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WQED (TV)

WQED (channel 13) is a PBS member television station in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, United States. Owned by WQED Multimedia, it is sister to public radio station WQED-FM (89.3). The two outlets share studios on Fifth Avenue near the Carnegie Mellon University campus and transmitter facilities near the campus of the University of Pittsburgh, both in the city's Oakland section.

WQED
Channels
BrandingWQED
Programming
Affiliations
Ownership
OwnerWQED Multimedia
Radio: WQED-FM
History
First air date
April 1, 1954 (70 years ago) (1954-04-01)
Former channel number(s)
  • Analog: 13 (VHF, 1954–2009)
  • Digital: 38 (UHF, 1999–2009), 13 (VHF, 2009–2019)
NET (1954–1970)
Call sign meaning
Quod erat demonstrandum ("What has been shown")
Technical information[1]
Licensing authority
FCC
Facility ID41315
ERP10 kW
HAAT218.3 m (716 ft)
Transmitter coordinates40°26′46.2″N 79°57′50.2″W / 40.446167°N 79.963944°W / 40.446167; -79.963944 (WQED)
Links
Public license information
  • Public file
  • LMS
Websitewww.wqed.org

Established on April 1, 1954, WQED was the first community-sponsored television station in the U.S. and the country's fifth public television station.[2] It was the first station to telecast classes to elementary school classrooms when Pittsburgh launched its Metropolitan School Service in 1955. The station has been the flagship for the shows Mister Rogers' Neighborhood, Once Upon A Classic, Where in the World Is Carmen Sandiego? (a co-production with Boston's WGBH-TV; filmed in New York City), and Daniel Tiger's Neighborhood (whose live-action scenes are filmed in Pittsburgh).

History edit

 
WQED headquarters, next to Central Catholic High School in Pittsburgh

A public television station was the brainchild of Pittsburgh mayor David L. Lawrence, who wanted 12 percent of U.S. TV stations licensed for non-commercial educational use. Despite the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) putting an indefinite freeze on new TV station licenses (due to the number of applications on file), the commission granted Lawrence a license if he could raise money to equip and operate the station. Lawrence, a friend of President Harry S. Truman, recruited Pittsburgh Plate Glass Company attorney Leland Hazard to help get the station off the ground.

 
Sculpture outside WQED headquarters

Its greatest obstacle was Pittsburgh-based Westinghouse Electric Corporation, owners of radio station KDKA. Westinghouse wanted a TV station in the city to compete with the DuMont-owned-and-operated WDTV (which had a de facto monopoly in the nation's sixth-largest television market), and was impatient with the freeze on new licenses. Although the corporation launched WBZ-TV in Boston in 1948 and purchased Philadelphia's WPTZ-TV (now KYW-TV) in 1952, it was unable to secure a TV-station license in its home market. When the freeze was lifted in 1952, the FCC granted station licenses to smaller cities (such as Steubenville and Youngstown, Ohio; Wheeling and Clarksburg, West Virginia, and Johnstown, Altoona and Erie, Pennsylvania) before granting more licenses in Pittsburgh. All those cities shared the VHF band with Pittsburgh, and only Youngstown would end up as a UHF island.

 
WQED title card

Westinghouse presented a compromise to the FCC, offering to share its proposed KDKA-TV with WQED on channel 13. Hazard found this unacceptable, and asked Westinghouse CEO Gwilym Price if he should give up his quest for public television. Price said that Hazard should keep fighting, promising Westinghouse support for WQED. Westinghouse donated the tower it had purchased for the channel 13 license, enabling WQED to begin operations on April 1, 1954. The station's call letters are from the Latin phrase quod erat demonstrandum ("what was demonstrated"), commonly used in mathematics.[3][4]

Westinghouse soon had its Pittsburgh TV station. Knowing that DuMont needed WDTV's cash flow to get its programming cleared in larger markets and a short-term cash infusion after DuMont investor Paramount Pictures vetoed a merger between DuMont and ABC, Westinghouse offered DuMont $10 million for WDTV in January 1955. It changed the station's call sign to KDKA-TV, making it a sister station of KDKA radio. DuMont, unable to obtain clearance in larger markets, was out of business by the end of 1956. Although KDKA-TV is now owned by Westinghouse successor Paramount Global, the station retains a close relationship with WQED.[5]

WQED briefly shared channel 13 with WENS-TV in 1955, after a storm damaged the WENS-TV tower in Reserve Township, until the WENS-TV tower was repaired. WQED acquired the station and renamed it WQEX in 1959, using the construction permit it had acquired for channel 22 to launch WQEX on channel 16. The Commercial Radio Institute acquired the WENS-TV permit for channel 22, launching WPTT (now WPNT) in 1978.

