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Wikipedia

WZTV

WZTV (channel 17) is a television station in Nashville, Tennessee, United States, affiliated with Fox and The CW. It is owned by Sinclair Broadcast Group alongside MyNetworkTV affiliate WUXP-TV (channel 30); it is also sister to Dabl affiliate WNAB (channel 58), which Sinclair operates under an outsourcing agreement with Tennessee Broadcasting. The stations share studios on Mainstream Drive along the Cumberland River, while WZTV's transmitter is located along I-24 in Whites Creek.

WZTV
Channels
Branding
  • Fox 17
  • The CW Nashville (DT2)
Programming
Affiliations
Ownership
Owner
WNAB, WUXP-TV
History
First air date
August 5, 1968 (54 years ago) (1968-08-05)[a]
Former call signs
  • WMCV (1968–1974)
  • WTLT (1974–1975)
Former channel number(s)
  • Analog: 17 (UHF, 1968–2009)
  • Digital: 15 (UHF, 2001–2019)
Independent (1968–1971, 1976–1990)
Technical information
Licensing authority
FCC
Facility ID418
ERP1,000 kW
HAAT427 m (1,401 ft)
Transmitter coordinates36°15′49.8″N 86°47′38.9″W / 36.263833°N 86.794139°W / 36.263833; -86.794139
Links
Public license information
  • Public file
  • LMS
Website
  • fox17.com
  • cwnashville.tv

Channel 17 in Nashville was first activated in August 1968 as WMCV, owned by local consortium Music City Video. It was the first ultra high frequency (UHF) station in Nashville and its first independent station, but it was unable to sustain itself financially and left the air in March 1971. Two years later, it was sold at bankruptcy auction to radio executive Bob Hudson, who attempted to return channel 17 to air as WTLT. Had Hudson been able to resume service, channel 17 would have been the first Black-owned television station in the United States. However, an economic downturn prevented him from raising sufficient capital to begin operations, and it fell to Reel Broadcasting Corporation, owned by Robert K. Zelle, to put the station back on air as WZTV in March 1976. In 1980, Zelle sold WZTV to Multimedia, Inc., which used Nashville as a base to distribute country music-related TV series. WZTV also remained the market's leading independent despite competition from two new startups in the decade.

Act III Broadcasting acquired WZTV in 1988 and purchased the Fox affiliation for the Nashville market in 1990. Act III was purchased in 1995 and became Sullivan Broadcasting, during which time the station began airing a local newscast for the first time. Sinclair purchased the Sullivan stations, including WZTV, in 1998 and has continued to expand the station's local news programming. The CW programming moved to a subchannel of WZTV from WNAB in 2021.

History

WMCV

On January 25, 1966, Music City Video, Inc., a consortium of local investors with connections to several local radio stations, applied to the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) for a construction permit to build a new TV station on channel 24 in Nashville.[1] The application was spearheaded by Alven S. Ghertner, who proposed to build studios on land he owned that was occupied by a service station. At the time, Nashville had no independent station, nor did it have any stations in the ultra high frequency (UHF) band; the Music City Video station was intended to fill both voids with a heavy emphasis on live programming[2] The FCC granted the permit application on July 7, 1966, by which time channel 24 had been switched to channel 17 because of a national overhaul of the UHF table of allocations.[1]

WMCV was not built for another two years. In 1968, however, activity increased with the construction of studios and a transmitter facility on 38th Avenue North.[3] There had been turnover in investors in the intervening years,[4] with new investors including congressman Richard Fulton and secretary of state Joe C. Carr, but the station continued to promise a series of new local programs, including a dance show and professional wrestling produced in the studios.[5] The station began broadcasting on August 5.[6] WMCV owned a mobile production unit, the "Jolly Green Giant", which allowed it to produce the first regular local telecasts of high school basketball games.[7] Channel 17 also brought viewers such local programs as auto racing from the Nashville Fairgrounds Speedway,[8] interviews with visiting celebrity athletes on Celebrities and Sports,[9] the first regular coverage of Tennessee State University and Fisk University sports, and all-night movies.[10]

However, two and a half years after WMCV began telecasting, Music City Video entered into financial difficulties. It announced it would leave the air on March 14, 1971, for what it hoped would be a period of no longer than 90 days to reorganize or find new investors.[10] Instead of finding new investors and returning to the air, it filed for bankruptcy protection in May 1971 and was adjudicated bankrupt in January 1973. A receiver was appointed and became the licensee.[11][1]

The "Total Local Television" that wasn't

On July 9, 1973, a bankruptcy court approved the sale of the WMCV license and some office furniture to the Hudson Broadcasting Corporation, a company owned by local radio executive Bob Hudson. The purchase held the prospect of ensuring the station's place in television history; if he put WMCV back on the air, it would be the first Black-owned television station in the United States.[11] While Hudson promised to return channel 17 to use by January 1974 and later by June,[12][13] the FCC did not approve the transaction until July 31, 1974, conditioning approval on a return to service within 90 days.[1]

The call letters on the permit were changed to WTLT, for "Total Local Television",[13] on September 6.[1] Hudson had previously promised that the station would serve the entire community with a special emphasis on minority issues and also on training minorities for careers in broadcasting,[14] later describing his program lineup as "60 percent Black-oriented, 40 percent other".[13] Work also began on updating equipment, with color cameras being ordered to replace the black-and-white units that WMCV used. The studio also needed attention; when Hudson's team first entered, they found cigar and cigarette butts on the floor, coffee cups untouched since 1971, and a half-opened letter.[1]

Hudson's dream, however, ran into unexpected trouble. WTLT was able to broadcast test patterns in February 1975,[15] and programming and staff had been secured, but Hudson Broadcasting was unable to assemble the capital necessary to begin full-time operations of the station, owing to an ongoing recession, high interest rates, and the unwillingness of banks to support a new speculative television venture.[16] In July 1975, the entire facility was put up for sale, with Bob Hudson telling The Tennessean that his firm was "in the right place at the wrong time".[17]

