WPIX
Encyclopedia : W : WP : WPI : WPIX
- This article is about the New York City television station. For the NYC radio station formerly called WPIX-FM, see WQCD.
On January 24, 2006, the WB and UPN networks announced that they would merge. The newly combined network would be called the CW, the letters representing the first initial of its corporate parents CBS (the parent company of UPN) and the Warner Bros. unit of Time Warner. The merger will take effect on-air in September 2006, and WPIX was announced as the CW's New York affiliate.
History
WPIX made its on-air debut on June 15, 1948. Like its longtime Chicago sister station, WGN-TV, its call letters come from the slogan of the newspaper that founded it. In this case, it was the New York Daily News, whose tag was "New York's Picture Newspaper". Both the paper and the station were owned by the Tribune Company. Then and now, WPIX's studios and offices are located in the News Building, at 220 East 42nd Street in Midtown Manhattan.
Through the early 1990s, WPIX was operated separately from the other Tribune television and radio outlets through the News-owned license holder, WPIX, Incorporated, which (starting in 1966) also operated WPIX-FM (101.9 MHz., now WQCD). The WPIX stations were separated from the Daily News in 1991, when British businessman Robert Maxwell bought the newspaper. Tribune retained WPIX and WQCD, and the radio station was sold to Emmis Communications in 1997.
From the outset, WPIX featured programming that was standard among independents: movies, syndicated reruns of network programs, children's shows, public affairs programming, religious programs, and sports -- specifically, the New York Yankees baseball team, which WPIX carried from 1951 until 1998. At various points, WPIX also aired the New York (baseball) Giants, the New York Giants and New York Jets football teams, the NHL's New York Rangers, and the NBA's New York Knicks.
In the 1960s, WPIX, like the other two major independents in New York -- RKO General's WOR-TV (now WWOR-TV) and Metromedia's WNEW-TV (now WNYW) -- struggled to acquire better programming. By the early 1970s, WPIX was the clear number-two independent station in the city, behind WNEW-TV. It offered a wide selection of programming including cartoons, off-network sitcoms, dramas, a strong library of movies and Yankees baseball. It identified on-air as 11 Alive from 1977 to 1986, a slogan made popular by stations like Atlanta's WXIA-TV, who started using "11 Alive" themselves in 1976 and still do so today.
WPIX suffered through a dry spell, ratings-wise, in the late 1980s and early 1990s. During this time, now-Fox-owned WNYW and a resurgent WWOR, then owned by MCA/Universal, relegated WPIX to sixth place among New York's VHF stations. After a new general manager, Michael Eigner, was transferred to WPIX from Los Angeles sister station KTLA in 1989, the station engineered a slow turnaround that eventually resulted in WPIX becoming the leading independent station in the New York market. In 1994, the station became the exclusive home of the New York City Marathon. In January 1995, WPIX became an affiliate of the new WB network.
WPIX lost its over-the-air broadcast rights to the Yankees to WNYW following the 1998 baseball season, more a result of regional cable sports networks (in this case, the Madison Square Garden Network) gaining team broadcast rights, leaving broadcast stations with fewer games to air. The station replaced them with the New York Mets, which up until that point had spent their entire televised history with WOR/WWOR. Ironically, beginning in 2005, over-the-air Yankees broadcasts were aired by WWOR, which was as synonymous with the Mets as WPIX was with the Yankees.
However, being a network affiliate does have its negatives. As WB network and syndicated daytime programming (such as Maury, Judge Mathis, and The Jerry Springer Show) became more prominent on channel 11's schedule, some of the station's local-interest programming has disappeared. WPIX was once home to the St. Patrick's Day, National Puerto Rican Day and Columbus Day parades, and Macy's Independence Day fireworks program. Along with the New York City Marathon these events moved to WNBC-TV, and the Marathon and the Macy's show are now carried on the NBC network. In recent years, WPIX has revived The Yule Log, a special holiday program that combines Christmas music with a film loop of logs burning inside a fireplace. The Yule Log aired on Christmas Eve and/or Christmas morning, initially from 1966 until 1990, and viewer response brought it back in 2001. WPIX also airs a live broadcast of the Midnight Mass, from St. Patrick's Cathedral, on Christmas Eve.
As children's programming began to fade from broadcast television, the WB dropped its morning cartoon block in 2000, leaving the time for local stations to carry their own programming. On June 2, 2000, WPIX launched the WB-11 Morning News, which has grown to challenge the established network morning programs as well as its more direct competitor, WNYW's Good Day New York. The station continues to carry Saturday morning cartoons from WB (known as Kids WB), but the afternoon cartoon block was discontinued on December 30, 2005.
