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Wikipedia

WXIA-TV

WXIA-TV (channel 11) is a television station in Atlanta, Georgia, United States, affiliated with NBC. It is owned by Tegna Inc. alongside MyNetworkTV affiliate WATL (channel 36). Both stations share studios at One Monroe Place on the north end of midtown Atlanta, while WXIA-TV's transmitter is located in the city's east section, near Kirkwood. Atlanta is the largest television market where the NBC station is not owned and operated by the network.[2]

WXIA-TV
Channels
Branding11 Alive
Programming
Affiliations
Ownership
Owner
WATL
History
First air date
September 30, 1951 (71 years ago) (1951-09-30)
Former call signs
  • WLTV (1951–1953)
  • WLWA (1953–1962)
  • WAII-TV (1962–1968)
  • WQXI-TV (1968–1973)
Former channel number(s)
  • Analog:
  • 8 (VHF, 1951–1953)
  • 11 (VHF, 1953–2009)
  • ABC (1951–1980)
Call sign meaning
"XI" is the Roman numeral for "11"; Atlanta
Technical information
Licensing authority
FCC
Facility ID51163
ERP80 kW
HAAT303 m (994 ft)
Transmitter coordinates33°45′24″N 84°19′55″W / 33.75667°N 84.33194°W / 33.75667; -84.33194
Translator(s)WATL-DT 11.11 (25.6 UHF) Atlanta[citation needed]
Links
Public license information
  • Public file
  • LMS
Websitewww.11alive.com

WXIA-TV is popularly known within the Atlanta metropolitan area by its longtime on-air brand, 11 Alive, which the station has used since 1976.

History Edit

What is known today as WXIA-TV originally signed on the air September 30, 1951, at 5 p.m., as WLTV on VHF channel 8. It was the first full time ABC affiliate for Atlanta, taking it over from WSB-TV and WAGA-TV (channel 5), both originally primary NBC and CBS affiliates respectively that previously shared ABC programming as a secondary affiliation. It was the third Atlanta television station to sign-on after WSB-TV and WAGA, all signing on within a three-year time frame.

Owned and operated by a group of Atlanta businessmen organized as Broadcasting, Inc., WLTV was indirectly born from the 1950 merger of Atlanta's two newspapers. The Atlanta Journal had originally owned channel 8 as WSB-TV, while The Atlanta Constitution held a construction permit for channel 2 as WCON-TV. Construction had already begun on the WCON-TV facilities when the Howell family, longtime owners of the Constitution, sold their paper to Cox Enterprises, owners of the Journal. However, Cox had a problem. At the time, the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) did not permit the sale of television station construction permits, considering it "trafficking". Cox had little option but to keep the WCON-TV construction permit rather than the already-operating WSB-TV.[3] As such, it announced plans to move the WSB-TV intellectual unit to the stronger channel 2 facility when it was completed and sell its channel 8 license, which was acquired by Broadcasting, Inc., for $525,000. The sale was challenged by applicants for additional stations that were affected by the then-ongoing freeze on new construction permits, including Georgia Tech (owners of WGST radio)[4] and Decatur radio station owner E.D. Rivers,[5] in part because planned allocation changes meant that there would be no further commercial VHF stations for Atlanta, and they sought to operate the channel as well.[6]

The FCC dismissed the complaints and approved the sale of the channel 8 license to Broadcasting, Inc., in August 1951.[5] Testing for the new channel 2 began on September 25, 1951,[7] and WSB-TV moved there on September 30. Channel 8 returned at 5 p.m. that day as WLTV.[8] Due to the way the transfer was structured legally, WXIA operates under the license originally granted to WSB-TV, while the current WSB-TV license dates from 1951.[9] Thus, the present-day channel 11 is the second-oldest broadcasting facility in the South; WSB-TV signed on in 1948, four months after WTVR-TV in Richmond, Virginia.

Several more large changes would come for WLTV in the years that followed. When the FCC lifted its freeze on new TV stations with the Sixth Report and Order in April 1952, it made several changes to television allocations and substituted channel 11 for 8 at Atlanta, modifying WLTV's license to specify channel 11.[9] The change coincided with the reallocation of channel 8 to non-commercial educational use at Athens and mitigated interference with channel 9 at Rome. The station would not change channels until September 1953, by which time Broadcasting, Inc., had sold WLTV to Cincinnati-based Crosley Broadcasting Corporation. In line with its other television stations, Crosley changed the call letters to WLWA (often rendered as "WLW-A") on March 3, 1953.[9]

In 1962, WLWA was purchased by Indianapolis businessman Richard Fairbanks, via his WIBC, Inc., as part of a settlement between Crosley and Fairbanks. Crosley had started WLWI (now WTHR) in Indianapolis in 1957, but Fairbanks insisted that the last VHF allocation in Indianapolis should go to a local owner. Eventually, the two companies agreed to what amounted to a trade, in which Crosley kept WLWI while Fairbanks bought WLWA. The Atlanta station's call sign then became WAII-TV, using the slogan "The Eyes of Atlanta" and the calls standing for "Atlanta's 11" (II). The station was sold to Pacific & Southern Broadcasting in 1968 and on March 23 became known as WQXI-TV, aligning it with WQXI AM and FM (the calls had originally been used on channel 36, currently WATL, from 1954 to 1955). Pacific & Southern later merged with Combined Communications Corporation; the merged company could not purchase both WQXI radio and television, as the FCC had barred new radio-television combinations in top 50 markets.[10] The radio stations were sold to Jefferson-Pilot Broadcasting; as a result of the split, the station assumed the WXIA-TV call letters on December 24, 1973.[11]