The station was briefly affiliated with the NTA Film Network during the late 1950s, sharing the affiliation with KDKA-TV, WTAE-TV, and WIIC-TV (now WPXI). From sign-on until its replacement by PBS in 1970, WQED was a National Educational Television member station.

During its heyday in the 1970s and 1980s, WQED supplied programming to PBS. For 15 years, WQED produced the National Geographic specials for the National Geographic Society. The programs won several Emmy and other awards, including Peabody Awards.

Actor Michael Keaton, who worked behind the scenes on Mister Rogers' Neighborhood, went on to international fame. During its heyday, WQED supported a post-production office and editing facility in Los Angeles. Known as QED/West, the satellite edited much of WQED's national programming.

During the early 1990s, WQED faltered, as did many other PBS stations across the country, as the rapidly-changing media landscape shifted. The downturn was exacerbated by a scandal in which top executives were discovered to have been augmenting their income without informing the board of directors. The period was chronicled in Jerold Starr's 2000 book, Air Wars: The Fight to Reclaim Public Broadcasting.

Problems continued with a failed attempt to sell WQED's auxiliary station, WQEX, in 1999. In 2002, WQEX's non-commercial educational status was removed; the station moved to a shopping format, first with America's Store and later with ShopNBC; that in effect made WQEX a for-profit arm to generate revenue for channel 13. In November 2010, WQED agreed to sell WQEX to Ion Media Networks for $3 million. The sale was completed (after FCC approval) on May 2, 2011, when the station's call sign changed from WQEX to WINP-TV.[6][7] WQED received $9.9 million in a 2017 spectrum auction, and would use the proceeds to pay down debt the station has carried since the 1990s.[8]

The Fred Rogers Studio, where Fred Rogers recorded his iconic television series Mister Rogers' Neighborhood, is featured in the film A Beautiful Day in the Neighborhood with Tom Hanks playing Rogers. The cast and crew shot at the WQED headquarters throughout October 2018.[9]

Original programming edit

Local edit

  • Black Horizons (1968–present) – weekly as the longest running African-American issues program in the nation.[3]
  • QED Cooks (1993–present) – Chris Fennimore and Nancy Polinsky Johnson celebrates and cooks the delicious food culture of Pittsburgh, and talks about heritage and the tradition of passing down recipes to the next generation.[10]

National edit

Technical information edit

Subchannels edit

The station's signal is multiplexed:

Subchannels of WQED[19]
Channel Res. Aspect Short name Programming
13.1 1080i 16:9 WQEDHD Main WQED programming / PBS
13.2 480i WQED-D1 Create
13.3 WQED-D2 World[20]
13.4 WQED-D3 Showcase
13.5 WQED-D4 PBS Kids

On January 5, 2009, WQED launched Create on 13.2, replacing the standard-definition simulcast of WQED's main channel.[21]

Analog-to-digital conversion edit

WQED shut down its analog signal on VHF channel 13 on June 12, 2009, when full-power television stations in the United States transitioned from analog to digital broadcasts by federal mandate. The station's digital signal relocated from its pre-transition UHF channel 38 to VHF channel 13.[22] WQED was the only full-powered station in the Pittsburgh market to move its digital signal back to its analog-era channel. Former sister station WINP-TV took over WQED's former digital channel 38, broadcasting on virtual channel 16.1.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "Facility Technical Data for WQED". Licensing and Management System. Federal Communications Commission.
  2. ^ Santoni, Matthew (September 30, 2014). "Public station WQED cutting staff in face of financial woes". TribLIVE.com. Retrieved June 14, 2018.
  3. ^ a b c . Archived from the original on May 28, 2004. Retrieved January 25, 2019.
  4. ^ "WQED at 50 - Page 73". Pittsburgh Post-Gazette from Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania Newspapers.com. March 28, 2004. Retrieved April 16, 2018.
  5. ^ . pbrtv.com. Archived from the original on December 23, 2010. Retrieved March 29, 2011.
  6. ^ "CDBS Print".
  7. ^ Staff, FCC Internet Services. "Call Sign History".
  8. ^ Sefton, Dru (February 10, 2017). "Spectrum auction nets nearly $35M for two Pennsylvania stations". Current. Retrieved February 14, 2017.
  9. ^ Sciullo, Maria (July 6, 2018). "Tom Hanks-as-Fred Rogers film, 'You Are My Friend,' begins shooting in Pittsburgh this fall". Pittsburgh Post-Gazette. Retrieved December 17, 2018.
  10. ^ "QED Cooks - PBS Food". www.pbs.org. Retrieved July 11, 2020.
  11. ^ "The Pittsburgh Press - Google News Archive Search".
  12. ^ "The Pittsburgh Press - Google News Archive Search".
  13. ^ "Lakeland Ledger - Google News Archive Search".
  14. ^ "The Pittsburgh Press - Google News Archive Search".
  15. ^ "The Pittsburgh Press - Google News Archive Search".
  16. ^ "The Pittsburgh Press - Google News Archive Search".
  17. ^ "The Pittsburgh Press - Google News Archive Search".
  18. ^ "Clinton Campaign Town Meeting in Pennsylvania".
  19. ^ "RabbitEars.Info".
  20. ^ Hazimanolis, George (December 2, 2014). "NEW DIGITAL TELEVISION CHANNEL TO DEBUT ON WQED JANUARY 1" (Press release). WQED Multimedia.
  21. ^ Owen, Rob (January 2, 2009). "Tuned In: WQED puts daytime focus on children's programming". Pittsburgh Post-Gazette.
  22. ^ (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on August 29, 2013. Retrieved March 24, 2012.

