Savannah, Georgia | |
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Branding | WSAV 3 News 3 My TV (on DT2) |
Slogan | On Your Side |
Channels | Digital: 39 (UHF) Virtual: 3 (PSIP) |
Affiliations | 3.1 NBC (since 1986; also from 1956-1982) 3.2 MyNetworkTV & Me-TV |
Owner | Media General (Media General Communications Holdings, LLC) |
Founded | February 1, 1956 |
Sister station(s) | WCBD-TV, WBTW, WJBF/WAGT, WRBL |
Former channel number(s) | 3 (VHF analog, 1956-2009) |
Former affiliations | ABC (1956-1986) |
Transmitter power | 1,000 kW |
Height | 442 m |
Facility ID | 48662 |
Website | wsav.com |
WSAV-TV is the NBC-affiliated television station for the Coastal Empire of Southeastern Georgia and the Lowcountry of Southern South Carolina. Licensed to Savannah, it broadcasts a high definition digital signal on UHF channel 39 from a transmitter in Pooler, Georgia. The station can also be seen on Comcast and Time Warner channel 2 with high definition on Comcast digital channel 432 and Time Warner digital channel 805, channel 3 and channel 4 in some surrounding areas. Owned by Media General, WSAV has studios on East Victory Drive (U.S. 80) in the Live Oak section of Savannah. Syndicated programming on the station includes: Jeopardy!, Wheel of Fortune, Dr. Phil, and Oprah.
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On WSAV-DT2 and Comcast digital channel 237 is the area's MyNetworkTV affiliate. This aired the Retro Television Network (RTV) outside weeknight prime time until September 26, 2011, when it was replaced with Me-TV. WSAV-DT2 also repeats Dr. Phil and Oprah from the main channel on weeknights after MyNetworkTV prime time.
Channel | Name | Programming |
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3.1 | WSAV-HD | Main WSAV-TV programming / NBC |
3.2 | MyLC | Me-TV[1] and MyNetworkTV |
The station signed-on VHF channel 3 on February 1, 1956 and was co-owned with WSAV-AM 630 (now WBMQ) after a long legal battle over the frequency with WJIV-AM 900. It initially aired an analog signal from a transmitter on top of a bank building on Broughton Street in Downtown Savannah. The flashing WSAV sign was a landmark on the street for many years. WSAV-AM had long been with NBC Radio, so WSAV-TV took the NBC television affiliation.
It shared ABC with CBS affiliate WTOC-TV until WJCL-TV signed-on in 1970. During the late-1950s, the station was also briefly affiliated with the NTA Film Network. [2] WSAV briefly had an FM station using an antenna atop the middle of three AM towers at the transmitter facility on Oatland Island. However, without many listeners to the simulcast programming, FM operation was ended in the 1950s.
In 1960, WSAV-AM-TV moved into a brand new facility on Victory Drive where WSAV-TV still is today. A new tower was built at the site boosting its signal to many of the surrounding counties in Georgia and South Carolina. The current tower in Pooler was built in 1976. In the same year, WSAV-AM was sold. In 1982, the station swapped affiliations with WJCL and became an ABC affiliate. That network had become number one in the country and was searching for stronger affiliates. However, this channel returned to NBC in 1986 one year after that network became number one again.
In the mid-1990s, like many other commercial television stations in the United States, WSAV was sold several times. At the beginning of that decade, the station was owned by a subsidiary of the News-Press & Gazette Company, who sold its entire broadcasting group of the time to the first incarnation of New Vision Television in 1993. Ellis Communications bought the New Vision stations in 1995. In 1996, Ellis was sold to Retirement Systems of Alabama who merged it with Aflac's former broadcasting division to form Raycom Media. Since Aflac had owned rival WTOC, Raycom could not keep both channels due to Federal Communications Commission (FCC) regulations forbidding common ownership of two stations in the same market. Raycom opted to keep the higher-rated WTOC and sell WSAV. In early-1997, Raycom traded WSAV and two other stations to current owner Media General in return for WTVR-TV in Richmond, Virginia. In the 2000s, this station acquired the local rights to the syndicated game shows Wheel of Fortune and Jeopardy!. Both were previously shown on rival WJCL for almost two decades.
