WTVR-TV
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WTVR-TV | |
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Richmond, Virginia | |
Branding | CBS 6 |
Slogan | First • Fair • Everywhere |
Channels | 6 (VHF) analog, 25 (UHF) digital |
Affiliations | CBS (secondary 1947-55, primary affiliate 1955-56, 1960-) The Tube - DT3 |
Owner | Raycom Media |
Founded | April 22, 1948 |
Call letters meaning | TeleVision Richmond |
Former affiliations | NBC (1947-55) ABC (1947-60; secondary until 1956) DuMont (1947-56) |
Website | www.wtvr.com |
WTVR-TV (CBS6) is a CBS television affiliate based in Richmond, Virginia. It is owned by Raycom Media, and broadcasts its analog signal on channel 6. Its studios and transmitter are co-located at 3301 West Broad Street in downtown Richmond. The 800-foot tower is also the transmitter for former sister station WTVR-FM and NPR member WCVE-FM. The tower is one of the tallest and oldest broadcast towers in Central Virginia and is considered part of the Richmond skyline. It can be seen for miles around Richmond, especially at night when the tower lights are activated.
The station's audio signal can also be heard on 87.7 FM in most of central Virginia. This is because the audio component of channel 6 is on the same wavelength as 87.7 FM.
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[edit] History
[edit] Early years
WTVR arose from unlikely roots. Auto parts dealer Wilbur Havens started WMBG (which stood for "Magnetos, Batteries, and Generators"), a 10-watt station on AM 1380, in 1926 in his auto-parts shop on West Broad Street in downtown Richmond. By 1939, Havens' original $500 investment had turned into a studio on 3301 West Broad (a former bus garage) , where WTVR-TV operates today. Havens brought FM service to Richmond in 1947 when he signed on WCOD-FM 98.1. No one expected him to go after one of the four channels originally allocated to Richmond for television, so it came as a complete surprise when Havens filed an application for channel 6. With no other applications to consider, FCC approval was a mere formality, and WTVR took to the air on April 22, 1948 as the first television station south of Washington, DC.
It was originally a primary NBC affiliate, carrying secondary affiliations with CBS, ABC and DuMont. Due to a freeze on new television construction permits, it was the only station in town until 1955, when WXEX-TV (now WRIC-TV) signed on from neighboring Petersburg and took the NBC affiliation. It was briefly a CBS affiliate until 1956, when WRVA-TV (now WWBT) signed on and took the CBS affiliation due to WRVA-AM's long history as a CBS radio affiliate. WTVR then carried on as an ABC affiliate until 1960, when CBS cut a new deal with Havens due to WRVA's low ratings. It has been with CBS ever since, and is one of a few stations in the country to have had primary affiliations with all three original television networks.
[edit] Park Communications era
Havens sold WTVR-TV, WMBG-AM, and WCOD-FM to Roy H. Park Communications in 1966, reaping a considerable return on his original $500 investment 40 years earlier. After taking ownership of the properties, the radio stations adopted the TV station's "WTVR" call letters. In 1974, WTVR-AM-FM moved into a pair of town houses located on Cutshaw Avenue, which bordered the rear of the West Broad property, where they remained until the year 2000. In the late 80s, WTVR-TV expanded into an adjoining space that had been a restaurant for many years. (Although the official reason given for the expansion was a need for more studio, production, and office space, there was a rumor floating around local broadcast circles that for years, station employees had been sneaking alcoholic beverages from the restaurant, called "Tony's", back into the station while on duty, and that frustrated station management had long been trying to figure out a way to get rid of the restaurant).
Roy H. Park died in 1993, and the company's assets were later sold to a Lexington, Kentucky group of investors who sold off the radio properties separately to various owners, with WTVR-AM-FM going to Clear Channel in 1995. WTVR-FM is still owned by Clear Channel, while the former WTVR-AM is now Spanish religious station WBTK.
[edit] Raycom Media era
Park merged with Media General in 1996 However, Media General already owned the Richmond Times-Dispatch and could not keep channel 6 because FCC rules of the time did not allow cross-ownership of newspapers and television stations. As a result, Media General sold WTVR to current owner Raycom Media in 1997.
