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City | Grand Rapids, Michigan |
Channels | |
Branding | 13 On Your Side |
Programming | |
Affiliations |
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Ownership | |
Owner |
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History | |
First air date | November 1, 1962 (62 years ago) (1962-11-01) |
Former channel number(s) |
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Call sign meaning | "WZZM" forms anambigram |
Technical information[1] | |
Licensing authority | FCC |
Facility ID | 49713 |
ERP | 24.5kW |
HAAT | 324.3 m (1,064 ft) |
Transmitter coordinates | 43°18′35″N85°54′45″W / 43.30972°N 85.91250°W /43.30972; -85.91250 |
Links | |
Public license information | |
Website | www |
WZZM (channel 13) is atelevision station licensed toGrand Rapids, Michigan, United States, servingWest Michigan as an affiliate ofABC. Owned byTegna Inc., the station has studios on 3 Mile Road NW inWalker (with a Grand Rapidsmailing address), and its transmitter is located inGrant, Michigan.
Channel 13 was inserted into Grand Rapids in 1961; station spacing rules of the time required that the transmitter be to the north of the city, closer toMuskegon. The station went on the air in November 1962 under interim operating authority; four companies jointly owned the station until West Michigan Telecasters was granted the permanent license in 1964 and bought out the others' interim holdings in 1965. Because of the transmitter site restriction, the station did not and does not provide adequate coverage of the southern portion of the market, namelyKalamazoo andBattle Creek. In the late 1960s and early 1970s, the station sought translators to serve those cities, only to have the proposals turned down in order to protect a new station on channel 41 in Battle Creek, WUHQ-TV (nowWOTV), which also broadcasts ABC but with separate non-network programming. An attempt to combine WZZM-TV and WUHQ-TV failed in 1991, and WOTV is today co-owned withWOOD-TV, the market'sNBC affiliate. Satellite television providersDish Network andDirecTV provide both stations across the entire market, and WZZM is also on cable in Battle Creek.
In local news, the station had a highly regarded news department from the 1960s through the 1980s; its original news director stayed on for the first 25 years of its history. While the station continues to be competitive, particularly in the Grand Rapids area northward, coverage shortfalls in the south and the aggregate nature of the television market have made WOOD-TV the overall market news leader since the 1990s. The station maintains a litweather ball displayed near its Walker studios.
In 1959, the Atlas Broadcasting Company was organized to pursue the addition of a thirdvery high frequency (VHF) station in West Michigan. It applied to theFederal Communications Commission (FCC), proposing the addition of channel 13 to Grand Rapids. The station would transmit from an area nearMuskegon, north of Grand Rapids, where it would be appropriately spaced toWSPD-TV inToledo, Ohio, andWREX-TV inRockford, Illinois; FCC regulations required the transmitter to be located at least 170 miles (274 km) from competing stations on that frequency. Atlas also proposed movingWWTV inCadillac to channel 9, where it would still be appropriately spaced toCKLW-TV inWindsor, Ontario.[2] The FCC approved this allocation change in 1961; it replaced channel 9 inAlpena with channel 6.[3] The placement of the channel at Grand Rapids attracted interest even before the insertion was final. By the end of 1960, three groups had incorporated with an eye toward filing for channel 13, including West Michigan Telecasters—consisting of 24 shareholders with Lewis V. Chamberlain, Jr. as president—whose final application was filed in October 1961.[4] One of the shareholders wasL. William Seidman, then on the board of directors ofGrand Valley State College and later chairman of theFederal Deposit Insurance Corporation.[5][6] Some of the stockholders were from Muskegon; the group promoted the northerly transmitter site as a bonus, noting that there were no local stations in Muskegon and that other communities such asGrand Haven andHolland were also underserved.[7] West Michigan was one of six applicants to file by the end of 1961, alongside Atlas (which also owned Grand Rapids–area radio stationWMAX); Grand Broadcasting Company, which counted formerWLAV andWLAV-TV owner Leonard Versluis among its stockholders as well as former FCC counsel Mary Jane Morris; Major Television Company; MKO Broadcasting Company; and Peninsular Broadcasting Company.[5]
