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WGBA-TV

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

Not to be confused withWGBH-TV.
WGBA-TV
In a Futura-like font without serifs, a large black "26" with the NBC Peacock logo to the right is displayed.
CityGreen Bay, Wisconsin
Channels
BrandingNBC 26
Programming
Affiliations
Ownership
Owner
WACY-TV
History
First air date
December 31, 1980 (44 years ago) (1980-12-31)
Former call signs
  • WLRE (1980–1985)
  • WGBA (1985–2009; unsuffixed calls)
Former channel numbers
  • Analog: 26 (UHF, 1980–2009)
  • Digital: 41 (UHF, 2002–2018)
Call sign meaning
Green Bay & Appleton
Technical information[1]
Licensing authority
FCC
Facility ID2708
ERP500kW
HAAT369 m (1,211 ft)
Transmitter coordinates44°21′30″N87°58′48.4″W / 44.35833°N 87.980111°W /44.35833; -87.980111
Translator(s)WLWK-CD 22 (UHF)Sturgeon Bay
Links
Public license information
Websitewww.nbc26.com

WGBA-TV (channel 26) is atelevision station inGreen Bay, Wisconsin, United States, affiliated withNBC. It is owned by theE. W. Scripps Company alongsideAppleton-licensedindependent stationWACY-TV (channel 32). The two stations share studios on North Road near theWIS 172 freeway inAshwaubenon (with a Green Baypostal address); WGBA-TV's transmitter is located in the unincorporated community ofShirley, east ofDe Pere, Wisconsin.

WGBA-TV operates aClass Atranslator station inDoor County,WLWK-CD (channel 22), licensed toSturgeon Bay, which transmits from a site north of Sturgeon Bay on Door County Trunk Highway HH.

History

[edit]

Early years

[edit]

WLRE, which stood for station co-founder Lyle R. Evans, sought to be operational as early as December 1977. It delayed so that it could put its transmission tower onScray Hill near De Pere, the location of other Green Bay market transmitter towers.[2] Ultimately the location was approved, but it meant ground was not broken on the studio and antenna location until June 1980. The station signed on the air onDecember 31, 1980, broadcasting ananalog signal on UHF channel 26. It was the Green Bay market's secondindependent station, after the short-livedKFIZ-TV (channel 34) inFond du Lac from 1968 to 1972. It was also the first new commercial station to sign-on in Green Bay itself sinceWFRV-TV (channel 5) signed on in May 1955. On November 12, 1982, WLRE was able to power up a new transmitter and had plans for further antenna power boosts.[3]

In early 1983, coinciding with the purchase of a licensing deal of approximately 1,000 movies and other syndicated programs,[3] WLRE took on the tagline "The Great Entertainer".[4] In late 1984, the station's partnership was dissolved in abankruptcy court in which investors lost money. In 1985, it was bought byFamily Group Broadcasting Incorporated for only pennies on the dollar. On October 3 of that year, the station's call letters were changed to WGBA-TV.[5] The station, then known on-air as "TV 26", was well known in its early years for children's program host "Cuddles theClown", who stayed with the station until it switched to NBC, and moved to sister stationWACY-TV (channel 32) before retiring. The station's imaging was also shared with sister stationWQRF-TV inRockford, Illinois;WVFT-TV inRoanoke, Virginia;WPGX-TV inPanama City, Florida;WFGX-TV inFort Walton Beach, Florida; andWLAX-TV inLa Crosse, Wisconsin, including its early 'diamond' logo.

In the wake of a bankruptcy, Green Bay's originalFox affiliate WXGZ (channel 32) went dark on February 14, 1992. WGBA became the new affiliate the following day, changing its branding to "Fox 26". After Ace TV acquired the WXGZ license, WGBA helped to relaunch the station through alocal marketing agreement in June 1994. That station became a charter affiliate ofUPN and changed its call letters to WACY-TV in 1995. In 1994, during the first year ofFox's contract to broadcast NFL games, the station entered into a contract withABC affiliateWBAY-TV (channel 2) to produce a pregame show to air beforeGreen Bay Packers games since it lacked a local sports department. With Fox gaining rights to air NFC games, channel 26 became the Packers' unofficial home station (a role it would only hold for one season; since their switch to NBC, the station aired any Packer games from 1995 to 1997 when the team hosted an AFC team at Lambeau Field, and since 2006, allNBC Sunday Night Football games; it also was the stationSuper Bowl XXXII aired in the market).

