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| History | |
First air date | June 19, 1953 (72 years ago) (1953-06-19) |
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Call sign meaning | Wonderful Charleston, South Carolina |
| Technical information[1] | |
Licensing authority | FCC |
| Facility ID | 71297 |
| ERP | 625kW |
| HAAT | 521 m (1,709 ft) |
| Transmitter coordinates | 32°55′29″N79°41′57″W / 32.92472°N 79.69917°W /32.92472; -79.69917 |
| Links | |
Public license information | |
| Website | www |
WCSC-TV (channel 5) is atelevision station inCharleston, South Carolina, United States, affiliated withCBS and owned byGray Media. The station's studios are located in theWest Ashley section of Charleston, and its transmitter is located inAwendaw, South Carolina. Both the studio and road are named for long-time WCSC personalities:Bill Sharpe, a news anchor from 1973 until his retirement in 2021, and Charlie Hall, the station's original personality who died just months before its relocation to the current facilities in 1997.
WCSC-TV began broadcasting on June 19, 1953.[2] Originally operating from studios located on East Bay Street in downtown Charleston, it was the second television station in South Carolina and the oldest continuously operating station in the state (the first wasWCOS-TV inColumbia, which broadcast from May 1953 to January 1956). It is the only station in Charleston to keep its original network affiliation since sign-on. The channel aired ananalog signal onVHF channel 5 and was originally owned by the Rivers family along with WCSC radio (AM 1390, nowWSPO, and 96.9 FM, nowWIWF).
Many of WCSC's early on-air staff were former radio disc jockeys who became involved with the new medium of television in 1953, including Al Stone, formerly recruited fromWGAR who at the time worked alongside Alan Freed (Moondog) inCleveland. Al Stone started with WCSC in 1952 as a radio DJ and the following year started hosting as emcee local program in 1953 calledWaxworks and later a local popularAmerican Bandstand–type dance show reviewing music for local teens. Carroll Godwin hosted a local daytimetalk show in the 1960s. Loraine (Rainee) Evans hosted the popular children's programThe Happy Raine Show. Ken Klyce was another popular news announcer.
The Rivers family sold WCSC-TV to Crump Communications ofHouston in 1987 while the radio stations were sold to Ralph Guild ofNew York City. Crump kept the station until selling it toGE Capital in 1991.[3] Three years later, WCSC-TV was sold to theJefferson-Pilot Corporation in 1994.[4] Jefferson-Pilot merged with theLincoln Financial Group in 2006 with its broadcast properties assuming the new corporate name ofLincoln Financial Media. In 1997, the station moved to newly built studios on Charlie Hall Boulevard in the West Ashley section of Charleston. The street was named for WCSC's longtime weatherman, Charlie Hall, who had been the first person seen on the station when it signed on in 1953. One of the station's most popular personalities, Hall stayed at channel 5 there covering events includingHurricane Hugo's impact on Charleston in 1989 until his death in March 1997. Local sports coverage has also been prominent at WCSC. In the early 1980s,Charleston Cougars games were aired on the station. It aired theCooper River Bridge Run from 1986 until 1990 and resumed the telecasts in 2004. The broadcasts feature reporters on the course.
WCSC was the local outlet forAtlantic Coast Conferencebasketball andSoutheastern Conferencefootball which have been produced by its parent company since the 1980s. In 2004, Jefferson-Pilot management effectively forced out Warren Peper (who had been with the station since 1974) by only offering him a one-year extension of his contract with no renewal option.[citation needed] The popular anchor, who had handled both news and sports during his time at WCSC, was also the play-by-play announcer for the station's live coverage of college basketball and theCooper River Bridge Run.
After the station was sold to Jefferson-Pilot, Peper was a sideline reporter for the company's syndicated college football broadcasts. Peper went toMedia General'sWCBD-TV after a one-year non-compete agreement in themarket expired. Viewers wrote that they hoped WCSC would not force out longtime anchors Bill Sharpe and Debi Chard in the same way. WCSC had lured meteorologist Bill Walsh away from rivalWCIV in 1994 and had to hide his identity with thunderclouds when running station promotions during his non-compete agreement.[citation needed]
On November 12, 2007, Lincoln Financial Media entered into an agreement to sell WCSC and the company's two other television stations (WBTV inCharlotte, North Carolina, andWWBT inRichmond, Virginia) and Lincoln Financial Sports to Raycom Media for $583 million. Raycom took ownership of the station on April 1, 2008. This made WCSC sister toWIS in Columbia,WTOC-TV inSavannah, Georgia, andWMBF-TV inMyrtle Beach. Between them, the four stations cover the eastern two-thirds of South Carolina.
On October 3, 2013, in honor of Bill Sharpe's 40 years at the station, the studio was renamed the Bill Sharpe Studio.