Media General, which grew out of the Times-Dispatch, had previously tried to get into television in its hometown. Its predecessor, Richmond Newspapers, lost a bid for what is now WWBT to Larus and Brothers Tobacco, founders of WRVA, because the FCC opted to give the channel 12 license to an applicant who didn't already own a newspaper. For many years, the paper owned WRNL radio (AM 910 and FM 102.1, now WRXL) but sold them in 1970 due to revised newspaper - broadcast station cross-ownership rules.
WTVR was the ratings leader in Richmond until the early 1980s, when WWBT passed it. It has been a solid runner-up for most of the time since then and wages a spirited battle for second place with WRIC. For many years, it was the only CBS station between Richmond and Roanoke until WCAV-TV signed on from Charlottesville in 2003.
Some of its local features include For Kids' Sake, Paws for Pets, and Battle of the Brains and a new 24-hour weather news channel broadcast on broadband and digital cable in the area. The station recently started broadcasting Raycom's 24/7 music television format "The Tube" on WTVR-DT.
WTVR is also known as "The South's first Television Station."
In 2007, WUPV will operate out of WTVR-TV’s studios in Richmond.
[edit] External links
Broadcast television in the Richmond market (Nielsen DMA #61) | ||
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WTVR 6 (CBS/The Tube) - WRIC 8 (ABC) - WWBT 12 (NBC) - WFLV 15 (Rel) - WXOB 17 (Rel) - WCVE 23 (PBS) - WFMA 28 (Rel) - WRLH 35 (Fox/MNTV) W39CO 39 (TBN) - WKYV 45 (Rel) - WRID 48 (DS) - WCVW 57 (PBS) - WUPV 65 (The CW) |
By frequency: 87.7 | 88.9 | 89.7 | 90.1 | 91.1 | 92.1 | 93.1 | 94.5 | 95.3 | 96.5 | 97.3 | 98.1 | 98.9 | 99.3 | 100.1 | 100.3 | 101.1 | 102.1 | 103.7 | 104.7 | 105.7 | 106.5 | 107.3
By callsign: WARV | WAUQ | WBBT | WBTJ | WCDX | WCVE | WDCE | WDYL | WHCE | WKHK | WKJM | WKJS | WKLR | WLFV | WMXB | WPZZ | WRIR | WRVQ | WRXL | WTVR | WTVR-TV (audio signal) | WWLB | WYFJ
Blacksburg-Christiansburg-Radford-Pulaski | Norfolk-Newport News-Virginia Beach (FM) (AM) | Richmond (FM) (AM) | Roanoke (FM) (AM) | Fredericksburg | Winchester | Charlottesville | Harrisonburg
CBS Network Affiliates in the state of Virginia | |
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WTKR 3 (Norfolk) - WTVR 6 (Richmond) - WDBJ 7 (Roanoke) - WCAV 19 (Charlottesville) |
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See also: ABC, CW, Fox, MyNetworkTV, NBC, PBS, and Other stations in Virginia |
Corporate Staff: Paul McTear (President & CEO) | Wayne Daugherty | Marty Edelman | Leon Long | Jeff Rosser | Anne Adkins | Clyde Baucom | Rebecca Bryan | David Folsom | Mary Carloe McDonnell | Billy McDowell | Susana Schuler | Melissa Thurber |
CBS Network Affiliates: KFVS | KOLD | KSLA | WAFB | WOIO | WTOC | WTOL | WTVR |
Fox Network Affiliates: WDFX | WFLX | WFXG1 | WPGX | WSFX1 | WTNZ | WXIX | WXTX1 |
MyNetworkTV Affiliates: KFVE | WBXH | WUAB |
NBC Network Affiliates: KCBD | KHNL/KHBC/KOGG | KPLC | WAFF | WALB | WAVE | WDAM | WECT | WFIE | WIS | WLBT | WMBF2 | WMC | WSFA |
1Raycom Media operates these stations owned by Southeastern Media Holdings. |
2Scheduled to begin broadcasting in 2007. |
Annual Revenue: Unknown at this time. | Employees: 4,200 | Stock Symbol: None, privately held. | Website: www.raycommedia.com |