WLTX
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| WLTX | |
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| Columbia, South Carolina | |
| Branding | News 19 |
| Slogan | On Your Side |
| Channels | Analog: 19 (UHF) |
| Subchannels | 19.1 HD 19.2 Radar 19.3 News19 WeatherNOW |
| Affiliations | CBS |
| Owner | Gannett Company, Inc. (Pacific and Southern Company, Inc.) |
| First air date | September 1, 1953 |
| Call letters’ meaning | Lewis Television (former owner, used same callsign format for other stations, such as WLTZ) |
| Former callsigns | WNOK-TV (1953-1977) |
| Former channel number(s) | 67 (1953-1961) |
| Former affiliations | Both secondary: DuMont (1953-1955) UPN (1995-1998) |
| Transmitter Power | 5000 kW (analog) 1000 kW (digital) |
| Height | 533 m (analog) 499.8 m (digital) |
| Facility ID | 37176 |
| Transmitter Coordinates | |
| Website | www.wltx.com |
WLTX, is the CBS television affiliate based in Columbia, South Carolina, broadcasting on Analog channel 19 and Digital channel 17. Its broadcast transmitter tower is located in Lugoff, South Carolina.
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[edit] History
WLTX is the second oldest continuously operating TV station in South Carolina, having begun on September 1, 1953 as WNOK-TV. It signed on two months ahead of Columbia's WIS-TV, and originally broadcast on channel 67. It has always been a CBS affiliate, but carried a secondary DuMont affiliation until that network's demise in 1955. Its studios were located in the Jefferson Hotel in downtown Columbia, along with WNOK radio (1230 AM and 104.7 FM). It moved to the much stronger channel 19 on June 30, 1961.
In June 1967, WNOK-AM-FM-TV moved to a new studio on Garners Ferry Road, 5 miles east of downtown Columbia and one mile from Interstate 77 and the University of South Carolina School of Medicine. In 1977, WNOK-TV was sold to Lewis Broadcasting and became the present WLTX.
Historically, WLTX has been a very distant second to long-dominant WIS, especially in news programming. Part of the problem was a weak signal. The Columbia market is a fairly large market geographically, and at first UHF stations were not strong enough to cover large areas. However, in 1985, WLTX activated a new tall tower in Lugoff that nearly doubled the station's signal and expanded its over-the-air coverage to 24 counties.
During the 1980s and early 1990s, WLTX (later followed by Columbia's ABC affiliate, WOLO-TV) aired reruns of old situation comedies instead of local news at 11 PM. Management at the time felt that it could not hope to compete with WIS, even with a taller tower. WLTX began a five-minute late newscast in 1993 and expanded to a full 35-minute newscast in 1995.
The loss of NFL broadcast rights to Fox in 1994 cost CBS and WLTX major revenue sources as advertising rates suffered because of the loss of ratings. From 1995 until 1998, WLTX was a secondary UPN affiliate, airing that network's programming on weekend afternoons when CBS had only limited sports programming.
In 1998, the current owner, Gannett, purchased WLTX from Lewis for $89 million[citation needed]. Gannett invested heavily in making WLTX competitive against the traditionally dominant WIS, building a new set and hiring new station management and news talent. Soon after taking control, Gannett hired Jim Gandy, long-time meteorologist at WIS. While Gandy initially could not appear on the air at WLTX until the expiration of a one-year non-compete agreement, Gannett used him as a consultant in Columbia and substitute weathercaster at the company's other stations, including WXIA-TV in Atlanta and WUSA-TV in Washington, D. C..
Gannett also created new segments such as "On Your Side", "Restaurant Report Card", and "Big Money Monday." In 2001, WLTX added a 7:00 PM newscast to its lineup, competing head-on against WIS' flagship news program. In 2002, WLTX became the flagship broadcaster of the South Carolina Education Lottery. J.R. Berry and Darci Strickland, the popular morning news duo at WLTX, also became the evening news anchors that year.
Currently, WLTX is the ratings leader at noon, having CBS' strong daytime lineup as a lead-in. It regularly trades the lead in the early-morning timeslot with WIS. While it still trails WIS at 5, 6, 7 and 11 pm by a considerable margin, it has been far more competitive with WIS than it has been in years. In the May 2007 books, WLTX continued to win its newscast at noon as well as winning the first half-hour of the morning news program. It stayed second behind WIS on all the other newscasts and lost the key demographics that it had during the 11 pm newscast in February.[citation needed]
In May 2002, WLTX was the first commercial station in Columbia to broadcast in digital. It has been able to take advantage of the multi-casting and High Definition broadcasting technology to air various special events, including the Super Bowl and the NCAA Men's Basketball Tournament. It broadcasts its own 24/7 Local Weather channel on digital channel 19-3 and on Time Warner Cable channel 812. However, its newscasts are not yet broadcast in High Definition.