On June 25, 2018, Gray Television announced its intent to acquire Raycom for $3.65 billion, pending regulatory approval.[5][6] The sale was completed on January 2, 2019.[7]
Since 2024, WCSC's 3rd subchannel has aired select matches featuring theCharleston Battery of theUSL Championship.[8]
WCSC's newscasts have long dominated the ratings in Charleston.[citation needed] The station's various owners have always poured significant resources into the news department, resulting in a much higher-quality product than conventional wisdom would suggest for a market of Charleston's size. The station had the same two news anchors weeknights at 6:30 from the mid-1970s until 1991 and the same three news anchors were together until 1997. Bill Sharpe became an employee at the station in 1973 after a short time atWTMA and has been with the station for over 40 years, with the station naming the primary studio for him in 2013. For most of the time since 1991, he has been teamed with Debi Chard. Sharpe retired on October 28, 2021. WCSC has been a trend-setter in South Carolina for newscasts as it expanded its local evening news programming on weeknights from thirty minutes to two and a half hours and has the most newscasts in the state within a broadcast day.[9]
AfterFox requested its affiliates to air local news in the early 1990s,WTAT-TV (then owned byAct III Broadcasting) entered into a news share agreement with WCSC. This resulted in a nightly prime time broadcast known asThe Fox 24 News at 10 to debut. It was the first prime time show in South Carolina, in the early 90s, followed by Fox affiliateWACH in Columbia which had a similar arrangement withNBC affiliate WIS, in that market, during the mid to late 90s. Eventually, an hour-long morning show on weekdays calledThe Fox 24 News at 7 also produced by WCSC launched on WTAT. Both shows originate from a secondary studio at 2126 Charlie Hall Boulevard (not the Sharpe studio). The 10 o'clock news is currently the second highest rated broadcast in the area.
In 1991, this station began airing a one-hour broadcast weeknights at 6 which later became ninety minutes from 5 to 6:30 followed byCBS Evening News in 1997. Prior to this, the national news aired at 7. In January 2000, WCSC launched its regional weather radar called "Live Super Doppler 5000". Now known as "Super Doppler HD", the system comprises four regional liveNOAANational Weather Service radars and its own Collins radar sold by Advanced Designs Corporation inBloomington, Indiana (which makes the station the only one in the market to operate its own radar). The station has often shared weather radars with fellow Raycom stations since the practice started after being purchased by Jefferson-Pilot.
In 2004, it added a thirty-minute newscast weekdays at 4 p.m. now totaling two hours of local broadcasts between 4 and 6:30. WCSC is the only station in the area to air local news at 4. In August 2006, with anchor and format changes at theCBS Evening News and concerns over ratings, it added a prime time show weeknights at 7 to "piggyback" with the network newscast. WCSC andABC affiliate WCIV-DT2 are the only stations in the area to offer news in this time slot, and is similar to fellow Raycom stations in the Carolinas, following the lead of WIS, which has run 7 p.m. since 1963.
The station expanded its weather product with the "Live 5 Storm TRACKER Mobile Storm Center". It is the first vehicle of its kind in the region and allows WCSC meteorologists access to weather data away from the station and ability to send back live weather data for display on-air. On September 29, 2008, WCSC set another broadcasting benchmark in the area when it became the first to offer newscasts in high definition. The upgrade included new custom Raycom corporate graphics, a re-designed HD logo, and updated music package. The WTAT broadcasts were initially not included in the new HD production because that station was not yet equipped to broadcast local or syndicated programming in high definition. As of January 24, 2011, the WTAT news shows are now in HD. Starting August 31, 2009, the weeknight prime time show at 10 on WTAT was expanded to an hour and added a second news anchor.
On January 25, 2014, WCSC-TV expanded its news presence, again, by adding a Saturday and Sunday morning broadcast ofLive 5 News This Morning from 6 a.m. to 8 a.m.
OnDecember 31, 2015, WCSC-TV produced its last broadcast for WTAT-TV (with production for that station moving to sister station WCIV). WCSC-TV began producing an expansion toLive 5 News on its Bounce digital subchannel from 7 a.m. to 8 a.m. The station also expanded its 7 p.m. newscast to one hour in late November.[10]
In 2023, a new Bill Sharpe Studio was constructed with influence from Gray'sWANF in Atlanta.[11]
The station's signal ismultiplexed:
| Channel | Res. | Aspect | Short name | Programming |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 5.1 | 1080i | 16:9 | WCSCDT | CBS |
| 5.2 | 480i | WCSCBNC | Bounce TV | |
| 5.3 | CSCPSEN | Palmetto Sports & Entertainment | ||
| 5.4 | WCSCGRT | Grit | ||
| 5.5 | WCSCDT5 | Quest | ||
| 5.6 | WCSCDT6 | Ion Mystery | ||
| 5.7 | WCSC365 | 365BLK | ||
| 4.2 | 720p | 16:9 | WGWGDEC | Catchy Comedy (WGWG) |
WCSC-TV launched a second subchannel on January 8, 2010, that carries additional programming, branded asLive 5+.[13] Until 2013, the schedule consisted of additional syndicated programming (some of which has moved to other stations) as well as select programming from the main channel aired on 5.2. On December 26, 2013, select programming fromThis TV was added the channel. As of 2016, syndicated programs are no longer seen on the schedule. WCSC-TV added Bounce TV to 5.3 upon its launch on September 26, 2011.
WCSC-TV shut down its analog signal, over VHF channel 5, at 6 a.m. on June 12, 2009, as part of thefederally mandated transition from analog to digital television.[14] Reporter Bill Burr and chief meteorologist Bill Walsh conducted the switch inside the transmitter room during the station's morning newscast.[15] The station's digital signal remained on its pre-transitionUHF channel 47, usingvirtual channel 5.[16]
On June 1, 2018, as part of therepacking process, WCSC-TV moved its digital signal to channel 19.[17]
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