On September 20, 1976, WXIA first adopted "11 Alive" as its on-air branding, as part of Combined's practice of using the word "Alive" as part of the brand of most of their stations (two stations not owned by Combined also adopted the "11 Alive" branding that same year, then-independent station WPIX (now a CW affiliate) in New York City—which used the brand until 1986, and NBC affiliate WIIC in Pittsburgh, now WPXI—which used it until 1979). In 1979, Combined merged with the Gannett Company in what became the largest media merger in history up to that time. Following the acquisition, most of the former Combined stations stopped using the "Alive" brand, though WXIA continued to call itself "11 Alive".[citation needed]

On September 1, 1980, WXIA swapped affiliations with WSB-TV and became an NBC affiliate. This move could be traced to ratings: NBC slid to a very poor third place; meanwhile, ABC was in first place for most of the late 1970s and was seeking out affiliates with higher viewership in many markets, including Atlanta. ABC thus jumped at the chance to affiliate with longtime market leader WSB-TV. Some network daytime programs switched stations in August, before the full affiliation switch occurred. In August 1994, Gannett dropped the "11 Alive" moniker as part of the introduction of new on-air graphics for its newscasts and promos; however, the brand was so well established in Atlanta that viewer outcry forced Gannett to restore it after only a month; even so, the "11 Alive" brand was not fully restored until 1996, when the 11 Alive News title was restored for its newscasts (which were retitled 11 News with the removal of the "11 Alive" brand).[citation needed]

On June 5, 2006, Gannett entered into an agreement to purchase WATL from the Tribune Company for $180 million, creating Atlanta's first television duopoly;[12] the sale was finalized on August 7, 2006. WATL occasionally airs NBC programs when WXIA is not able due to extended breaking news and severe weather coverage, or special programming. As a result of the WATL acquisition, WXIA management decided to house the combined operation at WATL's facility at One Monroe Place, leaving WXIA's longtime studios at 1611 West Peachtree Street; WXIA and WATL began broadcasting from the new studios on July 27, 2008.

Around the first week of October 2012, Gannett entered a dispute against Dish Network regarding compensation fees and Dish's AutoHop commercial-skip feature on its Hopper digital video recorders. Gannett ordered that Dish discontinue AutoHop on the account that it is affecting advertising revenues for WXIA and WATL. Gannett threatened to pull both stations should the skirmish continue beyond October 7 and Dish and Gannett fail to reach an agreement.[13][14] The two parties eventually reached an agreement after extending the deadline for a few hours.[15]

On June 29, 2015, the Gannett Company split in two, with one side specializing in print media and the other side specializing in broadcast and digital media. WXIA and WATL were retained by the latter company, named Tegna.[16]

On January 24, 2019, WXIA debuted a new station logo for the first time in 26 years; the "11" in the new logo is similar to Louisville sister station WHAS-TV.[17]

Programming Edit

The station previously aired a program called Noonday for many years, beginning with the news at noon and at 12:30 continuing on for the rest of the hour with features, akin somewhat to the Today Show. This program was canceled in 1997, but the half-hour noon newscast was preceded by the hour-long Atlanta & Company, a program which has some similar features, but is partly paid for by the companies featured on it, until 2015, when the noon newscast was canceled. The program then expanded to 90 minutes, currently running from 11 to 12:30 p.m.[citation needed]

Sports programming Edit

Owing to NBC's longstanding contract with the International Olympic Committee, WXIA was the local broadcaster for the 1996 Summer Olympics held in Atlanta. It also carried the Atlanta Braves' World Series victory the previous year (coverage alternated between NBC and ABC as part of The Baseball Network, so WSB had Games 1, 4 and 5, while WXIA received Games 2, 3 and the clinching sixth game; all Braves games on NBC's MLB broadcast contract from 1981 to 1989 (and before that, from 1976 to 1980 with ABC's broadcast contract) and postseason games in select years from 1996 to 2000 were also broadcast on WXIA which include their 1999 World Series appearance). From its switch to NBC in 1980 up to 1997, all Atlanta Falcons involving them playing an AFC team at home were aired on WXIA. Today, the station airs any Falcons contests under NBC's Sunday Night Football banner (afternoon games air either on WAGA or WANF). The station also provided local coverage of Super Bowl XXVIII, which was hosted at the Georgia Dome. WXIA also aired all Atlanta Hawks games carried through NBC's NBA coverage from 1990 to 2002.[citation needed]

News operation Edit

WXIA presently broadcasts 33 hours, 25 minutes of locally produced newscasts each week (with 5 hours, 35 minutes each weekday, 3½ hours on Saturdays and two hours on Sundays). It also produces a half-hour prime time newscast at 10 p.m. for sister station WATL, which competes with the longer-running hour-long 10 p.m. newscast on Fox-owned WAGA-TV. The station's Doppler weather radar site is located west of Atlanta in far southern Cobb County, south-southwest of Mableton, on the south side of Interstate 20 not far west of Six Flags Over Georgia.[citation needed]

