WMTW-TV

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WMTW-TV
Image:News_8_wntw_tv.JPG
Poland Spring/Portland, Maine
Branding News 8 WMTW
Slogan Where The News Comes First
Channels 8 (VHF) analog,
46 (UHF) digital
Translators 26 W26CQ Colebrook, NH
27 W27CP White River Junction, VT
Affiliations ABC
Owner Hearst-Argyle Television
Founded August 31, 1954
Call letters meaning W MounT Washington
Former affiliations DuMont (1954-1956)[1]
Website www.wmtw.com/

WMTW-TV, channel 8, is the ABC affiliate for Portland and the rest of southern Maine as well as parts of New Hampshire. The station is licensed to the town of Poland Spring and broadcasts its digital signal on channel 45.

Contents

[edit] History

It signed on for the first time on August 31, 1954, from a transmitter located atop Mount Washington, New Hampshire--the highest peak in the Northeastern United States. This gave WMTW one of the largest coverage areas of any station in the United States. At one point, WMTW was seen as far away as Montreal, Quebec and many parts of Vermont, New Hampshire, eastern New York, and northern Massachusetts. The station carried programming from ABC and DuMont until 1956, when DuMont ceased operations. [2] It was considered Vermont's (and Montreal's) ABC affiliate of record until WVNY signed on in 1968. Even after WVNY signed on, WMTW still had a large audience in Vermont. Many Vermont viewers watched WMTW rather than WVNY even after WMTW began focusing more on Portland. It stayed on most Montreal cable systems until the early 1990s.

The tower had been originally been built in 1940 by Edwin Armstrong, the inventor of Frequency Modulation Radio, for one of the first FM stations in the country. WMTW built a new tower there in the 1960s, but the Armstong-built tower remained as a standby.

WMTW was forced to leave Mount Washington in 2002 due to the FCC's digital television mandate. Two FM stations currently occupy separate broadcast facilities on the top of the mountain as well as an observatory. All of the users use power generated by generators on the summit. The FCC requires analog stations to broadcast alongside their digital counterparts until 80% of the viewing audience can watch the digital signal. Had WMTW-DT been built on the mountain, it would have had to operate at low power to conserve the fuel drums that powered the transmitter. However, a low-powered signal would have resulted in an inadequate signal for Portland and the more populated areas of the market. WMTW built a new tower in Baldwin, Maine and signed off from Mount Washington for the last time on February 5, 2002. The new transmitter site does not serve nearly as large an area as the Mount Washington facility did, but provides a better signal to the more populated areas of the market.

WMTW station identification in 2005. Note the mention of the two translators WMTW signed on after leaving Mount Washington.
WMTW station identification in 2005. Note the mention of the two translators WMTW signed on after leaving Mount Washington.

Jack Paar of Tonight Show fame, owned the station for a brief period in the 1960s after he left national TV. He hosted several programs on WMTW during that time.

In 2004, WMTW was sold to Hearst-Argyle Television. In 2005, it activated two translators: W26CQ on channel 26 in Colebrook, New Hampshire and W27CP on channel 27 in White River Junction, Vermont to make up for lost coverage when it signed off from Mount Washington. Under normal conditions, the translators should have been built before WMTW moved its transmitter to Baldwin in order to comply with FCC regulations. However, Canadian authorities had to agree to the proposed locations for the translators, and this delayed construction until after WMTW activated its new transmitter.

Colebrook is part of the Portland market, but White River Junction is part of the Burlington, Vermont-Plattsburgh, New York market. White River Junction is home base for NBC affiliate WNNE-TV, which is also owned by Hearst-Argyle. WNNE is a full-time a simulcast of WPTZ-TV. FCC regulations do not allow that two or more stations from two or more different markets to have coverage of the same location (in this case, White River Junction). This rule, however, doesn't apply to translators. Incidentally, White River Junction is within the fringes of WMUR-TV, another ABC affiliate owned by Hearst-Argyle.

