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WNJU

Coordinates:40°42′46.8″N74°0′47.3″W / 40.713000°N 74.013139°W /40.713000; -74.013139
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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Television station in Linden, New Jersey

WNJU
The Telemundo network logo, a T with two circular overlapping components. To the right and under the T, the number 47. Beneath it, in a sans serif, the word Telemundo.
CityLinden, New Jersey
Channels
BrandingTelemundo 47
Programming
Affiliations
Ownership
Owner
WNBC
History
First air date
May 16, 1965 (60 years ago) (1965-05-16)
Former call signs
WNJU-TV (1965–1988)
Former channel numbers
  • Analog: 47 (UHF, 1965–2009)
  • Digital: 36 (UHF, until 2019)
  • Translator: 62 W62AA
  • Independent (1965–1987)
  • NetSpan (secondary, 1984–1987)
Call sign meaning
New Jersey UHF[1]
Technical information[2]
Licensing authority
FCC
Facility ID73333
ERP575kW
HAAT496 m (1,627 ft)
Transmitter coordinates40°42′46.8″N74°0′47.3″W / 40.713000°N 74.013139°W /40.713000; -74.013139
Links
Public license information
Websitewww.telemundo47.com

WNJU (channel 47) is atelevision station licensed toLinden, New Jersey, United States, serving theNew York metropolitan area. It is one of twoflagship stations of the Spanish-language networkTelemundo (alongsideWSCV inMiamiFort Lauderdale), and isowned and operated byNBCUniversal'sTelemundo Station Group. Under common ownership withNBC flagshipWNBC (channel 4), the two stations share studios at30 Rockefeller Plaza inMidtown Manhattan and broadcast from the same transmitter atOne World Trade Center; WNJU's former studios, located on Fletcher Avenue inFort Lee, New Jersey, are used as WNJU and WNBC's New Jersey news bureau.

Conceived to replaceWNTA-TV as northern New Jersey's commercial station and to provide specialty ethnic programming in the tri-state area, WNJU began broadcasting on May 16, 1965. It was the first new commercial TV station for the New York City area in 16 years. Within months, 60 percent of its programming was in Spanish. The station was acquired byScreen Gems in 1970; Screen Gems also ownedWAPA-TV inSan Juan, Puerto Rico, with which channel 47 shared programming. WNJU's program lineup, which catered to the tastes of the Puerto Ricans and Dominicans in the tri-state area, often outperformed theSpanish International Network and its mostly Mexican shows in the local ratings. The studio sold the station in 1979 to a consortium headlined byNorman Lear andJerry Perenchio, but plans to convert tosubscription television operation were scrapped.

In 1984, WNJU became a part of a second Spanish-language television network, NetSpan. AfterReliance Capital, which had bought Spanish-language TV stations in Los Angeles and Miami, acquired the station, it became a charter owned-and-operated station of Telemundo upon its launch on January 12, 1987. At the same time, channel 47 began producing local Spanish-language newscasts. NBC bought Telemundo in 2002 and relocated WNJU to its former facility in Fort Lee.

History

[edit]

Early years

[edit]

On December 17, 1962, the New Jersey Television Broadcasting Company was granted aconstruction permit by theFederal Communications Commission to build a new commercial television station on a channel 47 allocation that belonged toNew Brunswick.[3][a] Edwin Cooperstein, the president of the permittee and director of radio and television atFairleigh Dickinson University and who had been the head ofWNTA-TV (channel 13) when it was a commercial outlet, had proposed the station a year earlier, to transmit from a tower in theNew Jersey Meadowlands.[4] FDU influence was also felt in the company's ownership: it was primarily owned by Henry Becton (son of Maxwell Becton, co-founder ofBecton Dickinson) andFairleigh Dickinson Jr. (son of Fairleigh S. Dickinson Sr., founder of Fairleigh Dickinson University and also the co-founder of Becton Dickinson).[5]