WZTV: The independent years

Hudson Broadcasting announced the sale of WTLT to Reel Broadcasting Corporation, a company headed by Robert K. Zelle, in August 1975.[16] The FCC granted approval on September 30,[1] and the sale closed in early November, with new WZTV call letters selected nearly immediately.[18] After months of construction and equipment delays, WZTV began broadcasting again on March 6, 1976.[19] The program lineup included several professional and college sports packages, syndicated shows, and movies.[20] The first program aired was a local show, a game show titled Beat the Bidders and taped at Opryland USA.[19][21] Equally noteworthy was its executive team, which included Michael Thompson—later an owner of independent television stations in Tennessee[22]—as vice president and station manager and general manager Ian "Sandy" Wheeler, who would later start Family Group Broadcasting.[23]

In December 1978, Reel Broadcasting agreed to sell WZTV to Multimedia, Inc., whose television station holdings consisted of network affiliates in the Midwest and South.[24] While WZTV would be the group's only independent, it would be part of a larger Multimedia operation in the city. The company published the monthly Music City News, covering Nashville's country music industry, and it was interested in building a Nashville presence for the production and syndication of country music TV programs.[24] The $7 million sale was not approved until January 1980[25] and completed in March.[26]

Multimedia's ownership tenure was one for growth for the station. By 1982, the company was attempting to secure additional space for WZTV's operations beyond the increasingly cramped 38th Avenue North plant; as a temporary move, administrative and sales staff were moved into a downtown office building in the MetroCenter area.[27] In addition, the station improved its technical facilities by agreeing to lease space on WSMV-TV's tower.[28] WZTV was also the television home of Nashville Sounds baseball from 1982 to 1991,[29] and from 1986 to 1989 and again in 1991, it was the television home of Vanderbilt Commodores football.[30][31][32]

At the same time, a market in which WZTV had been the only independent station suddenly turned competitive. In the span of four months, WFYZ (channel 39) started from Murfreesboro on December 30, 1983,[33] and WCAY-TV (channel 30), owned by TVX Broadcast Group, debuted on February 18, 1984.[34] WFYZ was purchased by Hudson and renamed WHTN in 1985,[35] but it lost money, went off the air in April 1986,[36] and returned the next month in the process of being sold to the Christian Television Network.[37]

In 1987, Multimedia announced a commitment to build a new facility in MetroCenter that would end the split of its staff between two offices.[38] By 1988, Multimedia's Nashville-based entertainment division was producing and syndicating the Music City News Awards telecast from the Grand Ole Opry and Christmas specials with the Statler Brothers.[39][40]

In 1988, Multimedia sold WZTV to Act III Broadcasting, a company owned by Norman Lear. The sale moved WZTV from Multimedia, which owned no other independents, to a broadcasting company that specialized in running such stations.[41] The sale included WZTV as well as the Nashville division of Multimedia, an archive of 4,000 programs, and Multimedia's music publishing business;[39] Act III described WZTV as its "flagship station" after the purchase.[40] Most of the program archive, consisting of programs produced between 1968 and 1982 by Showbiz Productions, was sold to Willie Nelson the next year for a proposed cable channel, The Cowboy Network.[42] Act III also completed the relocation to the Mainstream site in early 1989.[43][44]

Meanwhile, in 1986, WCAY affiliated with the newly launched Fox network.[45] However, WCAY initially did not get a substantial ratings boost and remained Nashville's second-rated independent behind WZTV.[22] Two years later, WCAY was purchased by MT Communications—the MT standing for the same Michael Thompson that had been WZTV's vice president in 1976[22]—and became WXMT in 1989.[46] However, WXMT's Fox affiliation agreement contained a clause under which, were the station to be sold, the network could review its affiliation after one year. As Fox was known to prefer to affiliate with the top-rated independent in a market, speculation arose as to how long WXMT could maintain the Fox affiliation in Nashville, and it was also becoming apparent that the Nashville market was not large enough for two directly competing independents.[47] Additionally, Act III openly coveted the Fox affiliation. Act III vice president Bert Ellis stated in 1989 that "we bought ZTV figuring it would eventually get a Fox affiliation", even though Fox's vice president of affiliate relations for the central region characterized such a move as "very unlikely".[48]

As a Fox affiliate

On February 6, 1990, after negotiations that had been in progress for a week, Act III acquired the vast majority of WXMT's programming inventory from MT Communications. With immediate effect, Fox programming, The Disney Afternoon, Cincinnati Reds baseball, and syndicated programs including The Arsenio Hall Show and Star Trek: The Next Generation moved to WZTV; WXMT maintained some children's programs and filled much of its air time with the Home Shopping Network. The deal also made Act III the largest owner of Fox affiliates in the United States, with seven.[49] Nashville became the first of four markets, all in the South, where Fox moved its affiliation during 1990; of the other three, two (Little Rock, Arkansas, and Memphis) involved ex-TVX stations;[50] it also became the third city in which Act III purchased much of another station's programming inventory, having previously done so at stations in Richmond, Virginia, and Buffalo, New York.[51][52] Less than a year earlier, in July 1989, MT Communications had offered to purchase WZTV's programming inventory, a deal that fell apart late in negotiations.[49]

WZTV was almost the victim of an affiliation switch in 1994. New World Communications, a company looking to acquire WSMV-TV, agreed on May 23, 1994, to affiliate most of its stations with Fox, setting off what turned into a multi-year national affiliation realignment.[53] WZTV would have had to find a new affiliation, such as NBC, which Fox would have displaced on WSMV-TV. New World continued to negotiate to acquire WSMV-TV,[54][55] but despite being described as a near-done deal, talks fell apart, leaving the affiliation status quo in place in Nashville.[56]

In 1995, Act III was acquired by ABRY Broadcast Partners;[57] the Boston buyout firm named Dan Sullivan, president of the TV division of Clear Channel Communications, to run Sullivan Broadcasting, a joint venture with ABRY to manage the former Act III portfolio.[58] The next year, Sullivan Broadcasting entered into a local marketing agreement—with an option to buy—to run most of the operations of WXMT, by then a UPN affiliate (renamed WUXP-TV later that year), concurrent with Mission Broadcasting acquiring WXMT's license assets.[59][60] In addition, under Sullivan, WZTV began airing its first local newscast.[61]

