WTTO
Encyclopedia : W : WT : WTT : WTTO
WTTO is a television station serving the Birmingham/Anniston/Tuscaloosa, Alabama market as a WB affiliate. It broadcasts its analog signal on UHF channel 21 and its digital signal on UHF channel 28. It is licensed to Homewood, a Birmingham suburb.
WDBB is a satellite of WTTO, and is licensed to Bessemer, another Birmingham suburb, but primarily serves the Tuscaloosa area. It broadcasts its analog signal on UHF channel 17 and its digital signal on UHF channel 18.
Both stations are owned by Sinclair Broadcast Group, which also owns sister station WABM, the local UPN affiliate.
History
WTTO began originally on April 21, 1982 as Alabama's second independent station, signing on a few months after WPMI-TV in Mobile. It was a typical UHF independent that aired numerous cartoons, movies, and sitcoms. The first program it broadcast was a rerun of the 1970s action show, Buck Rogers in the 21st Century. The station was owned by Chapman Broadcasting. Arlington Broadcasting bought WTTO in 1983. It was sold to HR Broadcasting in 1987. It turned down the Fox affiliation when that network started up. The station did very well even without Fox, and in fact was one of the top independent stations in the countrry. HR Broadcasting sold WTTO to Abry in 1989.Meanwhile, WDBB had its start on October 1, 1984 as an independent station licensed to Tuscaloosa, also serving Birmingham. In 1986, the station began broadcasting from a tower near Bessemer in an attempt to become the Birmingham area's second independent station, simulcasting with co-owned WNAL (channel 44, now WPXH) in Gadsden. At the same time, WDBB/WNAL became a Fox affiliate. However, neither station covered Birmingham with a signal and couldn't get on a couple Birmingham-area cable systems. In January of 1991, Fox moved its affiliation to WTTO after all efforts to get better cable coverage for WDBB/WNAL failed. Soon after, WDBB and WNAL began simulcasting WTTO for all but two hours of the broadcast day. By 1993 WNAL and WDBB became full-time satellites of WTTO, which nonetheless only called itself "FOX21". Within a few years, WTTO was one of the strongest Fox affiliates in the country.
In 1994 Abry began a Local marketing agreement with WABM, which joined UPN in 1995, a few months after Abry merged with Sinclair. Meanwhile, that same year, New World bought WBRC from Citicasters. At the same time, it bought WVTM-TV from Argyle. This posed a serious problem for New World. It not only owned two stations in the same market, but now owned more stations than the FCC allowed. A few months later, however, New World and Fox reached a deal in which New World would switch all its stations to Fox affiliates. This gave New World a chance to solve its Birmingham ownership problem by selling WBRC directly to Fox.
ABC wanted to affiliate with WTTO, but at the time Sinclair did not budget for local newscasts on its stations. Also, Sinclair was only interested in ABC's prime time shows, sports, and ABC News, not a full affiliation. ABC found this offer unattractive, and WTTO and WDBB continued as Fox stations until WBRC's affiliation deal with ABC ran out in September 1996. The two stations then became independents, though WTTO held onto Fox Kids after WBRC didn't pick it up. In the meantime, WNAL was sold to Fant Broadcasting and became Birmingham's WB affiliate. It broke off from the simulcast with WTTO to show WB programming live.
In 1997, WTTO and WDBB (listed from here on only as "WTTO") took the WB affiliation from WNAL, which was then sold by Fant, and then became a CBS affiliate until it was snapped up by Paxson Communications and renamed WPXH.
In the late 1990's WTTO evolved gradually away from movies, classic sitcoms, and cartoons to more talk/reality shows, court shows, as well as recent sitcoms (which they ran all along). WTTO dropped Fox Kids programming in the Fall of 2000 and WBRC did not pick it up. That year Fox stopped requiring its own stations from carrying it whether or not another station could be found. The main reason for this change was because the stations were having a tougher time making a profit running such programming. This was due to new FCC regulations in terms of the amount of ads allowed during children's programming as well as the content of such advertising. This made advertisers for children rely more on cable and caused syndicators to move their programming to cable.