Channel 47 in Linden was a backup plan: the company had previously asked for the assignment of channel 14 toNewark, the city of license of WNTA-TV, arguing that the conversion of WNTA-TV to noncommercial WNET effectively gave all seven VHF stations to New York City.[6] Even before filing for the permit, New Jersey Television Broadcasting had set up in the Mosque Theater (nowNewark Symphony Hall) at 1020 Broad Street in Newark, WNTA-TV's former home, which included a 10,000-square-foot (930 m2) studio that was the largest at any non-network TV station in the United States;[7] it announced it would use the former WNTA-TV transmitter site inWest Orange and stocked its staff with several channel 13 veterans.[8] When the permit was issued, Cooperstein announced that the station would launch in late 1963.[9]

However, within a month of obtaining the permit, the new WNJU-TV decided on anEmpire State Building site for its transmitter, which was approved by the FCC in April 1964.[3] Cooperstein felt that this would be necessary to have picture quality parity with the New York stations.[7] It had settled on a program format of shows for New Jersey audiences during the day and specialty ethnic programs at night.[10] In March 1965, the station revealed a schedule with 19 hours a week of Spanish-language programming and another seven hours for Black audiences.[11]

WNJU-TV signed on the air on May 16, 1965, as the first commercial UHF station in theNew York television market and the first new commercial service for the area in 16 years.[12] Channel 47's schedule included New Jersey programs as well as Spanish-language, Black, Jewish, and Italian programs, but even within three months of launch, sixty percent of WNJU-TV's broadcast hours consisted of Spanish-language output.[13] Outside of these programs, during the mid-1960s, the station broadcast a live and locally producedteenagedance show calledDisc-O-Teen, hosted byJohn Zacherle;bullfights; and afolk music program,Rainbow Quest, hosted byPete Seeger.[14] The station also broke ground when it accepted advertising for Puerto Rican rum; since most television stations (but not channel 47) subscribed to the Code of Good Practice of theNational Association of Broadcasters, it was the first hard liquor ad seen on American television.[15]

In 1967, WNJU-TV went all-color and also became the first New York-area television station to automate its transmitter;[16] it opted not to move to theWorld Trade Center when it was built for financial reasons.[17] In 1969, it added another type of specialty program to its diverse slate: daytime coverage of the stock markets.[18] That same year, however, Cooperstein resigned, citing a "basic policy difference" with the board of directors.[19]

Screen Gems ownership

[edit]

WNJU-TV was sold in the fall of 1970 for $8 million (a fairly high price for a UHF station in that time) toScreen Gems Broadcasting, a subsidiary ofColumbia Pictures. Screen Gems was unusually suited for the station, as it ownedWAPA-TV inSan Juan, Puerto Rico.[20] In 1968, WNJU originated a program for WAPA-TV, which represented the first live satellite connection from New York to San Juan.[21]

In 1975, WNJU-TV received a short-term license renewal for only one year (instead of the then-customary three) for failure to abide by a previous pledge to limit commercials to 16 minutes per hour, which the station exceeded more than 16 percent of the time.[22]

The station had evolved to carry mostly Spanish programming, along with some ethnic brokered programs that aired on weekends including shows inJapanese andPortuguese.[23] Sales doubled from $2.2 million in 1976 to $4.4 million in 1978.[24] By focusing on the large Puerto Rican community in New York, WNJU was able to beat theSpanish International Network'sWXTV (channel 41), with its comparatively more Mexican programming, in the ratings.[25]

To STV or not to STV

[edit]

In 1978, Columbia Pictures applied for authority to broadcastsubscription television (STV) programming on WNJU-TV, with the STV franchisee being National Subscription Television–New York, Inc., owned by Oak Communications and Chartwell Communications. These companies were the partners in the Los Angeles operation ofON TV, which had started in that city in 1977 and became the largest such operation in the United States; a pact in November 1978 gave the New York market to Chartwell to develop.[26] Concern was noted over the potential displacement of Spanish-language programming from prime time on channel 47, but the deal was approved.[27][28]

