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WFRV-TV

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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Television station in Green Bay, Wisconsin

WFRV-TV
A silver CBS eye and numeral 5. Behind them is a blue-and-yellow swoosh starting from the left and swooping around the bottom and right to the top. The word "Local" is in silver on a black shape in the upper left.
Channels
BrandingLocal 5
Programming
Affiliations
Ownership
Owner
History
FoundedJanuary 26, 1954 (1954-01-26)
First air date
May 20, 1955
(70 years ago)
 (1955-05-20)
Former call signs
WNAM-TV (1954–1955)
Former channel numbers
  • Analog: 42 (UHF, 1954–1955), 5 (VHF, 1955–2009)
  • Digital: 39 (UHF, until 2019)
  • ABC (1954–1959, 1983–1992)
  • NBC (1959–1983)
  • DuMont (secondary, 1955)
Call sign meaning
"Wonderful Fox River Valley"[1]
Technical information[2]
Licensing authority
FCC
Facility ID9635
ERP1,000kW
HAAT363.9 m (1,194 ft)
Transmitter coordinates44°20′0.1″N87°58′55.7″W / 44.333361°N 87.982139°W /44.333361; -87.982139
Links
Public license information
Websitewww.wearegreenbay.com

WFRV-TV (channel 5) is atelevision station inGreen Bay, Wisconsin, United States, affiliated withCBS. Owned byNexstar Media Group, the station maintains studios on East Mason Street in Green Bay and a transmitter north ofMorrison, Wisconsin.

WFRV-TV traces its history to WNAM-TV, which began broadcasting in January 1954 from studios inNeenah. Owned by the Neenah-Menasha Broadcasting Company, it was the onlyultra high frequency (UHF) outlet in northeastern Wisconsin at a time when UHF stations faced severe technical and economic handicaps againstvery high frequency (VHF) stations. At the end of 1954, WNAM-TV suspended operations and merged with the Valley Telecasting Company, a consortium of area investors that had obtained theconstruction permit for channel 5 in Green Bay. The new station, WFRV-TV, debuted on May 20, 1955, from the former WNAM-TV studios in Neenah and became owned entirely by Neenah-Menasha. In January 1957, the station opened its present studios in Green Bay. Originally an affiliate of theABC network, the station switched toNBC in 1959.

From 1960 to 1980, WFRV-TV was owned by the Morton and Norton families ofLouisville, Kentucky, under the aegis of what eventually became known asOrion Broadcasting. In 1969, the company openedWJMN-TV (channel 3) inEscanaba, Michigan, which served as asemi-satellite of WFRV for the centralUpper Peninsula of Michigan. When Orion Broadcasting and Cosmos Broadcasting merged, WFRV and WJMN were divested toMidwest Radio and Television, which ownedWCCO-TV inMinneapolis. Midwest switched the station's affiliation back to ABC in 1983 and invested in the news department. Midwest was acquired by CBS in 1991. This resulted in another affiliation switch in Green Bay on March 15, 1992, with ABC moving toWBAY-TV (channel 2). CBS continued to own WFRV-TV until 2007, when it traded the Green Bay and Escanaba stations toLiberty Media in exchange for shares of its stock.

Nexstar acquired WFRV and WJMN in 2011. WFRV added several new newscasts and a lifestyle show in the years following the purchase. WJMN was also given more local news programming; that station lost its CBS affiliation in January 2022 and was sold by Nexstar in 2024.

History

[edit]

WNAM-TV and VHF merger

[edit]

WNAM-TV began telecasting fromNeenah onultra high frequency (UHF) channel 42 on January 26, 1954,[3] after beginning test transmissions in December 1953.[4] Owned by the Neenah-Menasha Broadcasting Company alongside radio stationWNAM (1280 AM), WNAM-TV carried programming from ABC beginning in July 1954.[5]