In 1998, Sinclair Broadcast Group acquired Sullivan Broadcasting, including WZTV and its agreement to manage WUXP-TV. The deal made the company the largest owner of Fox affiliates outside of the network.[62]

On September 20, 2021, WZTV's second digital subchannel became Nashville's affiliate of The CW, inheriting the programming that had been on Sinclair-managed WNAB.[63]

Local programming

News operation

 
WZTV reporter John Dunn interviews a project manager at the Wolf Creek Dam in 2011

In the 1990s, Fox began to encourage its affiliates to develop local news programs. In response, in 1997, WZTV began hiring anchors and reporters to produce a 9 p.m. newscast in collaboration with Nashville ABC affiliate WKRN-TV. WKRN-TV would not produce the newscast, but it did provide studio space, equipment, and some news stories.[64] Fox News @ Nine began airing on July 7, 1997; notable among the initial hires was news anchor Ashley Webster, later of the Fox Business Network.[61] It was the first full newscast at the time slot in Nashville since the WSMV-produced The Scene at 9 aired on WXMT from 1992 to 1994.[65][66] Weekend newscasts were initially not included in the agreement, but six months later, on January 4, 1998, the station began airing Sunday night newscasts in response to the popularity of lead-in The X-Files.[67]

The program remained a half-hour in length until July 6, 2000, when WZTV brought news production in-house and expanded it to an hour.[68] Sinclair invested $3 million and increased WZTV's own news staff from six to 43 people.[69]

In 2002, WZTV expanded its local programming with a new, entertainment-oriented morning show, originally titled Tennessee Mornings; the program became a radio simulcast with WLAC in 2004 and expanded to two hours.[70] By 2013, when the program was relaunched and retitled Fox 17 This Morning, it had grown to four hours.[71] A 4:30 a.m. half-hour was added in 2014 alongside a 5:30 p.m. newscast competing against network newscasts on the ABC, CBS, and NBC affiliates.[72]

Sports programming

In 2003, WZTV began producing and airing Titans All Access, a weekly half-hour program during football season covering the activities of the Tennessee Titans.[73]

Technical information

Subchannels

The station's digital signal is multiplexed:

Subchannels of WZTV[74]
Channel Res. Aspect Short name Programming
17.1 720p 16:9 FOX17 Main WZTV programming / Fox
17.2 CW The CW[63]
17.3 480i 4:3 Antenna Antenna TV
17.4 16:9 TBD TBD
30.2 480i 4:3 Get-TV Quest (WUXP-TV)
  Broadcast on behalf of another station

WZTV hosts a subchannel of WUXP-TV as part of the ATSC 3.0 deployment plan for Nashville, in which WUXP-TV and WNAB broadcast several local stations (including WZTV) in 3.0 format.[75]

Analog-to-digital conversion

WZTV shut down its analog signal, over UHF channel 17, on February 17, 2009, which was intended to be the official date in which full-power television stations in the United States transitioned from analog to digital broadcasts under federal mandate. The deadline was moved to June 12, 2009, but the station decided to convert on the original deadline.[76] The station's digital signal remained on its pre-transition UHF channel 15, using virtual channel 17.[77]

Notes

  1. ^ The station launched as WMCV on August 5, 1968, and remained on the air until March 14, 1971, when its owners left the air for financial reorganization. The station was sold twice before returning to the air on March 6, 1976, as WZTV.

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f g "FCC History Cards for WZTV". Federal Communications Commission.
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  63. ^ a b Mojica, Adrian (September 14, 2021). "CW Nashville moving to 17.2 over-the-air, rescan TV on or after Sept. 20 at 10 am". CW58.tv. from the original on September 15, 2021. Retrieved September 15, 2021. ATTENTION FOX 17, MyTv30 and CW Nashville viewers: If you receive these stations over the air, on September 20 on or after 10 a.m. you will need to rescan your television as CW Nashville's over-the-air signal will move to the WZTV 17.2 channel.
  64. ^ Schmitt, Brad (April 11, 1997). "Fox 17 plans 9 p.m. news". The Tennessean. p. 5B. from the original on December 29, 2022. Retrieved December 29, 2022 – via Newspapers.com.
  65. ^ Smith, Sandy (May 21, 1992). "Ch. 4, Ch. 30 to produce 9 p.m. fall news show". The Tennessean. Nashville, Tennessee. p. 6D. from the original on December 29, 2022. Retrieved December 29, 2022 – via Newspapers.com.
  66. ^ Smith, Sandy (January 25, 1994). "'Scene at 9' to sign off the air". The Tennessean. p. 4D. from the original on December 29, 2022. Retrieved December 29, 2022 – via Newspapers.com.
  67. ^ "WZTV introduces Sunday newscast". Nashville Business Journal. January 6, 1998. from the original on September 5, 2008. Retrieved December 29, 2022.
  68. ^ Shiffman, John (March 31, 2000). "Fox 17 hires news director to shepherd independent newscast". The Tennessean. p. 1E. from the original on January 10, 2023. Retrieved December 29, 2022 – via Newspapers.com.
  69. ^ Shiffman, John (July 5, 2000). "New FOX news is a step up for local affiliate". The Tennessean. p. 1E, 2E. from the original on January 10, 2023. Retrieved December 29, 2022 – via Newspapers.com.
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  72. ^ Foster, Alisha (July 24, 2014). "Fox 17 to expand local programming". The Tennessean. p. 4D. from the original on December 29, 2022. Retrieved December 29, 2022 – via Newspapers.com.
  73. ^ Wyatt, Jim (May 24, 2003). "Fox program focusing on Titans debuts in fall". The Tennessean. p. 2C. from the original on January 10, 2023. Retrieved December 29, 2022 – via Newspapers.com.
  74. ^ "RabbitEars TV Query for WZTV". RabbitEars. from the original on January 22, 2016. Retrieved September 8, 2013.
  75. ^ Balderston, Michael (June 24, 2020). "NextGen TV Launches at Five Nashville Stations". TV Technology. from the original on December 29, 2022. Retrieved December 29, 2022.
  76. ^ "TV stations ending analog service on Feb. 17". NBC News. Associated Press. February 17, 2009. from the original on April 2, 2015. Retrieved March 19, 2015.
  77. ^ (PDF). Federal Communications Commission. May 23, 2006. Archived from the original (PDF) on August 29, 2013. Retrieved August 29, 2021.