In its order assigning channel 13 to Grand Rapids, the FCC indicated its willingness to accept proposals for interim operating authority to hasten the construction of the station. This meant that thecomparative hearing process and construction would run in parallel. Days after filing its permanent bid, West Michigan Telecasters also proposed interim operating authority.[8] Major and Atlas both withdrew in August 1962; the four remaining contenders formed Channel 13, Grand Rapids, Inc., which received interim authority that same month.[9] The interim station originally chose the call letters WIIM-TV, butWJIM-TV inLansing objected, resulting in the choice of WZZM as the call sign.[10] Construction rapidly proceeded, and from studios in thePantlind Hotel downtown, WZZM made its first broadcast on November 1, 1962, an ABC affiliate from the start.[11]
While WZZM was on the air, the applicants wrangled at the FCC over permanent authority to run it. In May 1963, an FCC hearing examiner gave Grand Broadcasting Company the nod in his initial decision, citing its superior integration of ownership and management, a comparative criterion analyzing the involvement of owners in station operations.[12] The FCC itself, however, instead selected West Michigan Telecasters in April 1964, citing its principals' involvement in civic affairs and research into local public service programming.[13] The company then settled with the other applicants, ultimately paying them between $360,000 and $390,000 apiece,[14] and on January 25, 1965, it became the sole owner of WZZM.[15] After the award, West Michigan Telecasters proceeded with its plans to build a studio in Muskegon.[16]
After a plan to merge with Basic Communications Inc. andEccentric magazine inBirmingham, Michigan, fell through,[17] West Michigan Telecasters merged with two publishing companies in 1969 to form Synercom Communications Corporation.[18] In 1971, WZZM-TV finally left the Pantlind and moved to purpose-built studios. The 38,500-square-foot (3,580 m2) facility also housedWZZM-FM, which West Michigan Telecasters had acquired in 1966,[19] and the station's production arm.[20] Synercom then spun West Michigan Telecasters and the WZZM stations out as its own company in 1973, including Elinor Bunin Productions, a New York City film production house.[18]
West Michigan Telecasters entered into an agreement to sell WZZM-TV toWometco Enterprises for $14 million in 1976, with WZZM-TV becoming Wometco's fourth television property.[21] The acquisition closed in January 1978;[22] WZZM-FM was split from the television station by West Michigan Telecasters and sold to separate interests.[23] Wometco was then taken private in aleveraged buyout byKohlberg Kravis Roberts (KKR) in 1984.[24]
KKR then sold the station to Price Communications, owned byRobert Price, in 1985; the deal was the largest acquisition for the company to date.[25] Price then sold its four stations to Northstar Television Group in 1989 for $70 million; Northstar was a joint venture of Osborn Television and Desai Capital, the largest stakeholder in Price.[26] Three of Northstar's four stations were acquired by Argyle Television Holdings II in 1994; the original Argyle Television had been sold earlier in the year.[27]
In 1996, theGannett Company acquiredMultimedia, Inc.. This created conflicts for the company inCincinnati andOklahoma City, where Multimedia had a newspaper-TV station combination and a TV station-cable system combination that were not permissible under FCC rules of the time. As a result, Gannett agreed to a trade with Argyle. Gannett sent Argyle the Cincinnati and Oklahoma City stations (WLWT andKOCO-TV) in exchange for $20 million;WGRZ inBuffalo, New York; and WZZM-TV.[28] In 1999, after a 33-year run, the station ceased producing its local children's show,Bozo's Big Top.[29][30]
From 1967 to 1987, aweather ball sat atop the Michigan National Bank building in Grand Rapids, utilizing 288 colored neon lights to convey forecast precipitation or changes in temperature, until it was removed because its weight had caused structural damage. The station located the stainless steel ball in a scrapyard in Kalamazoo in 1999 and applied to authorities in Walker to mount a 100-foot (30 m) pole to display it near its studios in 2002.[31][32] New neon tubes were fitted atop the restored weather ball, which returned to service in 2003.[33]