NBC affiliation

[edit]
The studios of WGBA-TV andWACY-TV in 2007
Further information:1994–1996 United States broadcast television realignment

In 1994,WLUK-TV (channel 11) and three other stations owned by Burnham Broadcasting were sold toSF Broadcasting (owned as a partnership betweenSavoy Communications and Fox). As part of the purchase and through Fox's ownership of the group, SF signed a group affiliation deal to switch its stations to Fox; this enabled WLUK to become the Packers' unofficial "home" station as Fox had acquired the television contract to theNFL'sNational Football Conference. Almost by default, WGBA was then left to take the NBC affiliation.[6] On August 28, 1995, WGBA-TV switched its affiliation to NBC (and changed its on-air branding to "NBC 26"); the Fox affiliation moved to former NBC affiliate WLUK. As an NBC affiliate, it struggled to find a constant identity. Green Bay's other three stations have been on-the-air since the 1950s and had loyal audiences. Relief did not come until October 2004, when the Journal Broadcast Group bought it for $43.2 million after Aries Telecommunications sold the station. Journal had long wanted a station in Northeastern Wisconsin alongside its flagship station,WTMJ-TV inMilwaukee, thatmarket's NBC affiliate and long-dominant news station.

The purchase also included the LMA with WACY. Although Journal wanted to buy WACY outright, this had been unlikely since Green Bay has only seven full-power stations (not enough to legally permit a duopoly). However, in September 2010, WLUK ownerLIN TV Corporation exercised an option to purchaseCW affiliateWCWF (channel 14) fromACME Communications, and filed for a "failing station waiver" – which permits duopoly in such situations if the petitioner can prove the station is in an economically non-viable position – to allow LIN to own WLUK and WCWF. Because WCWF was hampered for years by several factors, including insufficient cable carriage and an analog signal originating more towards its city of license,Suring, than Green Bay, the waiver was granted in February 2011.[7][8] Journal eventually pleaded for the failing station waiver for WACY at the beginning of 2012, citing that station'sdark period between 1992 and 1994 (when the Ace TV LMA began) and that the station was unable to survive on its own without the production and control assistance of WGBA. Because of this, the FCC allowed the full sale of WACY to Journal at the beginning of September 2012.[9][10][11]

Since being acquired by Journal, WGBA and WTMJ have become closesister stations, eventually synchronizing their news imaging and sharing news and sports resources (WTMJ had previously paired with WFRV-TV, an NBC affiliate until the early 1980s, to provide Green Bay coverage and video). This became more evident in 2008, when WGBA outsourced sports and weekend weather reports to WTMJ, and had simulcast that station's morning and noon newscasts for a short time.

Summer 2013 Time Warner Cable carriage dispute

[edit]

After several extensions of the original June 30, 2013, expired agreement, and the invocation of thesweeps rule disallowing cable providers from pulling the main signal of a carried station during local sweeps periods (which includes July),[12] the main signals of WGBA and WACY were pulled offTime Warner Cable systems in the market at midnight on July 25, 2013.[13] The MeTV subchannel had been pulled earlier on July 10 as those were not under the same protection under the sweeps rule.[14] WTMJ was also affected in the Milwaukee market, along with Journal stations inOmaha andPalm Springs, California. The main effect of the blackout on Time Warner Cable systems was the carriage of three Packers preseason games on WTMJ and WGBA, which were blacked out on the provider due to the dispute, though the games were still available via theSpanish language simulcast using the Packers Television network camera positions produced for Milwaukee'sTelemundo affiliateWYTU-LD (channel 63/49.4), which is carried on the subchannel tier in the Green Bay market (and was simulcast on WACY), with the suggestion to listen to English play-by-play via eitherWTMJ radio from Milwaukee or the local FM stations in Green Bay or Appleton carrying Packers Radio Network coverage. The later replays of the games were also available via replays onNFL Network through the week.[15]

Aclass action lawsuit was also filed by viewers against Time Warner Cable on August 8 under grounds ofbreach of contract.[16] Journal Broadcast Group has also made claims via its website detailing their version of the carriage dispute that TWC was distracted due to the other dispute involvingCBS Corporation'sTelevision Stations group andShowtime Networks premium channel suites.[17]

By August 15, WGBA and WACY's channel slots on Time Warner Cable were replaced with a simulcast ofGSN, withStarz Kids & Family airing on the channel 994 subchannel slot usually carrying MeTV. Journal Broadcast Group also asked state authorities to intervene in their dispute with Time Warner Cable.[18]