External links

  • Official website
  • The CW Nashville website

wztv, confused, with, ktvz, kztv, wtvz, channel, television, station, nashville, tennessee, united, states, affiliated, with, owned, sinclair, broadcast, group, alongside, mynetworktv, affiliate, wuxp, channel, also, sister, dabl, affiliate, wnab, channel, whi. Not to be confused with KTVZ KZTV or WTVZ WZTV channel 17 is a television station in Nashville Tennessee United States affiliated with Fox and The CW It is owned by Sinclair Broadcast Group alongside MyNetworkTV affiliate WUXP TV channel 30 it is also sister to Dabl affiliate WNAB channel 58 which Sinclair operates under an outsourcing agreement with Tennessee Broadcasting The stations share studios on Mainstream Drive along the Cumberland River while WZTV s transmitter is located along I 24 in Whites Creek WZTVNashville TennesseeUnited StatesChannelsDigital 20 UHF Virtual 17BrandingFox 17The CW Nashville DT2 ProgrammingAffiliations17 1 Fox17 2 The CW17 3 Antenna TV17 4 TBDOwnershipOwnerSinclair Broadcast Group WZTV Licensee LLC Sister stationsWNAB WUXP TVHistoryFirst air dateAugust 5 1968 54 years ago 1968 08 05 a Former call signsWMCV 1968 1974 WTLT 1974 1975 Former channel number s Analog 17 UHF 1968 2009 Digital 15 UHF 2001 2019 Former affiliationsIndependent 1968 1971 1976 1990 Technical informationLicensing authorityFCCFacility ID418ERP1 000 kWHAAT427 m 1 401 ft Transmitter coordinates36 15 49 8 N 86 47 38 9 W 36 263833 N 86 794139 W 36 263833 86 794139LinksPublic license informationPublic fileLMSWebsitefox17 wbr comcwnashville wbr tvChannel 17 in Nashville was first activated in August 1968 as WMCV owned by local consortium Music City Video It was the first ultra high frequency UHF station in Nashville and its first independent station but it was unable to sustain itself financially and left the air in March 1971 Two years later it was sold at bankruptcy auction to radio executive Bob Hudson who attempted to return channel 17 to air as WTLT Had Hudson been able to resume service channel 17 would have been the first Black owned television station in the United States However an economic downturn prevented him from raising sufficient capital to begin operations and it fell to Reel Broadcasting Corporation owned by Robert K Zelle to put the station back on air as WZTV in March 1976 In 1980 Zelle sold WZTV to Multimedia Inc which used Nashville as a base to distribute country music related TV series WZTV also remained the market s leading independent despite competition from two new startups in the decade Act III Broadcasting acquired WZTV in 1988 and purchased the Fox affiliation for the Nashville market in 1990 Act III was purchased in 1995 and became Sullivan Broadcasting during which time the station began airing a local newscast for the first time Sinclair purchased the Sullivan stations including WZTV in 1998 and has continued to expand the station s local news programming The CW programming moved to a subchannel of WZTV from WNAB in 2021 Contents 1 History 1 1 WMCV 1 2 The Total Local Television that wasn t 1 3 WZTV The independent years 1 4 As a Fox affiliate 2 Local programming 2 1 News operation 2 2 Sports programming 3 Technical information 3 1 Subchannels 3 2 Analog to digital conversion 4 Notes 5 References 6 External linksHistory EditWMCV Edit On January 25 1966 Music City Video Inc a consortium of local investors with connections to several local radio stations applied to the Federal Communications Commission FCC for a construction permit to build a new TV station on channel 24 in Nashville 1 The application was spearheaded by Alven S Ghertner who proposed to build studios on land he owned that was occupied by a service station At the time Nashville had no independent station nor did it have any stations in the ultra high frequency UHF band the Music City Video station was intended to fill both voids with a heavy emphasis on live programming 2 The FCC granted the permit application on July 7 1966 by which time channel 24 had been switched to channel 17 because of a national overhaul of the UHF table of allocations 1 WMCV was not built for another two years In 1968 however activity increased with the construction of studios and a transmitter facility on 38th Avenue North 3 There had been turnover in investors in the intervening years 4 with new investors including congressman Richard Fulton and secretary of state Joe C Carr but the station continued to promise a series of new local programs including a dance show and professional wrestling produced in the studios 5 The station began broadcasting on August 5 6 WMCV owned a mobile production unit the Jolly Green Giant which allowed it to produce the first regular local telecasts of high school basketball games 7 Channel 17 also brought viewers such local programs as auto racing from the Nashville Fairgrounds Speedway 8 interviews with visiting celebrity athletes on Celebrities and Sports 9 the first regular coverage of Tennessee State University and Fisk University sports and all night movies 10 However two and a half years after WMCV began telecasting Music City Video entered into financial difficulties It announced it would leave the air on March 14 1971 for what it hoped would be a period of no longer than 90 days to reorganize or find new investors 10 Instead of finding new investors and returning to the air it filed for bankruptcy protection in May 1971 and was adjudicated bankrupt in January 1973 A receiver was appointed and became the licensee 11 1 The Total Local Television that wasn t Edit On July 9 1973 a bankruptcy court approved the sale of the WMCV license and some office furniture to the Hudson Broadcasting Corporation a company owned by local radio executive Bob Hudson The purchase held the prospect of ensuring the station s place in television history if he put WMCV back on the air it would be the first Black owned television station in the United States 11 While Hudson promised to return channel 17 to use by January 1974 and later by June 12 13 the FCC did not approve the transaction until July 31 1974 conditioning approval on a return to service within 90 days 1 The call letters on the permit were changed to WTLT for Total Local Television 13 on September 6 1 Hudson had previously promised that the station would serve the entire community with a special emphasis on minority issues and also on training minorities for careers in broadcasting 14 later describing his program lineup as 60 percent Black oriented 40 percent