included The French Chef (a pioneering cooking show featuring Julia Child), and The Scarlet Letter (a major costume drama miniseries produced on-location that was the first challenger to the British dominance in such programming in America, and was PBS's highest-rated series for many years). The station has co-produced many other period dramas in conjunction with British production companies. Broadcasts of concerts by the Boston Symphony established the genre as a staple on television.

WGBH has also engaged in several experiments in programming and technology that have become standard in television, including:

  • Nam June Paik's wild morphing of the television image, and antic adventures in narrative story-telling (What's Happening, Mr. Silver?, Nine Heroes)
  • Ron Hayes' use of slit-scan imagery inspired by the yearning, driving themes of Wagner's Liebestod
  • The two-screen color stereo dance program CITY/motion/space/game.
  • Arts series produced in collaboration with Boston's Museum of Fine Arts (Museum Open House, Images, Eye-to-Eye) set the bar for the medium and were a major contributing force in "video art".
  • The Workshop for New Television developed works in dance (Dan Wagoner's George's House) and in drama (Mary Feldhaus-Weber's RED, BLUE, GOLD).

Notable general-audience programs produced by WGBH

Notable children's programs produced by WGBH

Notable alumni of WGBH productions

WGBH alumni maintain a website where stories and photographs are shared; reunions were held in 2000 and 2006.

Technical information

Subchannels

The station's digital signal is multiplexed. Note that due to WGBX's channel share agreement with NBC's WBTS-CD, WGBH instead carries the high definition feed identified as channel 44.1:

Subchannels of WGBH-TV[27]
Channel Res. Aspect Short name Programming
2.1 1080i 16:9 WGBH-HD Main WGBH programming / PBS
44.1 WGBX-HD WGBX-TV in HD
66.5 480i 16:9 Twist Twist (WUNI-DT5)
  Simulcast of subchannels of another station
  Broadcast on behalf of another station

In 2010, WGBH-TV became the first television station in the Boston market to provide a mobile DTV signal. It transmits two free-to-air channels using the ATSC-M/H standard, at 2.75 Mbit/s, with its first subchannel labelled as "WGBH CH 2".[28][29][30]

WGBH-DT2

WGBH launched a digital subchannel on virtual channel 2.2 in December 2005, which initially served as an affiliate of the PBS World news and documentary service (the subchannel was branded as "WGBH World").[31] In 2007, World programming was moved to the 44.2 subchannel of WGBX; WGBH replaced the network with a standard definition simulcast of its analog feed. The station discontinued the SD simulcast of channel 2.1 on April 17, 2012, when WGBH-DT2 re-assumed the local affiliation rights to World, which was simulcast on WGBX-DT2 for several months after the switch, before the former subchannel became its exclusive Boston outlet.

WGBH-DT3

WGBH launched a tertiary subchannel on virtual channel 2.3 in 2005, which offered high definition program content separate from that seen on the station's analog signal via the PBS-HD satellite feed; in 2008, the subchannel switched to a high-definition simulcast of the analog signal, with standard-definition programming presented in a windowboxed or letterboxed format. WGBH decommissioned the DT3 feed in 2010.

Spectrum auction repacking

In a list announcing the winning bids for stations which participated in the 2016 United States wireless spectrum auction released by the FCC on April 13, 2017, WGBH-TV was disclosed to have agreed to sell a portion of the broadcast spectrum allocated to its UHF channel 19 digital signal for a bid of $161,723,929;[32] in a statement, the station said it would "use the proceeds to expand its educational services to children and students, further its in-depth journalism, and strengthen its modest endowment."[33] The station also consigned to move its digital allocation to a low-band VHF channel; the FCC assigned VHF channel 5 (the former analog channel allocation of WCVB-TV) as the post-repack digital allocation to which WGBH was reassigned once the repacking of auction and repack participant stations were occurred on August 2, 2019. WGBH-TV's post repack facility on VHF 5 is located at the nearby American Tower owned facility on Cabot Street, also in Needham.[34]

Because the VHF channel 5 signal was significantly weaker than the prior UHF channel 19 signal, the repack initially left many over-the-air viewers in the Greater Boston area unable to receive the station's primary broadcasts on WGBH 2.1 and WGBX 44.1. A notice posted on the station's website in August 2018 stated that a power upgrade was forthcoming which would boost the signal from 6.9 kW to 34.5 kW, but that the upgrade was "temporarily on hold, pending the mitigation of the COVID-19 pandemic".[35] In the spring of 2021, the upgrade to 34.5 kW was finally completed,[36] but a VHF antenna specifically designed to receive low-band signals (channels 2-6) is now required for most viewers.

Former translator

WGBH formerly operated a low-power translator in Hyannis, W08CH (channel 8), which later ceased operations[when?]. The translator's license and callsign were deleted by the FCC in 2004.[37]

Related services

Television stations

WGBX-TV

WGBH-TV operates a secondary station in the Boston market, WGBX-TV (channel 44), which signed on the air on September 25, 1967. The station's schedule focuses on program genres not covered by WGBH-TV. Reruns of programs aired the previous evening on WGBX and WGBH-TV also make up a portion of the station's programming schedule. WGBX also maintains several digital subchannels that rebroadcast programs produced by WGBH and other PBS member stations around the U.S.

WGBY-TV

GBH also owns WGBY (channel 57), the PBS member station for the Springfield, Massachusetts market, which signed on the air on September 26, 1971. It was run separately from the Boston operations of WGBH television and radio and WGBX-TV.

In 2019, the station became part of New England Public Media, a joint venture with the local NPR station WFCR.[38][39]

Media Access Group

Since its creation in 1990, WGBH's Media Access Group is a leading provider of accessible media services to television producers, home video, websites, and movie theaters throughout the United States. The unit originated with the founding of The Caption Center in 1972, which invented the method of closed captioning to improve access to television programs for the deaf and hard-of-hearing (The French Chef was the first program to offer captioning provided by the unit), and created the Rear Window Captioning System for films. Along with providing closed captions for television programs seen on channel 2 and its sister stations, the Media Access Group is a major captioning provider for programs on other broadcast television networks (with the exception of ABC) and several cable channels. It also developed the Descriptive Video Service, and is the main provider for audio description soundtracks that give blind and low-vision viewers details about events occurring on-screen within an individual program, which can be found on streaming services as well as PBS stations, select broadcast networks and cable channels.