The station began calling its newscasts News Watch in 1963 and began broadcasting news in color for the first time on March 20, 1967. From the early 1970s onward, channel 11's newscasts waged a spirited battle with WAGA for second place behind long-dominant WSB-TV. When WAGA switched to Fox in 1994, WXIA surged to become a solid runner-up, usually finishing well ahead of perennial third-place finisher WGCL-TV; however, by May 2009, WXIA's ratings had been surpassed by WGCL at noon and 11 p.m. The morning news program Today in Atlanta had experienced a 40% ratings drop, leaving them a very distant third behind the local morning shows on WSB and WAGA, and sometimes fourth behind WGCL.[citation needed]

WXIA formerly had a partnership with The Weather Channel to use their weather forecasters and provide local weather forecasts (incidentally, NBCUniversal—which owns NBC through parent company Comcast, Atlanta's primary cable television provider—held a majority ownership stake in The Weather Channel until 2018). WXIA became the first Atlanta station to begin broadcasting its local newscasts in high definition on February 2, 2006. As part of the conversion to HD, a new HD-ready news set from Production Design Group, Ltd. was built and the station began using a new graphics package from Giant Octopus.[citation needed]

In February 2010, WXIA began a nightly news segment, "Bull Fighters", which consists of eight reporters/anchors; the segment is usually provided by former WAGA sports reporter Jeff Hullinger. On April 28, 2010, a new 4:30 a.m. newscast called Wake Up with Chesley debuted, featuring meteorologist Chesley McNeil and travel producer Matt Holmes; in addition to news updates throughout the show, McNeil primarily gives weather updates while Holmes gives travel delays and information. On January 29, 2013, on the noon broadcast, WXIA debuted the new Gannett standardized graphics and music ("This is Home" by Gari Media Group); their renovated studio debuted on February 12, 2013.[citation needed]

On January 29, 2015, WXIA announced that the 5 p.m. newscast would return for the first time since 2003, when Dr. Phil took over that time slot; that show moved to the 3 p.m. timeslot.[18] However, the new newscast came at the cost of ending its noon and 7 p.m. newscasts, which were replaced by an extension of Atlanta & Company and Wheel of Fortune, respectively (the latter reversing its 2007 move from WXIA to WATL). These changes went into effect on March 2, 2015.[19]

Between July 31 and August 28, 2017, WXIA underwent a significant relaunch of its news department, mirroring a similar move that was made by Tampa Bay sister station WTSP in April of that same year. The station renamed its morning and late-night newscasts as Morning Rush ATL and The Late Feed, respectively. Shiba Russell, who came over from NBC O&O station WNBC the previous year, became the solo anchor of Morning Rush ATL, while Vinnie Politan became the anchor of The Late Feed.[citation needed]

In March 2020, WXIA relaunched its noon newscast; however, it was meant to be temporary due to the COVID-19 pandemic.[citation needed]

In June 2021, WXIA re-titled its morning and late-night newscasts once again; the former is now titled 11 Alive Morning News and the latter, which had been renamed from The Late Feed to Up Late following Vinnie Politan's departure from the station in November 2018, returned to the previous 11 Alive News at 11 title.[citation needed]

Notable current on-air staff Edit

Notable former on-air staff Edit

Technical information Edit

Subchannels Edit

The station's digital signal is multiplexed:

Subchannels of WXIA-TV[1]
Channel Res. Aspect Short name Programming
11.1 1080i 16:9 WXIA-TV Main WXIA-TV programming / NBC
11.3 480i Crime True Crime Network
11.4 Quest Quest
11.5 Shop LC Shop LC
17.2 1080i 16:9 CourtTV Court TV (WPCH-DT2)
  Broadcast on behalf of another station

The NBC Weather Plus service was discontinued on December 1, 2008; however, some stations, including WXIA, continued to air national and local radar with Weather Plus branding, supplied by The Weather Channel through the end of December. In January, WXIA rebranded the channel "11Alive Weather" and kept the "L-Bar" with weather information from The Weather Channel, but shifted the remainder of the content to a local radar loop, and eliminated the background music that aired with it. It was later rebranded as the "11Alive Weather Information Zone" or "WIZ" in 2010, along with the weather segments during newscasts on the main channel. This service was also carried on digital cable in the Atlanta area through Charter Spectrum and Comcast.

In early December 2010, the WIZ was moved to WATL, and aired on channel 36.2, while 11.2 continued to air a static message graphic directing over-the-air viewers to tune there and re-scan if necessary. One month later, on January 10, the channel was removed completely from WXIA, and 11.3 became 11.2, before being reversed the following day. In 2011, Atlanta-based Bounce TV launched on September 26 with WATL 36.2 as its de facto flagship affiliate, with the WIZ channel being restored two weeks later on 36.3. In early October, 11.2 again became Universal Sports and 11.3 was deleted and was reversed again a week later, with WIZ bounced back to its original channel 11.2. In November 2011, 11.3 was deleted leaving 36.3 as the sole channel for Universal Sports until it became a cable channel in 2012. Eventually, WIZ was converted from being presented using internal station weather computers to presentation and programming from The Local AccuWeather Channel. But an agreement with WAGA-TV and AccuWeather has made WXIA switch its programming and presentation to WeatherNation TV.