Jerry Perenchio, one of the shareholders in Chartwell, and hisTandem Productions acquired 80 percent of WNJU-TV from Columbia Pictures in late 1979 for $5 million.[29] Chartwell gave the idea of bringing ON TV to New York serious thought; it pursued rights to theNew York Yankees at a reported offer of $20 million a year and lost.[30] It also proposed using the multichannel audio capability of the STV system to present some programs in English and Spanish simultaneously.[31] A technical improvement also came in 1980, when WXTV and WNJU were approved to move to the World Trade Center.[32]

The idea of turning channel 47 into a subscription station was dropped in January 1981, with competition fromWometco Home Theater (which had operated in the tri-state area since 1977[33]), extensive cable penetration, and the station's existing ratings leadership over WXTV for Spanish-speaking audiences cited among the reasons for terminating the plans.[34] Channel 47 continued to be Spanish-language, though other suitors made unsolicited offers, some of which would have ended that status. In 1985,Grant Broadcasting System made a $65 million offer for the station, which was rejected as far too low.[35]

NetSpan and Telemundo

[edit]
Refer to caption
A float representing WNJU Telemundo 47 at the Cuban Day parade atUnion City, New Jersey.

In 1970, Carlos Barba, a former Cuban TV star who had been WAPA-TV's general manager,[36] became the general manager of WNJU;[37] he was promoted to president in 1980.[38] In 1984, Barba led the creation of NetSpan, a second Spanish-language network to compete with SIN. NetSpan's founding affiliates were WNJU, ethnic independentKSCI-TV channel 18 for the Los Angeles market, and Chicago'sWBBS-TV.[39] That same year, channel 47 relocated from Newark to a new one-story building inTeterboro,[40] and Barba hired a 22-year-oldNely Galán to be the station manager.[41]

ON TV folded in 1985, and on the way out, it made two major contributions to the launch of a second Spanish-language television network by selling Los Angeles-area KBSC-TV to Estrella Communications, aReliance Capital-backed group that converted it to Spanish asKVEA, andFort Lauderdale, Florida, station WKID to John Blair & Co., which relaunched it as Spanish-languageWSCV. By 1986, KVEA had replaced KSCI (andWCIU-TV had entered in Chicago); the network offered three hours a day of programming plus specials.[37] Reliance Capital Group, which also was in the process of buying WSCV, reached a deal to acquire WNJU-TV for $70 million in October 1986.[42] Two higher offers had been made by groups that would have converted channel 47 to English-language operation, both of which were shunned.[43]

With WNJU and WSCV now Reliance-owned, on January 12, 1987,[44] NetSpan became Telemundo, supplying additional programming and national news programming.[45] The station continued to air weekend programs in other languages into the 1990s, including Indian, Greek, Haitian and Pakistani programs.[46] During the 1990s and early 2000s, the station experimented with Spanish-language sports simulcasts, which included games of the Yankees,New York Knicks, andNew York CityHawks.[47] However, local ratings fell as New York viewing habits fell more in line with national ones and Univision came to dominate in national and local programming.[48]

In October 2001,NBC (then owned byGeneral Electric) announced its acquisition of Telemundo and WNJU, creating aduopoly withWNBC;[49] NBC would assume control in April 2002.[50] The purchase led to a major overhaul of the on-air product at the network and the station. In 2004, WNJU relocated from Teterboro to the sixth floor at 2200 Fletcher Avenue inFort Lee, occupying the former studios and offices of the NBC-ownedCNBC cable network, which had moved to a state-of-the-art new studio complex inEnglewood Cliffs; the space was more than twice the size of the Teterboro facility.[51]

After theSeptember 11 attacks, WNJU was one of several stations that moved to theAlpine Tower provisionally. There was no space for a digital facility at the Empire State Building, so a permanent site in West Orange was used along with a secondary transmitter at4 Times Square to improve signal levels inQueens and onLong Island.[52] However, channel 47's analog facility returned to the ESB.[53] On May 17, 2017, WNJU announced it would begin over-the-air nighttime transmission testing fromOne World Trade Center in the fourth week of May 2017, which they expected to commence seven to 10 days later; by the end of the year, WNJU and four other New York City-area TV stations began broadcasting from the new tower, which also inaugurated a channel sharing arrangement between WNBC and WNJU for reasons mentioned further below.[54][55]