Online resources

The internet is WGBH's third platform; all radio and television programs produced by the stations have web components that are available at wgbh.org. The WGBH website also incorporates "web-only" productions:

  • WGBH Forum Network – a service offering free online public lecture videos and podcasts, produced in partnership with Boston's leading cultural and educational organizations
  • WGBH Podcasts – available at wgbh.org/podcasts, the service provides exclusive podcasts as well as podcasts related to WGBH original productions (such as Morning Stories], produced for WGBH radio and WGBH.org, The Scrum and Security Mom) available for mobile download
  • WGBH Media Library and Archives – available at openvault.wgbh.org, the site features archived WGBH program content.[40]
  • FFFBI (The Fin, Fur and Feather Bureau of Investigation) – an interactive website aimed at children that was developed through a partnership with National Geographic; the site features interactive games themed in the style of a detective story that are designed to help children learn science and engineering principles.
  • PBS LearningMedia – a partnership with PBS, which provides digital content and solutions for use in grade school instruction.
  • The WGBH Lab – a partnership with the World network, which incorporates featured content produced by independent and public media filmmakers.
  • Engineer Your Life – a partnership with the National Science Foundation, the Northrop Grumman Foundation, Stephen D. Bechtel, Jr. and the United Engineering Foundation, featuring stories and vocational information about careers in the engineering field, aimed at high school girls ages 14 to 17.
  • American Archive of Public Broadcasting—a collaboration between the Library of Congress and WGBH to coordinate a national effort to digitally preserve and make accessible historically significant public radio and television collections created over the past 70+ years.[41]

See also

References

  1. ^ a b Wyllie, Julian (August 31, 2020). "To change with the times, WGBH drops its 'W' and pivots to purple". Current. Retrieved August 31, 2020. WGBH in Boston is removing the "W" from its branding to become "GBH." [...] The legal name for the organization will remain the WGBH Education Foundation. The "W" will also remain in its FCC registration.
  2. ^ Yankl Stillman (September 2004). . JewishCurrents. Archived from the original on August 4, 2012. Retrieved March 20, 2013.
  3. ^ a b c "WGBH Timeline (1946-1978)". WGBH Educational Foundation. January 1, 2007. Retrieved July 20, 2017.
  4. ^ a b c d Hallock, Don (December 23, 2010). "The foundations of WGBH: 84 Mass. Ave". WGBH Alumni. Retrieved October 18, 2021.
  5. ^ "Ralph Lowell Award". Corporation for Public Broadcasting. Retrieved March 13, 2013.
  6. ^ a b c Hallock, Don (January 1, 2007). "The 1961 WGBH Fire". WGBH Alumni. Retrieved October 18, 2021.
  7. ^ "Fire Ravages WGBH" (PDF). The Tech. Massachusetts Institute of Technology. October 18, 1961. Retrieved September 12, 2007.
  8. ^ "The 1961 WGBH Fire". WGBH-TV. WGBH Educational Foundation. January 1, 2007.
  9. ^ "Friends in Need (1962)". The Boston Globe. April 29, 1962. Retrieved January 1, 2007 – via WGBH-TV.
  10. ^ "Address Song". PBS Kids. Public Broadcasting Service. 1998. Retrieved July 20, 2017.
  11. ^ "FCCInfo Facility Search Results".
  12. ^ "FCCInfo Facility Search Results".
  13. ^ "Remembering The James Brown Concert That Calmed Boston". News. April 5, 2018. Retrieved August 7, 2021.
  14. ^ Suzanne C. Ryan (October 31, 2003). "City revives kids' PBS channel". The Boston Globe. The New York Times Company. Retrieved January 27, 2017.
  15. ^ Jeremy Egner (April 3, 2006). "World and Go! streams flow into PBS plans". Current. Current LLC. Retrieved March 30, 2016.
  16. ^ Katy June-Friesen (January 12, 2009). . Current. Current LLC. Archived from the original on April 16, 2016. Retrieved December 9, 2010.
  17. ^ . Vanasse Hangen Brustlin, Inc. Archived from the original on July 17, 2011. Retrieved March 13, 2013.
  18. ^ Bruce L. Paisner (August 9, 1962). "Harvard Gives WGBH Land For New Studio". The Crimson. Harvard University. Retrieved July 20, 2017.
  19. ^ "About our digital mural". WGBH-TV. WGBH Educational Foundation. Retrieved March 13, 2013.
  20. ^ Clea Simon (April 5, 2007). "'GBH celebrates memories of Western Ave. studio". The Boston Globe. The New York Times Company. Retrieved July 20, 2017. (subscription required)
  21. ^ Mark Favermann (December 31, 2007). "WGBH's New Headquarters Building". Berkshire Fine Arts. Retrieved July 20, 2017.
  22. ^ "Harvard Innovation Lab Opens". Harvard Business School (Press release). Retrieved March 13, 2013.
  23. ^ (PDF). Federal Communications Commission. Archived from the original (PDF) on August 29, 2013. Retrieved June 26, 2017.
  24. ^ "APPENDIX B: ALL FULL-POWER TELEVISION STATIONS BY DMA, INDICATING THOSE TERMINATING ANALOG SERVICE BEFORE ON OR FEBRUARY 17, 2009" (PDF). Federal Communications Commission. Retrieved August 29, 2013.
  25. ^ Northrop, Daphne (2020). "GBH's Iconic "Sting" Gets A Facelift". GBH. Retrieved January 26, 2023.
  26. ^ Murie, Michael (March 20, 2014). "Reimagining an ID: Sound & Vision | Filmmaker Magazine". Filmmaker Magazine. Retrieved January 26, 2023.
  27. ^ "RabbitEars TV Query for WGBH". RabbitEars. Retrieved July 20, 2017.
  28. ^ "Mobile DTV Query for WGBH". RabbitEars. Retrieved March 13, 2013.
  29. ^ . MDTVSignalMap.com. Archived from the original on October 17, 2016. Retrieved March 13, 2013.
  30. ^ "Mobile TV takes three steps forward in Asia, North America, one step back in Europe". Broadcast Engineering. Retrieved March 13, 2013.
  31. ^ . Current. Current LLC. December 19, 2005. Archived from the original on April 26, 2016. Retrieved March 30, 2016.
  32. ^ "FCC Broadcast Television Spectrum Incentive Auction: Auction 1001: Winning Bids" (PDF). Federal Communications Commission. April 13, 2017.
  33. ^ Dan Adams; Shirley Leung (April 13, 2017). "WGBH, WLVI reap huge windfall in sale of broadcast spectrum". The Boston Globe. Boston Globe Media Group. Retrieved April 14, 2017.
  34. ^ "FCCInfo Results". www.fccinfo.com. Retrieved March 25, 2019.
  35. ^ "I'm Getting Weak or No Reception Digital or Over-The-Air TV". GBH. Retrieved November 13, 2021.
  36. ^ "WGBH Upgrades COMARK PARALLAX VHF DTV Band 1 Transmitter". The Broadcast Bridge. June 2, 2021. Retrieved November 23, 2021.
  37. ^ "Call Sign History". CDBS Public Access. Federal Communications Commission. Archived from the original on July 14, 2012. Retrieved February 19, 2006.
  38. ^ Kinney, Jim (April 11, 2019). "New England Public Radio, WGBY-TV in Springfield to merge; boosting local news coverage". masslive.com. Retrieved April 11, 2019.
  39. ^ Falk, Tyler (April 11, 2019). "New England Public Radio and WGBY to combine operations". Current. Retrieved April 11, 2019.
  40. ^ "WGBH Openvault". openvault.wgbh.org. Retrieved July 23, 2020.
  41. ^ "About the AAPB". americanarchive.org. Retrieved July 23, 2020.