Journal and Time Warner Cable came to an agreement for carriage on September 20, 2013, to last at least through the2016 Summer Olympics, returning WGBA and WACY to their lineups as of 7 p.m. that evening. However, Journal conceded that the analog andcable-ready positions were less important than carriage in the high definition tier, so while WGBA's high definition signal remained on channel 1007, the standard definition signal moved to channel 13, WACY's former SD slot, with WACY shifting to channel 83 with high definition coverage coming at the start of the year.[19] However, MeTV subchannel 26.2 remained removed from Time Warner systems, though southern portions of the Green Bay market already receive MeTV Milwaukee flagshipWBME-CD (channel 41) on the basic lifeline tier.[20]

Sale to the E. W. Scripps Company

[edit]

On July 30, 2014, theE. W. Scripps Company announced that it would acquire Journal Communications in an all-stock transaction. The combined firm would retain their broadcast properties, including WTMJ-TV and its radio siblings, with the print assets beingspun off as Journal Media Group.[21] The deal was approved by the FCC on December 12, 2014,[22] with shareholders of the two companies approving it on March 11, 2015;[23] the merger/spin-off between Journal and Scripps formally closed on April 1.

Scripps and Time Warner Cable announced a new multi-year carriage agreement on February 1, 2016, that includes WGBA and WACY, well ahead of the 2016 Summer Olympics and averting any carriage issues for the Games.[24] This also returned all the subchannels of WGBA to Time Warner systems in the area on channels 990 and 991, which occurred on April 4, 2016.

Programming

[edit]

Packers partnership

[edit]

On March 2, 2012, the Green Bay Packers and Journal announced that WTMJ would be retained as theOfficial Packers Station in the Milwaukee market after the expiration of the previous agreement, and that WGBA would become the official station for the team in the Green Bay market beginning in August 2012, replacing former partner WFRV-TV.[25] As a result, WGBA carries the majority of the team's preseason schedule (the game broadcasts useCBS Sports announcers, with theNBC Sunday Night Football graphics package) along withPackers Live Tuesday nights andTotal Packers withMatt LaFleur on Wednesday evenings before prime time, and theInside Lambeau program on Sunday nights, along with other official team programming; the station also provides gametime and 'ride home' forecasts for the "TundraVision" scoreboard displays atLambeau Field during Packers home games. The first preseason game of 2012 was a nationalESPN game against theSan Diego Chargers on August 9 and aired on WBAY-TV, precluding a situation where NBC's non-preemptable coverage of theSummer Olympics would have forced WGBA to move that game to WACY instead (that situation also occurred four years later due to the 2016 Summer Olympics for two games). In addition, the station also held the rights to the September 13Thursday Night Football game of thePackers–Bears rivalry broadcast on cable/satellite on NFL Network, a network unavailable to much of the Green Bay market at the time due to conflicts with Time Warner Cable (three weeks later Time Warner added the network to its systems); this unusually forced theseason seven finale ofAmerica's Got Talent to air the same night over WACY (the station's first move of NBC programming to that station in a pre-emption situation), and re-air afterSaturday Night Live on September 15 on WGBA due to the preemption. As an NBC affiliate, WGBA broadcasts Packers games that are played onSunday Night Football. For the2016 and2017 seasons, the station also aired Packers appearances on NBC's portion of theThursday Night Football contract, along with the November 17, 2022, Packers game against theTennessee Titans onAmazon Prime Video. It also carried the team's first London appearance in theNFL International Series on October 9 against theNew York Giants atTottenham Hotspur Stadium.[26]

Larry McCarren, who had been the sports director at WFRV until the Packers contract ended in March 2012, along with budget cuts at that station, went over to Journal in July 2012; however he was only able to do short Packer analysis segments through the 2012 season on-air for WTMJ and WGBA, along with blogging on WTMJ's site, due to a one-yearnon-compete clause (which included these segments by contractual force originating outside the Green Bay market in Milwaukee), but continued his duties as color commentator over Journal's Packers Radio Network. With the expiration of the clause, McCarren assumed sports director duties for WGBA on April 1, 2013.[27][28]Packers Live, a program that resembles his formerLocker Room program, with Packer player guests and "chalk talk" play analysis in front of a live audience, also began airing on the station beginning with the 2013 NFL season. He retired as WGBA sports director in April 2015 to fully focus on his television and radio network duties for the Packers and Scripps (as of the fall 2018 purchase of Scripps' Milwaukee radio stations by Good Karma Brands, his radio duties are now with that group).