On January 14, 2022, WNJU announced that it would move its studios into NBC's headquarters at30 Rockefeller Plaza inMidtown Manhattan in late 2023, sharing the second floor space with WNBC; New York City was the last NBC–Telemundo duopoly market where the two networks' stations maintained separate facilities.[56] In August 2022, NBCUniversal indicated that it would split Studio 3B, former home ofNBC Nightly News andToday, between WNJU and WNBC.[57] On May 31, 2025, beginning with the night's 6 p.m. newscast, WNJU started broadcasting from their new studios at 30 Rockefeller Plaza. WNJU's former studios remain in use as WNJU and sister station WNBC's New Jersey news bureau.

News operation

[edit]
A white panel van with broadcasting equipment on the roof. The vehicle is wrapped in a design with blue and red accents and the Noticiero Telemundo 47 logo on the side.
A WNJU news van on the streets of New York City

WNJU launched its news operation in the mid-1980s, with 6 p.m. newscasts anchored byJorge L. Ramos; an 11 p.m. edition followed in 1996.[58] In 1997, it launched a weekend edition ofNoticiero 47; a morning newscast calledNoticiero 47 Primera Edición followed in 2001.[59] However, due to company-wide cutbacks, WNJU pulled the plug on its morning, midday, and weekend newscasts in 2009.[60]

Weekend newscasts were restored in 2011, along with the launch of a new public affairs show,Enfoque New York.[61] In November 2012, a new morning newscast was introduced, calledBuenos Días, Nueva York.[62]

On September 18, 2014, Telemundo announced a new 5:30 p.m./4:30 p.m. newscast for all 14 of its owned-and-operated stations, including WNJU.[63] In 2018, a noon newscast was added at 10 Telemundo stations, including WNJU.[64]

Notable current on-air staff

[edit]

Notable former on-air staff

[edit]

Technical information and subchannels

[edit]

WNJU and WNBC transmit using WNJU's spectrum from an antenna atopOne World Trade Center.[2] The stations' signals aremultiplexed:

Subchannels of WNJU and WNBC[69]
LicenseChannelRes.AspectShort nameProgramming
WNJU47.11080i16:9WNJU-HDTelemundo
47.2480iTeleXTeleXitos
WNBC4.11080iWNBCNBC
4.2480iCOZI-TVCozi TV
4.3CRIMESNBC True CRMZ
4.4OXYGENOxygen

Analog-to-digital conversion

[edit]

WNJU discontinued regular programming on its analog signal, overUHF channel 47, on June 12, 2009, as part of thefederally mandated transition from analog to digital television.[70] The station's digital signal remained on its pre-transition UHF channel 36.[71]

On April 13, 2017, it was revealed that the over-the-air spectrum of sister station WNBC had been sold in the FCC'sspectrum reallocation auction, fetching $214 million; WNBC would remain in operation, sharing broadcast spectrum with WNJU.[72] The shared broadcast took effect on April 2, 2018. WNJU and WNBC later changed channels again to digital channel 35 on August 1, 2019.[73]

Notes

[edit]
  1. ^A television station could be placed in any city within 15 miles (24 km) of the actual allocation, as Linden is to New Brunswick.

