WFOR-TV
Miami–Fort Lauderdale, Florida United States | |
---|---|
City | Miami, Florida |
Branding |
CBS 4 (general) South Florida's CBS 4 News (newscasts) |
Slogan | South Florida's Smart Choice |
Channels |
Digital: 22 (UHF) Virtual: 4 (PSIP) |
Subchannels |
4.1 CBS 4.2 Decades |
Affiliations | CBS (O&O) |
Owner |
CBS Corporation (CBS Television Stations, Inc.) |
Founded | April 1964[1] |
First air date | September 20, 1967 |
Call letters' meaning | Channel Four |
Sister station(s) | WBFS-TV, WKIS, WPOW, WQAM |
Former callsigns | WCIX(-TV) (1967–1995) |
Former channel number(s) |
Analog: 6 (VHF, 1967–1995) 4 (VHF, 1995–2009) |
Former affiliations |
Independent (1967–1986) Fox (1986–1988) |
Transmitter power | 1,000 kW |
Height | 298 m (978 ft) |
Facility ID | 47902 |
Transmitter coordinates | 25°58′8.3″N 80°13′19.2″W / 25.968972°N 80.222000°WCoordinates: 25°58′8.3″N 80°13′19.2″W / 25.968972°N 80.222000°W |
Licensing authority | FCC |
Public license information: |
Profile CDBS |
Website |
miami |
WFOR-TV, channel 4, is a CBS owned-and-operated television station located in Miami, Florida, United States. The station is owned by the CBS Television Stations subsidiary of CBS Corporation, as part of a duopoly with MyNetworkTV affiliate WBFS-TV (channel 33). The two stations share studio and office facilities in Doral, Florida, near Miami International Airport; WFOR's transmitter is located in Andover, Florida.
History
WCIX, channel 6
The station first signed on the air on September 20, 1967 as WCIX-TV,[2] broadcasting on VHF channel 6. The station was originally owned by the locally-based Coral Television Corporation. General Cinema Corporation acquired controlling interest in Coral Television and WCIX in August 1972.[3]
The channel 6 frequency was allocated to Miami by the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) in June 1957, as part of a minor reorganization nationwide of VHF channel assignments.[4][5] The channel was reallocated to the city of South Miami when Coral Television was awarded a construction permit to build channel 6 in April 1964. In February 1967, seven months before WCIX went on the air, Coral Television successfully convinced the FCC to move the community of license back to Miami proper, where the station could serve more viewers. WCIX built a transmitter tower in Homestead, which was 40 miles (60 km) southwest of Miami, farther south than the Miami-Fort Lauderdale market's other television stations. This arrangement was necessary to protect WPTV (on adjacent channel 5) in West Palm Beach and WDBO-TV (now WKMG-TV, and also on channel 6) in Orlando. As a result, Miami's channel 6 only provided a "Grade B" signal to Fort Lauderdale, and was virtually unviewable in the northern portion of Broward County. The station made up for this shortfall in its coverage area by signing on translator stations throughout Broward County and in Boca Raton (part of the West Palm Beach market); WCIX identified these translators, broadcasting on UHF channels 33, 61 and 69, in its station IDs as late as the mid-1980s. The channel 33 translator was shut down in 1984 to allow future sister station WBFS-TV to sign on, and was then moved to channel 27 where it operated until the mid-1990s; channel 69 became WYHS-TV in 1988. Translators on channels 21 (in Pompano Beach) and 58 (in central Broward County) were also used in later years.
WCIX-TV was the first general entertainment independent station in the Miami-Fort Lauderdale market, and the second in Florida, after WSUN-TV (whose channel 38 allocation is now occupied by WTTA) in St. Petersburg converted to an independent in 1965. Channel 6 ran the typical independent format of children's programs, sitcoms, movies, and other local and syndicated programs. WCIX was also one of the very few stations not owned by Kaiser Broadcasting to carry The Lou Gordon Program from WKBD-TV in Detroit in the 1970s. It was also one of the first stations in the area to offer programming in both English and Spanish to serve South Florida's growing Hispanic population. From the 1970s to the early 1980s, WCIX had widespread cable penetration throughout Florida and was seen on cable systems as far north as Tampa Bay and Orlando. Outside the Miami market, WCIX shared its cable channel space with another Miami station, WKID-TV (channel 51, now WSCV), which presented older movies and sitcoms after WCIX left the air.