News operation

[edit]
A secondary version of WGBA's logo, formerly primary until the channel number and NBC logo were isolated in 2021. Currently used mainly forstation identification purposes.

WGBA-TV broadcasts24+12 hours of locally produced newscasts each week (with4+12 hours each weekday and one hour each on Saturdays and Sundays). In addition to its main studios, the station operates aFox Cities Bureau in DowntownAppleton on West College Avenue. WGBA operates its ownweather radar from the North Road studios. In addition tolocal insertions duringToday, WGBA also carries news and weather updates during the noon hour weekdays duringNBC News Daily at around 20 and 50 minutes past the hour.

In early 1996, shortly after WGBA picked up the NBC affiliation, then-owner Aries Telecommunications announced plans to start a full-fledged news department for the station. On July 19, 1996, during the start of NBC's coverage of the1996 Summer Olympics, WGBA debuted its local newscasts, with a half-hour early-evening newscast at 6 p.m. on Mondays through Saturdays (the initial broadcast of that program on July 19 ran a special one-hour broadcast, leading into NBC's coverage of theOlympic Opening Ceremonies inAtlanta) and a late evening newscast at 10 p.m. seven nights a week. Ted O'Connell[29] was WGBA's firstnews director; he was succeeded by Ashley Webster (now a journalist withFox Business Network), who also served as weeknight co-anchor alongside Heather Hays (presently a main anchor at Foxowned-and-operated stationKDFW inDallas-Fort Worth). Eventually as the operation grew, the station added newscasts on weekday mornings, weekdays at noon and at 5 p.m.

WGBA's newscasts have consistently rated fourth in the market, behind WBAY, WLUK and WFRV. Ratings were unable to improve after the Journal purchase, even with the ties to WTMJ's news department, which had issues in itself in the Milwaukee market. TheGreat Recession in particular starkly brought these issues on-air. On June 3, 2008, Journal announced that WGBA's sports department would shut down and that it would be laying off sports anchors Ted Stefaniak and John Burton.[30] Until Larry McCarren took over as sports director in April 2013,[31] sports segments were taped in advance and originated from WTMJ's facilities (on East Capitol Drive/WIS 190 in Milwaukee'sFar North Side section) using its personnel.

On July 14, 2008, due to low ratings and inconsistent viewership, WGBA discontinued its weekday morning and noon newscasts, while laying off some of its staff. In place of those shows, the station began simulcasting WTMJ's morning and midday newscastsLive at Daybreak (now known asTMJ4 News Today) andLive at Noon, interspersed with local weather cut-ins presented by a meteorologist from WGBA's Green Bay studios (again, recorded in advance since WTMJ was already live in its own market), but with no regard to coverage of Fox Valley and Green Bay news.[32] Due to the latter issue, in January 2009, the weekday morning simulcast was dropped and turned into a WGBA-produced rolling weather block calledNon-Stop Weather. WTMJ's weekday noon broadcast was later moved to WACY and replaced in that timeslot on WGBA bypaid programming, which for a time in 2008, filled some of the station's early afternoon schedule due to an unusual number of syndicated program cancellations in that year. The midday news simulcast on WACY and paid programming on WGBA were eventually dropped as well.

On April 7, 2009, WTMJ became the first station in Milwaukee to begin broadcasting its local newscasts inhigh definition. However, until April 2012, the pre-taped nightly sports and weekend weather segments originating from WTMJ were broadcast in4:3standard definition.[33] On July 24, it was announced that WGBA would eliminate some of its reporting and photojournalist positions, with the remaining staff being retrained to act as "one-man band"videojournalists handling reporting, camera work, and editing stories themselves. In September 2009, reporter Bonnie Kirschman, the final employee to remain with WGBA's news operation since its 1996 launch, left the station.

In mid-August 2009, the weekday morning weather block was canceled entirely and replaced by the now-canceled syndicated lifestyle talk showBetter, which moved to the 5 a.m. hour followed by encore broadcasts of the previous night's 10 p.m. newscast andEarly Today beforeToday.[34] On January 10, 2011, WGBA restored a weekday morning newscast to its schedule under the slightly revised title ofNBC 26 News Today from a new secondary set exclusively used for the program.[35] In August 2012, the Valley news bureau, which had been in operation since July 1996, was shut down.