External links edit

  • Official website
  • A history from the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
  • "Changes Lives" Identity unveiled
  • 2007 annual report award win for WQED

wqed, this, article, multiple, issues, please, help, improve, discuss, these, issues, talk, page, learn, when, remove, these, template, messages, this, article, factual, accuracy, disputed, relevant, discussion, found, talk, page, please, help, ensure, that, d. This article has multiple issues Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page Learn how and when to remove these template messages This article s factual accuracy is disputed Relevant discussion may be found on the talk page Please help to ensure that disputed statements are reliably sourced October 2017 Learn how and when to remove this template message This article possibly contains original research Please improve it by verifying the claims made and adding inline citations Statements consisting only of original research should be removed October 2017 Learn how and when to remove this template message Some of this article s listed sources may not be reliable Please help improve this article by looking for better more reliable sources Unreliable citations may be challenged and removed October 2017 Learn how and when to remove this template message 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 WQED TV news newspapers books scholar JSTOR January 2019 Learn how and when to remove this template message Learn how and when to remove this template message WQED channel 13 is a PBS member television station in Pittsburgh Pennsylvania United States Owned by WQED Multimedia it is sister to public radio station WQED FM 89 3 The two outlets share studios on Fifth Avenue near the Carnegie Mellon University campus and transmitter facilities near the campus of the University of Pittsburgh both in the city s Oakland section WQEDPittsburgh PennsylvaniaUnited StatesChannelsDigital 4 VHF Virtual 13BrandingWQEDProgrammingAffiliations13 1 PBSfor others see SubchannelsOwnershipOwnerWQED MultimediaSister stationsRadio WQED FMHistoryFirst air dateApril 1 1954 70 years ago 1954 04 01 Former channel number s Analog 13 VHF 1954 2009 Digital 38 UHF 1999 2009 13 VHF 2009 2019 Former affiliationsNET 1954 1970 Call sign meaningQuod erat demonstrandum What has been shown Technical information 1 Licensing authorityFCCFacility ID41315ERP10 kWHAAT218 3 m 716 ft Transmitter coordinates40 26 46 2 N 79 57 50 2 W 40 446167 N 79 963944 W 40 446167 79 963944 WQED LinksPublic license informationPublic fileLMSWebsitewww wbr wqed wbr org Established on April 1 1954 WQED was the first community sponsored television station in the U S and the country s fifth public television station 2 It was the first station to telecast classes to elementary school classrooms when Pittsburgh launched its Metropolitan School Service in 1955 The station has been the flagship for the shows Mister Rogers Neighborhood Once Upon A Classic Where in the World Is Carmen Sandiego a co production with Boston s WGBH TV filmed in New York City and Daniel Tiger s Neighborhood whose live action scenes are filmed in Pittsburgh Contents 1 History 2 Original programming 2 1 Local 2 2 National 3 Technical information 3 1 Subchannels 3 2 Analog to digital conversion 4 See also 5 References 6 External linksHistory edit nbsp WQED headquarters next to Central Catholic High School in Pittsburgh A public television station was the brainchild of Pittsburgh mayor David L Lawrence who wanted 12 percent of U S TV stations licensed for non commercial educational use Despite the Federal Communications Commission FCC putting an indefinite freeze on new TV station licenses due to the number of applications on file the commission granted Lawrence a license if he could raise money to equip and operate the station Lawrence a friend of President Harry S Truman recruited Pittsburgh Plate Glass Company attorney Leland Hazard to help get the station off the ground nbsp Sculpture outside WQED headquarters Its greatest obstacle was Pittsburgh based Westinghouse Electric Corporation owners of radio station KDKA Westinghouse wanted a TV station in the city to compete with the DuMont owned and operated WDTV which had a de facto monopoly in the nation s sixth largest television market and was impatient with the freeze on new licenses Although the corporation launched WBZ TV in Boston in 1948 and purchased Philadelphia s WPTZ TV now