WLFL

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WLFL
Raleigh/Durham, North Carolina
Branding CW 22
Channels Analog: 22 (UHF)

Digital: 22 (UHF)

Affiliations The CW
Owner Sinclair Broadcast Group, Inc.
(WLFL Licensee, LLC)
First air date December 18, 1981
Call letters’ meaning Light For Living
(slogan used by original owners prior to sign-on)
Sister station(s) WRDC
Former callsigns WLFL-TV (1981-1993)
Former affiliations independent (1981-1986)
Fox (1986-1998)
The WB (1998-2006)
Transmitter Power 5000 kW (analog)
680 kW (digital)
Height 510 m (analog)
610 m (digital)
Facility ID 73205
Transmitter Coordinates 35°42′50″N, 78°49′3″W (analog)
35°40′29.1″N, 78°31′39.2″W (digital)
Website www.raleighcw.com

WLFL, channel 22, is The CW affiliate for the Raleigh-Durham-Fayetteville, North Carolina television market. It is licensed to Raleigh and is owned by the Sinclair Broadcast Group, along with sister station and MyNetworkTV affiliate WRDC-TV (channel 28).

WLFL shows on cable channel 2 in Raleigh, most of its suburbs and Fayetteville, 6 in Cary, Garner, Clayton, and Smithfield, 10 in Durham and Chapel Hill, and 12 in Carrboro.

Contents

[edit] History

WLFL-TV was originally in planning as early as 1976 as a Christian-themed station to be operated by L.L. "Buddy" Leathers' Carolina Christian Communications, a radio company which owned several religious stations in the Triangle and surrounding areas. Carolina Christian was bought out by Family Television in 1980; they would reenvision UHF channel 22 as a general entertainment independent station, running cartoons, sitcoms, dramas, and old movies in addition to religious programming. After a late-September launch which was delayed for three months due to technical problems and bad weather, the station finally went on the air at 2 p.m. on December 18, 1981 with the movie Love Is a Many-Splendored Thing as its inaugural program following a day of test patterns. While licensed to Raleigh, its studios were initially located at 2410 Broad Street in Durham, the same building where WTVD (channel 11) set up shop in 1954, and its master control facility was located with the transmission and tower facilities near Apex, North Carolina.

In 1985 WLFL was purchased by the Norfolk, Virginia-based TVX Broadcast Group, which upgraded the station's programming until it was actually the third-highest rated station in the Triangle. A year later, TVX moved WLFL into a new studio at 1205 Front Street in Raleigh, just inside the Beltline. Later that year, it became a charter affiliate for the new Fox television network, along with all the other TVX stations. The station also replaced its original 1,000-foot (300 m) tower and one megawatt ERP transmission facilities with a new 1,550-foot (470 m) tower and five megawatt visual, 500 kW aural ERP transmission facilities. The transmitter site remained at its original location located near Apex.

TVX sold off most of its medium market stations in 1988 following its purchase of Taft Broadcasting's independent stations and Fox affiliates, but held onto WLFL until its merger with Paramount Pictures in 1991, after which the group was renamed "Paramount Stations Group." By this time, WLFL was one of the strongest Fox affiliates in the country.

David Alan and Carolyn Clifford were early anchors as Fox 22 began their News at 10 program
David Alan and Carolyn Clifford were early anchors as Fox 22 began their News at 10 program

WLFL launched a news operation in 1992. It was known as the Fox 22 10 O'Clock News, featuring North Carolina's first 10:00 p.m. newscast since WKFT (channel 40) attempted one in the late 1980s. Paramount sold WLFL to the Sinclair Broadcast Group in 1994 and entered into a local marketing agreement with WRDC-TV the following year. WRDC itself was owned by Glencairn Broadcasting, a separate entity which the Smith family (who also owned Sinclair) had a majority stake in, thus creating a duopoly in the market even before Sinclair purchased WRDC outright in 2001. While WLFL was the senior partner in the deal, it vacated its Front Street studio that year and moved to WRDC's new studios in the nearby Highwoods office complex. WNCN-TV (channel 17), which acquired the market's NBC affiliation from WRDC in 1995, moved into WLFL's old studios at the same time.

In 1996, Fox announced that it would not renew its contract with WLFL when it got involved in a dispute with Sinclair over programming issues during the 10:00 p.m. slot. Even though Fox later relented, it still managed to seek a new affiliation with WRAZ-TV (channel 50) in 1998, leaving WLFL to pick up programming from the WB.