other 13 Work also began on updating equipment with color cameras being ordered to replace the black and white units that WMCV used The studio also needed attention when Hudson s team first entered they found cigar and cigarette butts on the floor coffee cups untouched since 1971 and a half opened letter 1 Hudson s dream however ran into unexpected trouble WTLT was able to broadcast test patterns in February 1975 15 and programming and staff had been secured but Hudson Broadcasting was unable to assemble the capital necessary to begin full time operations of the station owing to an ongoing recession high interest rates and the unwillingness of banks to support a new speculative television venture 16 In July 1975 the entire facility was put up for sale with Bob Hudson telling The Tennessean that his firm was in the right place at the wrong time 17 WZTV The independent years Edit Hudson Broadcasting announced the sale of WTLT to Reel Broadcasting Corporation a company headed by Robert K Zelle in August 1975 16 The FCC granted approval on September 30 1 and the sale closed in early November with new WZTV call letters selected nearly immediately 18 After months of construction and equipment delays WZTV began broadcasting again on March 6 1976 19 The program lineup included several professional and college sports packages syndicated shows and movies 20 The first program aired was a local show a game show titled Beat the Bidders and taped at Opryland USA 19 21 Equally noteworthy was its executive team which included Michael Thompson later an owner of independent television stations in Tennessee 22 as vice president and station manager and general manager Ian Sandy Wheeler who would later start Family Group Broadcasting 23 In December 1978 Reel Broadcasting agreed to sell WZTV to Multimedia Inc whose television station holdings consisted of network affiliates in the Midwest and South 24 While WZTV would be the group s only independent it would be part of a larger Multimedia operation in the city The company published the monthly Music City News covering Nashville s country music industry and it was interested in building a Nashville presence for the production and syndication of country music TV programs 24 The 7 million sale was not approved until January 1980 25 and completed in March 26 Multimedia s ownership tenure was one for growth for the station By 1982 the company was attempting to secure additional space for WZTV s operations beyond the increasingly cramped 38th Avenue North plant as a temporary move administrative and sales staff were moved into a downtown office building in the MetroCenter area 27 In addition the station improved its technical facilities by agreeing to lease space on WSMV TV s tower 28 WZTV was also the television home of Nashville Sounds baseball from 1982 to 1991 29 and from 1986 to 1989 and again in 1991 it was the television home of Vanderbilt Commodores football 30 31 32 At the same time a market in which WZTV had been the only independent station suddenly turned competitive In the span of four months WFYZ channel 39 started from Murfreesboro on December 30 1983 33 and WCAY TV channel 30 owned by TVX Broadcast Group debuted on February 18 1984 34 WFYZ was purchased by Hudson and renamed WHTN in 1985 35 but it lost money went off the air in April 1986 36 and returned the next month in the process of being sold to the Christian Television Network 37 In 1987 Multimedia announced a commitment to build a new facility in MetroCenter that would end the split of its staff between two offices 38 By 1988 Multimedia s Nashville based entertainment division was producing and syndicating the Music City News Awards telecast from the Grand Ole Opry and Christmas specials with the Statler Brothers 39 40 In 1988 Multimedia sold WZTV to Act III Broadcasting a company owned by Norman Lear The sale moved WZTV from Multimedia which owned no other independents to a broadcasting company that specialized in running such stations 41 The sale included WZTV as well as the Nashville division of Multimedia an archive of 4 000 programs and Multimedia s music publishing business 39 Act III described WZTV as its flagship station after the purchase 40 Most of the program archive consisting of programs produced between 1968 and 1982 by Showbiz Productions was sold to Willie Nelson the next year for a proposed cable channel The Cowboy Network 42 Act III also completed the relocation to the Mainstream site in early 1989 43 44 Meanwhile in 1986 WCAY affiliated with the newly launched Fox network 45 However WCAY initially did not get a substantial ratings boost and remained Nashville s second rated independent behind WZTV 22 Two years later WCAY was purchased by MT Communications the MT standing for the same Michael Thompson that had been WZTV s vice president in 1976 22 and became WXMT in 1989 46 However WXMT s Fox affiliation agreement contained a clause under which were the station to be sold the network could review its affiliation after one year As Fox was known to prefer to affiliate with the top rated independent in a market speculation arose as to how long WXMT could maintain the Fox affiliation in Nashville and it was also becoming apparent that the Nashville market was not large enough for two directly competing independents 47 Additionally Act III openly coveted the Fox affiliation Act III vice president Bert Ellis stated in 1989 that we bought ZTV figuring it would eventually get a Fox affiliation even though Fox s vice president of affiliate relations for the central region characterized such a move as very unlikely 48 As a Fox affiliate Edit On February 6 1990 after negotiations that had been in progress for a week Act III acquired the vast majority of WXMT s programming inventory from MT Communications With immediate effect Fox programming The Disney Afternoon Cincinnati Reds baseball and syndicated programs including The Arsenio Hall Show and Star Trek The Next Generation moved to WZTV WXMT maintained some children s programs and filled much of its air time with the Home Shopping Network The deal also made Act III the largest owner of Fox affiliates in the United States with seven 49 Nashville became the first of four markets all in the South where Fox moved its affiliation during 1990 of the other three two Little Rock Arkansas and Memphis involved ex TVX stations 50 it also became the third city in which Act III purchased much of another station s programming inventory having previously done so at stations in Richmond