The station added Universal Sports at the beginning of May 2009 on channel 11.3, added it to 36.3 in October 2011, and then deleted it from 11.3 in November 2011. However, it used severe video data compression, which left very obvious blurriness and pixelation during high-motion scenes common in sports. This low-bitrate sacrifice protects the quality of the main HD channel and is unavoidable because Universal Sports transmits its programming via satellite in this highly compressed form (4.48Mbit/s). It was therefore not originally transmitted on sister station WATL (virtual channel 36.3, digital channel 25) because it would look the same there, and that station's bandwidth is being used for mobile television (ATSC-M/H), including WXIA's mobile channels. Additionally, mobile communications work better on higher UHF TV channels than on low VHF ones.

In early 2018, the station added new network Quest on new subchannel 11.4, taking over many of WXIA-DT2's cable slots and leaving that station for the most part exclusive to over-the-air customers.

In February 2020, WeatherNation TV was replaced by a VHF simulcast of WATL on subchannel 11.2. The simulcast ended on April 5, 2021, when it was replaced with Twist after the network launched.

Analog-to-digital conversion Edit

WXIA-TV originally had the only VHF allotment for digital television in the area, until WGTV (channel 8) was moved from UHF 22 to VHF 12 (now 8). The station shut down its analog signal, over VHF channel 11, on June 12, 2009, at 12:30 p.m., as part of the federally mandated transition from analog to digital television.[21] The station's digital signal remained on its pre-transition VHF channel 10,[22] using PSIP to display WXIA-TV's virtual channel as 11 on digital television receivers.

See also Edit

References Edit

  1. ^ a b "Digital TV Market Listing for WXIA". RabbitEars.Info. Retrieved January 26, 2017.
  2. ^ Nielsen DMA Rankings 2021 MediaTracks Communications. Retrieved on February 14, 2021.
  3. ^ "Cox, Howell Merge: Affects Atlanta AM-TV" (PDF). Broadcasting. March 20, 1950. p. 23. Retrieved February 20, 2020.
  4. ^ "Tech Moves To Halt TV Sale Here". Atlanta Constitution. Associated Press. April 25, 1951. p. 6. Retrieved February 21, 2020.
  5. ^ a b "FCC Authorizes Sale Of WSB-TV's Properties". Atlanta Constitution. August 10, 1951. p. 1. Retrieved February 21, 2020.
  6. ^ "Tech Seeks To Block TV Sale". Atlanta Constitution. Associated Press. June 23, 1951. p. 2. Retrieved February 21, 2020.
  7. ^ Jones, Paul (September 26, 1951). "WSB's TV Tops World In Coverage". Atlanta Constitution. pp. 1, 9. Retrieved February 21, 2020.
  8. ^ "Cox Alerts TV Industry to Major Duties In Dedicating Powerful Facilities of WSB". Atlanta Constitution. October 1, 1951. pp. 1, 3. Retrieved February 21, 2020.
  9. ^ a b c FCC History Cards for WXIA-TV
  10. ^ "P&S goes under wing of CCC" (PDF). Broadcasting. April 23, 1973. pp. 22–23. Retrieved September 22, 2021.
  11. ^ "New Call Letters For WQXI-TV". The Atlanta Constitution. December 22, 1973. p. 7-T. Retrieved September 24, 2021.
  12. ^ "Access Denied". www.11alive.com.
  13. ^ Loose, Ashley (October 5, 2012). . KNXV-TV. Archived from the original on October 11, 2012. Retrieved October 6, 2012.
  14. ^ Vuong, Andy (October 6, 2012). "Gannett threatening to black out stations in its dispute with Dish". Denver Post. Retrieved October 6, 2012.
  15. ^ Warner, Melodie (October 8, 2012). "Dish, Gannett Reach New Deal". The Wall Street Journal. Retrieved October 8, 2012.
  16. ^ "Separation of Gannett into two public companies completed | TEGNA". Tegna. Retrieved June 29, 2015.
  17. ^ "Atlanta station gets chunky, less lively new logo design". www.newscaststudio.com. January 24, 2019. Retrieved January 31, 2019.
  18. ^ "11Alive takes over 5:00 time slot". WXIA. 11Alive Staff, WXIA. Retrieved February 11, 2015.
  19. ^ "WXIA Adds 5PM Newscast, Drops Noon and 7PM Programs". TVSpy. Aneya Fernando. Retrieved February 11, 2015.
  20. ^ Ho, Rodney (October 31, 2019). "Exclusive: Vinnie Politan leaving 11Alive after four-plus years". The Atlanta Journal-Constitution. Retrieved March 22, 2019.
  21. ^ List of Digital Full-Power Stations
  22. ^ "CDBS Print". licensing.fcc.gov. Retrieved November 27, 2022.