[edit] Sister Radio Stations

There was also a WMTW-AM (870) in Portland, a news-talk station. It was sold by Harron Communications, the (now-former) owners of WMTW-TV to Nassau Broadcast Group in 2003. Today it is WLVP-AM and is an Air America Radio affiliate. This station, along with WLAM-AM 1470 WHXR-FM 106.7, were all branded as "Newsradio WMTW". This set of stations aired and produced local news and talk programs, as well as simulcasts of WMTW-TV's newscasts.


In addition, there have been several stations known as WMTW-FM co-owned with channel 8: the first became WHOM 94.9 (which continues to transmit from Mount Washington), and the second was the FM sister station to WMTW-FM, which was located on 106.7 MHz. It is also owned by Nassau, and is currently WHXR. An earlier WMTW-FM was not connected to any other WMTW apart from also transmitting from Mount Washington.

[edit] Newscasts

WMTW's main anchors.
WMTW's main anchors.

The station uses live NOAA NWS radar data from several regional sites in a forecasting system presented onscreen as "News 8 First Warning Live Doppler". The main signal comes from the NWS radar in Gray.

WMTW, in partnership with Time Warner Cable, also operates a 24-hour cable news station on channel 9 throughout the Portland market. Known as News 9 WMTW, the cable station airs rebroadcasts of newscasts from channel 8. There is no logo or website for the cable station.

WMTW schedules its weekday evening anchor team for the 11PM Sunday newscast during sweeps periods.

[edit] Weekdays

  • News 8 This Morning (5-7 AM)
    • Rachel Ruble
    • Norm Karkos
    • Metorologist Matt Zidle
  • News 8 WMTW at Noon (12-12:30 PM)
    • Rachael Ruble
    • Meteorologist Matt Zidle
  • News 8 WMTW at 6 (6-6:30 PM)
  • News 8 WMTW at 11 (11-11:35 PM)
    • Tory Ryden
    • Jon Camp
    • Chief Meteorologist Tom Chisholm
    • Travis Lee, Sports

[edit] Weekends

  • News 8 WMTW at 6 (6-6:30 PM)
  • News 8 WMTW at 11 (11-11:30 PM)
    • Jim Keithley
    • Tracy Sabol
    • Meteorologist Gray Stabley
    • Ryan Welch, Sports

[edit] Reporters

  • Steve Minich
  • Lisa Gardner
  • Jim Cyr
  • Kathryn Sotnik
  • Michelle Frey
  • Dick Gosselin
  • Marnie MacLean
  • Danielle Strauss
  • Ryan Welch, Sports
  • Russ Murley, Weather (former Chief Meteorologist, now freelance)

[edit] Past Station Personalities

  • Dave Baer, former news director,
  • Elisa Boxer, former anchor,
  • Gabe Caggiano, former reporter, to KTBC Austin, now columnist in Maryland.
  • Doug Cook, former anchor/reporter, now communications director Bowdoin College.
  • John Dougherty, former co-anchor/managing editor,
  • Bob Dyk, former reporter '97-04, now radio host WGAN Radio Portland.
  • Bob Elliot, former features reporter, deceased '97 heart attack.
  • Tom Elliman, former weathercaster, later worked in PR for New Hampshire International Speedway, Motorsports Hall of Fame and Ford Racing
  • Marty Engstrom, former engineer/weather reporter, retired, author of book '38 Years on Mount Washington'
  • Denise Keniston, reporter/anchor, has own production co.
  • Jeff Peterson, former anchor, now anchor/reporter WGME Portland.
  • Neila Smith, former co-anchor,
  • Michael Weber, former reporter, now with CBS NewsPath NY.
  • Joan Trapp Weise, 50's weather girl, known as 'Joan Knight' deceased 2001.
  • Jessica York, weathercaster, to TVG, HGTV, now host RSN Television Los Angeles.
  • Christine Young, investigative reporter, now a columnist with Times Herald-Record in New York; author of "A Bitter Brew: Faith Power and Poison in a Small New England Town"

[edit] External links


[[Category:ABC network affiliates]