On April 7, 2012, WGBA upgraded its local newscasts to16:9 widescreen standard definition. It became the last station in the market to convert to full high-definition operations on January 23, 2016, with the unveiling of a new chyron-heavy "virtual" set, the first major change to the station's newsroom and set since the station began carrying newscasts in 1996 and the newsroom and anchor sets were split off in the early 2000s via an opaque partition. The station began to use the default Scripps graphics package/news music package in October 2016.

In October 2014, the station addedWisconsin Tonight, a pre-prime time newsmagazine to nights without Packers team programming which features news rundowns, feature segments and various NBC affiliate service reports, along with some shared content from WTMJ, which also carried their own edition ofWisconsin Tonight; this averted a situation whereInside Edition, which was moved to an earlier timeslot, might only air up to two of their five programs a week on the station in the fall and early winter. That show moved to WBAY in the fall of 2015. Starting with the 2016 Summer Olympics, the station launched Scripps' national programsThe List andRight This Minute in the 4 p.m. timeslot. In June 2017,Wisconsin Tonight was retitledThe Now Wisconsin, in line with Scripps' branding for their feature-heavy local newscast format which WTMJ also took up; theWisconsin Tonight title remained in use for a Saturday nightadvertorial program, presumably to preventtrademark dilution where another state station can claim the title for their program; it has intermittently aired since September 2017.

On June 15, 2020, WGBA began producing a 9 p.m. newscast for WACY entitledMy News at 9, the first time WLUK-TV's 9 p.m. news has had competition; the latter half hour is filled with a same-night replay ofNBC26 Tonight, the station's local version of Scripps' national programThe Now (it is unknown if WGBA's Packers Television Network programming will repeat in the fall in that timeslot).

National attention on the Internet

[edit]

In 2012, two segments from WGBA's morning newscasts gained notice on the Internet. In January of that year, a video showing meteorologist Brian Niznansky falling victim to an on-air prank went viral in which Niznansky was tricked into saying, "I love lamp," a line from the filmAnchorman: The Legend of Ron Burgundy. By October 2012, the video was viewed nearly two million times onYouTube. The prank was featured on several news sites, including on the front page ofMSN at one point.

In September 2012, on the day following the controversialNFL game between the Green Bay Packers and Seattle Seahawks, the station did a segment on its morning newscast with a "replacement weather guy", poking fun at the NFL replacement referees. WGBA floor director Tom Legener was seen on-air forecasting a "thunderblizzard hurricane", with a temperature of "-200 degrees" at 7 a.m. and "346 degrees" at noon. The video went viral, and by October 2012, had nearly 600,000 views on YouTube. It was featured on various news sites, includingCNN,ESPN,Yahoo!, and MSN.

Notable current on-air staff

[edit]
  • Larry McCarren – former sports director; remains asPackers Live host

Technical information

[edit]

Subchannels

[edit]

The station's signal ismultiplexed:

Subchannels of WGBA-TV[36]
ChannelRes.AspectShort nameProgramming
WGBA-TVWLWK-CD
26.122.11080i16:9WGBA-HDNBC
26.222.2480iIonPlusIon Plus
26.322.3GRITGrit
26.422.4IONIon Television
26.522.5HSNHSN
26.622.6QVCQVC
26.722.7QVC2QVC2

WGBA launched a new seconddigital subchannel in November 2010 carryingTheCoolTV which had aired on the WTMJ's second subchannel since the summer of 2009. The establishment of WGBA-DT2 made it the second commercial station in the market to launch a subchannel service after WBAY-TV. On September 7, 2011, Journal andWeigel Broadcasting announced that WGBA would carryMeTV beginning on October 1, 2011.[37][38] MeTV replaced TheCoolTV on 26.2 on that date, as Journal brought a lawsuit against TheCoolTV's parent company Cool Music Network, LLC for non-payment of services; WTMJ-TV, along with Journal's other stations dropped the network on October 1, 2011, to carryLive Well Network or MeTV, depending on the market.[39][40][41] Sometime in the summer of 2016, 26.2 was converted to awidescreen presentation in line with Weigel converting their networks to that format.

On May 18, 2015, Scripps andKatz Broadcasting announced an affiliation agreement allowing Scripps' Green Bay duopoly to carry all three of Katz's digital broadcast networks in the near future, with WGBA carryingLaff and WACY carryingEscape andGrit (Laff launched one month earlier in markets with Scripps-owned stations not affected by its merger with the Journal Broadcasting Group, while the two others will also begin to be carried by select sister stations of WGBA through the deal).[42] Laff debuted as a digital subchannel on August 12, 2015.