The station was the only general entertainment independent in the market until 1976, when WHFT-TV (channel 45) was purchased by LeSEA Broadcasting and switched a hybrid schedule of general entertainment and religious programs. In 1980, WHFT was sold to the Trinity Broadcasting Network and switched to religious programming full-time, leaving WCIX as the market's lone independent once again. However, it would receive competition once again in 1982 when WDZL (channel 39, now WSFL-TV) signed on.
General Cinema traded WCIX-TV to Cincinnati-based Taft Broadcasting in early 1983 in exchange for WGR-TV (now WGRZ) in Buffalo, New York and $70 million.[6][7] Under Taft, WCIX (the station officially dropped the -TV suffix from its call sign in 1984[8]) continued to be the leading independent station in South Florida; the station moved from its original studios on Brickell Avenue in downtown Miami to its current facility in Doral (then an unincorporated area, now a separate city) in 1985. On October 6, 1986, WCIX became a charter affiliate of the newly launched Fox Broadcasting Company, and was one of a handful of VHF stations to affiliate with the network, though the station was essentially still independent since Fox offered only an hour of late night programming at the time (consisting of the talk show The Late Show Starring Joan Rivers) and would only add two nights of primetime programming by the end of the station's tenure with the network.
Acquisition by CBS
After losing a bid to purchase then-CBS affiliate WTVJ (then on channel 4) from then-owner Kohlberg Kravis Roberts & Co., CBS made a half-hearted offer to buy WCIX from Taft in January 1987. Taft declined, but a month later opted to sell all of its independent stations and Fox affiliates, including WCIX, to the TVX Broadcast Group. However, TVX became mired in debt as a result of the purchase, and began to sell off many of its medium- and small-market stations. Although TVX originally planned to keep WCIX, the company eventually decided that the station would have to be divested. One of the primary factors in the decision to sell was that WCIX was TVX's only VHF station, whereas its sister stations were all broadcasting on the UHF band. KKR sold WTVJ to NBC in September 1987. However, CBS' affiliation contract with WTVJ did not expire until December 31, 1988, as did NBC's contract with WSVN (channel 7), which had served as its Miami affiliate since that station signed on in July 1956. WSVN's owner, Sunbeam Television, was not willing to end channel 7's affiliation with NBC one year early. NBC was thus forced to run WTVJ as a CBS affiliate for over a year – a situation that did not sit well with either NBC or CBS.
With the defection of WTVJ looming, CBS made another offer to TVX to acquire WCIX in the spring of 1988. The two sides agreed to a final deal in August of that year.[9] In the interim, channel 6 agreed to air CBS programs that WTVJ chose to preempt. Meanwhile, WSVN fought to retain its relationship with NBC, but later relented and approached CBS for an affiliation deal. CBS turned the offer down and went forward with its plans to purchase WCIX despite its weak signal in Broward County.
The affiliation changeover officially occurred on January 1, 1989: the entire CBS network schedule moved to WCIX, while NBC's full schedule of programs moved to WTVJ. Fox moved its programming over to WSVN (although the station advertised itself as an independent upon the switch); most of WCIX's syndicated programming inventory (a notable exception being Star Trek: The Next Generation, the rights to which are now owned by CBS) went to WDZL. CBS formally finalized its purchase of WCIX the next day. In the case of Miami-Fort Lauderdale, it is one of two television markets in which the Fox affiliation moved from one VHF station to another (the other being Honolulu, Hawaii if stations not operating as satellites are counted, when Fox affiliate KHNL and NBC affiliate KHON-TV swapped affiliations on January 1, 1996) – and the only known instance of a longtime "Big Three" affiliate switching to Fox prior to Fox's 1994 affiliation agreement with New World Communications and other affiliation transactions involving the network that resulted from the deal.
