WUSA (TV)
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| WUSA | |
|---|---|
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| Washington, D.C. | |
| Branding | W*USA 9 (general) 9 News Now (newscasts) |
| Channels | Analog: 9 (VHF) |
| Affiliations | CBS |
| Owner | Gannett Company (Detroit Free Press, Inc.) |
| Founded | January 16, 1949 |
| Call letters’ meaning | USA Today and United States of America |
| Former callsigns | WOIC-TV (1949-1950) WTOP-TV (1950-1978) WDVM-TV (1978-1986) |
| Transmitter Power | 316 kW (analog) 1000 kW (digital) |
| Height | 235 m (analog) 254 m (digital) |
| Facility ID | 65593 |
| Transmitter Coordinates | |
| Website | www.wusa9.com |
- For the former Minneapolis TV station, see KARE.
WUSA is a television station broadcasting on channel 9 in Washington, D.C.. Owned by the Gannett Company, WUSA is an affiliate of the CBS television network. WUSA's studios and transmitter are located in the Tenleytown neighborhood of Washington. [1]
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[edit] History
The station officially went on the air on January 11, 1949 as WOIC-TV, and began full-time operations on January 16. It is the fourth-oldest station in the nation's capital. Its original owner was the Bamberger Broadcasting Service, a subsidiary of R.H. Macy and Company, which also owned WOR-AM-FM in New York City, and was working to put WOR-TV (now WWOR-TV) on the air at the same time. Nine days later, WOIC broadcast the first televised American presidential inaugural address, given by President Harry S. Truman.
WOIC-TV picked up the CBS affiliation upon signing on, replacing WMAL-TV (channel 7, now WJLA-TV) as CBS's Washington outlet. But the Bamberger/Macy's ownership had other plans for their station: both WOIC and its New York sister station were scheduled to become affiliates of a planned television network operated by Mutual Radio. However, Mutual Television never made it to air, leaving channel 9 to remain a CBS station.
In June 1950, CBS teamed up with the Washington Post to purchase WOIC-TV from Bamberger/Macy's. The new owners, WTOP Incorporated (the Washington Post owned 55 percent, and CBS held the remaining 45 percent), changed the station's call sign to WTOP-TV, after its new sister stations WTOP radio (then at 1500 AM) and WTOP-FM (96.3 MHz., now WHUR-FM).
In July 1950, WTOP-TV became the first television station in Washington authorized to broadcast color television in the 405-line field sequential color standard, which was incompatible with the black-and-white 525-line NTSC standard. Color broadcasts would continue for nearly 30 months, when regulatory and commercial pressures forced the FCC to rescind its original color standard and begin the process of adopting the 525-line NTSC-3 standard, developed by RCA to be backwards compatible with the existing black-and-white televisions.
In 1954, the WTOP stations moved into a new facility, known as "Broadcast House", at 40th and Brandywine streets NW in Washington. The building was the first in the country designed as a unified radio and television facility. Its name was in honor of Broadcasting House, home of the BBC in London. The building was well-known to WTOP's president. since he had spent much of World War II assigned to the BBC. Previous to the move to Broadcast House, the radio stations operated out of the Earle Building (now the Warner Building, home of the Warner Theatre), and WTOP-TV had operated out of the small WOIC studios at the same location. When Broadcast House was completed and the new television studios were inaugurated, the old studio became the garage for Broadcast House and the old master control room became both the master control and transmitter room for channel 9, since Broadcast House had been built around the station's original, four-sided tower. People can still see the building with the tower in the middle at the same location, although it is now an office building and retail store front operated by Douglas Development Corp.
The WTOP-TV tower was well known in Washington for two things. First, at Christmas time, the tower was strung with Christmas lights and glowed brightly on top of Mount Reno, the tallest point in the District of Columbia. Second, the tower tended to sway much more than three-sided towers. In a strong wind the tower could be seen swaying back-and-forth, and during the winter ice from the tower fell quite often on the streets below.
Also in 1954, CBS sold its share of WTOP Inc. to the Washington Post to comply with the Federal Communications Commission's new seven-station-per-group ownership rule. CBS's partial ownership of WTOP radio and WCCO radio in Minneapolis exceeded the FCC's limit for AM stations. CBS opted to sell its share of WTOP, which it had purchased in whole in 1932 before selling controlling interest to the Post in 1949.
After the sale closed, the Post merged the WTOP stations with its other broadcast property, WMBR-AM-TV in Jacksonville, Florida and changed the name of the licensee from "WTOP Inc." to "Post Stations, Inc." WMBR radio was sold off in 1958, and WMBR-TV became WJXT. The Post renamed its broadcasting group "Post-Newsweek Stations" in 1961 after the Post bought Newsweek magazine. Post-Newsweek acquired its third television station, WLBW-TV (now WPLG) in Miami in 1970 and in 1974 added WTIC-TV (now WFSB) in Hartford, Connecticut to the group.