Meanwhile, in April 1952, 17 local businessmen formed the Valley Telecasting Company to apply for channel 6, which had been allocated to Green Bay.[6] Three months later, the Green Bay Newspaper Company, owner of theGreen Bay Press-Gazette newspaper and radio stationWJPG, switched its application to specify channel 6 instead of channel 2.[7] That switch left the application of WBAY-TV uncontested on channel 2, allowing theFederal Communications Commission (FCC) to grant it, and sent channel 6 to acomparative hearing situation.[8] In December 1953, acting on a petition from theHearst Corporation, the FCC moved the channel 6 allocation toWhitefish Bay, nearMilwaukee. Hearst had applied for a Milwaukee TV station but was shut out by the redesignation of channel 10 there for educational use. Moving channel 6 to Whitefish Bay required it to be replaced with channel 5 at Green Bay and channel 5 atMarquette, Michigan, to be changed to channel 6.[9][10]

On March 10, 1954, the Green Bay Newspaper Company withdrew its application for channel 5,[11] and the FCC granted a construction permit to Valley Telecasting Company the next day. By this time, there was an additional VHF station under construction in the region,WMBV-TV on channel 11.[12] Meanwhile, UHF stations were struggling.WOSH-TV ofOshkosh closed down the same month; its owners claimed that national and regional advertisers were content with VHF stations to reach the area and cited the forthcoming advent of channels 5 and 11, which together with WBAY-TV would provide all three major networks.[13] Sensing that the arrival of Valley Telecasting—which had selected the call letters WFRV-TV for its station to represent the "Wonderful Fox River Valley"[1]—would economically harm its UHF station, Neenah-Menasha agreed to merge with Valley Telecasting in November[14] and announced it would suspend operations of WNAM-TV on the evening of January 2, 1955.[15] The combined station would retain some operations at Neenah for program production in theFox Cities, but it would use the tower and transmitter building of the former WJPG-FM on Scray's Hill nearDe Pere.[14]

WFRV-TV signed on channel 5 on May 20, 1955, after an appeal lodged by WMBV-TV to block the merger of Valley Telecasting and Neenah-Menasha was declined for the final time; the station aired film programming for its first ten days before beginning affiliations with ABC and DuMont Television Network on June 1.[16] While the transmitter facility was new, WFRV-TV used WNAM-TV's Neenah studios.[16] DuMont ceased network operations four months later.[17] By 1956, Neenah-Menasha owned all of WFRV-TV;[18] that same year, the company announced plans to build a studio base in Green Bay.[19] Master control switched to Green Bay in December when a new tower and transmitter building were activated, and production from the station's present Mason Street studios began in mid-January 1957.[20]

WFRV-TV was the Green Bay station in the short-livedBadger Television Network, which operated in 1958 and also includedMilwaukee'sWISN-TV andMadison'sWKOW-TV.[21] The next year, on February 1, the station changed affiliations from ABC to NBC.[22] Later that year, the station claimed to be the first ever to show coverage of a live lunar eclipse. To capture the event, a studio camera was wheeled out into the station parking lot.[23]

Orion Broadcasting ownership

[edit]

In December 1960, Valley Telecasting sold WFRV-TV to Valley Broadcasting Company, a subsidiary ofWAVE-TV atLouisville, Kentucky, for $1.09 million.[24] WFRV's first attempt at expanding to the Upper Peninsula, a construction permit to build channel 8 atIron Mountain, Michigan, was scrapped at the company's request days after the sale, as was an application by the company to build a channel 9 station atWausau.[25]

Channel 5 began to broadcast local programming in color in the fall of 1965, making it the second station (behind WBAY-TV) with that capability in the market.[26] Two years later, the station began its move to build a satellite in the Upper Peninsula when it filed for channel 3 atEscanaba, Michigan, on June 20, 1967.[27] As a result of an attempt byNorthern Michigan University to build an educational station on the wider-coverage channel 3 instead of the allocated channel 13, nearly two years passed before a construction permit was granted on April 23, 1969.[28] From a transmitter site nearTrenary,WJMN-TV—so designated in honor of Jane Morton Norton, chairman of the board of the company[29]—began broadcasting October 7, bringing a full NBC lineup and WFRV-TV's signal to a further 50,000 households.[30] That same year, WAVE, Inc. renamed itself Orion Broadcasting in reflection of its broadcasting holdings beyond Louisville.[31]

Midwest ownership

[edit]