External links Edit

  • Official website

wxia, alive, redirects, here, york, city, television, station, that, formerly, used, slogan, from, 1976, 1986, wpix, pittsburgh, television, station, that, used, slogan, from, 1976, 1979, wpxi, sister, station, that, formerly, used, callsign, used, wxia, watl,. 11 Alive redirects here For the New York City television station that formerly used the slogan from 1976 to 1986 see WPIX For the Pittsburgh television station that used the slogan from 1976 to 1979 see WPXI For its sister station that formerly used the callsign used by WXIA see WATL For the television station in Miami that currently uses the callsign formerly used by WXIA see WLTV DT This article uses bare URLs which are uninformative and vulnerable to link rot Please consider converting them to full citations to ensure the article remains verifiable and maintains a consistent citation style Several templates and tools are available to assist in formatting such as Reflinks documentation reFill documentation and Citation bot documentation August 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message WXIA TV channel 11 is a television station in Atlanta Georgia United States affiliated with NBC It is owned by Tegna Inc alongside MyNetworkTV affiliate WATL channel 36 Both stations share studios at One Monroe Place on the north end of midtown Atlanta while WXIA TV s transmitter is located in the city s east section near Kirkwood Atlanta is the largest television market where the NBC station is not owned and operated by the network 2 WXIA TVAtlanta GeorgiaUnited StatesChannelsDigital 10 VHF Virtual 11Branding11 AliveProgrammingAffiliations11 1 NBC11 3 True Crime Network11 4 Quest11 5 Shop LC 1 OwnershipOwnerTegna Inc Pacific and Southern LLC Sister stationsWATLHistoryFirst air dateSeptember 30 1951 71 years ago 1951 09 30 Former call signsWLTV 1951 1953 WLWA 1953 1962 WAII TV 1962 1968 WQXI TV 1968 1973 Former channel number s Analog 8 VHF 1951 1953 11 VHF 1953 2009 Former affiliationsABC 1951 1980 Call sign meaning XI is the Roman numeral for 11 AtlantaTechnical informationLicensing authorityFCCFacility ID51163ERP80 kWHAAT303 m 994 ft Transmitter coordinates33 45 24 N 84 19 55 W 33 75667 N 84 33194 W 33 75667 84 33194Translator s WATL DT 11 11 25 6 UHF Atlanta citation needed LinksPublic license informationPublic fileLMSWebsitewww wbr 11alive wbr comWXIA TV is popularly known within the Atlanta metropolitan area by its longtime on air brand 11 Alive which the station has used since 1976 Contents 1 History 2 Programming 2 1 Sports programming 2 2 News operation 2 2 1 Notable current on air staff 2 2 2 Notable former on air staff 3 Technical information 3 1 Subchannels 3 2 Analog to digital conversion 4 See also 5 References 6 External linksHistory EditWhat is known today as WXIA TV originally signed on the air September 30 1951 at 5 p m as WLTV on VHF channel 8 It was the first full time ABC affiliate for Atlanta taking it over from WSB TV and WAGA TV channel 5 both originally primary NBC and CBS affiliates respectively that previously shared ABC programming as a secondary affiliation It was the third Atlanta television station to sign on after WSB TV and WAGA all signing on within a three year time frame Owned and operated by a group of Atlanta businessmen organized as Broadcasting Inc WLTV was indirectly born from the 1950 merger of Atlanta s two newspapers The Atlanta Journal had originally owned channel 8 as WSB TV while The Atlanta Constitution held a construction permit for channel 2 as WCON TV Construction had already begun on the WCON TV facilities when the Howell family longtime owners of the Constitution sold their paper to Cox Enterprises owners of the Journal However Cox had a problem At the time the Federal Communications Commission FCC did not permit the sale of television station construction permits considering it trafficking Cox had little option but to keep the WCON TV construction permit rather than the already operating WSB TV 3 As such it announced plans to move the WSB TV intellectual unit to the stronger channel 2 facility when it was completed and sell its channel 8 license which was acquired by Broadcasting Inc for 525 000 The sale was challenged by applicants for additional stations that were affected by the then ongoing freeze on new construction permits including Georgia Tech owners of WGST radio 4 and Decatur radio station owner E D Rivers 5 in part because planned allocation changes meant that there would be no further commercial VHF stations for Atlanta and they sought to operate the channel as well 6 The FCC dismissed the complaints and approved the sale of the channel 8 license to Broadcasting Inc in August 1951 5 Testing for the new channel 2 began on September 25 1951 7 and WSB TV moved there on September 30 Channel 8 returned at 5 p m that day as WLTV 8 Due to the way the transfer was structured legally WXIA operates under the license originally granted to WSB TV while the current WSB TV license dates from 1951 9 Thus the present day channel 11 is the second oldest broadcasting facility in the South WSB TV signed on in 1948 four months after WTVR TV in Richmond Virginia Several more large changes would come for WLTV in the years that followed When the FCC lifted its freeze on new TV stations with the Sixth Report and Order in April 1952 it made several changes to television allocations and substituted channel 11 for 8 at Atlanta modifying WLTV s license to specify channel 11 9 The change coincided with the reallocation of channel 8 to non commercial educational use at Athens and mitigated interference with channel 9 at Rome The station would not change channels until September 1953 by which time Broadcasting Inc had sold WLTV to Cincinnati based Crosley Broadcasting Corporation In line with its other television stations