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. WZZM was retained by the latter company, namedTegna.[34]
The FCC reckoned channel 13 as a Grand Rapids–Kalamazoo station when it inserted the allocation,[3] and for most regional viewers the sign-on of WZZM gave West Michigan full service from all three networks; the market was already served by Grand Rapids–based NBC affiliate WOOD-TV and Kalamazoo-basedCBS affiliateWKZO-TV. However, WZZM's transmitter was located further north than its competitors. While the northerly location was necessary to insert channel 13 in the area in the first place, it left much of the market's southern portion without even a fringe signal from the station. Bill Tompkins ofThe Battle Creek Enquirer and News wrote that local viewers found WZZM "about as elusive as a flying saucer" when it began broadcasting. While WZZM officials insisted that Battle Creek was firmly within its service area, only a "small and lucky" few viewers received a watchable signal from channel 13, and Kalamazoo viewers reported getting only marginal coverage at best from WZZM. Since WOOD-TV and WKZO-TV removed ABC programs from their schedules when WZZM came into service, viewers in this area had to depend on part-time carriage of ABC programs by the stations in theLansing–Jackson market.[35] In 1964, WZZM was authorized to construct a translator on channel 12 in Kalamazoo,[36] and the next year, it applied to build one on channel 83 in Battle Creek. This was simultaneous with Mary Jane Morris, who had been involved with one of the losing bids for channel 13, filing with James Searer to build a full-service station in Battle Creek on channel 65.[37] That translator went on the air on channel 74 in January 1968,[38] but the FCC then ordered it to cease broadcasting in early March in the context of a battle with the permittee for a full-power station on Battle Creek's channel 41. The commission expressed concern that the WZZM translator could be detrimental to the establishment of the proposed full-service station.[39] This was particularly acute because the channel 41 permittee, BCU-TV, proposed to affiliate with ABC, while WZZM-TV contended it had the rights to ABC in the Battle Creek area.[40] West Michigan Telecasters reached a deal with BCU-TV to buy the channel 41 permit in October 1968.[41]
However, that same week, a second local group, Channel 41, Inc., filed a competing application to propose a local station, with Searer defecting from BCU-TV to become one of its leaders.[42] The FCC canceled BCU-TV's construction permit and West Michigan Telecasters's attempt to buy it on September 8, 1969. It then accepted the application of Channel 41, Inc., for filing;[43] ten days later, West Michigan Telecasters abandoned its attempt to pursue channel 41 in favor of seeking a relocation of its transmitter fromGrant toHudsonville, improving the signal in Kalamazoo and Battle Creek.[44] However, the spacing considerations that resulted in the northerly location of WZZM in the first place were an insurmountable obstacle; the FCC denied the proposal because it would have been too close to the channel 13 station in Toledo.[45]
Channel 41, Inc., received its construction permit in July 1970[46] and went on the air asWUHQ-TV on July 24, 1971. The Battle Creek cable system removed WZZM-TV from its lineup to accommodate the new ABC affiliate; in spite of the competition, WUHQ-TV depended on WZZM to receive ABC network programming.[47] The FCC then ordered WZZM-TV to cease using its Kalamazoo translator on February 7, 1972.[48] WZZM-TV was restored to Battle Creek cable in 1975 over objections from WUHQ-TV,[49] then discontinued in 1986 along with two out-of-market network affiliates.[50]
