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WYFF

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WYFF is the NBC television affiliate based in Greenville, South Carolina. It serves a market which includes Greenville, Spartanburg and Anderson in South Carolina and Asheville, North Carolina. The market takes in large portions of western North Carolina and upstate South Carolina. Its transmitter is located near Caesars Head, South Carolina.

History

The station went on the air on December 31, 1953 as WFBC-TV, South Carolina's fifth television station, and the Carolinas first sole NBC affiliate. It was owned by the Peace family, publishers of the Greenville News and Greenville Piedmont, along with WFBC-AM-FM. For its first two years of operation, its studios were located on Paris Mountain before moving to its current location on 505 Rutherford Street in 1955. Norvin Duncan was the station's first news anchor, moving from the radio side.

"Monty's Rascals" (started in 1960) was one of the station's popular children's shows, starring two channel 4 weathermen: Monty DuPuy (who left in 1978) and Stowe Hoyle as Mr. Doohickey (wearing a hat with an old Santa's beard). The show continued as "The Rascal's Clubhouse" after DuPuy's departure in 1978 and continued until 1982. Two years later, Hoyle retired.

During the 1960s, personalities from channel 4 included Dave Partridge and Jim Phillips, better known as the radio voice of the Clemson Tigers (who died in 2003). Locally televised color programming also began in February 1967. In 1968, the Peace family media holdings were reorganized as Multimedia, Inc. with WFBC-AM-FM-TV as the flagship.

In the mid 1970s the famous Arrow 4 logo was introduced and was used in one form or another for many years. Partridge succeeded Duncan as anchor of the 6 and 11 o'clock news. In 1976 Kenn Sparks joined, and the 6 o'clock news went to a full hour called The Scene at Six. Later, in 1979, the long-running 'Your Friend Four' slogan was introduced and seen in a 1980 edition of TV Guide.

The 1980s brought new personalities to channel 4, like James Baker, sportscaster J.D. Hayworth (later Congressman from Arizona), and weatherman Charlie Gertz (who died in 2003 from a stroke). Action News 4 became NewsCenter 4 in the early 1980s.

In 1983, Multimedia swapped WFBC-TV to Pulitzer Publishing in exchange for that group's KSD-TV St. Louis. With the change of ownership came a change of call letters to WYFF-TV (We're Your Friend Four). The station's logo also changed in 1983. New personalities include Carl Clark, Kim Brittain, and Carol Anderson (later Carol Goldsmith) who co-anchors the 5 o'clock, 6 o'clock, and 11 o'clock newscasts. In the late 1980s, Carol Anderson was replaced by Annette Estes who came from its rival station WSPA-TV. Stan Olenik also came from WSPA. Goldsmith later took her spot back from Estes after Estes made an off-color slip on live air.

NewsCenter 4 became simply known as News 4 in the 1990s. Charlie Gertz retired, and the "arrow 4" logo was dropped by 1991.

WYFF (or WFBC?) was the first Upstate television station to begin 24/7 broadcasting, and did so sometime in the mid-late 1980's. They ran NBC News Overnight (later Nightside)/Home Shopping Spree/CNN Headline News overnight. They have since 2005 discontinued CNN Headline News (and previously the Home Shopping Spree) overnight and now run NBC Late Night/drama reruns/home-garden shows/paid programming overnight.

In 1999 Hearst-Argyle bought Pulitzer's entire television division, including WYFF-TV.

Programming

Here's a list of NBC programs that was pre-empted by WFBC/WYFF over the years, those include:

Syndicated programming

Syndicated programming formerly shown on WYFF

Current and past station personalites

Station logos

Image:The-WFBC-Four-Logo-from-1963.jpg|Used around 1963 Image:The-WFBC-Four-Logo-from-1972.jpg|Used from around 1966 to 1974 Image:Arrow4logo.png|The famous 'Arrow 4' logo introduced in 1974 when it was WFBC-TV, and used when the call letters changed to WYFF-TV in 1983. The colors were red/blue and later changed it to gold for the current NBC peacock debut on May 12, 1986 (NBC's 60th Anniversary Special) before dropping it in 1991. Image:Goldarrow4logo.jpg|Used from May 12, 1986 to 1991. The 6 feather NBC peacock appered on the gold arrow 4 logo, because the gold arrow 4 logo was launched when the current NBC Peacock debuted at the very end of the 60th aniversery special. Image:Wyff greenville94.jpg|Used from early 1994 to April 2000

External links

Broadcast television in the Greenville/Spartanburg/Asheville market  [(Nielsen DMA #35)]
WYFF 4 (NBC) - WSPA 7 (CBS) - WGTV 8 (PBS/GPB) - WLOS 13 (ABC) - WGGS 16 (Rel./TBN) - WHNS 21 (Fox) - WNTV 29 / WNEH 38 / WRET 49 (PBS/SCETV) - W31AZ 31 / W50CL 50 / W50CZ 50 (TBN) - WNEG 32 (CBS) - WUNF 33 (PBS/UNC-TV) - WMYA 40 (The WB/MNTV) - WYCW 62 (UPN/The CW) - WAEN-LP 64 (A1
'''NBC Network Affiliates in the state of South Carolina
WCBD 2 () - WYFF 4 () - WIS 10 ()
'''See also: , , , , , and stations in South Carolina

 


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