External links

  • Official website  
  • WGBH Media Library and Archives website OpenVault

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For the radio station see WGBH FM Not to be confused with WGBA TV WGBH TV channel 2 branded on air as GBH or GBH 2 since 2020 1 is the primary PBS member television station in Boston Massachusetts United States It is the flagship property of the WGBH Educational Foundation which also owns Boston s secondary PBS member WGBX TV channel 44 and Springfield Massachusetts PBS member WGBY TV channel 57 operated by New England Public Media Class A Biz TV affiliate WFXZ CD channel 24 and public radio stations WGBH 89 7 FM and WCRB 99 5 FM in the Boston area and WCAI radio and satellites WZAI and WNAN on Cape Cod WGBH TV also effectively but unofficially serves as one of three flagship stations of PBS along with WNET in New York City and WETA TV in Washington D C WGBH TVBoston MassachusettsUnited StatesChannelsDigital 5 VHF shared with WFXZ CD Virtual 2BrandingGBH 2ProgrammingAffiliations2 1 44 1 PBSOwnershipOwnerWGBH Educational FoundationSister stationsTV WFXZ CDWGBX TVWGBY TVRadio WGBHWCAI WZAI WNANWCRBHistoryFirst air dateMay 2 1955 67 years ago 1955 05 02 Former channel number s Analog 2 VHF 1955 2009 Digital 19 UHF 2002 2019 Former affiliationsNET 1955 1970 Call sign meaningGreat Blue Hill original location of transmitter Technical informationLicensing authorityFCCFacility ID72099ERP34 kWHAAT362 7 m 1 190 0 ft Transmitter coordinates42 18 10 7 N 71 13 4 9 W 42 302972 N 71 218028 W 42 302972 71 218028 Coordinates 42 18 10 7 N 71 13 4 9 W 42 302972 N 71 218028 W 42 302972 71 218028LinksPublic license informationPublic fileLMSWebsitewww wbr wgbh wbr orgWGBH TV WGBX TV and the WGBH and WCRB radio stations share studios on Guest Street in northwest Boston s Brighton neighborhood WGBH TV s transmitter is located on Cabot Street east of I 95 MA 128 in Needham Massachusetts on the former candelabra tower which is shared with Fox affiliate WFXT and serves as a full power backup facility for sister station WGBX TV as well as CBS owned and operated station WBZ TV ABC affiliate WCVB TV NBC owned and operated station WBTS CD which itself shares spectrum with WGBX and MyNetworkTV affiliate WSBK TV Contents 1 History 2 Soundmark 3 Programming 3 1 Original productions 3 1 1 Notable general audience programs produced by WGBH 3 1 2 Notable children s programs produced by WGBH 4 Notable alumni of WGBH productions 5 Technical information 5 1 Subchannels 5 2 WGBH DT2 5 3 WGBH DT3 5 4 Spectrum auction repacking 5 5 Former translator 6 Related services 6 1 Television stations 6 1 1 WGBX TV 6 1 2 WGBY TV 6 2 Media Access Group 6 3 Online resources 7 See also 8 References 9 External linksHistory EditFor more of a history of the Lowell Institute Cooperative Broadcasting Council see John Lowell Jr philanthropist WGBH Guest Street studios with digital mural LED screen The WGBH Educational Foundation received its first broadcast license for radio in April 1951 under the auspices of the Lowell Institute Cooperative Broadcasting Council a consortium of local universities and cultural institutions whose collaboration stems from an 1836 bequest by textile manufacturer John Lowell Jr that called for free public lectures for the citizens of Boston WGBH first signed on the air on October 6 1951 with a live broadcast of a performance by the Boston Symphony Orchestra The Federal Communications Commission FCC originally awarded a construction permit to Waltham based electronics company Raytheon to build a television station that would transmit on VHF channel 2 in Boston Raytheon planned to launch a commercial television station using the call letters WRTB TV for Raytheon Television Broadcasting However after some setbacks and the cancellation of the construction permit license WRTB never made it on the air paving the way for the FCC to allocate channel 2 for non commercial educational use WGBH subsequently applied for and received a license to operate on that channel The WGBH Educational Foundation obtained initial start up funds for WGBH TV from the Lincoln and Therese Filene Foundation 2 WGBH TV first signed on the air at 5 20 p m on May 2 1955 becoming the first public television station in Boston and the first non commercial television station to sign on in New England The first program to air on the station was Come and See a children s program hosted by Tony Saletan and Mary Lou Adams which was filmed at Tufts Nursery Training School 3 Channel 2 originally served as a member station of the National Educational Television and Radio Center NETRC which evolved into National Educational Television NET in 1963 for its first few years on the air channel 2 only broadcast on Monday through Fridays between 5 30 and 9 00 p m For the first six years operations were based out of studio facilities located at 84 Massachusetts Avenue in Cambridge Massachusetts directly across from the Rogers Building main entrance to MIT 4 The first television studios were located in second floor space which originally housed a roller skating rink 4 The uneven and rippled maple floors caused difficulties moving the heavy TV cameras and loud creaking noises plagued the sound engineers 4 The station s callsign refers to Great Blue Hill the highest point in the Boston area at an elevation of 635 feet 194 m a location in Milton that served as the original location of WGBH TV s transmitter facility and where the transmitter for WGBH radio continues to operate to this day the callsign is occasionally jokingly referred as God Bless Harvard although the station s connections with the university are at best indirect Harvard was one of several Boston area universities which took part in the Lowell Institute Cooperative Broadcasting Council and rented space to WGBH on Western Avenue in Allston for the station s studio operations In 1957 Hartford N Gunn Jr was appointed general manager of WGBH he would later earn the Corporation for Public Broadcasting s Ralph Lowell Award for his achievements in programming development 5 Under Gunn who resigned in February 1970 to become president of PBS WGBH made