Despite a significant technical overhaul and upgraded programming, WCIX struggled as a CBS station due to its weak signal in Fort Lauderdale. Despite operating a translator in the area on UHF channel 27, CBS persuaded West Palm Beach's longtime ABC affiliate WPEC (channel 12), to switch to CBS (replacing UHF station WTVX) in order to give the network a stronger signal in northern Broward County.[10]
WCIX's transmission tower collapsed on August 24, 1992, as a result of destructive winds caused by Hurricane Andrew, forcing channel 6 off the air. Within hours, the station resumed broadcasts via its low power translator in Fort Lauderdale. WDZL began carrying WCIX's newscasts the next day, with the entire CBS schedule following a few days later. Within a week, WCIX was back on the air using an emergency transmitter on a borrowed tower. In the wake of the devastation, WCIX's staff helped create Neighbors Helping Neighbors, a grass roots charitable organization which aimed to help people rebuild. The organization lives on as Neighbors 4 Neighbors, which is still supported by the station.
Move to channel 4
On July 14, 1994, Westinghouse Broadcasting (Group W) signed a long-term affiliation deal with CBS, part of which resulted in three Westinghouse-owned stations (WBZ-TV in Boston, WJZ-TV in Baltimore and KYW-TV in Philadelphia) becoming CBS affiliates.[11] As a sidebar, a subsequent deal between NBC and a new joint venture between Group W and CBS was reached in November 1994, with CBS selling the channel 6 facility to NBC as compensation for the loss of Westinghouse-owned NBC affiliates KYW-TV and WBZ-TV.[12] In return, Group W/CBS received the stronger channel 4 facility and cash as compensation for the loss of Philadelphia's WCAU-TV, which was being acquired by NBC. NBC also included stations in Denver (KCNC-TV) and Salt Lake City (KUTV) in the trade agreement with Group W/CBS.
At 1:00 a.m. on September 10, 1995, WCIX and WTVJ swapped channel positions. The entire WCIX intellectual unit (studios, CBS affiliation, programming and staff) moved from channel 6 to channel 4, effectively returning CBS programming to channel 4 after a six-year hiatus. WTVJ had been Miami's CBS affiliate from its sign-on in March 1949 until the 1989 switch to NBC. Along with the frequency change came a new set of call letters, WFOR-TV, changing the reference to the station's channel number from its original allocation to its new one. Due to the way the asset exchange deal was structured, the two stations were required to swap licenses in addition to the transmitting facilities.[13][14] As a result, WFOR-TV legally operated under WTVJ's old license on channel 4 through the end of the analog broadcasting era; however, the studios of both WFOR-TV and WTVJ remained the same.
Under the terms of the deal, CBS sold controlling interest (55%) in WFOR-TV to Westinghouse, while retaining a minority interest (45%). WFOR became wholly owned by CBS once again when the Westinghouse Electric Corporation merged with CBS at the end of 1995.[15] Since 1998, WFOR has been the primary station for the Miami Dolphins, thanks to CBS acquiring the rights to the AFC broadcast contract, which the Dolphins are part of. Additionally, the station also carries any Thursday night games in which the Dolphins are playing. In 2000, Viacom bought CBS, making WFOR a sister station to UPN affiliate WBFS-TV, which subsequently moved into WFOR's studio facility (Viacom was also the owner of some of WFOR's sister stations under TVX by this time). The station also handled some support operations for WTVX in West Palm Beach until it was sold to the Cerberus Capital Management subsidiary Four Points Media Group in 2007. WFOR-TV and WBFS-TV became properties of CBS Corporation, when Viacom split up its assets in December 2005.
Digital television
Digital channels
Channel | Video | Aspect | PSIP Short Name | Programming[16] |
---|---|---|---|---|
4.1 | 1080i | 16:9 | WFOR-TV | Main WFOR-TV programming / CBS |
4.2 | 480i | 4:3 | Decades | Decades |
Analog-to-digital conversion
WFOR-TV signed on its digital signal on May 1, 2001. WFOR-TV terminated its analog signal, at 12:30 p.m. on VHF channel 4, on June 12, 2009, as part of the federally mandated transition from analog to digital television.[17] The station's digital signal remained on its pre-transition UHF channel 22. Through the use of PSIP, digital television receivers display WFOR-TV's virtual channel as 4.
