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WHDH-TV - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

WHDH-TV

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

WHDH-TV
Image:7NBC.jpg
Boston, Massachusetts
Branding 7 NBC (general)
7 News (newscasts)
Slogan The News Station
Channels 7 (VHF) analog,
42 (UHF) digital
Affiliations NBC

NBC Weather Plus (DT2)

Owner Sunbeam Television
Founded June 21, 1948
Call letters meaning from former sister station WHDH-AM (now WEEI
Former callsigns WNAC-TV (1948-82)
WNEV-TV (1982-90)
Former affiliations CBS (1948-61 and 1972-95), ABC (secondary 1948-57, primary 1961-72), DuMont (secondary 1948-1955)
Transmitter Power 316 kW/306 m(analog)
948 kW/288 m (digital)
Website whdh.com

WHDH-TV "7 NBC" is the NBC affiliate in Boston, Massachusetts. The station's transmitter is located in Newton, Massachusetts, while its studios are located at 7 Bulfinch Place near Government Center in Downtown Boston. It is one of six local Boston TV stations seen in Canada on the Bell ExpressVu satellite provider. It is also the carried in the 1000 Islands region in Hammond NY on Citizens Cable Television.

The station is owned by Sunbeam Television and because of this, it is the largest NBC affiliate that is not a network owned and operated station. WHDH is co-owned with WLVI-TV channel 56, Boston's CW affiliate. Sunbeam Television, which is based in Miami, Florida; also owns that market's FOX affiliate, WSVN. WHDH and WSVN share video, news stories, and reporters when covering each other's news.

Contents

[edit] History

Channel 7 first went on the air on June 21, 1948 as WNAC-TV, the second television station in Boston (twelve days after WBZ-TV). It was owned by General Tire along with WNAC-AM 680 (now WRKO), flagship of the Yankee Network, a New England regional radio network. General Tire had purchased the Yankee Network in 1943. WNAC first broadcasted from studios at 21 Brookline Avenue (which had also been home to WNAC radio and the Yankee Network) before moving to its current facilities at 7 Bullfinch Place near Government Center in 1968.

In 1950, General Tire bought the West Coast regional Don Lee Broadcasting System. Two years later, it bought the Bamberger Broadcasting Service (WOR-AM-FM-TV in New York City) and merged its broadcasting interests into a new division, General Teleradio. General Tire bought RKO Radio Pictures in 1955 after General Tire found RKO's film library would be a perfect programming source for WNAC and its other television stations. The studio was merged into General Teleradio to become RKO Teleradio; after the film studio was dissolved, the business was renamed RKO General in 1959.

WNAC-TV was originally a CBS affiliate, but shared ABC programming with WBZ until 1957 when (the original) WHDH-TV signed on channel 5. It switched affiliations with WHDH in 1961 and joined ABC. [1] It stayed with ABC until 1972, when channel 5 lost its license. The licensees of the station that replaced it, WCVB-TV, planned to air more local programming than any other station in the country, heavily preempting CBS programming in the process. This didn't sit very well with CBS, who immediately moved back to WNAC. However, WNAC utilized the version of the circle 7 logo it had adopted in 1973 until 1977, when ABC complained it was infringing on its trademark, and it began using a Times-Serif-Italic "7". In 1980, a stylish, strip-layered "7" was introduced, which ended up being the last logo redesign under RKO General ownership.

Two legendary Boston TV personalities had shows on WNAC: Louise Morgan, who hosted a talk show and was known as "New England's First Lady of Radio and Television", and Ed McDonnell, who as the costumed (as an astronaut) character "Major Mudd", hosted a popular children's show in the 1960s and early 1970s.

By 1965, RKO General faced numerous investigations into its business and financial practices. Though the FCC renewed the broadcast license for WNAC in 1969, RKO General lost the license in 1981 after General Tire admitted to a stunning litany of corporate misconduct as part of a settlement with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission. Among other things, General Tire admitted that it had committed financial fraud over illegal political contributions and bribes. However, in the FCC hearings, RKO General had withheld evidence of General Tire's misconduct, and had also failed to disclose evidence of accounting errors on its own part. In light of RKO's dishonesty, the FCC stripped RKO of the Boston license and the licenses for WOR-TV in New York and KHJ-TV in Los Angeles. The FCC had previously conditioned renewal of the latter two stations' licenses on WNAC's renewal. An appeals court partially reversed the ruling, finding that the FCC had erred in tying the latter two stations' renewals to WNAC's license. It upheld the WNAC revocation and ordered a rehearing on the other stations.