Former WB22 logo (1998-2006)
Former WB22 logo (1998-2006)

When the WB and UPN merged in January 2006 to form the CW, it was initially seen as a foregone conclusion that WLFL would be the new network's Triangle affiliate. It is by far the stronger of the two stations in Sinclair's Triangle duopoly, and network officials were on record as favoring the "strongest" WB and UPN stations. However, when the new network announced its first group of stations outside the core group of Tribune Company and CBS Corporation-owned stations, WLFL was not on the list. In February, sister station WRDC was announced as an affiliate of the newly-formed MyNetworkTV, controlled by the News Corporation. [1]. It wasn't until May 2 that Sinclair agreed to affiliate all of its non-My Network WB affiliates, including WLFL, with the CW.

[edit] Digital television

The station's digital signal is multiplexed:

Channel Programming
22.1 / 27.1 main WLFL/CW programming

[edit] Post-analog shutdown

After the analog television shutdown and digital conversion, which is tentatively scheduled to take place on February 17, 2009[1], WLFL will move its digital broadcasts to channel 27.[2] However, through the use of PSIP, digital television receivers will display WLFL's virtual channel number as 22.

[edit] News Programming

WB22 News at Ten logo while it used the News Central format
WB22 News at Ten logo while it used the News Central format

March 30, 2006 marked the last official broadcast for the WB 22 News at Ten. After a fourteen-year run, the news operation at WLFL was closed, the result of a cost-cutting move implemented by Sinclair Broadcast Group. The newscast, which had been one hour in length and used Sinclair's controversial News Central format for the previous four years, was cut down to thirty minutes in September 2005 in an attempt to boost its anemic ratings against WRAZ, which still has a 10 PM newscast.

Bob Vernon and Tracy West anchored the WB22 News at Ten in the late 1990's
Bob Vernon and Tracy West anchored the WB22 News at Ten in the late 1990's

WB22 News at Ten had been anchored by Bob Vernon on weekdays, and Tamara Gibbs (now with WTVD) on weekends. Alternate anchors included Kami Carrmann. Weather reports were done Sunday-Thursday by chief meteorologist Kristen Emery, and on Friday and Saturday by Susan Shrack.

Other notable alumni of WLFL's news operation (partial list):

  • David Alan (now at WVEC-TV in Norfolk, Virginia)
  • Andrea Arcenaux (once worked at CNN prior to arrival)
  • Varen Black
  • Carolyn Clifford (now at WXYZ-TV in Detroit)
  • Bobby Estill
  • Paul Furr (floor camera, floor director & News Photographer; Now at WTVD-TV)
  • Tom Foolery (Real name is Dave Wisniewski. Because his other on air personality was Double Deuce Kid's Club host aka "Tom Foolery" he was referred to on air as just "Tom" of "Tom's Weather" to avoid confusion)
  • Lori Geary (now at WSB-TV in Atlanta)
  • Lauren Green (now a producer in Washington, DC)
  • Amy Hockert
  • Robert Judson (former fill in sports anchor; now at WTVD-TV)
  • Captain Jim Kilpatrick (Full-time American Airlines pilot & weekend meteorologist)
  • Matt Lundy
  • Carlos McCormick
  • Rachel McNeill (now at KPRC-TV in Houston)
Bryan Moore reports at the North Carolina State Fair, Raleigh, NC, 1999.
Bryan Moore reports at the North Carolina State Fair, Raleigh, NC, 1999.
  • Bryan Moore (now a Manager with Northrop Grumman Newport News, Virginia)
  • Mark Mottern (now a producer and freelancer in Hollywood, Ca)
  • Steve Noble (former reporter for a L.A. based tabloid show)
  • Bill Reh (who now works at WNCN-TV, Raleigh's NBC station)
  • Suzanne Robinson
  • Amy Szutowicz
  • Mike Solarte (now Sports Director for News 14 Carolina, also hosted radio talk show at WRBZ)
  • Rick Sullivan (now at UNC-TV)
  • Keenan Smith (now at WGN-TV in Chicago)
  • Steve Swienckowski
  • Dallas Woodhouse (now Director of Americans for Prosperity, in Raleigh, NC)
  • Nancy Yamada (Now a Washington D.C. based Reporter)
  • Perry Alexander Photo-journalist (now a successful auto dealership owner in New Bern NC)

On June 26, 2006, WLFL began airing a new 10pm newscast produced by WTVD entitled ABC11 Eyewitness News at Ten on CW 22. [2].

[edit] References

[edit] External links