On February 1, 2006, WSAV celebrated its 50th anniversary. To commemorate the event, Savannah Mayor Otis Johnson officially announced the date as "WSAV Day" and lauded the station for its many achievements over the decades. Its continued service to its viewers being always "On Your Side" whenever a viewer needs to get a story out was also recognized. On September 5, WSAV began carrying MyNetworkTV and RTV on a new second digital subchannel. This service is also available to DirecTV customers in Savannah on channel 29. WSAV-DT2's website and the digital subchannel feature a logo in the upper right-hand corner of the screen that reads "WSAV-DT 3.2 Savannah". WSAV-TV ended analog services on June 12, 2009, as part of the DTV transition in the United States. [3] The station remained on its pre-transition channel 39. [4] Through the use of PSIP, WSAV-TV's main NBC signal is displayed as virtual channel 3. On September 26, 2011, RTV was replaced with classic programming from Me-TV.
This channel was known for an unusual practice on its newscasts from the 1950s to the 1970s. WSAV was home to "Captain Sandy" who was something of a hybrid between a weatherman and children's show host. The character gave the weather on the weeknight news working with puppet sidekicks "Wilbur the Weather Bird", "Arthur Mometer" (the thermometer), and "Calamity Clam". Captain Sandy would appear on the news set wearing a vaguely nautical cap and blazer as a nod to the region's dependence on the Atlantic Ocean. The comedy elements of the forecast included the thermometer and the clam. Captain Sandy's big thermometer was temperamental and would fidget before revealing the next day's high and low temperatures. When Captain Sandy opened Davy Jones' Locker to get the tide information (a crucial component of any weather forecast in the region) out of Calamity Clam, the puppeteer always tried to bite the captain's hand.
By the end of the 1970s, new station ownership found Captain Sandy's routine embarrassing (and likely anachronistic since most television stations had discontinued local children's shows years before) and the owners made the Captain finally conform to convention prescribing him a suit and tie like other newscasters. The owners also fired the puppets shortly after to the almost-certain sorrow of area children. One of the personalities behind the Captain Sandy character was smooth-voiced Joe Cox, who later left WSAV to become weatherman at cross-town rival WJCL, where he also hosted an evening radio program on WJCL-FM 96.5. The original Captain Sandy from 1956 was played by Norm Strand.
For most of its history, WSAV has been a solid, if distant, runner-up to long-dominant WTOC. In 1976, as part of a major expansion of its news department, channel 3 moved to a former insurance office next door to its original Victory Drive studios.
Unlike most NBC affiliates in the Eastern Time Zone, WSAV does not offer midday or 5 p.m. newscasts during the week (It previously did offer a 5pm newscast for some time, but it was cancelled sometime in the early 2000s). The most recent addition to local news occurred on June 21, 2010 when the station added a show weeknights at 5:30. Before this, WTOC had been the area's only channel to air a broadcast in this time slot. Like all RTV stations in the Eastern Time Zone, WSAV-DT2 airs Daytime weekday mornings at 9 for an hour that is produced by sister station WFLA-TV in Tampa Bay.
In early-March 2009, WSAV-DT2 launched the market's only newscast weeknights at 7. Known as My Lowcountry 3, it airs for an hour. Unlike the main channel's local broadcasts, this production focuses on the South Carolina side of the market featuring coverage from throughout the Lowcountry and the state. There is a weather forecast targeted towards Hilton Head as well as South Carolina sports headlines. WSAV was the featured city during Al Roker's weather forecast on the April 23, 2007 edition of Today. Roker referred to the station as "WSAV NBC 3". WSAV became the last Savannah station to air local news in high definition on March 8, 2011 beginning with the 5:30 pm program. News and weather updates from this station can be heard on: WGCO-FM 98.3, WGZO-FM 103.1 , WFXH-FM 106.1, WUBB FM 106.9, WXYY FM 107.9, and WHHW AM 1130. All news anchors also serve as reporters.
Anchors
Storm Team 3 Meteorologists
Reporters
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