On October 21, 2014, CBS and Weigel Broadcasting announced the launch of a new digital subchannel service called Decades, scheduled to launch on all CBS-owned stations in 2015, including on WFOR-TV on channel 4.2. The channel will be co-owned by CBS and Weigel (owner of CBS affiliate WDJT-TV in Milwaukee), with Weigel being responsible for distribution to non-CBS-owned stations. It will air programs from the extensive library of CBS Television Distribution, including archival footage from CBS News.[18]
News operation
WFOR-TV presently broadcasts 26½ hours of locally produced newscasts each week (with 4½ hours on weekdays and two hours each on Saturdays and Sundays). A few years after its launch, the station (while on channel 6) began operating a news department, with the launch of The 10 O'Clock News, the first primetime newscast in the South Florida market. Indeed, CBS expressed interest in buying WCIX in part because it was the only non-Big Three station in South Florida that had a functioning news department.
After CBS closed on its purchase of WCIX on January 1, 1989, the station debuted a half-hour early evening newscast at 6:00 p.m. and moved its 10:00 p.m. newscast to 11:00; then summer of that year, it became known as Action News; it continued to increase its local news output during the early 1990s with the addition of newscasts at noon, 4:00 and 5:00 p.m. and by 1995, on weekday mornings.
With the hiring of Shannon High-Bassalik as its news director in 1999, major changes came to WFOR's news department. The station added new anchors, incorporated a younger and hipper look, and implemented flashy news format – all of which was similar to the style used at WSVN, where High-Bassalik had previously served as assistant news director. The station also changed the branding of its newscasts from News 4 South Florida (which had been used since the move to channel 4 in September 1995) to CBS 4 News. Until June 2007, Maggie Rodriguez and Elliot Rodriguez served as co-anchors of the station's 5:00 and 11:00 p.m. newscasts; Maggie left the station to become co-anchor of the Saturday edition of CBS's The Early Show. Shannon Hori, formerly of Fort Worth sister station KTVT, was named main anchor in June 2007. That same month, High-Bassalik was forced to resign, and was replaced as news director by Adrienne Roark. Roark left WFOR/WBFS in March 2010 to join CBS' Dallas-Fort Worth duopoly of KTVT/KTXA. Cesar Aldama became the news director until he relocated to Baltimore, and was replaced by Liz Roldan. On July 15, 2009, WFOR-TV began broadcasting its newscasts from a temporary set in preparation for production upgrades to broadcast its news programming in high definition. After about two weeks of preparation, on July 29, 2009, WFOR-TV became the last major English-language station in the Miami television market and the last CBS-owned station with a full-time news department to begin broadcasting its local newscasts in high definition (Detroit sister station WWJ-TV was technically the last CBS-owned station with an in-house news operation that continued to broadcast in standard definition, but it upgraded its news production to high definition on February 2, 2012; however, it does not produce or air regular evening or late-night newscasts nor does it have a full-scale news department, and had only carried a morning news program at the time of the upgrade). The newscasts on sister station WBFS-TV were also included in the upgrade at that time (WFOR would discontinue producing newscasts for that station in September 2011). The upgrade included a major retooling of the station's news set, the purchase of new studio equipment, changes to master control operations, and the implementation of new graphics. Along with the revamp, a new logo was introduced, which would further emphasize a "South Florida feel".[19]
On August 9, 2010, WFOR began using a new graphics package that was standardized among the rest of the news-producing CBS O&Os, which prominently featured a glass CBS eye design. A new logo was also introduced based on the logo used by KCNC-TV, while keeping the wave featured in the prior logo below it. The station's news theme, "Moving Forward" by 615 Music, was retained in its original format but was eventually switched to Gari Media Group's "The CBS Enforcer Music Collection", which uses the basic music signature of "I Love Chicago, Chicago, My Home" that has been used on many of CBS's O&O stations since the mid-1970s, when it was introduced by Chicago sister station WBBM-TV (versions of the tunes were previously used by WCIX during the CBS era, using the Palmer News Package (commissioned by sister WCBS-TV in 1985) from 1989 to 1992; then an unnamed theme with the same melody, used from 1992 until the switch to channel 4 in 1995).
