WTRF-TV

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WTRF-TV


Image:FoxOhioValley.JPG
Wheeling, West Virginia/
Steubenville, Ohio
Branding 7 News
Fox Ohio Valley (DT2)
Slogan Your Town *Your State* Your Future
Channels Analog: 7 (VHF)

Digital: 32 (UHF)

Affiliations CBS
Fox (DT2)
Owner West Virginia Media Holdings, LLC
First air date October 24, 1953
Call letters’ meaning Two
Radio
Frequencies
(referring to AM and FM stations with same calls)
Former affiliations NBC/ABC (1953-1980)
Transmitter Power 316 kW (analog)
730.9 kW (digital)
Height 293 m (both)
Facility ID 6869
Transmitter Coordinates 40°3′41.1″N, 80°45′8.5″W
Website www.wtrf.com

WTRF-TV channel 7 is the CBS affiliate for the Wheeling, West Virginia/Steubenville, Ohio television market. It is owned and operated by West Virginia Media Holdings. It is licensed to Wheeling, with studios in downtown Wheeling and transmitter located in adjacent Bridgeport, Ohio. WTRF serves Eastern Ohio, East central Ohio, Northern West Virginia, North Central West Virginia, and Western Pennsylvania.

WTRF signed on for the first time on October 24, 1953. Its call letters came from two radio stations that the original owners had put on the air in 1947; they were sold off to finance the television station. WTRF was originally an NBC affiliate, but also carried some programming from ABC. In 1979, WTRF became the area's first station to use videotape rather than film. The station began phasing out ABC programs in the late 1980s, in part because WTAE-TV in Pittsburgh was widely available in the area over-the-air and on cable.

On January 7, 1980; WTRF swapped network affiliations with WTOV-TV and became a CBS affiliate. NBC had struggled in the ratings for a number of years at the time, and WTRF wanted a stronger affiliation.

Once one of West Virginia's most respected stations, WTRF fell on hard times in the 1980s due to ownership instability. From the early 1980s through the mid-1990s, it went through three different owners. Adams Communications bought the station from Wesray Corporation in the mid-1980s, but ran into financial trouble and sold most of its stations, including WTRF, to a company headed by former Adams vice president Paul Brisette in 1991. Brisette himself was nearly brought down by financial issues, and merged his group with Benedek Broadcasting in 1996. West Virginia Media Holdings bought the station in 2002. Currently, WTRF is a distant second in the ratings, behind WTOV. In many cases, CBS O&O KDKA-TV from Pittsburgh gets better ratings in the Wheeling/Steubenville market than WTRF, due to a combination of the proximity of the market to Pittsburgh, less than an hour away, not to mention WTRF's recent performance woes and KDKA's longstanding popularity in Western Pennsylvania.

WTRF has also started a digital sub-channel, FOX Ohio Valley, available on digital channel 7.2. This service is available on the Comcast cable lineup as well as over-the-air. In addition to FOX's programming feed and syndicated content, FOX Ohio Valley is home to the Valley's only 10:00 newscast, which mirrors WTRF's news format.

[edit] Former Slogans

  • TV 7 NEWS
  • NEWSCHANNEL 7


[edit] News Team

  • Mike Anthony - Sports Reporter
  • Steven Centofanti- Weekend Anchor/Reporter
  • Ashley Dougherty - Morning Weather Anchor
  • Jerry Echemann - Reporter
  • Dave Elias - Reporter
  • Nate Fluharty - Morning Anchor/Reporter
  • Jim Forbes - Managing Editor/Anchor at 5, 6, 10, and 11
  • Scott Nolte - Sports Director
  • Stacy Rich - Morning Anchor/Reporter
  • Leigh Ann Towne - Anchor at 5, 6, 10, and 11
  • Dr. Dave Walker - Evening Meteorologist
  • D.K. Wright - Reporter
  • Jason Kratzwald - Weekend Meteorologist

[edit] External links