| |
|---|---|
| City | Weston, West Virginia |
| Channels | |
| Branding | WDTV 5;5 News |
| Programming | |
| Affiliations |
|
| Ownership | |
| Owner |
|
| WVFX | |
| History | |
First air date | March 17, 1954 (71 years ago) (1954-03-17)[a] |
Former call signs | WJPB-TV (1954–1964) |
Former channel numbers |
|
| |
Call sign meaning | Chosen in honor ofKDKA-TV's original call sign |
| Technical information[3] | |
Licensing authority | FCC |
| Facility ID | 70592 |
| ERP | 935 kW[1] |
| HAAT | 221.8 m (728 ft)[1] |
| Transmitter coordinates | 39°18′2″N80°20′36″W / 39.30056°N 80.34333°W /39.30056; -80.34333 |
| Translator(s) | W28FC-D (UHF 28,Roanoke) |
| Links | |
Public license information | |
| Website | www |
WDTV (channel 5) is atelevision station licensed toWeston, West Virginia, United States, serving as theCBS affiliate forNorth-Central West Virginia. It is owned byGray Media alongsideClarksburg-licensed dualFox/CW+ affiliateWVFX (channel 10). The two stations share studios on Television Drive inBridgeport (alongI-79/Jennings Randolph Expressway); WDTV's transmitter is located in an unincorporated area between Clarksburg andArlington.
It signed on as WJPB-TV on March 17, 1954, as the second television station in themarket licensed toFairmont. WJPB was a primaryNBC affiliate but maintained secondary relations withABC and CBS.WTAP-TV inParkersburg was technically the area's first outlet having launched October 8, 1953. That station cleared programming from NBC, CBS, and ABC but was intended to be a primary NBC outlet.[citation needed] Originally, there were plans calling for WJPB to join WTAP (located 70 miles [113 km] to the west) and turn North-Central West Virginia into one large market. However, the latter's analog signal on UHF channel 15 was not strong enough to reach across the very ruggeddissected plateau to provide Fairmont, Clarksburg, and Weston with adequate reception. Likewise, WJPB's analog signal on UHF channel 35 did not reach Parkersburg.
Those two issues, combined with the fact UHF converters were very expensive, led the station to shut down on February 28, 1955. Meanwhile, the area's third stationWBOY-TV signed on from Clarksburg on November 17, 1957. That was originally intended to be the ABC affiliate for all of North-Central West Virginia. After it became clear Clarksburg–Weston–Fairmont and Parkersburg were going to be separate markets, WBOY joined NBC and remains with the network to this day. On December 30, 1959, WJPB's owner was awarded a construction permit for an analog signal on the more desirable VHF channel 5 in Weston. It returned to the air on June 23, 1960, as a sole ABC affiliate.[4] On November 15, 1964, the station changed itscall letters to WDTV. The calls had previously been used from 1949 until 1954 on what is now CBSO&OKDKA-TV inPittsburgh. The call sign was reportedly chosen for use on this West Virginia outlet "in honor" of KDKA which had been a charter affiliate ofDuMont and served as the default station for Clarksburg–Weston–Fairmont.
In 1967, WDTV switched primary affiliation to CBS. As a result, it is one of the few TV stations in the country that has held a primary affiliation with all"Big Three" networks. However, for many years it continued sharing ABC with WBOY and aired selectsports programming from the network since the market was one of the few in the country without a primary ABC affiliate. The area's cable companies importedWTAE-TV from Pittsburgh (which already served theMorgantown area) to bring the full ABC schedule to the area. Illinois businessman W. Russell Withers bought the station in 1973 under hisWithers Broadcasting
At some point in 1981, WDTV dropped all ABC programming. The network would not return to a Clarksburg–Weston–Fairmont based station until August 1, 2008, when WBOY launched a new seconddigital subchannel to offer the network. WDTV aired programming fromUPN on its second digital subchannel until September 18, 2006, when the network merged withThe WB to formThe CW. WVFX, at the time owned separately from this station, became an affiliate with the new combined service (throughThe CW Plus) on a second digital subchannel.