RKO appealed this decision, but after almost two years of legal action agreed to a settlement in 1982. It agreed to sell channel 7 to New England Television, a merger of two of the original challengers to the station's license controlled by Boston grocery magnate David Mugar. The sale took effect on May 22, 1982. At that time, the station's call letters were changed to WNEV and the "7" logo was dropped in favor of a new SE7EN logo. This logo would change to one of a number 7 made up of seven dots in 1987.

In 1990, Mugar bought WHDH (850 AM, now WEEI) and renamed the TV station WHDH-TV. Those call letters had previously been used by what is now WCVB from 1957 until 1972. In fact, the call letter change took place on March 19, 1990--18 years to the day they had last been used in Boston. In June 1993, WHDH-TV was sold to Sunbeam Television of Miami (controlled by Ed Ansin), who still owns the station today. Shortly afterward, it adopted its present circle 7 logo, the same one also used by WSVN.

Over the years, channel 7 as WNAC preempted little programming. As WNEV, the station prempted programming in moderation. The preempted programs often aired on WHLL (now WUNI-TV). From 1989 to 1990, the station delayed CBS Morning News in favor of a children's show called Ready To Go. In late 1993, CBS News This Morning was dropped and picked up by WABU (now WBPX). WHDH then began an expanded morning local newscast. When the station became a NBC affiliate, WHDH ran the entire NBC lineup.

WNEV/WHDH also had exclusive rights to Lottery Live, broadcasting the Mass State Lottery games early & late evening from 1988 to 1994. Long-time host Dawn Hayes began her run during this era. The games were subsequently moved over to WCVB-TV Ch. 5.

WHDH stayed with CBS until January 2, 1995, when WBZ took over the CBS affiliation as part of a group deal between CBS and WBZ's owner, Group W. Fox considered an affiliation deal with WHDH. However, WHDH opted to become the NBC affiliate.

Between 1996 and 1997, WHDH also produced a mid-morning weekday newsmagazine for the NBC network called Real Life. [2]

In May of 2006, WHDH introduced NBC Weather Plus, which is offered on the station's DT2 digital subchannel and Comcast digital cable channel 297.

On September 14, 2006, it was announced that Tribune Broadcasting would sell WLVI, Boston's CW affiliate, to Sunbeam Television, owners of WHDH and WSVN, for $117.3 million dollars, after much speculation that Sunbeam would buy WLVI. [3] The sale was approved by the FCC in late November giving Boston its second television duopoly (the other is WBZ-TV and WSBK-TV). WLVI moved from its Dorchester studios to WHDH in Downtown Boston.

[edit] Newscasts

As WNAC-TV, the station had been among the first to use the music called "Move Closer to Your World" in 1970. Two years later, the station's news director moved to WPVI-TV in Philadelphia and took the theme with him, where it became famous. It was also during that time that a young news personality by the name of Chuck Scarborough assumed the role of lead anchor at the WNAC news department. Scarborough would later move on to WNBC in New York, where he remains today, and be prominently featured on NBC's national news.

For many years, WNAC-TV was a distant third behind WBZ-TV and WCVB. However, due to Scarborough's presence and those of other up-and-coming journalists, the station had begun to be fairly competitive with WCVB and WBZ in the early 1970s. For a brief period in 1974, WNAC's 6pm newscast actually catapulted from third place to first, thanks in part to its new hit lead-in, Candlepins For Cash, a local bowling show which had premiered the previous year. However, WNAC's news operation wasn't able to maintain this momentum for long; the RKO fiasco caused a sharp drop in the ratings.

By the time New England Television bought the station, a massive attempt to bring Channel 7 as WNEV out of the ratings basement occurred with the infamous "dream team" headed by Tom Ellis and Robin Young. Ellis had previously maintained WBZ's dominance in the news market and then helped WCVB reach number one during his tenure there (1979-82). Young, on the other hand, had no hard news experience but was well-known to Boston viewers as former co-host of Evening Magazine. Along with other significant personnel changes, it seemed this 1982 "dream team" would work out; what would come for WNEV's news in the next few years was more shakeups, both in talent and identity due to ongoing sagging ratings, and the eventual firing of Ellis in 1986 (Young would stay on another year). WNEV/WHDH would spend the rest of its years under Mugar in the ratings basement, but it did gain a new solid lead newsman in R.D. Sahl, who became lead anchor in 1986 and gained a following with his various co-anchors, two of which included Kate Sullivan (1987-1990) and Margie Reedy (early 1990s). In addition, Channel 7's news identity constantly changed under Mugar, changing from NEWSE7EN (1982-84) to The New England News (1984-1988) to News 7 New England (1988-1990) to News 7 (1990-1994).

