| |
|---|---|
| City | Kalamazoo, Michigan |
| Channels | |
| Branding |
|
| Programming | |
| Affiliations |
|
| Ownership | |
| Owner |
|
| History | |
First air date | June 1, 1950 (1950-06-01) |
Former call signs | WKZO-TV (1950–1985) |
Former channel numbers |
|
Call sign meaning | We're West Michigan Television |
| Technical information[1] | |
Licensing authority | FCC |
| Facility ID | 74195 |
| ERP | 25kW |
| HAAT | 317 m (1,040 ft) |
| Transmitter coordinates | 42°37′56″N85°32′16″W / 42.63222°N 85.53778°W /42.63222; -85.53778 |
| Links | |
Public license information | |
| Website | wwmt |
WWMT (channel 3) is atelevision station inKalamazoo, Michigan, United States, servingWest Michigan as an affiliate ofCBS. The station is owned bySinclair Broadcast Group and maintains studios on West Maple Street in Kalamazoo; its transmitter is located north ofGun Lake, alongM-179.
WWMT went on the air on June 1, 1950, as WKZO-TV. Owned byJohn Fetzer alongsideWKZO radio in Kalamazoo, the station was a CBS affiliate from shortly after its first telecast—though it aired various programs from other networks as late as 1962—and the second television station on the air in West Michigan. WKZO-TV expanded into local news in 1953; its coverage generally lagged behind the other stations, though its strongest ratings were in the southern portion of the market that included Kalamazoo.
Fetzer sold his remaining TV stations toGillett Communications in 1985, and channel 3 changed itscall sign to WWMT that December. Under Gillett and Busse Broadcasting, a management buyout of five smaller-market Gillett stations, the station became more competitive not only in the Kalamazoo area but in the broader media market as it invested in its newscasts, improving equipment and adding morning coverage. After two years of ownership byGranite Broadcasting,Freedom Communications acquired WWMT in 1998. Under Freedom, the station launched a subchannel affiliated withThe CW in 2006. Sinclair acquired the Freedom TV stations in 2012.
The Fetzer Broadcasting Company filed an application on May 12, 1948, seeking to build a television station inKalamazoo, and theFederal Communications Commission (FCC) granted aconstruction permit to Fetzer on July 29.[2] WKZO-TV began broadcasting its first test signals on April 6, 1950,[3] and by May it was telecasting slide and film programs on a test basis.[4] The station began airing regular programs on June 1, 1950,[5] and network programming on July 9 as the 20th primary affiliate ofCBS; network programs were received fromWJBK-TV inDetroit andmicrowaved across the state.[6] The CBS affiliation matched Fetzer'sWKZO radio station in Kalamazoo.[7] In addition to CBS, the station aired some programming fromNBC[8] and theDuMont Television Network.[7] In 1953, the station upgraded itseffective radiated power to 80,000 watts afterWTMJ-TV inMilwaukee moved from channel 3 to channel 4,[9] followed by a second increase to 100,000 watts in 1954.[10] WKZO-TV was the second television station inWest Michigan and the fifth in the state, coming on the air less than a year after WLAV-TV (channel 7, nowWOOD-TV on channel 8) began in August 1949. The owner of Fetzer Broadcasting Company,John Fetzer, later recalled, "I was broke when I decided to get into television" and that his attorney and wife were skeptical of the new medium's prospects. To help finance the station, Fetzer bartered for the use of equipment from manufacturer Federal Telephone and Radio Corporation in exchange for being used in Federal promotional materials.[11] Early local programs included agricultural and women's programs as well as sponsored soapbox derby races.[12] Another long-running program was the children's showChannel 3 Clubhouse, which debuted in 1956 and ran as a daily feature before moving to weekends in 1984.[13]
Originally sharing studios with WKZO radio in the Burdick Hotel, which was billed as "Block Long Radio City",[11] in 1956, Fetzer announced the acquisition of land and a building at Maple Street and Crosstown Parkway to build new studios for WKZO-TV.[14] The facility, known as Broadcast House, was completed in June 1958. It featured two television studios and a studio designed for simulcast radio and television programs.[15] In 1961, transmission of WKZO-TV moved to a more northerly site inBarry County, nearGun Lake, where that station and co-ownedWBCT were installed on a 1,130-foot (340 m) tower.[16][17] The next year, the station—which had carried selectedABC programs—dropped them whenWZZM-TV (channel 13) began inGrand Rapids.[18] In 1956, Fetzer was part of an 11-member group that bought theDetroit Tigers baseball team,[19] becoming the sole owner in 1962.[20] Fetzer had initially become involved to protect the rights to broadcast the club for his stations;[21] Channel 3 remained on the Tigers network through 1995.[22]
WWMT debuted its first newscast on April 5, 1953, with Hugh Harper as the first anchorman. The WKZO radio and television news operations were combined; for instance, Karl Guenther was the farm director for radio and produced an agricultural TV show,Michigan Reports.[23] However, its record in local news coverage was lacking. In 1973, WKZO-TV ranked in the bottom ten among 140 stations in the top 50 television markets in the percentage of airtime devoted to news and public affairs programming[24][25] and at the bottom in employing minorities, according to a report produced byNicholas Johnson.[26] In 1981, WKZO established facilities to provide live transmission of news material from Grand Rapids to Kalamazoo, where previously tapes had to be driven an hour for broadcast.[27] WKZO found itself in third place in overall market ratings,[28] including in second place in Kalamazoo and Calhoun counties (losing to WOTV), and its image lagged in the community, where people often joked about channel 3's news.[29]