In late April 2019, WGBA was revealed as launching a fourth digital subchannel for Katz's relaunch ofCourt TV on May 8, 2019.[43] At the end of October 2021, the station picked upIon Television (formerly a WBAY subchannel since 2015), which had come under common Scripps ownership in January 2021. In December 2021, a minor switch of subchannels occurred, with WGBA-DT3 becoming the new home of Grit, and WACY-DT2 taking Laff.

The station ended its MeTV affiliation on October 1, 2022, due to corporate mandates involving Scripps preferring their networks be carried on their stations, withDefy TV replacing it and two subchannels for theQVC networks added on the same day. MeTV's ownerWeigel Broadcasting has since launched a newShawano-licensed station on channel 31,WMEI, on June 23, 2024, with MeTV, in addition to subchannels carryingMeTV+,MeTV Toons,Story Television andMovies!.

On July 1, 2024, subchannel 2 was switched without notice from Defy TV to ION plus.

Analog-to-digital conversion

[edit]

WGBA-TV shut down its analog signal, overUHF channel 26, 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 remained on its pre-transition UHF channel 41,[44][45] usingvirtual channel 26.

One week after the transition, Journal chose to suffix all of their owned television stations with the "-TV" suffix as part of the FCC's one-time allowance during the transition to allow stations to suffix either "-TV" or "-DT" to their call signs if not previously included on their permanent digital channel; this included WGBA, which became WGBA-TV in FCC correspondence and on-air station identifications upon that day.

On July 1, 2019, WGBA's digital signal moved from channel 41 to channel 14 as part of the FCC spectrum repack.

Translator

[edit]
City of licenseCallsignChannelERPHAATFacility IDTransmitter coordinates
Sturgeon BayWLWK-CD19 (UHF, VC 22)4.1 kW195.8 m (642.4 ft)271144°54′13.7″N87°22′08.2″W / 44.903806°N 87.368944°W /44.903806; -87.368944 (WLWK-CD)

In addition to its main signal, WGBA operates atranslator to extend the station's coverage northward. This is a remnant of the analog era when it was Green Bay's only major UHF commercial television station. The station in fact kept apost office box address open for years to allow responses to an offer through a station promo of a free pamphlet describing the installation of a UHFtelevision antenna to interested viewers until the early 1990s.[46] During that period, residents of NorthernDoor County and the southern portion ofMichigan'sUpper Peninsula could easily receive the three Green Bay network stations onVHF and WFRV semi-satelliteWJMN-TV fromEscanaba, Michigan, along with PBS member stationWNMU fromMarquette, Michigan, but not WGBA andPBS Wisconsin's WPNE-TV (channel 38); the latter is served bySister Bay translator W15DJ-D.

WLWK-CD (channel 22) inSturgeon Bay is officially licensed as aClass A station; this translator was known as W22BW prior to November 27, 2012.[47] Journal and Scripps used the Sturgeon Bay station to warehouse severalcall letters utilized by its FM station on 94.5 in the Milwaukee market to prevent re-use by competitors. It first carriedWKTI, a call sign that had been in use from 1974 to 2008, and were previously warehoused on former sister stationWJBE (1040 AM) inPowell, Tennessee, which serves theKnoxville market, until December 2012, when that station was sold to local interests. The calls came back into use in the Milwaukee market as of early June 2015, when Scripps switched 94.5 back to WKTI this time under a country format. WKTI-CD then changed its call sign to WLWK-CD on June 17, 2015, as the WLWK calls used between 2008 and 2015 (standing for "The Lake Milwaukee") on the 94.5 frequency had to be warehoused themselves to preventa station in Racine trying to claim the station's former branding andvariety hits format after Scripps dropped it. Scripps sold the Milwaukee radio stations in 2018 toGood Karma Brands, making it unlikely any other calls will be warehoused on channel 22.

Former translators

[edit]

Before it became an NBC affiliate, WGBA was rebroadcast in Michigan's Upper Peninsula on W02AM (channel 2) inGwinn, W09BA (channel 9) inFelch,W49AF (channel 49) inCrystal Falls, and W56BF (channel 56) inIron Mountain. The last translator was encrypted and part of the now-defunct over-the-air cable system in the area.

WGBA-TV formerly operated analog translator W31BK inMenominee, Michigan.