In 1990, WZZM owner Northstar Television announced it had entered into a merger agreement with Channel 41, Inc., the owner of WUHQ-TV, which would have seen WUHQ-TV and WZZM share almost all programming with the exception of split local news programming. John Lawrence, president of WUHQ, said at the time, "It is now appropriate that ABC service in this market be combined."[51] The FCC approved of the merger in June 1991, with Northstar announcing a plan to continue airing separate news coverage,[52] but a planned August closing was delayed[53] and never took place. WUHQ-TV's owners then signed an agreement for WOTV (channel 8) to provide news coverage for channel 41,[54] part of an 11-year time brokerage agreement in which WOTV assumed many of the station's operating functions but not ownership.[55] WUHQ-TV then changed its call sign to WOTV in June 1992 when WOTV becameWOOD-TV.[56]
Dish Network began offering local channel service in the market in 2002 and offers WZZM and WOTV in all areas.[57] WZZM was readded to severalComcast systems in southwest Michigan, including Battle Creek, in 2009.[58]
WZZM currently produces 32 hours of local news each week (with five hours each weekday, three hours on Saturdays and four hours on Sundays).[59]
WZZM's original news director, Jack Hogan—who was the first voice heard on the station when it started—held the post for more than 25 years until Price Communications owner Robert Price fired him in February 1988. During Hogan's tenure, the station was a stop on the careers of journalists including sportscasterJohn Keating (known as Steve Knight in Grand Rapids), futureDetroit Free Press executive editorKurt Luedtke, and reportersJay Schadler andMartha Teichner. In spite of its coverage shortfalls, WZZM was West Michigan's revenue leader for most of its history through the 1980s.[60] In the late 1970s, it surpassed WOTV (channel 8) in local news viewership for the first time,[61] becoming the regular number-one by the early 1980s.[62] It was nationally respected: the Associated Press said in 1980 that "WZZM has a quality news operation that should be the envy of many stations in larger markets", while it won six straight "News Station of the Year" honors within Michigan fromUnited Press International.[63] After the Price purchase, the station experienced several high-profile defections to other stations.[60] Hogan's firing came less than two weeks after the1988 Michigan Republican presidential caucus. Price, aRepublican, demanded information on delegate counts; from New York City, he ordered Hogan out of bed and to station offices to keep him informed until 3 a.m., accused the station's staff of poor reporting despite not having seen its coverage, and threatened to fire the entire news department.[63]
The 1990s brought changes to the newsroom. The station debuted an hour-long morning news program in 1992[64] and a 5:30 p.m. newscast in February 1993.[65] However, WOOD-TV became the news leader in the highly fragmented market: though WZZM-TV was stronger within the immediate Grand Rapids area, WOOD's availability in the Kalamazoo–Battle Creek area more than offset the Muskegon and northern area coverage unique to channel 13. WOOD-TV's sales manager likened the advertising sales power of his competitor to "a vehicle with two wheels" because of its inability to cover the full market.[66][67] Another obstacle, particularly with older viewers, was that WOOD-TV predated WZZM in Grand Rapids by more than a decade.[68] In 2016, WZZM added eight and a half hours a week of new newscasts, including morning and noon news extensions and a 5 p.m. newscast.[69]
In 2004, the station debuted a 5 p.m. talk show,Take Five Grand Rapids.[70] The program was originally produced outside the news department, mixing features and sponsored segments.[71] The show was moved to 4:30 p.m., retitledTake Five & Company, and then moved to an hour at 9 a.m. in 2008.[72][73] It was replaced with a new hour-long program known asMy West Michigan in 2015.[74] The program was put on a continuing hiatus in July 2020 because ofCOVID-19-related restrictions that made the show's format unworkable.[75]
The station's signal ismultiplexed:
Channel | Res. | Aspect | Short name | Programming |
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13.1 | 720p | 16:9 | WZZM 13 | ABC |
13.2 | 480i | WX | 13 On Your Side Weather Network | |
13.3 | Crime | True Crime Network | ||
13.4 | Quest | Quest | ||
13.5 | Crime | True Crime Network | ||
13.6 | Outlaw | Outlaw | ||
13.7 | QVC | QVC | ||
13.8 | ShopLC | Shop LC | ||
13.9 | StartTV | Start TV |
WZZM shut down its analog signal, overVHF channel 13, on June 12, 2009, as part of thefederally mandated transition from analog to digital television. The station's digital signal relocated from its pre-transitionUHF channel 39 to channel 13.[77]