After 35 years of ownership, in August 1985, Fetzer announced the sale of WKZO-TV—as well asKOLN and KGIN-TV in central Nebraska andKMEG inSioux City, Iowa—toGillett Communications ofNashville, Tennessee.[30] WKZO radio remained with Fetzer, and as a result, the call sign for WKZO-TV changed to WWMT when Gillett took over on December 5, 1985.[31] Gillett canceledChannel 3 Clubhouse, whose tapings interfered with the production of local newscasts,[32] andAccent, the long-running news and features program descended from the station'sFeminine Fancies of the 1950s.[33] The new owner set out to bolster the news department. It hiredJohn Lansing fromWAVE inLouisville, Kentucky, to serve as WWMT's news director,[34] invested $1 million into technical improvements, and upgraded the station's syndicated programming inventory.[35] A new anchor, Barry Shanley, was hired from WZZM. News staff were no longer burdened by the triple responsibility of being television reporters, radio reporters, and photographers.[29]
In 1987, Gillett conducted a buyout ofStorer Communications. With this acquisition, Gillett now had 14 stations, more than the limit of 12 then in place. Five of Gillett's smaller stations, including WWMT, were spun off to a new company, Busse Broadcasting Corporation, which was run by and named for the former general manager ofWEAU-TV inEau Claire, Wisconsin, one of the stations included in the transaction.[36] Busse Broadcasting was originally announced to be owned by Lawrence A. Busse and a trust set up for George N. Gillett Jr.'s children; the FCC rejected complaints from members of Congress after Gillett himself bought non-voting stock in the company.[37] Busse Broadcasting was headquartered in Kalamazoo.[38] By the time Lansing departed forKARE inMinneapolis in 1988, WWMT was again number-one in its home area and a more competitive third-place outlet in the larger media market.[39]
WWMT began airing a morning newscast in 1989.[40] This was followed by the institution of weekday noon and weekend morning newscasts in 1992.[41] and a 5:30 p.m. newscast in 1994.[42]
In January 1995,Granite Broadcasting agreed to acquire WWMT from Busse for $95 million.[43] The company took over in June, and in March 1996, it fired manager Gil Buettner and replaced him with Dick Appleton, who had owned WZZM under the aegis of Northstar Television Group until 1995. At the time, channel 3 was close to tied with WZZM for second in news ratings.[44] Later that year, Granite was contracted byJoel Ferguson to runWLAJ, theABC affiliate inLansing, with management duties for WLAJ moving to Kalamazoo.[45] Granite did not immediately buy WLAJ, valued at $19.4 million, outright because of the signal overlap between the Lansing and Kalamazoo stations.[46] Several staff, including anchorJoe Parker, were transferred from Kalamazoo to Lansing to reinitiate a news department there.[47][48]
Granite agreed to acquireKOFY-TV inSan Francisco in late 1997. To fund the purchase, the company opted to sell WWMT and WLAJ toFreedom Communications for a total of $170 million,[46] with the deal closing that July.[49]
On April 4, 2006, WWMT announced it would affiliate withThe CW on a newdigital subchannel.[50] The subchannel was known as CW7, as it aired on channel 7 on some local cable systems.[51] A 10 p.m. newscast debuted on CW7 in February 2008.[52]
Under Freedom, WWMT continued to provide services to WLAJ. Some WLAJ operations moved to WWMT in 2005,[53] and when WLAJ discontinued longform local newscasts in 2009, WWMT continued to provide limited news breaks and weather to the Lansing station.[54]
Freedom Communications announced on November 2, 2011, that it would exit from television and sell its stations, including WWMT, to theSinclair Broadcast Group.[55] Sinclair operated the stations beginning on December 1, 2011, and the deal formally closed in April 2012.[56] Ties with the Lansing station were cut, as Sinclair sold WLAJ to Shield Media; Shield entered into an agreement with Lansing'sWLNS-TV, and in 2013, WLAJ began airing that station's news programming.[57][58]
Sinclair provided a cash infusion to WWMT, whose news operation had languished during Freedom's bankruptcy.[59] Less than a month after Sinclair closed on ownership, the morning newscast was extended to a 4:30 a.m. start.[60] The company reinstated weekend morning newscasts, invested in new newsgathering equipment, and extended the 10 p.m. CW newscast from 30 minutes to an hour.[59]
On May 8, 2017, Sinclair entered into an agreement to acquire Chicago-basedTribune Media, owner ofFox affiliateWXMI (channel 17).[61] FCC rules of the time precluded Sinclair from simultaneously owning WWMT and WXMI, two of the four highest-rated stations. Though WXMI was later earmarked for divestiture,[62][63] the overall deal was terminated in August 2018 after the FCC designated it for administrative hearing.[64]
In April 2023, WWMT was the subject of abomb threat when a person entered the station and claimed to an employee that he had a bomb on him. The station was safely evacuated and the suspect surrendered within three hours. The station remained closed off after the suspect was arrested due to a backpack that the person brought in.[65][66][67] By that year, WWMT was in second place across the day in news ratings.[68]
The CW affiliation moved toWOTV 41.2 on January 1, 2024.[69] As such, the subchannel became anindependent, rebranded as "ARC West Michigan".[70]
WWMT is broadcast from a transmitter north ofGun Lake, Michigan, alongM-179.[1] The station's signal ismultiplexed:
| Channel | Res. | Aspect | Short name | Programming |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 3.1 | 1080i | 16:9 | CBS | CBS |
| 3.2 | Ind | Independent | ||
| 3.3 | 480i | ROAR | Roar | |
| 3.4 | CHSN | Chicago Sports Network | ||
| 15.3 | 480i | 4:3 | Comet | Comet (WXSP-CD) |
WWMT shut down its analog signal on June 12, 2009, as part of thedigital television transition.[77] The station's digital signal moved from channel 2 to channel 8 for post-transition operations.[78]