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| City | Steubenville, Ohio |
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| History | |
First air date | December 24, 1953 (71 years ago) (1953-12-24) |
Former call signs | WSTV-TV (1953–1979) |
Former channel numbers |
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Call sign meaning | "We're Television for the Ohio Valley" |
| Technical information[1] | |
Licensing authority | FCC |
| Facility ID | 74122 |
| ERP | 30kW |
| HAAT | 282 m (925 ft) |
| Transmitter coordinates | 40°20′33.3″N80°37′13.3″W / 40.342583°N 80.620361°W /40.342583; -80.620361 |
| Links | |
Public license information | |
| Website | wtov9 |
WTOV-TV (channel 9) is atelevision station licensed toSteubenville, Ohio, United States, serving theWheeling, West Virginia–Steubenville, Ohiomarket as an affiliate ofNBC andFox. Owned bySinclair Broadcast Group, the station maintains studios and transmitter facilities on Burr Avenue inMingo Junction, Ohio (mailing address readsRed Donley Plaza in Steubenville).
The station went on air as WSTV-TV (for Steubenville) onDecember 24, 1953.[2] It was owned byRust Craft Broadcasting along with WSTV radio (1340 AM), which went off the air in 2011, and 103.5 FM (nowWNKV). When theFederal Communications Commission (FCC) opened bidding for the channel 9 license, Rust Craft andCBS emerged as the favorites. CBS planned to move the station's license toPittsburgh in order to get its own station in what was then the sixth-largest market. However, the FCC turned CBS' bid down. The major cities in the Upper Ohio Valley are so close together that they must share the VHF band, and the FCC had opted not to issue any more VHF construction permits to Pittsburgh in order to give Wheeling–Steubenville and the other smaller markets in the area a chance to get on the air. The Wheeling–Steubenville TV market, despite its very close proximity to Pittsburgh and overlapping signals, remains a separate market today.
Channel 9 was originally a CBS affiliate, but also carried a secondary affiliation withABC, sharing that network's programming with NBC affiliateWTRF-TV (channel 7). It changed its call letters to WTOV (standing for "We're Television for the Ohio Valley") on June 1, 1979, after Rust Craft merged withZiff Davis and sold off the radio stations.[2] The call letters had been previously used for a TV station inPortsmouth, Virginia that is nowWGNT. During its time as a CBS affiliate, the station struggled in the ratings due to the presence ofGroup W powerhouseKDKA-TV (channel 2) in Pittsburgh, which to this day remains widely viewable in the area both over-the-air and available on cable.
The station began phasing out ABC in the 1970s, but continued to carry a few ABC programs in off-hours for many years. Channel 9 had little need to air many ABC shows due to the presence ofWTAE-TV (channel 4),Youngstown affiliateWYTV (channel 33), and to a lesser extentColumbus affiliate WTVN-TV (channel 6, nowWSYX) on cable systems in the area; WSYX is now a sister station to channel 9.
On January 7, 1980, WTOV swapped affiliations with WTRF and became an NBC affiliate. At the time of the switch, NBC had struggled in the ratings for a number of years and then-market leader WTRF wanted a stronger affiliation. However, in the ensuing years the affiliation switch began to benefit WTOV. For starters, instead of competing with KDKA-TV for network programming from the nearby Pittsburgh market, WTOV now competed with future sister station WIIC-TV, channel 11 (which becameWPXI the following year), which, until recently, had been one of NBC's weakest major-market affiliates. Secondly, NBC as a whole began to improve in the ratings in the early 1980s, and by the middle of the decade, was America's most-watched network, while CBS went through a serious decline that the network would not recover from until the late 1990s. The affiliation with NBC also gave the station rights to carry the majority ofSteelers games via theNFL on NBC package until1997, and since2006 a few games per year via NBC'sSunday Night Football, allowing it a good opportunity to establish itself with viewers (the station is within the 75-mile (121 km)NFL blackout contour, though the Steelers have never had a blackout since the current NFL blackout policy went into effect). These factors led WTOV-TV to surpass WTRF-TV in the ratings in the Wheeling–Steubenville market, a position it now holds by a wide margin.
In 1983, Ziff Davis sold WTOV, along with then-sister stationsWEYI-TV inSaginaw, Michigan,WRDW-TV inAugusta, Georgia, andWROC-TV inRochester, New York, to Television Station Partners,L.P. Under the new ownership, channel 9 was the last NBC affiliate known to have used the old "Proud N" in its branding, keeping it for two years after NBC adopted its current simplified peacock logo in 1986. WTOV, along with WEYI and WROC, were sold toSmith Broadcast Group in 1996. In 2000,Cox Enterprises acquired WTOV, along with fellow NBC affiliateWJAC-TV inJohnstown, Pennsylvania, on the other side of the Pittsburgh market, from Sunrise/STC Broadcasting (one of several subsidiaries of Smith Broadcasting). The station dropped the remaining ABC shows from its schedule soon after Cox took over. It also updated its logo to resemble that of sister station WPXI in Pittsburgh, and along with WJAC, the three were occasionally marketed together as a result until WPXI revamped its news graphics and music package.