KYW TV in 1952 it was unable to secure a TV station license in its home market When the freeze was lifted in 1952 the FCC granted station licenses to smaller cities such as Steubenville and Youngstown Ohio Wheeling and Clarksburg West Virginia and Johnstown Altoona and Erie Pennsylvania before granting more licenses in Pittsburgh All those cities shared the VHF band with Pittsburgh and only Youngstown would end up as a UHF island nbsp WQED title card Westinghouse presented a compromise to the FCC offering to share its proposed KDKA TV with WQED on channel 13 Hazard found this unacceptable and asked Westinghouse CEO Gwilym Price if he should give up his quest for public television Price said that Hazard should keep fighting promising Westinghouse support for WQED Westinghouse donated the tower it had purchased for the channel 13 license enabling WQED to begin operations on April 1 1954 The station s call letters are from the Latin phrase quod erat demonstrandum what was demonstrated commonly used in mathematics 3 4 Westinghouse soon had its Pittsburgh TV station Knowing that DuMont needed WDTV s cash flow to get its programming cleared in larger markets and a short term cash infusion after DuMont investor Paramount Pictures vetoed a merger between DuMont and ABC Westinghouse offered DuMont 10 million for WDTV in January 1955 It changed the station s call sign to KDKA TV making it a sister station of KDKA radio DuMont unable to obtain clearance in larger markets was out of business by the end of 1956 Although KDKA TV is now owned by Westinghouse successor Paramount Global the station retains a close relationship with WQED 5 WQED briefly shared channel 13 with WENS TV in 1955 after a storm damaged the WENS TV tower in Reserve Township until the WENS TV tower was repaired WQED acquired the station and renamed it WQEX in 1959 using the construction permit it had acquired for channel 22 to launch WQEX on channel 16 The Commercial Radio Institute acquired the WENS TV permit for channel 22 launching WPTT now WPNT in 1978 The station was briefly affiliated with the NTA Film Network during the late 1950s sharing the affiliation with KDKA TV WTAE TV and WIIC TV now WPXI From sign on until its replacement by PBS in 1970 WQED was a National Educational Television member station During its heyday in the 1970s and 1980s WQED supplied programming to PBS For 15 years WQED produced the National Geographic specials for the National Geographic Society The programs won several Emmy and other awards including Peabody Awards Actor Michael Keaton who worked behind the scenes on Mister Rogers Neighborhood went on to international fame During its heyday WQED supported a post production office and editing facility in Los Angeles Known as QED West the satellite edited much of WQED s national programming During the early 1990s WQED faltered as did many other PBS stations across the country as the rapidly changing media landscape shifted The downturn was exacerbated by a scandal in which top executives were discovered to have been augmenting their income without informing the board of directors The period was chronicled in Jerold Starr s 2000 book Air Wars The Fight to Reclaim Public Broadcasting Problems continued with a failed attempt to sell WQED s auxiliary station WQEX in 1999 In 2002 WQEX s non commercial educational status was removed the station moved to a shopping format first with America s Store and later with ShopNBC that in effect made WQEX a for profit arm to generate revenue for channel 13 In November 2010 WQED agreed to sell WQEX to Ion Media Networks for 3 million The sale was completed after FCC approval on May 2 2011 when the station s call sign changed from WQEX to WINP TV 6 7 WQED received 9 9 million in a 2017 spectrum auction and would use the proceeds to pay down debt the station has carried since the 1990s 8 The Fred Rogers Studio where Fred Rogers recorded his iconic television series Mister Rogers Neighborhood is featured in the film A Beautiful Day in the Neighborhood with Tom Hanks playing Rogers The cast and crew shot at the WQED headquarters throughout October 2018 9 Original programming editLocal edit Black Horizons 1968 present weekly as the longest running African American issues program in the nation 3 QED Cooks 1993 present Chris Fennimore and Nancy Polinsky Johnson celebrates and cooks the delicious food culture of Pittsburgh and talks about heritage and the tradition of passing down recipes