Crosley changed the call letters to WLWA often rendered as WLW A on March 3 1953 9 In 1962 WLWA was purchased by Indianapolis businessman Richard Fairbanks via his WIBC Inc as part of a settlement between Crosley and Fairbanks Crosley had started WLWI now WTHR in Indianapolis in 1957 but Fairbanks insisted that the last VHF allocation in Indianapolis should go to a local owner Eventually the two companies agreed to what amounted to a trade in which Crosley kept WLWI while Fairbanks bought WLWA The Atlanta station s call sign then became WAII TV using the slogan The Eyes of Atlanta and the calls standing for Atlanta s 11 II The station was sold to Pacific amp Southern Broadcasting in 1968 and on March 23 became known as WQXI TV aligning it with WQXI AM and FM the calls had originally been used on channel 36 currently WATL from 1954 to 1955 Pacific amp Southern later merged with Combined Communications Corporation the merged company could not purchase both WQXI radio and television as the FCC had barred new radio television combinations in top 50 markets 10 The radio stations were sold to Jefferson Pilot Broadcasting as a result of the split the station assumed the WXIA TV call letters on December 24 1973 11 On September 20 1976 WXIA first adopted 11 Alive as its on air branding as part of Combined s practice of using the word Alive as part of the brand of most of their stations two stations not owned by Combined also adopted the 11 Alive branding that same year then independent station WPIX now a CW affiliate in New York City which used the brand until 1986 and NBC affiliate WIIC in Pittsburgh now WPXI which used it until 1979 In 1979 Combined merged with the Gannett Company in what became the largest media merger in history up to that time Following the acquisition most of the former Combined stations stopped using the Alive brand though WXIA continued to call itself 11 Alive citation needed On September 1 1980 WXIA swapped affiliations with WSB TV and became an NBC affiliate This move could be traced to ratings NBC slid to a very poor third place meanwhile ABC was in first place for most of the late 1970s and was seeking out affiliates with higher viewership in many markets including Atlanta ABC thus jumped at the chance to affiliate with longtime market leader WSB TV Some network daytime programs switched stations in August before the full affiliation switch occurred In August 1994 Gannett dropped the 11 Alive moniker as part of the introduction of new on air graphics for its newscasts and promos however the brand was so well established in Atlanta that viewer outcry forced Gannett to restore it after only a month even so the 11 Alive brand was not fully restored until 1996 when the 11 Alive News title was restored for its newscasts which were retitled 11 News with the removal of the 11 Alive brand citation needed On June 5 2006 Gannett entered into an agreement to purchase WATL from the Tribune Company for 180 million creating Atlanta s first television duopoly 12 the sale was finalized on August 7 2006 WATL occasionally airs NBC programs when WXIA is not able due to extended breaking news and severe weather coverage or special programming As a result of the WATL acquisition WXIA management decided to house the combined operation at WATL s facility at One Monroe Place leaving WXIA s longtime studios at 1611 West Peachtree Street WXIA and WATL began broadcasting from the new studios on July 27 2008 Around the first week of October 2012 Gannett entered a dispute against Dish Network regarding compensation fees and Dish s AutoHop commercial skip feature on its Hopper digital video recorders Gannett ordered that Dish discontinue AutoHop on the account that it is affecting advertising revenues for WXIA and WATL Gannett threatened to pull both stations should the skirmish continue beyond October 7 and Dish and Gannett fail to reach an agreement 13 14 The two parties eventually reached an agreement after extending the deadline for a few hours 15 On June 29 2015 the Gannett Company split in two with one side specializing in print media and the other side specializing in broadcast and digital media WXIA and WATL were retained by the latter company named Tegna 16 On January 24 2019 WXIA debuted a new station logo for the first time in 26 years the 11 in the new logo is similar to Louisville sister station WHAS TV 17 Programming EditThe station previously aired a program called Noonday for many years beginning with the news at noon and at 12 30 continuing on for the rest of the hour with features akin somewhat to the Today Show This program was canceled in 1997 but the half hour noon newscast was preceded by the hour long Atlanta amp Company a program which has some similar features but is partly paid for by the companies featured on it until 2015 when the noon newscast was canceled The program then expanded to 90 minutes currently running from 11 to 12 30 p m citation needed Sports programming Edit Owing to NBC s longstanding contract with the International Olympic Committee WXIA was the local broadcaster for the 1996 Summer Olympics held in Atlanta It also carried the Atlanta Braves World Series victory the previous year coverage alternated between NBC and ABC as part of The Baseball Network so WSB had Games 1 4 and 5 while WXIA received Games 2 3 and the clinching sixth game all Braves games on NBC s MLB broadcast contract from 1981 to 1989 and before that from 1976 to 1980 with ABC s broadcast contract and postseason games in select years from 1996 to 2000 were also broadcast on WXIA which include their 1999 World Series appearance From its switch to NBC in 1980 up to 1997 all Atlanta Falcons involving them playing an AFC team at home were aired on WXIA Today the station airs any Falcons contests under NBC s Sunday Night Football banner afternoon games air either