On September 11, 2001, the transmitter facilities of WPIX as well as eight other New York City television stations and several radio stations were destroyed when two hijacked airplanes crashed into and destroyed the World Trade Center towers. The station's lead engineer, Steve Jacobson, was lost in the tragedy. WPIX's satellite feed eerily froze on the last image received from the WTC mast - the North Tower just as it started to collapse; the image remained on the screen for much of the day until WPIX was able to set up alternate transmission facilities (the microwave relay for WPIX's satellite feed was also up there). Since then, WPIX has transmitted its signal from the Empire State Building.
In April 2006, WPIX started broadcasting 24-hour music video channel The Tube on one of its digital sub-channels.
News programming
Appropriate for a station originally owned by the Daily News and linked to the Tribune Company, news has played an important role on WPIX from the station's beginnings. WPIX won national acclaim in 1956 for its filmed documentary coverage of the collision, and later, sinking of the New York-bound oceanliner SS Andrea Doria off the coast of Nantucket.
During the late 1970s and early 1980s, WPIX used the Action News title and format for its local news programs, complete with its theme music, "Move Closer to Your World". A 30-minute newscast aired at 7:30 p.m., and a one-hour program (at some points it was also 30 minutes) ran at 10:00 p.m..
From June 1980 until June 1990, WPIX produced and syndicated Independent Network News (INN), a national newscast for independent stations. The program featured the same talent that worked on WPIX's local newscasts. WPIX transmitted the national show's live feed weeknights at 9:30 p.m. ET. In New York, WPIX paired a 10 p.m. replay of the national show with a live local newscast at 10:30 p.m., called the "Action News Metropolitan Report."
As part of a midday expansion of INN starting in 1981, Channel 11 also experimented with a newscast at 12:30 p.m. anchored by Marvin Scott. During the decade, WPIX also offered INN affiliates "The Wall Street Journal Report," a business-oriented show; and From the Editor's Desk, a Sunday newsmaker show hosted by Richard D. Heffner.
The station dropped Action News in 1984 and renamed its programs as The Independent News. In 1986, the national INN newscast, which was contained within the 10:00 show, was renamed USA Tonight, while the 7:30 program retained the title Independent News. When INN was cancelled, the 7:30 program ended as well, and WPIX focused its efforts on the 10:00 program. Currently, WPIX uses segments within its newscasts to cross-promote Newsday, the Melville, New York-based daily newspaper purchased by Tribune in 2000.
Over the years, channel 11 has won many awards for news, and was the first independent station to win a New York-area Emmy Award for outstanding newscast, first gaining the statuette in 1979 and earning it again in 1983. It was a significant comeback for a news operation that was accused of falsifying news reports broadcasts in the late 1960s, such as labeling stock footage as "via satellite", and saying a voice report was live from Prague when, in actuality, it was made from a pay telephone in Manhattan. As a result, a group called Forum Communications — led by future PBS and NBC News president Lawrence Grossman — approached the FCC to challenge WPIX Inc.'s license to operate channel 11, but after years of litigation, WPIX and the Daily News prevailed in 1979.
Newscasts
- WB-11 Morning News - Monday-Friday 5:00-9:00 a.m.
- WB-11 News at Ten - every night 10:00-11:00 p.m.
- WB-11 News Closeup - Sundays 6:00-6:30 a.m.
Anchors
- Linda Church - morning meteorologist
- Joe Cioffi - weekend meteorologist
- Irv "Mr. G" Gikofsky - weeknight meteorologist
- Sukanya Krishnan - WB-11 Morning News (7 to 9 am)
- Lolita Lopez - weekend sports anchor
- Sal Marchiano - sports director/weeknight sports anchor
- Tiffany McElroy - WB-11 Morning News (5 to 7 am)
- John Muller - WB-11 Morning News (7 to 9 am)
- Mary Murphy - weekend co-anchor
- Peter Thorne - weekend co-anchor
- Kaity Tong - weeknight co-anchor
- Craig Treadway - WB-11 Morning News (5 to 7 am)
- Jim Watkins - weeknight co-anchor
Reporters
(a partial listing)- Julie Chang
- Arthur Chi'en
- Emily Frances (entertainment)
- Chris Glorioso
- Cathy Hobbs
- Larry Hoff
- Patricia Lopez
- Jill Nicolini (traffic)
- Dr. Mike Rosen (medical)
- Dr. Steve Salvatore (medical)
- Marvin Scott - senior correspondent and host, WB-11 News Closeup
- Glenn Thompson (Long Island)
- Vanessa Tyler
Former Personalities
- Steve Bosh - local/INN anchor (1977-1983)
- Jack Cafferty - anchor during the early 1990s (now at CNN)
- Morton Dean - local/INN anchor (1986-1988)
- Jerry Girard - sports anchor (1968-1993)
- Donna Hanover - local/INN anchor (1984-1989)
- Pat Harper - local/INN anchor (1973-1985)
- Brad Holbrook - local/INN anchor (1983-1989)
- Bill Jorgensen - local/INN anchor (1978-1982)
- Lynda Lopez - entertainment reporter, WB-11 Morning News (2000-2002)
- Tim Malloy - reporter/anchor during 1980s and early 1990s (now at WPTV in West Palm Beach)
- Sally Jessy Raphael - reporter/anchor during early 1970s
Public affairs and special events
In addition to its news-oriented broadcasts, WPIX was a leader in public-affairs and special events programming, inspired by its roots as the television station of the Daily News. Early on, it offered the first in-depth program to look at New York City government, called City Hall. WPIX children's show personality "Captain" Jack McCarthy anchored the station's coverage of the St. Patrick's Day Parade (now aired by WNBC-TV), and the station later added the Columbus Day Parade and National Puerto Rican Day Parade to its stable. Later on, the station produced Essence, a TV show inspired by Essence magazine and hosted by the publication's chief editor, Susan L. Taylor.Editor's Desk host Heffner was and still is the host of the longtime interview show The Open Mind, which was produced by channel 11 in the 1970s, 80s and 90s (and was concurrently aired on PBS stations) before moving to other New York studios.