significant investments in technology and programming to improve the station s profile and set out to make it a producer of public television programming That February WGBH expanded its programming to weekends for the first time adding a four hour schedule on Sunday afternoons from 2 30 to 6 30 p m its sign on time on Sundays was later extended to 11 00 a m that May In March 1958 channel 2 began offering academic instructional television programs with the debut of eight weekly science programs aimed at students in the sixth grade which were televised in some 48 separate school systems in and around the Boston area In November of that year the station installed a new full power transmitter donated by Westinghouse which increased channel 2 s transmitting power to 100 000 watts 3 Guest Street entrance to the WGBH studios During the early morning hours of October 14 1961 a large fire devastated the Cambridge studios of WGBH TV and WGBH radio 6 Until the WGBH Educational Foundation was able to build a new studio complex to replace the destroyed former building the two stations arranged to operate from temporary offices and had to produce their local programming from the studio facilities of various television stations in the Boston area and southern New Hampshire WGBH TV maintained a splintered operation basing its master control operations at Newman Catholic Center at Boston University production facilities for which it was reserved to use late nights and on weekends at the studios of then CBS affiliate WHDH TV channel 5 now defunct allocation as of March 1972 operated by ABC affiliate WCVB TV on Morrissey Boulevard in Boston s Dorchester section and its film and tape library including those which were salvaged from the fire was housed at the studios of fellow NET station WENH TV channel 11 in Durham New Hampshire 7 6 8 WGBH was only off the air for one day after the fire 6 Before the conflagration WGBH had purchased a used Greyhound bus and had begun refitting it as a mobile TV studio It was parked behind the 84 Massachusetts Avenue building but somehow survived the disaster and became a vital temporary facility for continued operations 4 Several area universities also chipped in to temporarily house other operations displaced by the fire WGBH s scenic department was relocated to Northeastern University its arts department was set up on the Boston University campus and programming and production offices were based in Cambridge s Kendall Square neighborhood WHDH NBC affiliate WBZ TV channel 4 as of January 1995 a CBS owned and operated station and ABC affiliate WNAC TV channel 7 now defunct allocation now occupied by independent station WHDH that is unrelated to the above mentioned WHDH which is now WCVB TV also provided technical and production assistance to the WGBH television and radio stations until a permanent facility was built to reintegrate the stations operations 3 9 On August 29 1963 WGBH TV and WGBH radio both began operating from a new studio facility for the stations that was built at 125 Western Avenue in Boston s Allston neighborhood the post office box address that the station adopted at that time P O Box 350 Boston MA 02134 would become associated with a jingle used on the WGBH produced children s program ZOOM both in its 1972 and 1999 adaptations exhorting viewers to send in ideas for use on the show 10 On June 18 1966 WGBH TV relocated its transmitter to a broadcast tower in Needham Massachusetts The following year on September 25 1967 WGBH TV gained a sister television station in the Boston area WGBX TV channel 44 which has transmitted its signal from the Needham site since the station signed on WGBX s digital signal on UHF channel 32 shares the master antenna at the very top of the tower with several commercial stations in the market while WGBH TV s channel 5 digital transmitter operates from a different tower on Cabot St also in Needham 11 12 The launch of WGBX was one facet of a plan developed by the WGBH Educational Foundation in the late 1960s to operate a network of six non commercial television stations around Massachusetts However these plans never materialized in their intended form besides WGBX the only other station that ultimately made it on the air was WGBY channel 57 in Springfield which launched in 1971 Three additional WGBH owned stations were to have launched all of which were slated to use the WGB prefix for their call letters these included WGBW which was to broadcast on channel 35 in Adams the W in its callsign was to stand for West the callsign has since been reassigned to a radio station in Two Rivers Wisconsin along with two stations in New Bedford and Worcester On the night of April 5 1968 WGBH TV at roughly three hours notice broadcast a James Brown concert from the Boston Garden the night after Martin Luther King Jr was assassinated Boston Mayor Kevin White who was worried that the concert would set off a riot and certain that cancellation would be worse contacted WGBH to air the concert on TV and told the public to stay home and watch helping prevent boycotts in the region The concert would later be seen numerous times in the following days helping the Boston area stay in peace 13 WGBH newsroom In 1970 WGBH TV became a member station of the Public Broadcasting Service PBS which was launched as an independent entity to supersede NET which itself was integrated into its Newark New Jersey outlet WNDT now WNET per request by the Corporation for Public Broadcasting and assumed many of the functions of its predecessor network Over time WGBH became a pioneer in public television producing many programs that were seen on NET and later PBS that either originated at the station s studio facilities or were otherwise produced by channel 2 On October 31 2003 WGBH launched Boston Kids amp Family TV a PBS Kids Channel affiliated local cable service that was developed in partnership with the City of Boston Available to Comcast and RCN subscribers the service took over channel space previously occupied by one of the city s cable access channels which carried a mix of public affairs programs footage of city sponsored events and mayoral press