Orion Broadcasting reached a deal to merge with Cosmos Broadcasting, a subsidiary of theLiberty Corporation, in 1980. The merger would put the combined company over the limit for the number of VHF television stations it could own, prompting it to immediately announce that it would divest WFRV/WJMN.[32] In January 1981, Cosmos found a buyer:Midwest Radio-Television, owners ofWCCO radio andtelevision inMinneapolis.[33] The transaction closed in October.[34]

After taking over, Midwest made $1 million in major investments in new equipment, including a news helicopter.[35] On October 25, 1982, the station announced it would end its 23-year association with NBC and return to the then-stronger ABC in 1983, after ABC began courting channel 5, which had been one of NBC's strongest affiliates.[36] One potential complication emerged when it was discovered that WFRV's affiliation agreement had just been automatically renewed through February 1985.[37] It was not until March 1983 that outgoing ABC outlet WLUK-TV and NBC reached an affiliation deal, which allowed the switch to take place on April 18.[38]

CBS purchase and affiliation switch

[edit]

On July 23, 1991,CBS announced that it would purchase the entirety of Midwest Communications, Inc. The deal gave the company WCCO radio and television in Minneapolis, but it also gave CBS an ABC affiliate—WFRV/WJMN—in a market smaller than any in which the company was operating.[39] In the immediate aftermath of the $200 million acquisition, the network sent out mixed messages: CBS executive Peter Lund said the company had decided to keep the Green Bay station, yet an affiliate relations official told longtime CBS affiliate WBAY-TV that the network would be interested in remaining there if a buyer were to be found.[39]

The sale dislodged the existing CBS affiliates in the Green Bay and Marquette markets, WBAY-TV andWLUC-TV. The switch in Green Bay took place March 15, 1992—just over a month after CBS closed on the Midwest purchase—with WBAY becoming the ABC outlet.[40] In Marquette, where CBS angered WLUC-TV by notifying it on February 5 that it was terminating the affiliation agreement in July, that station switched to ABC on February 23, prompting WJMN to change to CBS three weeks early (and be fed CBS programs from the control room in Green Bay).[41]

WFRV was unaffected by the 1995 switch that saw WLUK-TV andWGBA-TV swap affiliations. The station was the first in Green Bay to launch a digital television signal, in 2002.[23]

Spinoff to Liberty Media

[edit]

In April 2007,Liberty Media (a media company unrelated to The Liberty Corporation and aspin-off of former cable television companyTCI) completed an exchange transaction with CBS Corporation pursuant to which Liberty Media exchanged 7.6 million shares of CBS Class B common stock valued at $239 million for a subsidiary of CBS that held WFRV and WJMN and approximately $170 million in cash[42] As part of the transaction, Liberty Media acquired WFRV and WJMN, becoming the only over-the-air television properties to be owned by the company.[43]

WFRV-TV shut down its analog signal, overVHF channel 5, on February 17, 2009, the original target date on which full-power television stations in the United States were totransition from analog to digital broadcasts under federal mandate (which was later pushed back to June 12, 2009).[44] The station's digital signal remained on its pre-transitionUHF channel 39, usingvirtual channel 5.[45]

WFRV under Nexstar

[edit]

On April 7, 2011,Nexstar Broadcasting Group announced it would acquire WFRV and WJMN-TV from Liberty Media for $20 million.[46] The deal was approved by the FCC on June 28, 2011,[47] and closed three days later on July 1, when Nexstar appointed Joseph Denk to become vice president and general manager of both stations.[48] Denk replaced Perry Kidder, a 37-year employee of the station, who announced his retirement shortly after the sale was announced.[49] Nexstar also relaunched the station's website at a new domain, "wearegreenbay.com".[50]

Nexstar also moved to increase the local content of WJMN in the Upper Peninsula. A station that had long merely rebroadcast WFRV-TV's newscasts or maintained a minimal reporting and weather presence in northern Michigan, WJMN launched separate local newscasts at 6 and 11 p.m. on March 13, 2014.[51] At that time, it branded as "Local 3",[51] matching WFRV, which had taken on the "Local 5" moniker in 2012.[52]

