Columbus, Georgia | |
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Branding | WTVM News Leader 9 |
Slogan | Coverage You Can Count On |
Channels | Digital: 11 (VHF) Virtual: 9 (PSIP) |
Subchannels | 9.1 ABC 9.2 Bounce TV |
Owner | Raycom Media (WTVM License Subsidiary, LLC) |
First air date | October 6, 1953 |
Call letters' meaning | TeleVision Martin (from Martin Theaters, former owner) |
Sister station(s) | WXTX |
Former callsigns | WDAK-TV (1953-1956) |
Former channel number(s) | Analog: 28 (UHF, 1953-1960) 9 (VHF, 1960-2009) |
Former affiliations | effective_radiated_power = 50 kW |
Height | 507 m |
Facility ID | 595 |
Website | wtvm.com |
WTVM is the ABC-affiliated television station for Columbus, Georgia. It broadcasts a high definition digital signal on VHF channel 11 from a transmitter in Cusseta. The station can also be seen on Charter, Knology, and Mediacom channel 10. There is a high definition feed offered on Charter digital channel 707, Mediacom digital channel 810, and Knology digital channel 901.
Owned by Raycom Media, WTVM operates primary Fox and secondary MyNetworkTV affiliate WXTX (owned by Southeastern Media Holdings) through a shared services agreement (SSA). The two share studios on Wynnton Road (GA 22) in the Dinglewood section of Columbus. Syndicated programming on this channel includes: Entertainment Tonight, Inside Edition, The Doctors, and Ellen.
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On WTVM-DT2, Mediacom digital channel 803, Charter digital channel 108, and Knology digital channel 170 is a 24-hour local weather channel. Programming consists of current weather conditions with forecasts, a live feed of "Live Doppler 9", and severe weather alerts when conditions warrant. On Saturday mornings, the subchannel broadcasts educational shows to fulfill an E/I requirement. Despite being called "Storm Team 9 Weather Now", it is not affiliated with The Local AccuWeather Channel. It will be replaced with Bounce TV on September 26, 2011.
Channel | Programming |
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9.1 | Main WTVM programming / ABC |
9.2 | Storm Team 9 Weather Now (To be replaced by Bounce TV on 9/26/2011.) |
The station signed-on for the first time on October 6, 1953 as WDAK-TV airing an analog signal on UHF channel 28. It was a primary NBC station with secondary ABC affiliation. WDAK was the first television station in the Columbus market (beating rival WRBL by just over a month) and is the fifth-oldest in the state of Georgia and second-oldest outside Atlanta. During the late-1950s, the station was also briefly affiliated with the NTA Film Network. [1] It was originally owned by Allen Woodall Sr. (owner of WDAK-AM 540) and Martin Theaters (forerunner of Carmike Cinemas). Studios were located on 1st Avenue in Downtown Columbus where Carmike's corporate headquarters are today.
Woodall sold his interest in the station to Martin Theaters in 1956 and the call letters were changed to the current WTVM. It moved to VHF channel 9 in 1960 in a three-way switch-and-move approved by the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) in which WRBL moved from channel 4 to channel 3 and WTVY-TV in Dothan, Alabama moved from channel 9 to channel 4. The moves were permitted because two years earlier Martin Theaters had bought WROM-TV in Rome, Georgia and moved it 70 miles north to Chattanooga, Tennessee while changing its calls to WTVC. Eventually, WTVM's old channel 28 allotment was occupied by Georgia Public Broadcasting's WJSP-TV.
On the same day WTVM moved to channel 9, it switched its primary affiliation to ABC while relegating NBC to secondary status shared with WRBL. This was very unusual for a then two-station market, especially one of Columbus' size. Usually, ABC, as the smallest and weakest network, was relegated to secondary status on one or both of existing stations. However, Martin Theaters wanted to get WTVM in line with WTVC, which has always been an ABC affiliate. Also, a large number of viewers in Western Georgia and Eastern Alabama did not have access to ABC full-time; the nearest ABC affiliate that put a decent signal into Columbus was WLWA-TV in Atlanta (now NBC affiliate WXIA-TV). By contrast, NBC had strong outlets in Atlanta's WSB-TV and Montgomery, Alabama's WSFA, with both transmitting fairly clear Grade B signals to the region. Therefore, Martin realized that an ABC affiliation would not bring significant out-of-market competition. Augusta businessman J. B. Fuqua bought Martin Theaters in 1969, including both WTVM and WTVC.