conferences some of the aforementioned content was moved to the city managed Educational Channel Boston Kids amp Family carried a mix of children s programs produced by WGBH and other distributors which were scheduled to avoid simulcasts with WGBH TV or WGBX TV daily from 7 00 a m to 8 00 p m and a repeating block of telecourse programs aimed at adults from 8 00 p m to 7 00 a m 14 15 The channel intended to affiliate the subchannel with the planned PBS Kids Go network which was scheduled to launch in October 2006 however PBS scuttled plans to launch the Kids Go network prior to its launch opting only to launch the brand as an afternoon only sub block within PBS s existing children s program lineup 16 After PBS Kids ceased network operations Boston Kids amp Family was replaced by The Municipal Channel which carried much of the programming offered by the service prior to the WGBH partnership As WGBH s operations grew the 125 Western Avenue building proved inadequate to facilitate it and its sister stations some administrative operations were moved across the street to 114 Western Avenue with an overhead pedestrian bridge connecting the two buildings By 2005 WGBH had facilities in more than a dozen buildings in the Allston area 17 The station s need for more studio space dovetailed with Harvard Business School s desire to expand its adjacent campus Harvard already owned the land on which the WGBH studios were located which the university had donated to WGBH for use to construct the Western Avenue facility in 1962 at a value of 250 000 18 WGBH built a new studio complex designed by James Polshek amp Partners in nearby Brighton which was inaugurated in June 2007 The building spans the block of Market Street from Guest Street to North Beacon Street 1 Guest Street where the lobby entrance of the new studio building is located is the building s postal address with radio studios facing pedestrian traffic on Market Street The outside of the building carries a 30 by 45 foot 9 1 m 13 7 m digital mural LED screen which displays a different image each day to commuters on the passing Massachusetts Turnpike 19 Television and radio programs continued to be recorded at the Western Avenue studios until the WGBH stations completed the migration of their operations into the new facility in September 2007 20 21 The old Western Avenue studios were renovated by Harvard University in 2011 to house the Harvard Innovation Lab 22 WGBH TV has been digital only since June 12 2009 23 24 WGBH 2 logo from 2010 to 2020 The main portion of the logo had been used since 1974 as a national and corporate logo Secondary logo used for station branding until the early 2000s used again until 2010 On August 27 2020 it was announced that the WGBH Educational Foundation would re brand all of its operations as GBH with WGBH TV subsequently re branding from WGBH 2 to GBH 2 The organization felt that the inclusion of the W prefix was too synonymous with terrestrial broadcasting and did not reflect its current multi platform operations WGBH also cited that GBH was already commonly used as a shorthand name for the station 1 Along with the rebrand came a modified version of its iconic wordmark logo in use since 1974 Soundmark EditExternal video Original full version Current version since 2020Since the early 1970s WGBH has used a distinctive soundmark created by composer Gershon Kingsley in conjunction with Creative Director Sylvia Davis and General Manager Michael Rice It is an electronic sound using a Moog synthesizer described as a crescendo The sound has been updated periodically by manipulating the original recording with modern tools through the years most recently in 2020 25 26 Programming EditAs a PBS member station much of WGBH TV s program schedule consists of educational and entertainment programming distributed by PBS to its member stations including non WGBH productions such as the PBS NewsHour the Nightly Business Report Sesame Street Peg Cat and Nature it also carries programs distributed by American Public Television and other sources to fill its schedule alongside programs produced for exclusive local broadcast in the Boston market WGBH features a mix of live action and animated children s programs produced by the station and other distributors between 6 00 a m and 5 00 p m as well as on Saturday and Sunday mornings The remainder of its weekday lineup includes a two hour block of news and travel programs leading into prime time with documentary arts and entertainment programs provided by PBS shown Sunday through Fridays during prime time encores of WGBH national productions typically air on Saturday evenings Programming on Saturday afternoons focuses heavily on cooking and home improvement how to shows at one point the station s Saturday afternoon lineup was branded as How 2 Saturday while Sunday afternoons focus mainly on travel shows along with some how to programs Original productions Edit For the better part of its history WGBH TV has been a major producer of programming for PBS and its predecessor NET Channel 2 produces more than two thirds of the programs that PBS distributes nationally to its member stations Among them are longstanding PBS mainstays such as NOVA Frontline Masterpiece American Experience The Victory Garden and This Old House Other notable programs originated by WGBH have included The French Chef a pioneering cooking show featuring Julia Child and The Scarlet Letter a major costume drama miniseries produced on location that was the first challenger to the British dominance in such programming in America and was PBS s highest rated series for many years The station has co produced many other period dramas in conjunction with British production companies Broadcasts of concerts by the Boston Symphony established the genre as a staple on television WGBH has also engaged in several experiments in programming and technology that have become standard in television including Nam June Paik s wild morphing of the television image and antic adventures in narrative story telling What s Happening Mr Silver Nine Heroes Ron Hayes use of slit scan imagery inspired by the yearning driving themes of