Amid all the local prominent journalists who attempted to leverage WNEV's news, a few future national talents had brief stints at the station in the 1980s. Bill O'Reilly, long before his national exposure on Inside Edition and Fox News Channel's The O'Reilly Factor, co-anchored NEWSE7EN Weekend in 1982-83. His successor on that same newscast was Paula Zahn, now a well-renowned newswoman of many TV networks, who co-anchored weekends with Lester Strong from 1983-85. Later, for six months during 1988, future Today host Matt Lauer hosted WNEV's mid-morning talk show Talk of the Town. Then in the early 90s, two more would later hit the big time: Edye Tarbox, who was an anchor/reporter at WHDH from 1990-92, now goes by the name E.D. Hill and has been at Fox News Channel since 1999. Rehema Ellis, who anchored and reported at WHDH in the same period, is now with NBC News.

This all changed when Sunbeam bought the station. New station owner Ed Ansin brought Joel Cheatwood, the creator of WSVN's fast-paced news format, to Boston. Most of the station's prominent newscasters, including R.D. Sahl, wanted nothing to do with Cheatwood and promptly resigned. Cheatwood introduced a considerably watered-down version of the WSVN format. However, it was still shocking by Boston standards.

The new format soon rejuvenated WHDH, especially after switching to NBC. For most of the last decade, WHDH has waged a spirited battle for first behind long-dominant WCVB. In 2002, WHDH was noted as having the best newscast in the U.S. in a study published by the Columbia Journalism Review. In previous studies, the station was deemed as having one of the worst newscasts.

The station operates a Bell LongRanger 206L news helicopter entitled Sky 7. The station's radar is presented on-air as "Storm Scan Doppler", with a signal coming from the radar at the NWS Local Forecast Office in Taunton.

As of August 2006, WHDH airs the Boston area's only weekday 4 and 4:30 PM newscasts. Before this point, WBZ-TV also broadcasted news at this time.

As of December 19, 2006, WHDH began producing WLVI's 10:00 p.m. newscast, under the name 7 News at 10 on CW 56.

WHDH shares its resources with WJAR, the NBC affiliate for the state of Rhode Island and New Bedford, for news coverage of Southeastern Massachusetts. WWLP, the NBC affiliate for Springfield and Holyoke, shares its resources with WHDH for news coverage of Western Massachusetts.

[edit] Weekdays

  • 7 News Today in New England (5-7 a.m.)
  • 7 News at Noon (12-1 p.m.)
  • 7 News First at 4 (4-4:30 p.m.)
  • 7 News at 4:30 (4:30-5 p.m.)
  • 7 News at 5 (5-5:30 p.m.)
  • 7 News at 5:30 (5:30-6 p.m.)
  • 7 News at 6 (6-6:30 p.m.)
  • 7 News at 10 on CW 56 (10-11 p.m. on WLVI)
  • 7 News at 11 (11-11:35 p.m.)

[edit] Saturday

  • 7 News Today in New England (9-11 a.m.)
  • 7 News at 6 (6-6:30 p.m.)
  • 7 News at 10 on CW 56 (10-11 p.m. on WLVI)
  • 7 News at 11 (11-11:30 p.m.)

[edit] Sunday

  • 7 News Today in New England (9-10:30 a.m.)
  • Urban Update (11:30 a.m.-12:00 p.m., public affairs)
  • 7 News at 6 (6-6:30 p.m.)
  • 7 News at 10 on CW 56 (10-11 p.m. on WLVI)
  • 7 News at 11 (11-11:25 p.m.)
  • 7 Sports Xtra (11:25 p.m.-12 a.m.)

[edit] News Team

Anchors

  • Christa Delcamp - Weekday Mornings and Noon
  • Jeff Glor - Weekend Evenings on WHDH and WLVI
  • Jonathan Hall - Weekday Mornings and Noon
  • Nichelle King - Weekend Evenings on WHDH and WLVI
  • Matt Lorch - Weeknights at 4, 4:30, and 5:30 p.m. (also at 10 p.m. on WLVI)
  • Randy Price - Weeknights at 5, 6, and 11 p.m.
  • Lauren Przybyl - Weeknights at 4, 4:30, 5:30
  • Frances Rivera - Weeknights at 5, 6, and 11 p.m. (also at 10 p.m. on WLVI)

Meteorologists (Note - They do not brand themselves 7NEWS Weather Plus, they brand themselves 7Weather.)