Notable current on-air staff
- Rick Folbaum - anchor
- Eliott Rodriguez - anchor
- Jim Berry - sports director
- Kim Bokamper - sports anchor; also host of Sports Talk on WQAM-AM 560
- Jorge Sedano - fill-in sports anchor; also radio host on WAXY (790 AM)
- Lesley Visser - sports reporter; also with CBS Sports
Notable former on-air staff
- Gayle Anderson (now at KTLA in Los Angeles)
- Susan Barnett (last at KYW-TV in Philadelphia)[20]
- Lisa Cabrera (moved to WNYW-TV in New York City, has since left the station)
- Giselle Fernández - anchor
- John Hambrick (1990–1993; deceased)
- Robb Hanrahan - anchor/reporter (now with WHP-TV in Harrisburg)[21]
- Dave Malkoff (now at The Weather Channel)
- Antonio Mora - 5:00, 6:00 and 11:00 p.m. co-anchor (2008-2011); 6:00 p.m. solo anchor (2011-2012; now at Al Jazeera America)
- Bryan Norcross - "Hurricane Specialist", executive producer storm coverage and CBS News hurricane consultant (from WTVJ, now hurricane specialist for The Weather Channel / NBC News)
- Bill O'Reilly - political commentator (now at Fox News Channel)
- Jeff Pegues - reporter/anchor (2002–2005; now with CBS News)
- Ralph Renick - commentator (1988–1990; deceased)
- John Roberts (formerly J.D. Roberts) - anchor/reporter (now at Fox News Channel)
- Maggie Rodriguez - 5, 6, and 11 p.m. anchor (former co-anchor of The Early Show on CBS)
- Ken Rosato - anchor (2000–2002; now at WABC-TV in New York City)
- Jennifer Santiago (now DirecTV correspondent for Hometown Heroes)
Translators
WFOR-TV previously operated two translator stations located in the Florida Keys: W38AA (channel 38) in Marathon and W39AC (channel 39) in Key West. Mapale LLC, which has owned them since at least 1979, now operates them as translators of Key West-based Spanish language station WSBS-TV (channel 22), making its entire service area redundant. Their "digital companion channels" are licensed separately from their analog allocations, and have Mapale's own WGEN-TV (channel 8, also from Key West) listed as their primary station.
References
- ↑ "Coral TV given VHF CP in Florida." Broadcasting, May 4, 1964, pg. 9.
- ↑ "Actions of the FCC–Station authorizations, actions–Existing TV stations–Call letters assigned." Broadcasting, June 22, 1964, pg. 77.
- ↑ "Rex Howell reassumes control at KREX; Miami transfer OK'd." Broadcasting, August 14, 1972, pg. 10.
- ↑ "More deintermixure cleared." Broadcasting - Telecasting, March 25, 1957, pg. 48.
- ↑ "Three areas get V's; New Bern shift made." Broadcasting - Telecasting, April 29, 1957; pg. 72.
- ↑ "$110 millon deal for Miami independent." Broadcasting, August 2, 1982, pg. 24
- ↑ "Changing Hands–Approved." Broadcasting, March 14, 1983, pg. 161.
- ↑ "For the record–Call letters–Grants–Existing TV's." Broadcasting, January 9, 1984, pg. 136.
- ↑ "THE MEDIA BUSINESS; CBS to Buy TV Station In Miami". The New York Times. August 9, 1988.
- ↑ Stations To Change On TV Dial, CBS Buys Channel 6, Signs Up Channel 12, South Florida Sun-Sentinel, August 9, 1988.
- ↑ Carter, Bill (July 15, 1994). "CBS to Add Three Affiliates in Deal With Westinghouse". The New York Times. Retrieved July 12, 2012.
- ↑ CBS, NBC Changing Channels, South Florida Sun-Sentinel, November 22, 1994.
- ↑ WCIX WFOR WTVJ Miami Channel Switch 1995 - YouTube
- ↑ WTVJ WCIX WFOR Miami Channel Switch - YouTube
- ↑ Hofmeister, Sallie (August 2, 1995). "CBS Agrees to Buyout Bid by Westinghouse : Entertainment: $5.4-billion merger would create biggest TV, radio empire. But the deal faces obstacles.". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved June 22, 2012.
- ↑ RabbitEars TV Query for WFOR
- ↑ List of Digital Full-Power Stations
- ↑ CBS Stations, Weigel Partner on Oldies Digi-Net Decades Broadcasting & Cable (10/21/2014)
- ↑ http://cbs4.com/local/high.definition.cbs4.2.1447173.html Archived January 27, 2010 at the Wayback Machine
- ↑ "Susan Barnett Bio". KYW-TV. Retrieved 9 March 2013.
- ↑ "Robb Hanrahan bio". WHP-TV. Retrieved 10 March 2013.
External links
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