In 2007, WVFX's owner, Davis Television, sold that station to Withers Broadcasting. The Clarksburg–Weston–Fairmont market has only five full-power stations, too few to allow a duopoly under normalFederal Communications Commission (FCC) guidelines. However, Withers obtained a "failed station" waiver allowing the purchase to go through.Gray Television announced on May 13, 2016, that it would acquire WDTV and WVFX for $26.5 million.[5] Gray assumed control of the stations through alocal marketing agreement on June 1.[6] The sale was completed on May 1, 2017.[7]
The northern West Virginia television geography is unusual, asMonongalia County (including Morgantown) andPreston County are assigned to the Pittsburgh market. WDTV has long claimed Morgantown as its primary coverage area, and been carried onXfinity's Morgantown cable system and its predecessors since 1965. However, none of the Clarksburg–Weston–Fairmont market stations were available on satellite in those counties, as the FCC would not allow satellite providers to carry them. A change in the law removed this restriction; one of the stated goals was to allow "orphan counties" served on satellite only by stations from other states to receive stations from their own state. The Monongalia and Preston County governments petitioned to allow carriage of Clarksburg–Weston–Fairmont market stations, and the market change was granted on February 2, 2018.[8]
WBOY historically leads WDTV in localNielsen ratings because it operates a news bureau in Morgantown and provides its two West Virginia sister stations with a large amount of sports content relative toWest Virginia University, an arrangement dating back to their ownership byWest Virginia Media Holdings. However, in recent years, WDTV has been able to pull ahead in the key demographics for most of their shows, and even beats WBOY in overall viewers at times. In summer 2005, its newscast operation and commercial production went completely digital usingelectronic news gatheringcameras. The station was also first in West Virginia (and quite possibly theEast Coast) to exchange audio and video files through various compression formats and high speedFTP servers.
After acquiring WVFX, WDTV made plans to produce a prime time newscast at 10 p.m. on the former. It would be the second time a broadcast has been attempted on the station in its history. In late 2010, the plans became a reality. The show is known asFox 10 News at 10 and it features theFox Interactive Media graphics package and music theme. WVFX also simulcasts WDTV's early evening broadcasts on weeknights from 5 to 6:30 p.m. This station does not air its weekday morning show for a full two hours unlike most CBS affiliates.
On November 12, 2011, WDTV began airing their news broadcasts in high definition. It makes WDTV the third station in West Virginia to broadcast local news in high definition, followingWTAP andWSAZ-TV (which, ironically, are now sister stations of WDTV).
On December 5, 2024, WDTV aired the station's first-ever documentary,4th and Forever: Liberty's Last Season.[9] Narrated byJimbo Fisher, a 1983 graduate ofLiberty High School, the documentary follows the school's last football season before being consolidated into its crosstown rival. This is the first full-length documentary produced by a television station in Clarksburg, West Virginia.
The station's signal ismultiplexed:
| Channel | Res. | Aspect | Short name | Programming |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 5.1 | 1080i | 16:9 | WDTV-D1 | CBS |
| 5.2 | 480i | WDTV-D2 | MeTV | |
| 5.3 | WDTV-D3 | Heroes & Icons | ||
| 5.4 | WDTV-D4 | Outlaw |
WDTV shut down its analog signal, overVHF channel 5, on June 12, 2009, the official date on which full-power television stations in the United Statestransitioned from analog to digital broadcasts under federal mandate. The station's digital signal relocated from its pre-transition VHF channel 6 to channel 5.[11][12]
WDTV is carried as far south asSummersville in theCharleston–Huntington market. In the Pittsburgh market, it is carried in Morgantown, West Virginia;Markleysburg, Pennsylvania; andOakland, Maryland. In theHarrisonburg market, it is carried inFranklin,Pendleton County.
During the 1970s and possibly into the 1980s, WDTV was once carried in Charleston[13] and surrounding areas. In Charleston, WDTV was available only whenWCHS-TV, then the CBS affiliate in the Charleston–Huntington market, did not clear a network program.