  • Pete Bouchard - Chief Meteorologist seen weeknights on all evening newscasts
  • Terry Casey - Fill-in and Senior Weather Producer
  • Dylan Dreyer - Weekends
  • Jeremy Reiner - Weekday Mornings and Noon

Sports

  • Joe Amorosino - Sports Director seen Weeknights at 5, 5:30, 6, and 11 p.m. (also at 10 PM on WLVI), and host of "7 Sports Xtra"
  • Dave Briggs - reporter
  • Larry Ridley - anchor

Reporters

  • Anne Allred
  • Sorboni Banerjee (also substitute anchor)
  • Byron Barnett (also substitute anchor and host of Urban Update)
  • Victoria Block
  • Lori Bordonaro
  • Steve Cooper (also substitute anchor)
  • Linda Ergas (also substitute anchor)
  • Grant Greenberg
  • Dan Hausle (also substitute anchor)
  • Andy Hiller - Political Reporter
  • Dr. Deanna Lites - Health Cast
  • Mike Macklin
  • Hank Phillippi Ryan - Investigative Reporter
  • Ryan Schulteis
  • Victoria Warren
  • Janet Wu (also substitute anchor)
  • Romeo - 10 p.m. Weeknight Entertainment Reporter on WLVI

Traffic

  • Marshall Hook
  • John Ryder
  • Jim Ryan
  • Karen Kiley

[edit] Past Personalities

  • Katy Abel - parenting beat reporter (1992-1999)
  • Teri Adler - reporter (1997-2005, now working in real estate [4])
  • Garry Armstrong - reporter (1971-2002)
  • Caterina Bandini - anchor (1995-2006)
  • Susan Banks - anchor (1981-1982)
  • Amalia Barreda - reporter (1982-1992, now at WCVB)
  • Linda Blackman - reporter (1975-1977, now a motivational speaker [5])
  • David Brudnoy - commentator (1973-1983, deceased)
  • Susan Burke - anchor/reporter (1981-1983)
  • Kim Carrigan - anchor (1994-2000, now at WFXT)
  • Christine Caswell - reporter (1994-2000)
  • Liz Claman - weekend anchor/reporter (1994-2000, now at CNBC)
  • Eric Clemons - sports anchor/reporter (1991-1994, now at WVUE in New Orleans)
  • Jack Cole - anchor (1975-1981, deceased)
  • John Dennis - longtime sports anchor (1977-1997, now at WEEI-AM)
  • Jack Edwards - sports reporter/anchor (1988-1991, now at NESN)
  • Sara Edwards - arts & entertainment reporter (1991-2003, now at CN8)
  • Rehema Ellis - weekend anchor/reporter/Urban Update host (1985-1993, now at NBC News)
  • Tom Ellis - anchor (1982-1986, now at NECN)
  • Debbie Enblom - entertainment reporter (1989-1991)
  • Bob Faw - reporter (1970, now at NBC News)
  • Carmen Fields - reporter/host of Higher Ground (1979-1986, now working in public relations for KeySpan)
  • Gary Gillis - sports anchor/reporter (1983-2004)
  • Todd Gross - chief meteorologist (1984-2005, now at WWLP in Springfield, Massachusetts)
  • Peter Henderson - reporter (1987-1994)
  • John Henning - anchor (1977-1981)
  • Brad Holbrook - anchor/reporter (1980-1982)
  • Kim Khazei - reporter/anchor (1994-2001)
  • Kristy Kim - morning anchor/reporter (1997-2001, now Kristy Lee at NECN)
  • Gene Lavanchy - sports anchor (1993-2003, now at WFXT)
  • Mike Lawrence - reporter (1982-1998)
  • Roy Leonard - anchor (1958-1967)
  • Harvey Leonard - longtime chief meteorologist (1977-2002, now at WCVB)
  • Darlene McCarthy - noon anchor (1992-1997)
  • Mish Michaels - meteorologist (1992-1999, now at WBZ-TV)
  • Bill O'Reilly - weekend anchor (1982-1983)
  • Margie Reedy - anchor (1990-1993)
  • Mary Richardson - anchor (1978-1980, now at WCVB)
  • R.D. Sahl - anchor (1983-1994, now at NECN)
  • Ron Sanders - reporter (1979-1998, now at WBZ-TV)
  • Chuck Scarborough - anchor (1972-1974, now at WNBC in New York)
  • Samantha Stevenson - anchor/reporter (1971-1973)
  • Lester Strong - anchor/Urban Update host (1984-2000)
  • Kate Sullivan - anchor (1984-1990)
  • Mike Taibbi - investigative reporter (1977-1983, now at NBC News)
  • Edye Tarbox - anchor/reporter (1990-1991, now E.D. Hill at Fox News Channel)
  • Garvin Thomas - reporter (1995-1999, now at KNTV in San Jose, CA)
  • Lyn Vaughn - anchor/reporter (1979-1983)
  • Diana Williams - anchor (1986-1990, now at WABC-TV in New York)
  • Diane Willis - anchor (1983-1986)
  • Dave Wright - anchor (1986-1988)
  • Robin Young - anchor (1982-1987, now at WBUR-FM)
  • Paula Zahn - anchor/reporter (1983-1985, now at CNN)

[edit] See also

[edit] References

[edit] External links


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