Wagner s Liebestod The two screen color stereo dance program CITY motion space game Arts series produced in collaboration with Boston s Museum of Fine Arts Museum Open House Images Eye to Eye set the bar for the medium and were a major contributing force in video art The Workshop for New Television developed works in dance Dan Wagoner s George s House and in drama Mary Feldhaus Weber s RED BLUE GOLD Notable general audience programs produced by WGBH Edit Adventure Africans in America 1998 1999 PBS America s Ballroom Challenge American Experience 1988 present PBS Andre s Mother Antiques Roadshow 1997 present PBS Antiques Roadshow FYI Ask This Old House The Art of Logos Basic Black Beat the Press a weekly program of media criticism airing Friday evenings hosted by Emily Rooney A Biography of America 2000 2001 Camera Three The Captioned ABC News 1973 1982 Conspiracy of Kindness 2005 PBS Commanding Heights The Battle for the World Economy 2002 PBS Culture Shock 2000 PBS Destinos An Introduction to Spanish Discover The World of Science Discovering Psychology Endgame Ethics and Values in America 2002 PBS produced with Scott Goldstein Productions Evening at Pops 1970 2005 PBS Evolution 2001 PBS produced with Clear Blue Sky Productions Inc Eye to Eye 50 Years War Israel and the Arabs January 24 25 1999 PBS The Fool of the World and the Flying Ship The French Chef French in Action Frontline 1983 present PBS Frontline World PBS Gourmet s Diary of a Foodie Greater Boston a public affairs program on issues of local interest airing Monday Thursday on WGBH TV and repeated later on WGBX TV hosted by Jim Braude High School Quiz Show Lidia s Italy from 2009 Lidia s Kitchen 2013 present Long Ago amp Far Away Making Things Grow Masterpiece formerly known as Masterpiece Theatre 1971 present PBS Mill Times 2002 PBS The Mind of a Chef 2012 present PBS Misunderstood Minds 2002 PBS MIT Science Reporter Moveable Feast with Fine Cooking Magazine 2013 present Mr Tornado 2020 PBS Neighborhood Kitchens 2011 present created written directed and produced by Patricia Alvarado Nunez The New Yankee Workshop Nova 1974 present PBS Nova ScienceNow Odd Job Jack 2017 present PBS Old Settler 2001 2004 PBS PBS Millennium 2000 People s Century 1995 April 19 1998 July 5 1999 PBS produced in conjunction with the BBC Religious America 1974 13 episodes PBS The Scarlet Letter Simply Ming Skinwalkers PBS Stories from the Stage 2017 present World The Ten O Clock News They Made America 2004 PBS This Old House 1979 present PBS The Victory Garden 1975 present PBS War and Peace in the Nuclear Age Weekends with Yankee 2017 present The Western Tradition Woof It s A Dog s Life Notable children s programs produced by WGBH Edit All About You 1974 produced for the Agency for Instructional Television Arthur 1996 2022 PBS produced with Cookie Jar Group seasons 1 15 seasons 1 8 as CINAR seasons 9 15 as Cookie Jar Entertainment seasons 16 19 with 9 Story Media Group seasons 20 25 with Oasis Animation Between the Lions 2000 2010 PBS with Sirius Thinking Ltd and Mississippi Public Broadcasting Curious George 2006 2015 PBS with Imagine Entertainment and Universal Animation Studios Design Squad 2007 2011 Don t Look Now 1983 PBS short lived clone of You Can t Do That on Television by the same producers Fetch with Ruff Ruffman 2006 2010 PBS Martha Speaks 2008 2014 PBS produced with Studio B Productions seasons 1 4 seasons 5 and 6 with Oasis Animation Molly of Denali 2019 present PBS co production with Atomic Cartoons Peep and the Big Wide World 2004 2011 PBS co produced with 9 Story Media Group for PBS Kids Plum Landing 2014 present PBS Pinkalicious amp Peterrific 2018 present PBS co production with Sixteen South Postcards from Buster 2004 2012 PBS produced with Marc Brown Studios Cookie Jar Group seasons 1 2 seasons 3 and 4 with 9 Story Media Group Rebop 1976 1979 PBS Sara Solves It failed pilot for Amazon Video 2013 co production with DHX Media Vancouver and Out of the Blue Enterprises Time Warp Trio 2005 2006 co production with Soup2Nuts for Discovery Kids Where in the World Is Carmen Sandiego 1991 1995 PBS in partnership with WQED in Pittsburgh Where in Time is Carmen Sandiego 1996 1997 PBS in partnership with WQED in Pittsburgh ZOOM 1972 1978 and 1999 2005 PBS Notable alumni of WGBH productions EditNorm Abram host of New Yankee Workshop Liliana Abud host of Destinos An Introduction to Spanish Russell Baker host of Masterpiece Theatre Pierre Capretz host of French in Action Julia Child host of The French Chef Bud Collins announcer for Tennis US Pro National Doubles Alistair Cooke host of Masterpiece Theatre James Underwood Crockett host of The Victory Garden Steve Curwood anchor for The Ten O Clock News Michael Dukakis host of The Advocates Roger Fisher host of The Advocates Michael Kolowich anchor for The Ten O Clock News Robert Krulwich host of NOVA scienceNOW Robert J Lurtsema known as Lurtz NOVA Christopher Lydon anchor for The Ten O Clock News Will Lyman Frontline narrator and announcer Louis M Lyons anchor of The Ten O Clock News during the 1960s and 1970s Thomas J MacDonald host of Rough Cut Woodworking with Tommy Mac Dodge Morgan host of Adventure Elliot Norton host of Elliot Norton Reviews Vincent Price host of Mystery Diana Rigg host of Mystery Emily Rooney Greater Boston and Beat the Press Jim Braude currently when hosts the weeknight program along with the WGBH radio midday program BPR William A Rusher host of The Advocates David Rutstein host of Facts of Medicine Gene Shalit host of Mystery Neil deGrasse Tyson host of Nova ScienceNOW Bob Vila host of This Old House Judy Woodruff Frontline host from 1984 to 1990WGBH alumni maintain a website where stories and photographs are shared reunions were held in 2000 and 2006 Technical information EditSubchannels Edit The station s digital signal is multiplexed Note that due to WGBX s channel share agreement with NBC s WBTS CD WGBH instead carries the high definition feed identified as channel 44 1 Subchannels of WGBH TV 27 Channel Res Aspect Short name Programming2 1 1080i 16 9 WGBH HD Main WGBH programming PBS44 1 WGBX HD WGBX TV in HD66 5 480i 16 9 Twist Twist WUNI DT5 Simulcast