on WAGA or WANF The station also provided local coverage of Super Bowl XXVIII which was hosted at the Georgia Dome WXIA also aired all Atlanta Hawks games carried through NBC s NBA coverage from 1990 to 2002 citation needed News operation Edit WXIA presently broadcasts 33 hours 25 minutes of locally produced newscasts each week with 5 hours 35 minutes each weekday 3 hours on Saturdays and two hours on Sundays It also produces a half hour prime time newscast at 10 p m for sister station WATL which competes with the longer running hour long 10 p m newscast on Fox owned WAGA TV The station s Doppler weather radar site is located west of Atlanta in far southern Cobb County south southwest of Mableton on the south side of Interstate 20 not far west of Six Flags Over Georgia citation needed The station began calling its newscasts News Watch in 1963 and began broadcasting news in color for the first time on March 20 1967 From the early 1970s onward channel 11 s newscasts waged a spirited battle with WAGA for second place behind long dominant WSB TV When WAGA switched to Fox in 1994 WXIA surged to become a solid runner up usually finishing well ahead of perennial third place finisher WGCL TV however by May 2009 WXIA s ratings had been surpassed by WGCL at noon and 11 p m The morning news program Today in Atlanta had experienced a 40 ratings drop leaving them a very distant third behind the local morning shows on WSB and WAGA and sometimes fourth behind WGCL citation needed WXIA formerly had a partnership with The Weather Channel to use their weather forecasters and provide local weather forecasts incidentally NBCUniversal which owns NBC through parent company Comcast Atlanta s primary cable television provider held a majority ownership stake in The Weather Channel until 2018 WXIA became the first Atlanta station to begin broadcasting its local newscasts in high definition on February 2 2006 As part of the conversion to HD a new HD ready news set from Production Design Group Ltd was built and the station began using a new graphics package from Giant Octopus citation needed In February 2010 WXIA began a nightly news segment Bull Fighters which consists of eight reporters anchors the segment is usually provided by former WAGA sports reporter Jeff Hullinger On April 28 2010 a new 4 30 a m newscast called Wake Up with Chesley debuted featuring meteorologist Chesley McNeil and travel producer Matt Holmes in addition to news updates throughout the show McNeil primarily gives weather updates while Holmes gives travel delays and information On January 29 2013 on the noon broadcast WXIA debuted the new Gannett standardized graphics and music This is Home by Gari Media Group their renovated studio debuted on February 12 2013 citation needed On January 29 2015 WXIA announced that the 5 p m newscast would return for the first time since 2003 when Dr Phil took over that time slot that show moved to the 3 p m timeslot 18 However the new newscast came at the cost of ending its noon and 7 p m newscasts which were replaced by an extension of Atlanta amp Company and Wheel of Fortune respectively the latter reversing its 2007 move from WXIA to WATL These changes went into effect on March 2 2015 19 Between July 31 and August 28 2017 WXIA underwent a significant relaunch of its news department mirroring a similar move that was made by Tampa Bay sister station WTSP in April of that same year The station renamed its morning and late night newscasts as Morning Rush ATL and The Late Feed respectively Shiba Russell who came over from NBC O amp O station WNBC the previous year became the solo anchor of Morning Rush ATL while Vinnie Politan became the anchor of The Late Feed citation needed In March 2020 WXIA relaunched its noon newscast however it was meant to be temporary due to the COVID 19 pandemic citation needed In June 2021 WXIA re titled its morning and late night newscasts once again the former is now titled 11 Alive Morning News and the latter which had been renamed from The Late Feed to Up Late following Vinnie Politan s departure from the station in November 2018 returned to the previous 11 Alive News at 11 title citation needed Notable current on air staff Edit Jeff Hullinger Co anchor and sports directorNotable former on air staff Edit Roz Abrams anchor reporter 1972 1980 last seen at WCBS TV in New York City Renee Chenault Fattah anchor reporter 1989 1991 last at WCAU in Philadelphia Jim Huber weekend sports anchor 1970s 84 later with CNN and Turner Sports Walt Maciborski anchor reporter now at KEYE TV in Austin Steve McCoy Noonday co host 1990 1992 formerly on Star 94 and B 98 5FM Steen Miles reporter formerly MARTA spokesperson and former Georgia legislator Demarco Morgan anchor reporter 2012 2015 now at ABC News Stone Phillips reporter 1978 1979 formerly of Dateline NBC Vinnie Politan The Late Feed anchor August 28 2017 November 2 2018 now with Court TV 20 Del Rodgers sports anchor reporter 1986 1997 now at KCRA TV and KQCA TV in Sacramento Steve Somers sports anchor reporter 1976 1978 now at WFAN in New York Tom Sullivan Atlanta amp Company co host 2007 2009 Harmon Wages sports anchor reporter 1979 1984 Monica Woods morning and noon meteorologist 1999 2001 now at KXTV in Sacramento Technical information EditSubchannels Edit The station s digital signal is multiplexed Subchannels of WXIA TV 1 Channel Res Aspect Short name Programming11 1 1080i 16 9 WXIA TV Main WXIA TV programming NBC11 3 480i Crime True Crime Network11 4 Quest Quest11 5 Shop LC Shop LC17 2 1080i 16 9 CourtTV Court TV WPCH DT2 Broadcast on behalf of another station The NBC Weather Plus service was discontinued on December 1 2008 however some stations including WXIA continued to air national and local radar with Weather Plus branding supplied by The Weather Channel through the end of December In January WXIA