Still WTTO continued cartoons in the afternoons as they ran Kids WB programming until that ended nationwide in January of 2006. Kids WB still runs on Saturday Mornings. In September 2003, WTTO finally began to produce its own local newscast, titled "WB21 News at 9:00". However, in October 2005, the market's CBS-affiliate, WIAT, began producing the newscasts for WTTO.
The WB will shut down in September 2006, along with UPN, to form The CW, a network featuring programming from both networks. Sinclair announced on May 2, 2006 that WTTO would become the CW affiliate. As a CW affiliate, the station will be branded as "CW21".
See also
External links
- [WTTO website]
- [Query the FCC's TV station database for WTTO]
- [Query the FCC's TV station database for WDBB]
| Terrestrial television>Broadcast television in the Central Alabama (Birmingham / Anniston / Tuscaloosa) market [(Nielsen DMA #40)] |
|---|
| WBXA-CA 2 (MTV2) - WBRC 6 (Fox) - WVUA-CA 7 (i/A1/ShopNBC) - WCIQ 7 / WBIQ 10 (PBS/APT) - WVTM 13 (NBC) - WOTM-LP 19 (Ind) - WTTO 21 / WDBB 17 (The WB/''The CW) - WUOA 23 (i/A1) - WJXS 24 (FamNet) - WBUN-CA 28 (Daystar) - WCFT 33 (ABC) - W34BI 34 (HSC) - WJSU 40 (ABC) - WIAT 42 (CBS) - WPXH 44 (i) - W49AY 47 (Ind/Rel.) - WOIL-LP 47 (Daystar)- WBMA 58 (ABC) - WTJP 60 (TBN) - WABM 68 (UPN/My Network TV) |
| WB Network Affiliates in the state of Alabama | |
|---|---|
| "WBDO" 3 / 63 () - "WBMY" 16 / 38 () - WTTO 21 / WDBB 17 () - "WAWB" 41.2 () - WBPG 55 () | |
| See also: , , , , , and stations in Alabama | |
|
Corporate Staff: David D. Smith (COB and President & CEO) | Frederick G. Smith | J. Duncan Smith | Robert E. Smith | Daniel C. Keith | Martin R. Leader | Lawrence E. McCanna | Basil A. Thomas | David B. Amy | Lucy A. Rutishauser | Barry M. Faber | David R. Bochenek | Nat S. Ostroff | Donald H. Thompson | Thomas I. Waters III | Darren Shapiro | Gregg Siegel | Jeff Sleete | M. William Butler | Steven M. Marks | Delbert R. Parks III | Joe DeFeo
|
|
ABC Network Affiliates: KDNL | WCHS | WEAR | WGGB | WICD | WICS | WKEF | WLOS | WSYX | WXLV
|
|
CBS Network Affiliates: KGAN | WGME
|
|
Fox Network Affiliates: KABB | KBSI | KDSM | KOKH | WBFF | WDKY | WMSN | WPGH | WRGT | WRLH | WSMH | WSYT | WTAT | WTTE | WUHF | WUTV | WVAH | WYZZ | WZTV
|
|
NBC Network Affiliate: WTWC
|
|
UPN Network Affiliates: WABM¹ | WCGV¹ | WMMP¹ | WMYV¹ | WRDC¹ | WUXP¹
|
|
WB Network Affiliates: KMYS¹ | KOCB² | KVMY¹ | WDKA¹ | WLFL² | WMYA¹ | WNAB² | WNYO¹ | WNUV² | WNYS¹ | WPMY¹ | WSTR¹ | WTTA¹ | WTTO/WDBB² | WTVZ¹ | WUCW² | WVTV²
|
|
Independent Television Stations: KVCW² | WFGX¹
|
|
¹ Stations that have been announced as My Network TV affiliates.
|
|
² Stations that have been announced as CW affiliates.
|
| Annual Revenue: .24 billion USD (2004) | Employees: Unknown at this time. | Stock Symbol: NASDAQ: [SBGI]| Website: [www.sbgi.net] |
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.