of subchannels of another station Broadcast on behalf of another station In 2010 WGBH TV became the first television station in the Boston market to provide a mobile DTV signal It transmits two free to air channels using the ATSC M H standard at 2 75 Mbit s with its first subchannel labelled as WGBH CH 2 28 29 30 WGBH DT2 Edit WGBH launched a digital subchannel on virtual channel 2 2 in December 2005 which initially served as an affiliate of the PBS World news and documentary service the subchannel was branded as WGBH World 31 In 2007 World programming was moved to the 44 2 subchannel of WGBX WGBH replaced the network with a standard definition simulcast of its analog feed The station discontinued the SD simulcast of channel 2 1 on April 17 2012 when WGBH DT2 re assumed the local affiliation rights to World which was simulcast on WGBX DT2 for several months after the switch before the former subchannel became its exclusive Boston outlet WGBH DT3 Edit WGBH launched a tertiary subchannel on virtual channel 2 3 in 2005 which offered high definition program content separate from that seen on the station s analog signal via the PBS HD satellite feed in 2008 the subchannel switched to a high definition simulcast of the analog signal with standard definition programming presented in a windowboxed or letterboxed format WGBH decommissioned the DT3 feed in 2010 Spectrum auction repacking Edit In a list announcing the winning bids for stations which participated in the 2016 United States wireless spectrum auction released by the FCC on April 13 2017 WGBH TV was disclosed to have agreed to sell a portion of the broadcast spectrum allocated to its UHF channel 19 digital signal for a bid of 161 723 929 32 in a statement the station said it would use the proceeds to expand its educational services to children and students further its in depth journalism and strengthen its modest endowment 33 The station also consigned to move its digital allocation to a low band VHF channel the FCC assigned VHF channel 5 the former analog channel allocation of WCVB TV as the post repack digital allocation to which WGBH was reassigned once the repacking of auction and repack participant stations were occurred on August 2 2019 WGBH TV s post repack facility on VHF 5 is located at the nearby American Tower owned facility on Cabot Street also in Needham 34 Because the VHF channel 5 signal was significantly weaker than the prior UHF channel 19 signal the repack initially left many over the air viewers in the Greater Boston area unable to receive the station s primary broadcasts on WGBH 2 1 and WGBX 44 1 A notice posted on the station s website in August 2018 stated that a power upgrade was forthcoming which would boost the signal from 6 9 kW to 34 5 kW but that the upgrade was temporarily on hold pending the mitigation of the COVID 19 pandemic 35 In the spring of 2021 the upgrade to 34 5 kW was finally completed 36 but a VHF antenna specifically designed to receive low band signals channels 2 6 is now required for most viewers Former translator Edit WGBH formerly operated a low power translator in Hyannis W08CH channel 8 which later ceased operations when The translator s license and callsign were deleted by the FCC in 2004 37 Related services EditTelevision stations Edit WGBX TV Edit Main article WGBX TV WGBH TV operates a secondary station in the Boston market WGBX TV channel 44 which signed on the air on September 25 1967 The station s schedule focuses on program genres not covered by WGBH TV Reruns of programs aired the previous evening on WGBX and WGBH TV also make up a portion of the station s programming schedule WGBX also maintains several digital subchannels that rebroadcast programs produced by WGBH and other PBS member stations around the U S WGBY TV Edit Main article WGBY TV GBH also owns WGBY channel 57 the PBS member station for the Springfield Massachusetts market which signed on the air on September 26 1971 It was run separately from the Boston operations of WGBH television and radio and WGBX TV In 2019 the station became part of New England Public Media a joint venture with the local NPR station WFCR 38 39 Media Access Group Edit Since its creation in 1990 WGBH s Media Access Group is a leading provider of accessible media services to television producers home video websites and movie theaters throughout the United States The unit originated with the founding of The Caption Center in 1972 which invented the method of closed captioning to improve access to television programs for the deaf and hard of hearing The French Chef was the first program to offer captioning provided by the unit and created the Rear Window Captioning System for films Along with providing closed captions for television programs seen on channel 2 and its sister stations the Media Access Group is a major captioning provider for programs on other broadcast television networks with the exception of ABC and several cable channels It also developed the Descriptive Video Service and is the main provider for audio description soundtracks that give blind and low vision viewers details about events occurring on screen within an individual program which can be found on streaming services as well as PBS stations select broadcast networks and cable channels Online resources Edit The internet is WGBH s third platform all radio and television programs produced by the stations have web components that are available at wgbh org The WGBH website also incorporates web only productions WGBH Forum Network a service offering free online public lecture videos and podcasts produced in partnership with Boston s leading cultural and educational organizations WGBH Podcasts available at wgbh org podcasts the service provides exclusive podcasts as well as podcasts related to WGBH original productions such as Morning Stories produced for WGBH radio and WGBH org The Scrum and Security Mom available for mobile download WGBH Media Library and Archives available at openvault wgbh org the site features archived WGBH program content 40 FFFBI The Fin Fur and Feather Bureau of Investigation an interactive website aimed at children that was developed