WPBT
Encyclopedia : W : WP : WPB : WPBT
WPBT is the callsign of a television station in Miami, Florida, serving the South Florida region. The station was organised in November 1953 and first went on the air on August 12, 1955, the first educational station in Florida to sign on. At the time it signed on, all time was volunteered and all equipment was donated, and not a penny came from these taxes. The station is a member of PBS.
During the 1960s and 1970s, WPBT shared time with another educational station WTHS, which was owned by the Dade County School Board.
Over the years, WPBT has produced various programming that has proven popular to audiences throughout America:
- In 1976, [[Jack Horkheimer: Star Gazer]] (formerly Star Hustler) interstitial segments debuted. This 5-minute program, which features key constellations and stars to look for each week, was first seen only on Florida PBS stations. The show went national in 1985 and was aired in foreign markets by 1989. Star Gazer is generally seen on many PBS stations before sign-off. However, due to more PBS stations broadcasting 24/7 and no time to fit the five minute program, WPBT began to offer a one minute capsule version of Star Gazer.
- From 1977 to 1979, the station produced 39 episodes of ¿Qué Pasa, USA?, a bilingual comedy series that is still shown on some PBS stations to this day. Some of its stars went on to star in popular telenovelas in Latin America.
- In 1979, WPBT premiered the Nightly Business Report, a daily stock market and business program, which is now distributed nationally, recently, via PBS itself.
- In January 1982, WPBT presented what was probably the first international game show, Top Of The World, which was produced in association with Thames Television in London and the Australian Broadcasting Corporation in Sydney. Hosted by Eamonn Andrews in London, this was a straight quiz game involving contestants competing via satellite in Miami, London and Sydney. The victor at the end of the championship won a 1924 Rolls-Royce.
See also
External links
| Broadcast television in the South Florida (Miami / Fort Lauderdale) market [(Nielsen DMA #17)]''' | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| WPBT 2 (PBS) - WFOR 4 (CBS) - WTVJ 6 (NBC) - WSVN 7 (Fox) - WGEN 8 / WSBS 22 (Ind) - WPLG 10 (ABC) - WLMF-LP 13 (Ind/Edu.) - WLRN 17 (PBS) - WLTV 23 (UNI) - WIMP-CA 25 (HSN) - WBFS 33 (UPN/MNTV) - WPXM 35 (i) - WPMF-LP 38 (Ind) - WBZL 39 (The WB/The CW) - WJAN-CA 41 (Ind) - WHFT 45 (TBN) - WFUN-LP 48 (HSN) - WSCV 51 (TEL) - WEYS-LP 56 (ALMA) - WPPB 63 (EDU) - WAMI 69 (TFU) | |||
| Local digital television channels | |||
| WHDT-LP 44 (Ind) | |||
| PBS Member Stations in the state of Florida | |
|---|---|
| WPBT 2 ([[Template:Miami TV|Miami]]) - WEDU 3 ([[Template:Tampa Bay TV|Tampa]]) - WUFT 5 ([[Template:Gainesville TV|Gainesville]]) - WJCT 7 ([[Template:Jacksonville TV|Jacksonville]]) - WFSU 11 / WFSG 56 ([[Template:Tallahassee TV|Tallahassee]] / [[Template:Panama City TV|Panama City]]) - WCEU 15 ([[Template:Orlando TV|Daytona Beach]]) - WUSF 16 ([[Template:Tampa Bay TV|Tampa]]) - WLRN 17 ([[Template:Miami TV|Miami]]) - WSRE 23 ([[Template:PensacolaMobileTV|Pensacola]]) - WMFE 24 ([[Template:Orlando TV|Orlando]]) - WGCU 30 ([[Template:Ft. Myers TV|Fort Myers]]) - WXEL 42 ([[Template:WPB TV|West Palm Beach]]) - WBCC 68 ([[Template:Orlando TV|Cocoa]]) | |
| See also: [[Template:ABC Florida|ABC]], [[Template:CBS Florida|CBS]], [[Template:Fox Florida|Fox]], [[Template:NBC Florida|NBC]], [[Template:UPN Florida|UPN]], [[Template:WB Florida|WB]], [[Template:Florida Religous Stations|Religious]], [[Template:Florida Spanish Stations|Spanish]] and [[Template:Other Florida Stations|Other]] stations in the state of Florida | |
From Wikipedia, the Free Encyclopedia. Original article here. Support Wikipedia by contributing or donating.
All text is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License See Wikipedia Copyrights for details.