to the next generation 10 National edit Mister Rogers Neighborhood 1968 2001 in association with Family Communications Drink Drank Drunk 1974 an hour long program on alcoholism hosted by Carol Burnett 11 National Geographic Specials 1975 1991 Puzzle Children 1976 an hour long Julie Andrews and Bill Bixby hosted special 12 Once Upon a Classic 1976 1980 a show hosted by Bill Bixby that introduced literary works acted out for young viewers in a way easily understandable Including Me 1977 an hour long Patricia Neal hosted program spotlighting six disabled children 3 13 Raised in Anger 1979 an hour long Ed Asner hosted program on child abuse 14 The Chemical People 1982 1983 a nine part series on drug abuse 15 16 Planet Earth 1986 in association with the National Academy of Sciences Zoobilee Zoo 1986 1987 also aired nationally in syndication The Infinite Voyage 1987 1992 in association with the National Academy of Sciences 17 Where in the World Is Carmen Sandiego 1991 1995 in partnership with WGBH TV in Boston The first America Speaks with Bill Clinton aired nationally by NBC June 1992 18 Where in Time Is Carmen Sandiego 1996 1997 in partnership with WGBH TV in Boston Space Age 1994 in association with the National Academy of Sciences The Fox Cubhouse 1994 1996 aired nationally by Fox Doo Wop 50 1999 and subsequent similar programs produced by TJ Lubinsky The War that Made America 2006 Technical information editSubchannels edit The station s signal is multiplexed Subchannels of WQED 19 Channel Res Aspect Short name Programming 13 1 1080i 16 9 WQEDHD Main WQED programming PBS 13 2 480i WQED D1 Create 13 3 WQED D2 World 20 13 4 WQED D3 Showcase 13 5 WQED D4 PBS Kids On January 5 2009 WQED launched Create on 13 2 replacing the standard definition simulcast of WQED s main channel 21 Analog to digital conversion edit WQED shut down its analog signal on VHF channel 13 on June 12 2009 when full power television stations in the United States transitioned from analog to digital broadcasts by federal mandate The station s digital signal relocated from its pre transition UHF channel 38 to VHF channel 13 22 WQED was the only full powered station in the Pittsburgh market to move its digital signal back to its analog era channel Former sister station WINP TV took over WQED s former digital channel 38 broadcasting on virtual channel 16 1 See also editWINP TVReferences edit Facility Technical Data for WQED Licensing and Management System Federal Communications Commission Santoni Matthew September 30 2014 Public station WQED cutting staff in face of financial woes TribLIVE com Retrieved June 14 2018 a b c Moving Forward to the Future Archived from the original on May 28 2004 Retrieved January 25 2019 WQED at 50 Page 73 Pittsburgh Post Gazette from Pittsburgh Pennsylvania Newspapers com March 28 2004 Retrieved April 16 2018 Creating QED at DuMont s expense pbrtv com Archived from the original on December 23 2010 Retrieved March 29 2011 CDBS Print Staff FCC Internet Services Call Sign History Sefton Dru February 10 2017 Spectrum auction nets nearly 35M for two Pennsylvania stations Current Retrieved February 14 2017 Sciullo Maria July 6 2018 Tom Hanks as Fred Rogers film You Are My Friend begins shooting in Pittsburgh this fall Pittsburgh Post Gazette Retrieved December 17 2018 QED Cooks PBS Food www pbs org Retrieved July 11 2020 The Pittsburgh Press Google News Archive Search The Pittsburgh Press Google News Archive Search Lakeland Ledger Google News Archive Search The Pittsburgh Press Google News Archive Search The Pittsburgh Press Google News Archive Search The Pittsburgh Press Google News Archive Search The Pittsburgh Press Google News Archive Search Clinton Campaign Town Meeting in Pennsylvania RabbitEars Info Hazimanolis George December 2 2014 NEW DIGITAL TELEVISION CHANNEL TO DEBUT ON WQED JANUARY 1 Press release WQED Multimedia Owen Rob January 2 2009 Tuned In WQED puts daytime focus on children s programming Pittsburgh Post Gazette DTV Tentative Channel Designations for the First and Second Rounds PDF Archived from the original PDF on August 29 2013 Retrieved March 24 2012 External links editOfficial website A history from the Pittsburgh Post Gazette Changes Lives Identity unveiled 2007 annual report award win for WQED Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title WQED TV amp oldid 1213386188, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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