Early in 1970, Fuqua moved WTVM to its present studios on Wynnton Road. The station switched to ABC full-time in October of that year when WYEA (now WLTZ) signed-on and took over the NBC affiliation. Fuqua sold-off his broadcast interests in 1980, with WTVM going to Western Broadcasting. SFN Publishing eventually became the owner in 1984. A group of SFN managers formed Pegasus Broadcasting and purchased WTVM in 1986. Aflac (which had owned WYEA at one point during the 1970s) bought the station in 1989, making channel 9 Aflac's flagship station. In 1997, Aflac sold its entire broadcasting division, including WTVM, to an investment group that merged with Ellis Communications to form the station's current owner, Raycom Media.
Since half of the viewing area includes eastern Alabama, WTVM is part of the Raycom News Network, a system designed to rapidly share information among Raycom's widespread group of television stations and websites in Alabama. A regional network has developed among Montgomery's WSFA12 News , Huntsville's WAFF 48 News, and Birmingham's Fox 6 News WBRC in which stations share information, equipment such as satellite trucks or even reporters' stories. Between them, these four stations cover most of the state of Alabama, with the exception of the Mobile/Pensacola DMA. The four stations also comprise the Raycom Weather Network and the Raycom Alabama Weather Blog, where meteorologists from all four stations post forecasts and storm reports, as well as live feeds from all of the cameras that the four stations operate. The site also has live feeds of Live Doppler 9 (WTVM), Doppler 12 StormVision (WSFA), FOX 6 VIPIR (WBRC) and Live StormTrack Doppler 48 (WAFF).
News Leader 9 operates the Chattahoochee Valley's only live regional weather radar called "Live Doppler 9" (formerly known as TrueView Doppler 9), located on top of WTVM's midtown studios. The station also has access to four different Level 2 NEXRAD radars branded as the "Doppler 9 Radar Network" (formerly known as TrueView Tracker) which includes the capability to use 3-D graphics to track storms during newscasts. WTVM operates seven skycams (all but one, the Columbus Gov't Center skycam, are sponsored by ALFA Insurance) throughout the viewing area. There are two in Columbus (St. Francis Hospital and Columbus Park Crossing), and one each in Pine Mountain, Georgia; Auburn, Alabama; Opelika, Alabama and Eufaula, Alabama.
In addition to the main studios, the station operates an East Alabama bureau on Executive Park Drive in Opelika. WTVM produces a nightly prime time show for sister station WXTX known as Fox 54 News at 10. At one point, there was also an hour long broadcast seen weekday mornings at 7 on that station. However, this production (called Fox 54 Morning News) was canceled.
News Leader 9 Morning (5:30 to 7:00 A.M.)
Weekdays
Anchors
Storm Team 9 Weather
News Leader 9 Midday (12:00 to 12:30 P.M.)
Weekdays
Anchors
Storm Team 9 Weather
News Leader 9 at 5:00 (5:00 to 5:30 P.M.)
Weekdays
Anchors
Storm Team 9 Weather
News Leader 9 at 5:30 (5:30 to 6:00 P.M.)
Weekdays
Anchors
Storm Team 9 Weather
News Leader 9 at 6:00 (6:00 to 6:30 P.M.)
Weekdays
Anchors
Storm Team 9 Weather
Sports Leader 9
News Leader 9 Nightside at 11:00 (11:00 to 11:35 P.M.)
Weekdays
Anchors
Storm Team 9 Weather
Sports Leader 9
News Leader 9 at 6:00 (6:00 to 6:30 P.M.)
Weekends
Anchors
Storm Team 9 Weather
Sports Leader 9
News Leader 9 Nightside Weekends (11:00 to 11:30 P.M.)
Weekends
Anchors
Storm Team 9 Weather
Sports Leader 9
Reporters
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