On January 27, 2016,Media General announced that it had entered into a definitive agreement to be acquired by Nexstar.[53][54] Because Media General owned WBAY, the new company was required to sell that station or WFRV to another owner. On June 3, Nexstar announced it had opted to keep WFRV and would sell WBAY along with another merger divestiture,KWQC-TV inDavenport, Iowa, toGray Television for $270 million.[55][56]

In 2022, WJMN disaffiliated with CBS in the Marquette market toWZMQ (channel 19) and replaced the CBS programs with programming fromMyNetworkTV as well as Nexstar-owneddiginetsAntenna TV andRewind TV, to fill time where CBS programming formerly resided. The station also extended its existing 6 p.m. newscast to one hour and moved its 11 p.m. newscast to 10 p.m.[57][58] Nexstar sold WJMN-TV to Sullivan's Landing, LLC in 2024; the new owner contracted withMorgan Murphy Media, owner of Marquette-market ABC affiliateWBUP, which led to that company combining the two stations' operations and newsrooms.[59]

Programming

[edit]

News operation

[edit]
A one-story midcentury building with WFRV-TV signage, satellite dishes on the roof, and a tower with a large radome on top.
WFRV's primary studios and weather radar in Green Bay
A one-story stone-clad building and a tower with a large radome on top, both emblazoned with the WFRV-TV logo.
WFRV's Fox Valley Bureau and weather radar

WFRV has typically been the second- or third-rated station for local news in the Green Bay market, which is usually led by WBAY-TV.[60][61][62]

In the early 1980s, WFRV was the first local station to start a full news bureau in the Fox Cities area, which at the time accounted for a third of the newsroom budget. Where the original news bureau was in the reporter's apartment, by 1983 the station had dedicated facilities, including a microwave link for sending stories back to Green Bay.[63] In 2004, the station moved its Fox Valley facility to a site on Patriot Drive inLittle Chute, equidistant from downtown Appleton and downtown Green Bay, and equipped it with the area's onlyDoppler weather radar.[64]

On June 23, 2011, after a six-month upgrade process, WFRV became the first station in the Green Bay market to begin broadcasting its local newscasts inhigh definition; the changeover to HD included upgraded weather systems, including real-time street-level radar.[65][66] Beginning in September 2012, WFRV greatly expanded its local news output, including the addition of an hour-long afternoon newscast at 4 p.m. and the expansion of its 6 p.m. newscast from 30 minutes to one hour; the 6 p.m. newscast was reduced to 30 minutes during theNational Football League (NFL) season on nights when WFRV aired Packers-related programming.[67][68] The station launched an hour-long local mid-morning program,Local 5 Live!, in 2013.[69]

Sports programming

[edit]

WFRV has historically been a major producer of programming around theGreen Bay Packers. In 1988, the station hired former Packers centerLarry McCarren to serve as a sportscaster.[70] By 1990, McCarren was hosting a weekly program on the team,Packers Locker Room.[71] McCarren was elevated to sports director when he signed a new long-term contract with channel 5 in 1994; this came even as CBS lost NFL rights.[72] In 2003, WFRV acquired the rights to preseason telecasts, which had belonged locally to WBAY-TV for decades; McCarren appeared on the telecasts.[73]

After the Packers left WFRV for a deal withWGBA-TV (and a renewal with Milwaukee'sWTMJ-TV) in 2012,[74] McCarren soon followed; he resigned his duties as sports director of WFRV to move to WTMJ/WGBA as a Packers analyst, becoming WGBA's official sports director on April 1, 2013.[75][76] McCarren left WGBA in 2015 and became a team employee.[77]

Notable former on-air staff

[edit]

Subchannels

[edit]

WFRV-TV broadcasts from a transmitter north ofMorrison, Wisconsin.[2] The station's signal ismultiplexed:

Subchannels of WFRV-TV[82]
ChannelRes.AspectShort nameProgramming
5.11080i16:9WFRV-HDCBS
5.2480iBounceBounce TV
5.3TruCrimTrue Crime Network
5.44:3RewindRewind TV
14.2480i16:9CometComet (WCWF)
  Broadcast on behalf of another station