References

[edit]
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  2. ^ab"Facility Technical Data for WNJU".Licensing and Management System.Federal Communications Commission.
  3. ^ab"History Cards for WNJU".Federal Communications Commission.
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  7. ^abMackin, Tom (April 1965). "Television Returns to New Jersey".New Jersey Business.
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External links

[edit]
Full power
Low-power
Defunct
Broadcast television stations by affiliation in the state ofNew York
Includes stations in out-of-state TV markets, but reaching a portion of New York
ABC
CBS
Fox
NBC
The CW
Ion Television
Independent
PBS
Religious
Spanish
Estrella TV
WMBC-TV
Telemundo
WNJU
Univision
WXTV-DT
UniMás
WFUT-DT
WFTY-DT .2
Other
FNX
WNDT-CD
MeTV
WBBZ-TV
WJLP
Noncommercial Ind.
WNYE-TV
Roar
WKOF
Story Television
WNWT-LD
WZME
True Crime Network
WFTY-DT
ATSC 3.0
Broadcast television stations by affiliation in the state ofNew Jersey
Includes stations in out-of-state TV markets, but reaching a portion of New Jersey
ABC
CBS
Fox
NBC
The CW
Ion Television
Independent
PBS
Spanish
Estrella TV
WMBC-TV
Telemundo
WNJU
WWSI
Univision
WUVP-DT
WXTV-DT
UniMás
WFPA-CD
WFUT-DT
Religious
Other
Antenna TV
WPHL-TV .21
MeTV
WDPN-TV
WJLP
Noncommercial Ind.
WNYE-TV
Story Television
WZME
  • 1 Also has secondary affiliation with MyNetworkTV.
See also
Delaware TV
New York TV
Pennsylvania TV
Broadcast television stations by affiliation inNew England
ABC
CBS
Fox
NBC
The CW
Ion Television
Independent
PBS
CPTV
WEDH
WEDN
WEDW
WEDY
MPBN
WCBB
WMEA-TV
WMEB-TV
WMED-TV
WMEM-TV
NHPBS
WEKW-TV
WENH-TV
WLED-TV
VT Public
WETK
WVER
WVTA
WVTB
Religious
Daystar
WHNH-CD
WYDN
Sonlife
WMFP .2
TBN
WTBY-TV
Spanish
Other
Biz TV
WFXZ-CD
Court TV
WLWC
Grit
WDPX-TV
Heroes & Icons
WPXT .21
MeTV
WBGR-LD
WHCT-LD
WJLP
Noncommercial Ind.
WNYE-TV
Story Television
WZME
ATSC 3.0
  • 1 Also has secondary affiliation with MyNetworkTV.
See also
New York TV
Montreal TV
Quebec (provincial) TV
Atlantic Canada TV
Broadcast television stations by affiliation in the Commonwealth ofPennsylvania
Includes stations in out-of-state TV markets, but reaching a portion of Pennsylvania
ABC
CBS
Fox
NBC
The CW
Ion Television
Independent
PBS
Religious
Spanish
Altavision
WJAL
Estrella TV
WMBC-TV
Telemundo
WNJU
WWSI
WZDC-CD
Univision
WFDC-DT
WUVP-DT
WXBU
WXTV-DT
UniMás
WFDC-DT .4
WFPA-CD
WFUT-DT
Other
Antenna TV
WPHL-TV .21
MeTV
WDPN-TV
WJLP
Noncommercial Ind.
WNYE-TV
Story Television
WZME
ATSC 3.0
  • 1 Also has secondary affiliation with MyNetworkTV.
See also
Delaware TV
Maryland TV
New Jersey TV
New York TV
Ohio TV
West Virginia TV
Ontario TV
A division ofComcast
Predecessors
Executives
Studio Group
Universal Filmed
Entertainment Group
Universal
Studio Group
Destinations
& Experiences Group
United States
International
Media Group
Television networks
Streaming
NBC
Sports Group
International
Networks
A division ofNBCUniversal
Asia
Australia & New Zealand
Europe, Middle East
and Africa
Latin America & Brazil
Canada (licensed)
Defunct
Other assets
Telemundo Enterprises
Local Group
O&Os
NBC Owned
TV Stations
Telemundo
Station Group
Other units
News Group
Main divisions
CNBC global channels
CNBC Europe branches
CNBC Asia branches
Former/defunct
properties
Related
ABC
CBS
Fox
NBC
Telemundo
The CW
Univision
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