through a partnership with National Geographic the site features interactive games themed in the style of a detective story that are designed to help children learn science and engineering principles PBS LearningMedia a partnership with PBS which provides digital content and solutions for use in grade school instruction The WGBH Lab a partnership with the World network which incorporates featured content produced by independent and public media filmmakers Engineer Your Life a partnership with the National Science Foundation the Northrop Grumman Foundation Stephen D Bechtel Jr and the United Engineering Foundation featuring stories and vocational information about careers in the engineering field aimed at high school girls ages 14 to 17 American Archive of Public Broadcasting a collaboration between the Library of Congress and WGBH to coordinate a national effort to digitally preserve and make accessible historically significant public radio and television collections created over the past 70 years 41 See also EditPortals United States Television List of television stations in Massachusetts List of United States stations available in CanadaReferences Edit a b Wyllie Julian August 31 2020 To change with the times WGBH drops its W and pivots to purple Current Retrieved August 31 2020 WGBH in Boston is removing the W from its branding to become GBH The legal name for the organization will remain the WGBH Education Foundation The W will also remain in its FCC registration Yankl Stillman September 2004 Jewish Currents Edward Filene Pioneer of Social Responsibility JewishCurrents Archived from the original on August 4 2012 Retrieved March 20 2013 a b c WGBH Timeline 1946 1978 WGBH Educational Foundation January 1 2007 Retrieved July 20 2017 a b c d Hallock Don December 23 2010 The foundations of WGBH 84 Mass Ave WGBH Alumni Retrieved October 18 2021 Ralph Lowell Award Corporation for Public Broadcasting Retrieved March 13 2013 a b c Hallock Don January 1 2007 The 1961 WGBH Fire WGBH Alumni Retrieved October 18 2021 Fire Ravages WGBH PDF The Tech Massachusetts Institute of Technology October 18 1961 Retrieved September 12 2007 The 1961 WGBH Fire WGBH TV WGBH Educational Foundation January 1 2007 Friends in Need 1962 The Boston Globe April 29 1962 Retrieved January 1 2007 via WGBH TV Address Song PBS Kids Public Broadcasting Service 1998 Retrieved July 20 2017 FCCInfo Facility Search Results FCCInfo Facility Search Results Remembering The James Brown Concert That Calmed Boston News April 5 2018 Retrieved August 7 2021 Suzanne C Ryan October 31 2003 City revives kids PBS channel The Boston Globe The New York Times Company Retrieved January 27 2017 Jeremy Egner April 3 2006 World and Go streams flow into PBS plans Current Current LLC Retrieved March 30 2016 Katy June Friesen January 12 2009 Many stations packaging their own kids channels Current Current LLC Archived from the original on April 16 2016 Retrieved December 9 2010 WGBH Headquarters Vanasse Hangen Brustlin Inc Archived from the original on July 17 2011 Retrieved March 13 2013 Bruce L Paisner August 9 1962 Harvard Gives WGBH Land For New Studio The Crimson Harvard University Retrieved July 20 2017 About our digital mural WGBH TV WGBH Educational Foundation Retrieved March 13 2013 Clea Simon April 5 2007 GBH celebrates memories of Western Ave studio The Boston Globe The New York Times Company Retrieved July 20 2017 subscription required Mark Favermann December 31 2007 WGBH s New Headquarters Building Berkshire Fine Arts Retrieved July 20 2017 Harvard Innovation Lab Opens Harvard Business School Press release Retrieved March 13 2013 DTV Tentative Channel Designations for the First and the Second Rounds PDF Federal Communications Commission Archived from the original PDF on August 29 2013 Retrieved June 26 2017 APPENDIX B ALL FULL POWER TELEVISION STATIONS BY DMA INDICATING THOSE TERMINATING ANALOG SERVICE BEFORE ON OR FEBRUARY 17 2009 PDF Federal Communications Commission Retrieved August 29 2013 Northrop Daphne 2020 GBH s Iconic Sting Gets A Facelift GBH Retrieved January 26 2023 Murie Michael March 20 2014 Reimagining an ID Sound amp Vision Filmmaker Magazine Filmmaker Magazine Retrieved January 26 2023 RabbitEars TV Query for WGBH RabbitEars Retrieved July 20 2017 Mobile DTV Query for WGBH RabbitEars Retrieved March 13 2013 Mobile DTV Station Guide MDTVSignalMap com Archived from the original on October 17 2016 Retrieved March 13 2013 Mobile TV takes three steps forward in Asia North America one step back in Europe Broadcast Engineering Retrieved March 13 2013 Knight Foundation backs launch planning for PBS s Public Square Current Current LLC December 19 2005 Archived from the original on April 26 2016 Retrieved March 30 2016 FCC Broadcast Television Spectrum Incentive Auction Auction 1001 Winning Bids PDF Federal Communications Commission April 13 2017 Dan Adams Shirley Leung April 13 2017 WGBH WLVI reap huge windfall in sale of broadcast spectrum The Boston Globe Boston Globe Media Group Retrieved April 14 2017 FCCInfo Results www fccinfo com Retrieved March 25 2019 I m Getting Weak or No Reception Digital or Over The Air TV GBH Retrieved November 13 2021 WGBH Upgrades COMARK PARALLAX VHF DTV Band 1 Transmitter The Broadcast Bridge June 2 2021 Retrieved November 23 2021 Call Sign History CDBS Public Access Federal Communications Commission Archived from the original on July 14 2012 Retrieved February 19 2006 Kinney Jim April 11 2019 New England Public Radio WGBY TV in Springfield to merge boosting local news coverage masslive com Retrieved April 11 2019 Falk Tyler April 11 2019 New England Public Radio and WGBY to combine operations Current Retrieved April 11 2019 WGBH Openvault openvault wgbh org Retrieved July 23 2020 About the AAPB americanarchive org Retrieved July 23 2020 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to WGBH Guest Street studios Official website WGBH Media Library and Archives website OpenVault Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title WGBH TV amp oldid 1151441517, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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