WTOV's broadcasts became digital-only, effective June 12, 2009.
The station airstape-delayedhigh school football games of the week including numerous playoff games of local teams andWheeling Nailers hockey games (at one point preempting aManchester United–ChelseaPremier League game in 2014, to the ire of local viewers).[3] On June 3, 2010,Dish Network added WTOV, along withPBSmember stationWOUC and CBS affiliate WTRF (and the latter station's digital subchannels) as the local stations available to its subscribers in the Steubenville–Wheeling market.[4] WTOV and the other Steubenville–Wheeling area television stations were added toDirecTV on November 23, 2010.
On July 20, 2012, one day after Cox purchased four television stations inJacksonville, Florida, andTulsa, Oklahoma, fromNewport Television, Cox put WTOV-TV, WJAC-TV, and sister stations inEl Paso, Texas, andReno, Nevada (all in markets that are smaller than Tulsa), plus several radio stations in medium to small markets, on the selling block.[5] On February 25, 2013, Cox announced that it would sell the four television stations to Sinclair Broadcast Group.[6] The FCC granted its approval of the sale on April 29,[7] and the deal was consummated on May 2.[8] The deal made WTOV-TV a sister station to Pittsburgh'sFox affiliateWPGH-TV andMyNetworkTV affiliateWPMY, though it is still connected to WPXI through a news-share agreement WPXI has had with WPGH-TV since 2006.
On July 11, 2014, it was announced that WTOV would add Fox programming to its subchannel on September 1, which will serve as the Steubenville–Wheeling area's Fox affiliate, replacing the second digital subchannel of WTRF-TV. In a statement, Fox stated that it switched stations because WTOV has a stronger over-the-air signal than WTRF.[9][10] Fox programming began broadcasting on September 1, replacingMeTV, which moved to a newly created subchannel. MeTV, whose affiliation dated from Cox's ownership of WTOV, was dropped altogether on September 1, 2022, in favor of Sinclair's ownComet.[11]
WTOV's signal can be reached as far north asSharon, Pennsylvania, as far west asCoshocton, as far east asGreensburg, Pennsylvania and as far south asSistersville, West Virginia. Although the area is much better served by fellow NBC affiliate WPXI, WTOV's signal can easily be picked up in higher-elevated areas of the city of Pittsburgh with only a "rabbit-ear" antenna. WTOV is also carried on many cable systems that fall outside of its broadcast signal in northern West Virginia, western Pennsylvania, and east-central Ohio.

WTOV was the first station in the Ohio Valley to broadcast its local newscasts in16:9widescreenenhanced definition in April 2009, and it currently runs almost all of its syndicated programming in HD (rival WTRF launched the firsthigh-definition newscast in the market on December 29, 2011, during its noon newscast). When WTOV converted its newscasts to the 16:9 widescreen format, the graphics and set got a slight upgrade to match the 16:9aspect ratio, though the weather graphics were not upgraded until August 2010.
On October 27, 2010, during the noon newscast, WTOV unveiled a new HD-ready set similar to that used by sister stations WPXI/Pittsburgh and WJAC/Johnstown, among other Cox-owned stations. The station's former graphics were launched in 2000, when Cox Enterprises bought WTOV and WJAC. With the new set and graphics, the station flipped its news theme to615 Music's "The Tower", ending a nine-year run of using that same company's "Total Coverage" news music package. Sister station WJAC followed suit on October 25, 2011.
As part of its upgrade, the station launched "Early Warning Live Doppler 9" usingDoppler weather radar data from fiveNational Weather Service radar sites in the region. The station also updated master control to allow for weather warnings and news crawls without downconverting 16:9 video on the main signal to the 4:3 picture format.
On January 8, 2011, WTOV launched an hour-long Saturday morning newscast. On March 21, 2011, WTOV expanded its early evening newscast to a 90-minute block from 5 to 6:30 p.m. The extra half-hour replaced syndicated reruns ofSeinfeld, which aired on the station for 15 years (that series would air on cable-onlyCW Plus affiliate "WBWO" from 2011 to 2021).
In announcing WTOV's Fox subchannel, Sinclair stated that it would carry an hour-long, WTOV-produced 10 p.m. newscast which debuted on October 6, 2014.[12] In addition, WTOV flipped its graphics and news package to the Sinclair News Package. WJAC followed suit in 2016.
The station's signal ismultiplexed:
| Channel | Res. | Aspect | Short name | Programming |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 9.1 | 1080i | 16:9 | NBC | NBC |
| 9.2 | 720p | FOX | Fox | |
| 9.3 | 480i | Comet | Comet | |
| 9.4 | Charge! | Charge! |