rebranded the channel 11Alive Weather and kept the L Bar with weather information from The Weather Channel but shifted the remainder of the content to a local radar loop and eliminated the background music that aired with it It was later rebranded as the 11Alive Weather Information Zone or WIZ in 2010 along with the weather segments during newscasts on the main channel This service was also carried on digital cable in the Atlanta area through Charter Spectrum and Comcast In early December 2010 the WIZ was moved to WATL and aired on channel 36 2 while 11 2 continued to air a static message graphic directing over the air viewers to tune there and re scan if necessary One month later on January 10 the channel was removed completely from WXIA and 11 3 became 11 2 before being reversed the following day In 2011 Atlanta based Bounce TV launched on September 26 with WATL 36 2 as its de facto flagship affiliate with the WIZ channel being restored two weeks later on 36 3 In early October 11 2 again became Universal Sports and 11 3 was deleted and was reversed again a week later with WIZ bounced back to its original channel 11 2 In November 2011 11 3 was deleted leaving 36 3 as the sole channel for Universal Sports until it became a cable channel in 2012 Eventually WIZ was converted from being presented using internal station weather computers to presentation and programming from The Local AccuWeather Channel But an agreement with WAGA TV and AccuWeather has made WXIA switch its programming and presentation to WeatherNation TV The station added Universal Sports at the beginning of May 2009 on channel 11 3 added it to 36 3 in October 2011 and then deleted it from 11 3 in November 2011 However it used severe video data compression which left very obvious blurriness and pixelation during high motion scenes common in sports This low bitrate sacrifice protects the quality of the main HD channel and is unavoidable because Universal Sports transmits its programming via satellite in this highly compressed form 4 48Mbit s It was therefore not originally transmitted on sister station WATL virtual channel 36 3 digital channel 25 because it would look the same there and that station s bandwidth is being used for mobile television ATSC M H including WXIA s mobile channels Additionally mobile communications work better on higher UHF TV channels than on low VHF ones In early 2018 the station added new network Quest on new subchannel 11 4 taking over many of WXIA DT2 s cable slots and leaving that station for the most part exclusive to over the air customers In February 2020 WeatherNation TV was replaced by a VHF simulcast of WATL on subchannel 11 2 The simulcast ended on April 5 2021 when it was replaced with Twist after the network launched Analog to digital conversion Edit WXIA TV originally had the only VHF allotment for digital television in the area until WGTV channel 8 was moved from UHF 22 to VHF 12 now 8 The station shut down its analog signal over VHF channel 11 on June 12 2009 at 12 30 p m as part of the federally mandated transition from analog to digital television 21 The station s digital signal remained on its pre transition VHF channel 10 22 using PSIP to display WXIA TV s virtual channel as 11 on digital television receivers See also EditChannel 10 digital TV stations in the United States Channel 11 virtual TV stations in the United States WQXI AM WROM TV WSTR FM References Edit a b Digital TV Market Listing for WXIA RabbitEars Info Retrieved January 26 2017 Nielsen DMA Rankings 2021 MediaTracks Communications Retrieved on February 14 2021 Cox Howell Merge Affects Atlanta AM TV PDF Broadcasting March 20 1950 p 23 Retrieved February 20 2020 Tech Moves To Halt TV Sale Here Atlanta Constitution Associated Press April 25 1951 p 6 Retrieved February 21 2020 a b FCC Authorizes Sale Of WSB TV s Properties Atlanta Constitution August 10 1951 p 1 Retrieved February 21 2020 Tech Seeks To Block TV Sale Atlanta Constitution Associated Press June 23 1951 p 2 Retrieved February 21 2020 Jones Paul September 26 1951 WSB s TV Tops World In Coverage Atlanta Constitution pp 1 9 Retrieved February 21 2020 Cox Alerts TV Industry to Major Duties In Dedicating Powerful Facilities of WSB Atlanta Constitution October 1 1951 pp 1 3 Retrieved February 21 2020 a b c FCC History Cards for WXIA TV P amp S goes under wing of CCC PDF Broadcasting April 23 1973 pp 22 23 Retrieved September 22 2021 New Call Letters For WQXI TV The Atlanta Constitution December 22 1973 p 7 T Retrieved September 24 2021 Access Denied www 11alive com Loose Ashley October 5 2012 DISH customers may lose Gannett programming including 12 News KPNX over AutoHop feature KNXV TV Archived from the original on October 11 2012 Retrieved October 6 2012 Vuong Andy October 6 2012 Gannett threatening to black out stations in its dispute with Dish Denver Post Retrieved October 6 2012 Warner Melodie October 8 2012 Dish Gannett Reach New Deal The Wall Street Journal Retrieved October 8 2012 Separation of Gannett into two public companies completed TEGNA Tegna Retrieved June 29 2015 Atlanta station gets chunky less lively new logo design www newscaststudio com January 24 2019 Retrieved January 31 2019 11Alive takes over 5 00 time slot WXIA 11Alive Staff WXIA Retrieved February 11 2015 WXIA Adds 5PM Newscast Drops Noon and 7PM Programs TVSpy Aneya Fernando Retrieved February 11 2015 Ho Rodney October 31 2019 Exclusive Vinnie Politan leaving 11Alive after four plus years The Atlanta Journal Constitution Retrieved March 22 2019 List of Digital Full Power Stations CDBS Print licensing fcc gov Retrieved November 27 2022 External links EditOfficial website Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title WXIA TV amp oldid 1169370742, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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