In 1972 WTOP-TV joined with the Evening Star Broadcasting Company (owned by the Post's rival, the now-defunct Washington Star and licensee of WMAL-TV) to build the Joint Tower, a 1040-foot, three-sided tower across the alley from Broadcast House at 4010 Chesapeake Street, NW. Transmission lines were extended from Broadcast House's transmitter area to the new tower for both WTOP-TV and WHUR-FM (the former WTOP-FM, which had been donated by Post-Newsweek to Howard University in 1971). The old tower continued to serve as the backup antenna for channel 9 until the station sold Broadcast House in 1996.
In 1974, WTOP and the other Post-Newsweek stations adopted the slogan The One and Only. The moniker was part of a trend toward group identification of stations, with each station being The One and Only Channel (channel number). Staff members from the One and Only period usually refer to themselves as "the one and onlies" as a source of pride. The slogan was dropped from active use in the late 1990s and has not been used as part of an image campaign since 1996. The slogan no longer appears on the air, but was revived in a sense when channel 9 adopted its current slogan, First and Only with Local News in HDTV.
In July 1978 Post-Newsweek exchanged WTOP-TV with the Evening News Association's WWJ-TV (now WDIV) in Detroit. Upon completion of the swap, WTOP-TV changed its call letters to WDVM-TV, with the new call letters representing the initials of the areas which channel 9 serves: D for the District of Columbia, V for Virginia, and M for Maryland. The Washington Post and the Evening News Association, which published the Detroit News, decided to swap their stations for fear the FCC would force them to sell the stations at unfavorable terms or revoke their very valuable licenses because the FCC at the time was considering forbidding ownership of newspapers and broadcast stations in the same market.
In 1985, the Gannett Company purchased the Evening News Association.[2] On July 4, 1986, Gannett changed WDVM's call letters to WUSA both in honor of the station being located in the nation's capital and Gannett's ownership of USA Today. The same connection is noted with Gannett's Denver station, KUSA-TV. The WUSA callsign had previously been used by Gannett's station in Minneapolis, which changed its callsign to KARE. While the station's current call sign is commonly printed as W*USA, particularly in Gannett press releases, the asterisk or star between the W and U is not officially recognized as part of the call sign, as FCC records list the station as WUSA. The star device was used to denote its connection to USA Today. (KUSA-TV employs a similar practice.) After the Women's United Soccer Association (the WUSA) was founded in the late 1990s, the star was replaced on-air with the CBS eye.
WUSA moved to a new Broadcast House at 4100 Wisconsin Avenue, NW in January 1992. WTOP-FM had left the old Broadcast House in 1971, but kept its transmitter there. WTOP radio departed in 1978; the Post had sold it a year earlier to the Outlet Company. The move to the more modern building was tinged with sadness due to the death from a brain tumor of channel 9's popular sportcaster, Glenn Brenner just days before the move.
On May 2, 2005, WUSA became the first station in the Washington market to broadcast its newscasts in High Definition.
[edit] Digital television
| Channel | Programming |
|---|---|
| 9.1 / 34.1 | main WUSA/CBS programming |
[edit] Post-analog shutdown
After the analog television shutdown and digital conversion, which is tentatively scheduled to take place on February 17, 2009 [3], WUSA will move its digital broadcasts back to its present analog channel number, 9. [4]
[edit] News department
WUSA was the launchpad for several well-known news anchors. Sam Donaldson and Warner Wolf are among WUSA's most successful alumni. Max Robinson was co-anchor of Eyewitness News with Gordon Peterson from 1969 to 1978 before he became the first black anchorman on network television and one of the original anchors of ABC's World News Tonight. James Brown of CBS Sports was a sports anchor at the station in the 1980s.
[edit] Current personalities
[edit] Anchors
- Todd McDermott, Weekdays 6 and 11 p.m.
- Lesli Foster, Weekdays 6 and 11 p.m.
- J.C. Hayward, Noon
- Derek McGinty, Weekdays 5 and 7 p.m.
- Anita Brikman, Weekdays 5 and 7 p.m.