WLTX launched a new 5pm newscast on August 20, 2007 titled "News 19: Friends @ Five". The new newscast features Darci Strickland, Andrea Mock, and Chief Meteorologist Jim Gandy.
[edit] Logos
[edit] Personalities
[edit] News
- Curtis Wilson - Morning Anchor at 5 AM, since 2002
- Nat Roers - Morning Anchor at 5 AM and Noon, since January 2005
- Darci Strickland - Evening Anchor for "Friends @ Five", 6 and 7 PM, since 1997
- Andrea Mock - Evening Anchor for "Friends @ Five" and 11 PM, since 2008
- J.R. Berry - Evening Anchor at 6 PM, 7 PM, and 11 PM, since 1990
- Jennifer Tomazic - Weekend Anchor at 6 and 11 PM, since 2006
- Jocelyn Maner - Reporter/Anchor, since May 2004
- Will Frampton - Reporter, since 2004
- Ashley Yarchin - Reporter, since September 2005
- Jennifer Lindgren - Reporter, since 2006
- Sharie Harvin - Reporter, since April 2007
- Jerome Collins - Reporter, since October 2007
- Sydney Cummins- Reporter, since November 2007
[edit] TrueView Weather
- Scott Ryan - AMS Morning Meteorologist at 5 AM and Noon, since April 2002
- Jim Gandy - AMS Chief Meteorologist for "Friends @ Five", 6, 7, and 11 PM, since December 1999
- Daniel Bonds - Fill-in Meteorologist
- Lewis Turner - Weekend Weather Anchor, rejoined 2008
[edit] Sports
- Bob Shields - Sports Director/Weekday Sports Anchor at 6 and 11 PM, since 1981
- Matt Barrie - Weekend Sports Anchor at 6 and 11 PM, since 2005
- Reggie Anderson - Sports Fill-in Anchor, since 1993
[edit] Past Personalities
- Brandy Bell (now at KYW)
- Addie Bradshaw (now at WGRZ)
- Terry Brooks (now at WEWS)
- Johnny Chappell
- Joel Connable (now at WTVJ)
- Natasha Curry (now at KOMO)
- Ainsley Earhardt (now at Fox News Channel)
- Bridgett Williams (now at WAGT)
- Camille Bradford Hugg
- Deloris Keith
- Michael Chisholm
- Tabitha Kitchens
- Bryan Mims
- Adam Murphy (now at WGCL)
- Ros Runner (now Chief Meteorologist at WSLS)
- Todd Santos (now Meteorologist for NBC Weather Plus)
- Lisa Sigell (now at KCAL)
- Sharon Smith
- Lewis Turner (now at KSDK)
- Gene Upright
- Trinell Moore
- Kenneth Moton (now at WFTV)
- Jonathan Jamison
- Ronda Robinson (now at WBRC)
- Diana Watson (now at Fox Carolina)
- Kerri Hartsfield (now at WFMY)
- Andy Gary (News and FM - deceased)
- Jack Cook (News Director - deceased)
- Don Ferguson (News, sales, Jumptown and Tomahawk)
- Gwen Hebert (Robbie of Robbie's Roundup - deceased)
- James Payne (Jivetown)
- Stanley the Clown (several)
- Dr. Zot (J.T. Frierson)
- Bob Truer (News - deceased)
- Lois Quattlebaum (Community news - deceased)
[edit] Digital Television
WLTX-DT is an ATSC digital television signal broadcast over channel 17 which is available over-the-air with a digital tuner, or through digital cable service from Time Warner Cable. With either, there is an offering of three sub-channels:
- WLTX HD on DT 19.1 / 17.1 (Time Warner 810)
- News 19 Double Doppler on DT 19.2 / 17.2 (Time Warner 811)
- News 19 Weather Now on DT 19.3 / 17.3 (Time Warner 812)
As of March 20, 2007, the Newscasts on WLTX are not broadcast in High Definition. Most CBS programs broadcast from 8 PM ET, are broadcasted in HD, as are many sports programs on weekends.
At 8:00pm on January 21, 2008, WLTX became the first commercial station in Columbia to air a locally produced program in HD. Following a three week trip to Afghanistan, News 19's Will Frampton produced an hour long special titled "Stories from the 218th." The program gave a viewers a glimpse into the lives of the members of South Carolina's 218th Combat Brigade as they served in Afghanistan. It was rebroadcast on January 28th at 9am.
[edit] External links
- WLTX Website
- Query the FCC's TV station database for WLTX
- BIAfn's Media Web Database -- Information on WLTX-TV
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