References

[edit]
  1. ^"Facility Technical Data for WGBA-TV".Licensing and Management System.Federal Communications Commission.
  2. ^"Opening of Fifth Green Bay TV Station Delayed".The Post-Crescent. January 22, 1978. p. C-12. RetrievedMay 26, 2018 – via Newspapers.com.
  3. ^ab"New Transmitter part of WLRE push into Valley".The Post-Crescent. November 20, 1982. p. B-4. RetrievedMay 26, 2018 – via Newspapers.com.
  4. ^"7PM PRIME REVIEWS (Advertisement)".The Post-Crescent. April 26, 1983. B-6. RetrievedMay 26, 2018 – via Newspapers.com.
  5. ^"FCCInfo Results".www.fccinfo.com. Cavell, Mertz & Associates, Inc. RetrievedMay 26, 2018.
  6. ^"Clipped from Green Bay Press-Gazette".Green Bay Press-Gazette. August 27, 1995. p. 37.
  7. ^Jessell, Harry A.; Arthur Greenwald (September 21, 2010)."LIN Seeks OK for Dayton, Green Bay Duops".TVNewsCheck. NewsCheck Media.
  8. ^Eggerton, John (April 12, 2011)."FCC Grants Sale of ACME Stations, Denies Time Warner Cable Petitions".Multichannel News. NewBay Media.
  9. ^Jessell, Harry A. (May 4, 2012)."Journal hopes to buy WACY for $2M".TVNewsCheck. NewsCheck Media. RetrievedJune 28, 2015.
  10. ^Eggerton, John (September 4, 2012)."FCC Okays Journal Request for Green Bay Duopoly Waiver".Broadcasting & Cable.NewBay Media. RetrievedSeptember 4, 2012.
  11. ^Kirchen, Rich (October 23, 2012)."Journal closes acquisition of WACY-TV in Fox Valley".Milwaukee Business Journal.American City Business Journals.
  12. ^Kirchen, Rich (June 28, 2013)."Time Warner Cable, Channel 4 owner agree to extension".The Business Journal (Milwaukee).American City Business Journals. RetrievedJune 29, 2013.
  13. ^Dudek, Duane (July 25, 2013)."Conspiracy theories, frustration multiply as Time Warner pulls WTMJ-TV".Milwaukee Journal Sentinel. Journal Communications. RetrievedAugust 15, 2013.
  14. ^Dudek, Duane (July 10, 2013)."Stalemate in Journal Broadcast negotiations with Time Warner".Milwaukee Journal Sentinel. Journal Communications. RetrievedJuly 10, 2013.
  15. ^Dudek, Duane (August 10, 2013)."Packers ratings strong despite blackout of WTMJ on Time Warner".Milwaukee Journal Sentinel. Journal Communications. RetrievedAugust 15, 2013.
  16. ^Reynolds, Mike (August 9, 2013)."TWC Customers File Lawsuit over Retrans Disconnect with Milwaukee Station; Plaintiffs Seek Class-Action Status over Disconnect with Journal Broadcast's WTMJ".Multichannel News. RetrievedAugust 15, 2013.
  17. ^"JBG Answers". RetrievedAugust 15, 2013.
  18. ^Kabelowsky, Steve (August 14, 2013)."Journal asks state to force Time Warner to credit customers".OnMilwaukee.com. LIFTdigital Solutions. RetrievedAugust 15, 2013.
  19. ^"Journal Broadcast Group and Time Warner Cable Reach Agreement" (Press release). Journal Communications. September 20, 2013. RetrievedSeptember 21, 2013.
  20. ^"TWC Conversations: Q: Why are WGBA-D2 (Me TV), WTMJ-D2 (Storm Team), WTMJ-D3 (Live Well) no longer available? A: We have agreed with Journal to carry the channels that we believe deliver the most value to our customers". Time Warner Cable. September 21, 2013. Archived fromthe original on September 22, 2013. RetrievedSeptember 21, 2013.
  21. ^Glauber, Bill (July 30, 2014)."Journal, Scripps deal announced".Milwaukee Journal Sentinel. Journal Communications. RetrievedJuly 30, 2014.
  22. ^"Scripps-Journal Merger Gets FCC OK".TVNewsCheck. NewsCheck Media. December 12, 2014.
  23. ^Cornell, Joe (March 16, 2015)."Journal Communications, Scripps Spin/Merger set for April 1".Forbes. Forbes LLC.
  24. ^McAdams, Deborah (February 1, 2016)."Retrans Quietly Accomplished: E.W. Scripps, Time Warner Cable".TVTechnology. RetrievedFebruary 3, 2016.