Virginia and Buffalo New York 51 52 Less than a year earlier in July 1989 MT Communications had offered to purchase WZTV s programming inventory a deal that fell apart late in negotiations 49 WZTV was almost the victim of an affiliation switch in 1994 New World Communications a company looking to acquire WSMV TV agreed on May 23 1994 to affiliate most of its stations with Fox setting off what turned into a multi year national affiliation realignment 53 WZTV would have had to find a new affiliation such as NBC which Fox would have displaced on WSMV TV New World continued to negotiate to acquire WSMV TV 54 55 but despite being described as a near done deal talks fell apart leaving the affiliation status quo in place in Nashville 56 In 1995 Act III was acquired by ABRY Broadcast Partners 57 the Boston buyout firm named Dan Sullivan president of the TV division of Clear Channel Communications to run Sullivan Broadcasting a joint venture with ABRY to manage the former Act III portfolio 58 The next year Sullivan Broadcasting entered into a local marketing agreement with an option to buy to run most of the operations of WXMT by then a UPN affiliate renamed WUXP TV later that year concurrent with Mission Broadcasting acquiring WXMT s license assets 59 60 In addition under Sullivan WZTV began airing its first local newscast 61 In 1998 Sinclair Broadcast Group acquired Sullivan Broadcasting including WZTV and its agreement to manage WUXP TV The deal made the company the largest owner of Fox affiliates outside of the network 62 On September 20 2021 WZTV s second digital subchannel became Nashville s affiliate of The CW inheriting the programming that had been on Sinclair managed WNAB 63 Local programming EditNews operation Edit WZTV reporter John Dunn interviews a project manager at the Wolf Creek Dam in 2011 In the 1990s Fox began to encourage its affiliates to develop local news programs In response in 1997 WZTV began hiring anchors and reporters to produce a 9 p m newscast in collaboration with Nashville ABC affiliate WKRN TV WKRN TV would not produce the newscast but it did provide studio space equipment and some news stories 64 Fox News Nine began airing on July 7 1997 notable among the initial hires was news anchor Ashley Webster later of the Fox Business Network 61 It was the first full newscast at the time slot in Nashville since the WSMV produced The Scene at 9 aired on WXMT from 1992 to 1994 65 66 Weekend newscasts were initially not included in the agreement but six months later on January 4 1998 the station began airing Sunday night newscasts in response to the popularity of lead in The X Files 67 The program remained a half hour in length until July 6 2000 when WZTV brought news production in house and expanded it to an hour 68 Sinclair invested 3 million and increased WZTV s own news staff from six to 43 people 69 In 2002 WZTV expanded its local programming with a new entertainment oriented morning show originally titled Tennessee Mornings the program became a radio simulcast with WLAC in 2004 and expanded to two hours 70 By 2013 when the program was relaunched and retitled Fox 17 This Morning it had grown to four hours 71 A 4 30 a m half hour was added in 2014 alongside a 5 30 p m newscast competing against network newscasts on the ABC CBS and NBC affiliates 72 Sports programming Edit In 2003 WZTV began producing and airing Titans All Access a weekly half hour program during football season covering the activities of the Tennessee Titans 73 Technical information EditSubchannels Edit The station s digital signal is multiplexed Subchannels of WZTV 74 Channel Res Aspect Short name Programming17 1 720p 16 9 FOX17 Main WZTV programming Fox17 2 CW The CW 63 17 3 480i 4 3 Antenna Antenna TV17 4 16 9 TBD TBD30 2 480i 4 3 Get TV Quest WUXP TV Broadcast on behalf of another station WZTV hosts a subchannel of WUXP TV as part of the ATSC 3 0 deployment plan for Nashville in which WUXP TV and WNAB broadcast several local stations including WZTV in 3 0 format 75 Analog to digital conversion Edit WZTV shut down its analog signal over UHF channel 17 on February 17 2009 which was intended to be the official date in which full power television stations in the United States transitioned from analog to digital broadcasts under federal mandate The deadline was moved to June 12 2009 but the station decided to convert on the original deadline 76 The station s digital signal remained on its pre transition UHF channel 15 using virtual channel 17 77 Notes Edit The station launched as WMCV on August 5 1968 and remained on the air until March 14 1971 when its owners left the air for financial reorganization The station was sold twice before returning to the air on March 6 1976 as WZTV References Edit a b c d e f g FCC History Cards for WZTV Federal Communications Commission Cason Albert March 1 1966 Group Seeks UHF Station For Nashville The Tennessean Nashville Tennessee pp 1 8 Archived from the original on December 29 2022 Retrieved December 29 2022 via Newspapers com How New TV Station s Headquarters Will Look The Tennessean May 24 1968 p 42 Archived from the original on January 10 2023 Retrieved December 29 2022 via Newspapers com Cason Albert April 21 1968 Nashville Business City To Get 5th TV Station The Tennessean Nashville Tennessee p 10 C Archived from the original on December 29 2022 Retrieved December 29 2022 via Newspapers com Edds Margaret July 7 1968 Channel 17 Air Debut Now July 22 The Tennessean p 6 S Archived from the original on December 29 2022 Retrieved December 29 2022 via Newspapers com Channel 17 Schedule A New Channel The Tennessean Nashville Tennessee August 4 1968 p 24 S Archived from the original on December 29 2022 Retrieved December 29 2022 via Newspapers com King of the TV Road The Tennessean Nashville Tennessee February 16 1969 p 46 S Archived from the original on December 29 2022 Retrieved December 29 2022 via Newspapers com All Races Seen On Channel 17 The Tennessean Nashville Tennessee July 20 1969 p Nashville 400 Souvenir 17 Archived from the original on December 29 2022 Retrieved December 29 2022 via Newspapers com Archie Campbell Chats With Carroll The Tennessean Nashville Tennessee January 11 1970 p 15 S Archived from the original on December 29 2022 Retrieved December 29 2022 via Newspapers com a b Reorganization Planned Channel 17 To Suspend Telecasting The Tennessean Nashville Tennessee March 11 1971 p 19 Archived from the original on December 29 2022 Retrieved December 29 2022 via Newspapers com a b Black Owned