- Andrea Roane, Morning anchor and reporter
- Mike Walter, Weekday mornings anchor and reporter
- Bruce Johnson, Weekend evenings
- Jennifer Ryan, Weekends; also health reporter
[edit] Reporters
- Phyllis Armstrong, was a morning anchor during the 1980s
- Audrey Barnes, also a frequent substitute anchor
- Becky Diamond, Backpack journalist
- Peggy Fox
- Bruce Leshan
- Gary Neurenberg
- Gary Reals, also was at WJLA from 1983 to 1990 before returning
- Dave Statter, husband of former WUSA/WTTG meteorologist Hillary Howard Statter
- Nancy Yamada
- Brittany Morehouse
[edit] Weather
- Howard Bernstein, Noon, Fill-in weekday morning
- Kim Martucci, Weekday mornings
- Tony Pann, Weekends
- Topper Shutt, Chief meteorologist, weekday evenings
[edit] Sports
- Brett Haber, Sports director, weekday anchor (also fill-in anchor of Sports Plus)
- Levan Reid, Sports reporter, weekend sports anchor (primary anchor of Sports Plus)
- Sara Walsh, Sports reporter, Fill-in sports anchor
[edit] Traffic
- Angie Goff
[edit] Notable WUSA Alumni
- Donald Allen - anchor/reporter (1962-1969, then moved to WJLA) (D)
- Louis Allen - chief meteorologist (1974-1976) (D)
- Bob Althage - anchor/health reporter (1982-1997)
- Jess Atkinson - sports anchor (2000-2002, recently became creator/ep of Comcast Sportsnet's Terrapins Rising)
- Gordon Barnes - chief meteorologist (1976-1988)
- Glenn Brenner - sports anchor (1976-1992) (D)
- Mike "Buck" Buchanan - anchor/reporter (1970-2004, now at WTOP radio; father of reporter Doug Buchanan)
- Doug Buchanan- reporter from 2002-2007.
- Maureen Bunyan - anchor/reporter (1973-1995, now at WJLA-TV/News Channel 8)
- Ken Broo - sports director (1997-1999, now at WLWT in Cincinnati)
- James Brown - sports anchor (1984-1990, now at CBS Sports)
- Heather Cabot - general assignment reporter (2000-2002, last seen at ABC News as co-host of World News Now)
- Pat Collins - reporter (1976-1986, now at WRC-TV)
- Stacey Cohan - general assignment reporter (1999-2006, now at WTTG)
- Steve Davis - sports director (2002-2003)
- Gurvir Dhindsa - anchor/reporter (2000-2004, now at WTTG)
- Mike Dunston - general assignment reporter (1997-2000, now anchor at WOFL-TV in Orlando, FL)
- Bob Dalton - anchor (1951-1995) (D)
- Sam Donaldson - anchor/reporter (1961-1967)
- Beverly Farmer - traffic reporter (1998-2000, 2002-2006)
- Mark Feldstein - investigative reporter (1984-1989)
- Jan Fox, 9 Wants You to Know correspondent, was also a weekend anchor
- Joan Gartlan - political reporter (1989-2001)
- Steve Gendel - reporter (1971-1985, most recently a science and medical correspondent for CNBC)
- Charlie Gertz- meteorologist (1969-1972) (D)
- Chris Gordon - anchor/reporter (1976-1980 and 1984-1996, now at WRC-TV)
- Miriam Hernandez - general assignment reporter (?-1998, now at KABC-TV in Los Angeles)
- Frank Herzog - sports anchor and reporter (1969-1983 and 1992-2004, now at WTOP Radio)
- Doug Hill - chief meteorologist (1984-2000, now at WJLA-TV)
- Lexy Hickok - weekend meteorologist (1996-1999)
- Hillary Howard (Statter) - meteorologist (2000-2004, now at WTOP radio... wife of reporter Dave Statter)
- Joyce Jackson - sports anchor and reporter (2002-2006)
- Virg Jacques - anchor/reporter (2000-2002, now at WTTG (FOX) in Washington, DC)
- Paul Jones - reporter (1987-1994)
- Hilton Kaderli - chief meteorologist (1972-1974)
- Bill Kamal - meteorologist (1982-1993, formerly of WSVN-TV, incarcerated)
- Susan King - anchor/reporter (1975-1979)
- Ellen Kingsley - consumer reporter (1980-1992) (D)
- Edwin Laskos - reporter (1997-1999)
- Mack Lee - anchor/reporter (1982-1997)
- Mark Lodato - reporter, first to KPHO-TV in Phoenix, AZ. Now a professor at Walter Cronkite School of Journalism and Mass Communication at Arizona State University
- Keith Marler - weekend meteorologist (2001-2003, now at KMSP-TV in Minneapolis)
- Davey Marlin-Jones - film critic and entertainment reporter (1970-1987) (D)