  25. ^Wolfley, Bob (March 2, 2012)."Packers and Journal Broadcast Group announce partnership deal".Milwaukee Journal Sentinel. RetrievedMarch 3, 2012.
  26. ^Radcliffe, JD (September 16, 2022)."Don't worry, (some of) you will be able to watch the Packers on your regular TV channels for 'Thursday Night Football' in November".Milwaukee Journal Sentinel. RetrievedSeptember 17, 2022.
  27. ^"Larry McCarren returns to TV". Your Midwest Media.
  28. ^Kirchen, Rich (March 18, 2013)."McCarren will return to anchoring sports on Green Bay TV". The Business Journal (Milwaukee). RetrievedMarch 19, 2013.
  29. ^1996 WGBA promo for upcoming news onYouTube
  30. ^Gerds, Warren (June 4, 2008)."Channel 26 drops sports anchors".Green Bay Press Gazette.Gannett Company. RetrievedJune 28, 2015.
  31. ^Knox, Merrill (March 18, 2013)."Larry McCarren Joins WGBA as Sports Director".TVSpy.Guggenheim Partners, Mediabistro Holdings.
  32. ^Gerds, Warren (July 15, 2008)."Channel 26 cuts newscasts, positions".Green Bay Press Gazette. Gannett Company. RetrievedJune 28, 2015.
  33. ^Bilstad, Erik (April 7, 2009)."TMJ4 Debuts HD Newscasts".WTMJ (AM).Journal Communications. RetrievedJune 28, 2015.
  34. ^Gerds, Warren (August 17, 2009)."Warren Gerds column: WGBA shuffles morning schedule".Green Bay Press Gazette. Gannett Company. RetrievedJune 28, 2015.
  35. ^Gerds, Warren (February 8, 2011)."WGBA, Channel 26 in Green Bay, resumes morning newscasts".Green Bay Press Gazette. Gannett Company. RetrievedJune 28, 2015.
  36. ^RabbitEars TV Query for WGBA
  37. ^Where to Watch Me-TV: WGBA
  38. ^Lafayette, Jon (September 7, 2011)."Me-TV Signs With Stations in New Markets; New affiliates bring coverage to 60% of U.S."Broadcasting & Cable. RetrievedSeptember 8, 2011.
  39. ^"Channel 4 owner sues 'The Cool TV' for $257k".The Business Journal. September 2, 2011. RetrievedSeptember 13, 2011.
  40. ^"Channel 4 dropping 'The Cool TV' for lifestyle network".The Business Journal. September 12, 2011. RetrievedSeptember 13, 2011.
  41. ^Cuprisin, Tim (September 13, 2011)."Get ready for another round of Charlie Sheen". OnMilwaukee.com. RetrievedSeptember 13, 2011.
  42. ^Lafayette, Jon (May 18, 2015)."Scripps Stations to Launch Grit and Escape Networks; Expanded distribution for LAFF comedy channel".Broadcasting & Cable.NewBay Media. RetrievedMay 19, 2015.
  43. ^Ellis, Jon (April 25, 2019)."Northpine.com". Northpine. RetrievedApril 26, 2019.
  44. ^"DTV Tentative Channel Designations for the First and Second Rounds"(PDF). Archived fromthe original(PDF) on August 29, 2013. RetrievedMarch 24, 2012.
  45. ^CDBS Print
  46. ^"WLRE 1981 UHF Booklet Offer".The Post-Crescent. May 21, 1981. p. 30. RetrievedJuly 23, 2020.
  47. ^"Call Sign Changes"(PDF).Federal Communications Commission. RetrievedDecember 15, 2012.[permanent dead link]

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
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
sorted by primary channel network affiliations
ABC
CBS
Independent
Fox
NBC
Ion Television
Other
Bounce TV
KILM
WFPX-TV
Grit
WDPX-TV
Ion Mystery
KZCS-LD
Telemundo
K47DF-D
KZTV .2**
Networks
Acquisitions
People
Related
  • ** Owned by a third party and operated by Scripps through operating agreements.
Franchise
Overview
Notable people
Founders
Personnel
Players
Facilities
Stadiums
Other
Team history
General
Culture
Notable games
Rivalries
Championships
Division (21)
Conference (9)
League (13)
Media
Radio
Television
Personnel
Related
Current affiliations
Division
Conference
League
does not include1966 or1967 NFL championships
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