Operated TV Station Nearer The Tennessean July 10 1973 p 3 Archived from the original on December 29 2022 Retrieved December 29 2022 via Newspapers com First Black TV Station Closer to Reality The Tennessean Nashville Tennessee August 4 1973 p 26 Archived from the original on December 29 2022 Retrieved December 29 2022 via Newspapers com a b c Duning Natilee March 31 1974 WTLT Nashville National First The Tennessean Nashville Tennessee p Showcase 3 Archived from the original on December 29 2022 Retrieved December 29 2022 via Newspapers com Bontemps Alex December 16 1973 Nation s 1st Black Owned Operated TV Station Expected in Nashville Soon The Tennessean Nashville Tennessee p 24 A Archived from the original on December 29 2022 Retrieved December 29 2022 via Newspapers com Ask Showcase The Tennessean Nashville Tennessee February 16 1975 p Showcase 6 Archived from the original on December 29 2022 Retrieved December 29 2022 via Newspapers com a b Cason Albert August 19 1975 Late Autumn Signon Date Predicted for Channel 17 The Tennessean Nashville Tennessee pp 1 5 Archived from the original on December 29 2022 Retrieved December 29 2022 via Newspapers com Channel 17 Up For Grabs Again The Tennessean Nashville Tennessee July 13 1975 p Showcase 9 Archived from the original on December 29 2022 Retrieved December 29 2022 via Newspapers com WTLT TV Slates New Air Time for January The Tennessean Nashville Tennessee November 8 1975 p 25 Archived from the original on December 29 2022 Retrieved December 29 2022 via Newspapers com a b Alexander Alice March 7 1976 Getting on Air Is Happiness At Channel 17 The Tennessean Nashville Tennessee p 1 A 10 A Archived from the original on December 29 2022 Retrieved December 29 2022 via Newspapers com Zibart Eve February 22 1976 Saturday Big Day For New Ch 17 The Tennessean Nashville Tennessee p Showcase 3 Archived from the original on December 29 2022 Retrieved December 29 2022 via Newspapers com York Max January 25 1976 Beat the Bidders Coming to Town The Tennessean p 2 F Archived from the original on December 29 2022 Retrieved December 29 2022 via Newspapers com a b c Schweid Richard October 18 1988 Buyer has high hopes for Ch 30 The Tennessean p 1D Archived from the original on December 29 2022 Retrieved December 29 2022 via Newspapers com Hall John September 14 1977 Second Christian group seeks Channel 28 St Petersburg Times St Petersburg Florida p 9B Archived from the original on December 29 2022 Retrieved December 29 2022 via Newspapers com a b Eipper Laura December 12 1978 Multimedia Makes Plan To Buy WZTV The Tennessean Nashville Tennessee p 1 6 Archived from the original on December 29 2022 Retrieved December 29 2022 via Newspapers com Cason Albert January 17 1980 WZTV Sale Given FCC Green Light The Tennessean Nashville Tennessee p 17 Archived from the original on December 29 2022 Retrieved December 29 2022 via Newspapers com Multimedia Completes Acquisition of WZTV The Tennessean Nashville Tennessee March 2 1980 p 19 C Archived from the original on December 29 2022 Retrieved December 29 2022 via Newspapers com Bartley Diane April 22 1982 Ch 17 May Move Onto Enemy Territory The Tennessean Nashville Tennessee p 21 Archived from the original on December 29 2022 Retrieved December 29 2022 via Newspapers com Bartley Diane October 12 1982 Ch 17 Antenna Will Be Moved To Ch 4 Tower The Tennessean Nashville Tennessee p 29 Archived from the original on December 29 2022 Retrieved December 29 2022 via Newspapers com Russell Keith May 28 1999 Deal puts five Sounds home games on TV Nashville Business Journal Archived from the original on October 26 2014 Retrieved April 6 2016 Climer David July 8 1989 Vandy s football telecasts changed New play by play man in place more games may be shown live The Tennessean p 7 C Archived from the original on December 29 2022 Retrieved December 29 2022 via Newspapers com Woody Larry July 10 1991 Vandy Channel 17 nearing deal for live telecasts The Tennessean p 1 C Archived from the original on December 29 2022 Retrieved December 29 2022 via Newspapers com Power Ted August 14 1991 Hines to announce VU football on WZTV The Tennessean p 2 C Archived from the original on December 29 2022 Retrieved December 29 2022 via Newspapers com Bartley Diane December 31 1983 Ch 39 Finally On the Air The Tennessean p 4 D Archived from the original on December 29 2022 Retrieved December 29 2022 via Newspapers com Bartley Diane February 18 1984 Channel 30 To Sign On This Morning The Tennessean p 1 D 3 D Archived from the original on December 29 2022 Retrieved December 29 2022 via Newspapers com Bartley Diane October 18 1985 New Name Look And Shows for 39 The Tennessean p 6 D Archived from the original on December 29 2022 Retrieved December 29 2022 via Newspapers com Bartley Diane April 22 1986 Ch 39 off the air again but hopes for emergency cash The Tennessean p 1D Archived from the original on December 29 2022 Retrieved December 29 2022 via Newspapers com West Mike May 7 1986 Channel 39 returns to air with Christian programs The Daily News Journal p 1 2 Archived from the original on January 10 2023 Retrieved December 29 2022 via Newspapers com Cason Albert January 6 1987 Channel 17 plans new office in MetroCenter The Tennessean Nashville Tennessee p 1D Archived from the original on December 29 2022 Retrieved December 29 2022 via Newspapers com a b Schweid Richard March 16 1988 Norman Lear related firm buys Channel 17 The Tennessean Nashville Tennessee p 1A 2A Archived from the original on December 29 2022 Retrieved December 29 2022 via Newspapers com a b Schweid Richard June 21 1988 Ch 17 new flagship in Act III firm The Tennessean Nashville Tennessee p 1D 3D Archived from the original on December 29 2022 Retrieved December 29 2022 via Newspapers com Schweid Richard January 27 1988 Multimedia Act III negotiating over Ch 17 sale The Tennessean Nashville Tennessee p 1D Archived from the original on December 29 2022 Retrieved December 29 2022 via Newspapers com Oermann Robert K Schweid Richard September 7 1989 Willie Nelson creates Cowboy TV Network The Tennessean Nashville Tennessee p 1D Archived from the original on December 29 2022 Retrieved December 29 2022 via Newspapers com Schweid Richard January 17 1989 No rush for new host of Magazine The Tennessean p 1D Archived from the original on December 29 2022 Retrieved December 29 2022 via Newspapers com Schweid Richard January 31 1989 Channel 2 harvesting good will The Tennessean p 1E Archived from the original on December 29 2022 Retrieved