- Andrea McCarren - reporter (1987-1990, now at WJLA-TV)
- Patrick McGrath - anchor/reporter (1972-1983, now at WTTG)
- Ken Mease - sports anchor and reporter (1985-2003)
- Andrea Mitchell - reporter (1976-1978, now at NBC News)
- Tracey Neale - anchor/reporter (2004-2008)
- Nicole O'Brian - Weekday morning/noon traffic reporter (2006-2007)
- Teri Okita - weekend anchor/reporter (1997-2000, now at CBS News)
- Gerald Owens - sports anchor and reporter, was originally morning co-anchor (1997-2003, now at WRAL-TV in Raleigh, NC)
- Cindy Peña - reporter/fill-in anchor (?-2007)
- Ralph Penza - reporter (1979-1980) (D)
- Gordon Peterson - anchor/reporter (1969-2004, now at WJLA-TV/NewsChannel 8)
- Carolyn Presutti - morning anchor/noon reporter (1994-1996, now at WTTG-TV)
- Carol Randolph - host Morning Break (1975-1986)
- Steve Rudin - meteorologist (1995-2001, now at WJLA-TV/NewsChannel 8)
- Max Robinson - anchor/reporter (1969-1978, moved to ABC News) (D)
- Monika Samtani - morning traffic reporter (1997-1999 and 2001-2002)
- Lee Shepard - anchor/reporter (1961-1971)
- Greg Starddard - general assignment reporter (2000-2003), left for WRC-TV Washington DC
- Bob Strickland - anchor/reporter (1969-1996)
- Henry Tennenbaum - reporter (1974-1981, now at KRON-TV in San Francisco)
- Patrick VanHorn - former Day & Date anchor
- Hal Walker - reporter/anchor (1963-1968, went on to be the first black Washington correspondent at CBS News) (D)
- Ruth Todd - meteorologist/anchor (1991-1992, now semi-retired in Salt Lake City)
- Jane Van Ryan - reporter (70s-early 80s)
- Rick Williams - reporter (1983-1984)
- Tom Wills - reporter (1967-1975, now at WJXT-TV in Jacksonville, FL)
- Tony Williams - reporter (1992-1995)
- Warner Wolf - sports anchor (1968-1976 and 1992-1996) (now works at WABC in New York as the sports reporter for the Curtis & Kuby morning show)
- Eun Yang - reporter/anchor (1995-2001, now at WRC-TV)
- Barry Zee Van - meteorologist (mid 70s)
(D) - Deceased
This list is incomplete. You can help by expanding it.
[edit] Historical newscast titles
- Your Esso Reporter (1949-1958)
- The xx:00 Report (1958-1959)
- News Day/News Night (1959-1963)
- The Big News (1963-1970)
- Eyewitness News (1970-January 29, 2002)
- WUSA 9 News (January 30, 2002-July 2006)
[edit] Slogans
- 1974: The one and only TV 9! (also "The one and only channel 9!")
- 1976: "Keep Your Eye On"
- 1977: "We Give It All We've Got"
- 1979: "You Make Us the One"
- 1980-81: "One Good Thing Leads to Another"
- 1982: "The One to Watch" (a similar promo was used by Melbourne's ATV-10 and Los Angeles's KNXT, and another promo was made for Sky News). The advertising series won a Clio Award.
- 1983: "We've Got the Touch"
- 1985: "Ours to Share"
- 1986: "Share the Spirit"
- 1989: "Get Ready"
- Mid–Late '90s: Whatever It Takes.
- 2000–02: Where local news comes first.
- 2002–05: No Gimmicks. No Hype. Just The News.
- 2005–06: The First and Only Local News in the Nation's Capital in High-Definition
- Summer 2006–present: 9 News Now
[edit] Awards
2001 Emmy: NEWS SPECIALS, "Katherine Graham: A Washington Legend" - Ben Brodsky, Producer, Catherine Snyder-Charlip, Producer, Samara Martin Ewing, Producer [1]
[edit] Footnotes
- ^ "Digital Signal Sources", 'The Washington Post', 2008-05-20.
- ^ As indicated under "Licensee" above, the Evening News Association was renamed "Detroit Free Press, Inc." in 2005, when that Gannett subsidiary simultaneously bought the Free Press and sold the News.
- ^ http://hraunfoss.fcc.gov/edocs_public/attachmatch/DA-06-1082A2.pdf
- ^ http://fjallfoss.fcc.gov/cgi-bin/ws.exe/prod/cdbs/forms/prod/cdbsmenu.hts?context=25&appn=101233449&formid=387&fac_num=65593
[edit] External links
- WUSA Website
- WUSA Wireless
- WUSA My Space
- TV-ARK gallery of WUSA opens and idents
- Query the FCC's TV station database for WUSA
- BIAfn's Media Web Database -- Information on WUSA-TV
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