WFRV gradually added severaldiginets to its lineup in the 2010s.Bounce TV was added in 2016 as part of a group deal made withKatz Broadcasting,[83][84] whileTrue Crime Network debuted in April 2020.[85]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ab"It won't be long now!".Green Bay Press-Gazette (Advertisement). July 12, 1954. p. 20.Archived from the original on October 8, 2023. RetrievedNovember 20, 2020 – via Newspapers.com.
  2. ^ab"Facility Technical Data for WFRV-TV".Licensing and Management System.Federal Communications Commission.
  3. ^"WNAM-TV to Make Official Bow at Tonight's Premier".Oshkosh Daily Northwestern. January 26, 1954. p. 9.Archived from the original on October 8, 2023. RetrievedNovember 20, 2020 – via Newspapers.com.
  4. ^"Fox Cities TV Station Gets Rigid Tests".Appleton Post-Crescent. December 10, 1953. p. 25.Archived from the original on October 8, 2023. RetrievedNovember 20, 2020 – via Newspapers.com.
  5. ^"WNAM-TV to Telecast Live ABC Programs".Appleton Post-Crescent. July 17, 1954. p. 11.Archived from the original on October 8, 2023. RetrievedNovember 20, 2020 – via Newspapers.com.
  6. ^"Form Company To Seek TV Channel Here: 17 Businessmen Are Financing Venture; Burridge President".Green Bay Press-Gazette. Green Bay, Wisconsin. April 22, 1952. pp. 1,2. RetrievedMarch 19, 2025 – via Newspapers.com.
  7. ^"Press-Gazette Seeks TV Permit On Channel 6".Green Bay Press-Gazette. Green Bay, Wisconsin. Associated Press. July 11, 1952. p. 1. RetrievedMarch 19, 2025 – via Newspapers.com.
  8. ^"Second Station In Green Bay Is Year Away: FCC To Hold Hearing On Which Applicant Will Get Channel 6".Green Bay Press-Gazette. Green Bay, Wisconsin. March 16, 1953. p. 38. RetrievedMarch 19, 2025 – via Newspapers.com.
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  60. ^Gerds, Warren (December 22, 1984)."Diary-keeper right about football".Green Bay Press-Gazette. p. A-11.Archived from the original on October 8, 2023. RetrievedOctober 8, 2023 – via Newspapers.com.
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External links

[edit]
Full power
Low-power
Defunct
1In market but transmits from andde facto serves Milwaukee.
See also
Milwaukee TV
Madison TV
Eau Claire–La Crosse TV
Wausau TV
Twin Cities TV
Duluth TV
Marquette TV
Broadcast television stations by affiliation in the state ofWisconsin
Includes stations in out-of-state TV markets, but reaching a portion of Wisconsin
ABC
CBS
Fox
NBC
The CW
Ion Television
Independent
PBS
PBS Wisconsin
WHA-TV
WHLA
WHRM
WHWC
WLEF
WPNE
Milwaukee PBS
WMVS
WMVT
Twin Cities PBS
KTCA-TV
KTCI-TV
Religious
Independent
WVCY-TV
TBN
WWRS-TV
Spanish
Telemundo
KJNK-LD
WMEI .6
WYTU-LD
WDJT-TV .4
Univision
WUMN-LD
Other
365BLK
WBAY-TV .31
Cozi TV
WIWN
MeTV
WBME-CD
WDJT-TV .2
WMEI
WSAW-TV .21
W21DS-D .21
WZMQ
North Star SEN
KBJR-TV .31
KRII .31
ATSC 3.0
  • 1 Also has secondary affiliation with MyNetworkTV.
See also
Illinois TV
Iowa TV
Michigan TV
Minnesota TV
ABC
CBS
The CW
Fox
MyNetworkTV
NBC
Other stations
Antenna TV
KGBT-TV
Telemundo
KKEY-LP
KTAB-TV .2
Independent
KUSI-TV
KZUP-CD
WDVM-TV
Radio
WGN
TV network
Other assets
Online media
Border Report
The Hill
TV Content management
Lakana
LIN Digital
Online advertising
Yashi
Acquisitions
** Owned by third parties but operated by Nexstar through various agreements.
International
National
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