December 29 2022 via Newspapers com Joan Johnny to sock it out The Tennessean October 5 1986 p Showcase 14 Archived from the original on December 29 2022 Retrieved December 29 2022 via Newspapers com Winter Tom October 4 1989 Juke Box available for a fee The Commercial Appeal p C2 Archived from the original on December 29 2022 Retrieved December 29 2022 via Newspapers com Schweid Richard February 1 1990 Ch 17 s owners trying to purchase Ch 30 The Tennessean p 1D Archived from the original on January 10 2023 Retrieved December 29 2022 via Newspapers com Schweid Richard September 12 1989 C Span viewers are loyal The Tennessean Nashville Tennessee p 1D Archived from the original on December 30 2022 Retrieved December 30 2022 via Newspapers com a b Schweid Richard February 6 1990 Ch 17 owner buys chunk of Ch 30 The Tennessean Nashville Tennessee p 1D Archived from the original on December 29 2022 Retrieved December 29 2022 via Newspapers com Salomon Alan January 7 1991 Stations find new life after Fox affiliation Electronic Media pp 1 134 Durden Douglas September 16 1988 Demise of WVRN strengthens programming lineup of WRLH Richmond Times Dispatch Richmond Virginia p C1 C5 Archived from the original on January 6 2023 Retrieved January 6 2023 via Newspapers com Pergament Alan June 27 1990 Shuffling of Channels 29 49 to result in shift of programs The Buffalo News p B 10 Archived from the original on January 10 2023 Retrieved January 6 2023 via Newspapers com Smith Sandy May 24 1994 Deal sets scenario for WSMV to become Fox affiliate The Tennessean Nashville Tennessee p 1A 2A Archived from the original on December 29 2022 Retrieved December 29 2022 via Newspapers com Smith Sandy June 6 1994 The clock is ticking on WSMV The Tennessean p 1D Archived from the original on December 29 2022 Retrieved December 29 2022 via Newspapers com Lippman John June 9 1994 Nashville Station Sought for Move to Fox Network The Los Angeles Times p B7 Archived from the original on January 10 2023 Retrieved December 29 2022 via Newspapers com Smith Sandy June 11 1994 WSMV is not for sale anymore The Tennessean p 1A Archived from the original on December 29 2022 Retrieved December 29 2022 via Newspapers com Simmons Darryn June 22 1995 Boston group buys WZTV Channel 17 The Tennessean p 1E Archived from the original on December 29 2022 Retrieved December 29 2022 via Newspapers com Flint Joe October 2 1995 ABRY choice is clear Sullivan to top Act III Variety Archived from the original on January 10 2023 Retrieved December 12 2021 Carey Bill February 24 1996 TV stations to share programming roof The Tennessean p 1E Archived from the original on December 29 2022 Retrieved December 29 2022 via Newspapers com Changing Hands PDF Broadcasting amp Cable March 18 1996 p 39 Archived PDF from the original on December 29 2022 Retrieved December 29 2022 A correction listing Mission not Sullivan as the buyer ran on March 25 1996 p 51 Archived October 8 2022 at the Wayback Machine a b Sturdivant Kevin D July 6 1997 Faber comes home to host Fox news The Tennessean p Showcase 22 Archived from the original on December 29 2022 Retrieved December 29 2022 via Newspapers com Ribbing Mark February 24 1998 Sinclair to purchase Sullivan Deal could be worth 1 billion gives firm 14 new TV stations Most are Fox affiliates Company continues to gain outlets in mid size markets The Baltimore Sun Archived from the original on November 27 2021 Retrieved December 12 2021 a b Mojica Adrian September 14 2021 CW Nashville moving to 17 2 over the air rescan TV on or after Sept 20 at 10 am CW58 tv Archived from the original on September 15 2021 Retrieved September 15 2021 ATTENTION FOX 17 MyTv30 and CW Nashville viewers If you receive these stations over the air on September 20 on or after 10 a m you will need to rescan your television as CW Nashville s over the air signal will move to the WZTV 17 2 channel Schmitt Brad April 11 1997 Fox 17 plans 9 p m news The Tennessean p 5B Archived from the original on December 29 2022 Retrieved December 29 2022 via Newspapers com Smith Sandy May 21 1992 Ch 4 Ch 30 to produce 9 p m fall news show The Tennessean Nashville Tennessee p 6D Archived from the original on December 29 2022 Retrieved December 29 2022 via Newspapers com Smith Sandy January 25 1994 Scene at 9 to sign off the air The Tennessean p 4D Archived from the original on December 29 2022 Retrieved December 29 2022 via Newspapers com WZTV introduces Sunday newscast Nashville Business Journal January 6 1998 Archived from the original on September 5 2008 Retrieved December 29 2022 Shiffman John March 31 2000 Fox 17 hires news director to shepherd independent newscast The Tennessean p 1E Archived from the original on January 10 2023 Retrieved December 29 2022 via Newspapers com Shiffman John July 5 2000 New FOX news is a step up for local affiliate The Tennessean p 1E 2E Archived from the original on January 10 2023 Retrieved December 29 2022 via Newspapers com Davis Hudson Eileen April 11 2005 Nashville Tenn PDF Mediaweek pp 16 22 Archived PDF from the original on September 30 2021 Retrieved December 29 2022 Watts Cindy September 29 2013 Fox 17 morning show gets revamp Monday The Tennessean p 3A Archived from the original on December 29 2022 Retrieved December 29 2022 via Newspapers com Foster Alisha July 24 2014 Fox 17 to expand local programming The Tennessean p 4D Archived from the original on December 29 2022 Retrieved December 29 2022 via Newspapers com Wyatt Jim May 24 2003 Fox program focusing on Titans debuts in fall The Tennessean p 2C Archived from the original on January 10 2023 Retrieved December 29 2022 via Newspapers com RabbitEars TV Query for WZTV RabbitEars Archived from the original on January 22 2016 Retrieved September 8 2013 Balderston Michael June 24 2020 NextGen TV Launches at Five Nashville Stations TV Technology Archived from the original on December 29 2022 Retrieved December 29 2022 TV stations ending analog service on Feb 17 NBC News Associated Press February 17 2009 Archived from the original on April 2 2015 Retrieved March 19 2015 DTV Tentative Channel Designations for the First and Second Rounds PDF Federal Communications Commission May 23 2006 Archived from the original PDF on August 29 2013 Retrieved August 29 2021 External links EditOfficial website The CW Nashville website Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title WZTV amp oldid 1132704296, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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