WUTF-TV
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
| WUTF-TV | |
|---|---|
| Marlborough-Boston, Massachusetts | |
| Branding | TeleFutura 66 Boston |
| Channels | Analog: 66 (UHF) |
| Affiliations | TeleFutura |
| Owner | Univision Communications, Inc. (managed by Entravision Communications Corporation) (TeleFutura Boston, LLC) |
| First air date | February 12, 1985 |
| Call letters’ meaning | Univision TeleFutura |
| Sister station(s) | WUNI |
| Former callsigns | WVJV-TV (1985-1987) WHSH (1987-1992) WHSH-TV (1992-2000) WHUB-TV (2000-2001) WFUB (2001) WUTF (2001-2003) |
| Former affiliations | music videos (1985-1987) HSN (1987-2000) independent (2000-2001) HSN (2001-2002) |
| Transmitter Power | 3311 kW (analog) 100 kW (digital) |
| Height | 356 m (analog) 333.8 m (digital) |
| Facility ID | 60551 |
| Transmitter Coordinates | |
| Website | TeleFutura |
WUTF-TV is a television station in the Boston market. Owned by the Univision Broadcast Group and managed locally by Entravision, the station is an affiliate of the Telefutura network. As such, they have an advertising relationship with Univision affiliate WUNI-TV.
Contents |
[edit] History
WUTF-TV signed on for the first time on February 12, 1985[1] as WVJV-TV ("V-66, the Beat of Boston"), playing music videos at a time when they were a major part of the American culture (this was just four years after MTV signed on). At that time, the owner was John Garabedian (current host of the nationally syndicated radio show Open House Party), who also owned WGTR (now WBIX) both of which were located in Natick MA. The music format combined progressive rock WBCN and pop contemporary Kiss 108. Despite a must carry rule requiring cable systems to carry the station, many cable systems freely chose to carry V66 as opposed to VH1. It was also the first station in the Boston area to transmit in stereo. By mid 1986, music videos were starting to wane in popularity, so the station was sold to the Home Shopping Network, which changed the callsign to WHSH-TV. For the next thirteen years, WHSH ran HSN's shopping programs with some local feature segments in-between.
In the late 1990s, Barry Diller, who was the owner of HSN and their broadcast television arm (Silver King Television), began plans to turn his stations into true independents. On August 1, 2000, this format was implemented on channel 66 under the new WHUB-TV callsign, with a main focus on many of the types of programming that appeared for a long time on WSBK, as well as some first-run syndicated programs and WABU/WBPX's old rights to Boston University ice hockey games, which included the annual Beanpot tournament. However, what had become USA Broadcasting was preparing to sell its stations to the right buyer, which ended up to be Univision. As such, the station reverted to WHSH-TV's old HSN programming on February 1, 2001 [2], although the callsign remained WHUB-TV. (The Beanpot moved to AT&T 3 -- now CN8 New England -- for 2001, and have since switched to NESN. WHUB's independent format did not last long enough to actually air the tournament.)
By November 2001, WHUB-TV changed to the new Telefutura callsign of WFUB, likely for "TeleFUtura Boston". However, for reasons only known to Univision, the station changed the callsign again just one month later, to the current WUTF-TV ([3], [4]) -- both while still running the HSN programming. It wasn't until January 14, 2002 that channel 66 finally became a charter Telefutura affiliate, offering a general entertainment format with Spanish movies, serials, sports and children's shows.
[edit] Logos
|
WHUB logo, used from Aug. 1, 2000 to mid-2001 under USA Broadcasting |
[edit] See also
[edit] External links
- TeleFutura
- Query the FCC's TV station database for WUTF
- BIAfn's Media Web Database -- Information on WUTF-TV
|
|||||
|
||||||||
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
|||||||||||||||||