Logos
WPIX's famous Circle 11 logo -- which closely resembles the World Trade Center -- was first unveiled in 1969. (A Yankee Stadium advertising billboard for WPIX with the Circle 11 logo appeared that year.) It had become the official station emblem by 1974.The station dropped it when it adopted the 11 Alive moniker in 1976, but re-incorporated the Circle 11 into 11 Alive print ads in 1984 and the Yankee broadcast intros in April 1985. The Circle 11 returned full-time in 1986.
The current logo was first unveiled during WPIX's broadcast of the 1994 New York City Marathon, and eventually became the full-time logo, augmented with the WB logo after the station became a WB affiliate in 1995.
Logo gallery
See also
External links
- [WPIX Website]
- [Photos of WPIX's news set]
- [WPIX presentation on TV Ark]
- [Rare example of WPIX's Emergency Alert System]
- [Query the FCC's TV station database for WPIX]
- [Query the FCC's TV station database for W64AA]
| Terrestrial television>Broadcast television in the New York City market [(Nielsen DMA #1)] | ||
|---|---|---|
|
WCBS 2 (CBS) -
WNBC 4 (NBC) -
WNYW 5 (Fox) -
WABC 7 (ABC) -
WWOR 9 (UPN-to be MNTV in 09/06) -
WPIX 11 (The WB-to be The CW in 09/06) (The Tube on DT2) -
WNET 13 (PBS) -
WEBR-CA 17 (GCN) -
WLIW 21 (PBS) -
WMBQ-CA 22 (MTV2) -
WNYE 25 (NYC) -
WPXN 31 (i) -
W36AZ 36 (Ind) -
WDVB-CA 39 (ImaginAsian) -
WNYN-LP 39 (Azteca América) -
WXTV 41 (UNI) -
WSAH 43 (S@H/JTV) -
WNJU 47 (TMD) -
WEDW 49 (PBS/CPTV) -
WNJN 50 / WNJB 58 (PBS/NJN) -
WVVH-LP 50 (A1) -
WKOB-LP 53 (Ind) -
WTBY 54 (TBN) -
WRNN-LP 57 (Ind) -
W60AI 60 (HSN) -
WMBC 63 (Ind) -
WFME 66 (Religious) -
WFTY 67 (TFR) -
WFUT 68 (TFR)
| ||
| Local digital-only channels | ||
|
WRNN 48 (Ind) -
WLNY 57 (Ind) (Both stations also have low-powered repeaters in analog.) | ||
| Local cable television channels | ||
| MSG Network - News 12 - NY1 - NYCTV - SportsNet New York - YES Network | ||
|
Note: Networks in parenthesis indicate affiliations starting September 2006. Also, stations in bold are cable-only stations. WBE 2 (, ND) - WBU 11 (, The CW) - WBXI 11 (, The CW) - WPIX 11 (, The CW) - WBWT 14 (, The CW) - WRWB 16 (, The CW) - WNYS 43 (, MNTV) - WCWN 45 (, The CW) - WNYO 49 (, MNTV) | |
| '''See also: , , , , , and stations in New York | |
| Superstations in List_of_television_stations_in_North_America_by_media_market>North American markets | |
|---|---|
| United States: KTLA | KWGN | WAPA | WGN | WKAQ | WPIX | WSBK | WTBS | WWOR | |
|
Mexico: Multimedios Television | XEFB | XEW | XHDF | XHGC | XHIMT
| |
| See Also: | List of American Over-The-Air Networks | Local American TV Stations (W) | Local American TV Stations (K) | | Local Canadian TV Stations | | Local Mexican TV Stations | | North American TV | | |
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