WBMA-LP
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WBMA-LP / WCFT-TV / WJSU-TV | |
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Birmingham / Anniston / Gadsden / Tuscaloosa, Alabama | |
Branding | ABC 33/40 |
Slogan | Alabama's News Leader |
Channels | 58 (WBMA-LP) 33 (WCFT-TV) 40 (WJSU-TV) (UHF) analog, 11 (LD application) (WBMA) 5 (WCFT-TV) 9 (WJSU-TV) (VHF) digital |
Affiliations | ABC |
Owner | Allbritton Communications Company (TV Alabama, Inc.) |
Founded | June 7, 1965 (WCFT) October 29, 1969 (WJSU) September 6, 1996 (WBMA) |
Call letters meaning | WBMA: AlaBaMA WCFT: Chapman Family Television WJSU: Jacksonville State University |
Former callsigns | WJSU: WHMA-TV (1969-1984) |
Former affiliations | WCFT: Independent (1965-1970), CBS (1970-96) WJSU: CBS (1969-96), NBC (secondary, 1969-70) |
Transmitter Power | (see FCC data in links below) |
Website | http://www.abc3340.com/ |
WBMA-LP is the ABC television affiliate for Birmingham and central Alabama. Its transmitter is located atop Red Mountain in Birmingham.
WBMA is a low power station whose signal does not extend outside of the immediate Birmingham area. The station's brand name, ABC 33/40, comes from two full-power stations: WCFT-TV, channel 33 in Tuscaloosa and WJSU-TV, channel 40 in Anniston. Although this makes it appear that WCFT is the main station, WBMA is officially Birmingham's ABC affiliate. WCFT and WJSU are regarded as full-power satellite stations. Their combined power carries WBMA's signal to all of central Alabama from the Alabama-Georgia state line westward to Columbus, Mississippi.
WBMA and WCFT are owned by Allbritton Communications through its subsidiary, TV Alabama, Inc. WJSU is operated by Flagship Broadcasting, under an LMA with Allbritton.
ABC 33/40's main studio is in Hoover, a suburb of Birmingham. It operates bureaus in Tuscaloosa and Anniston.
Contents |
[edit] History
[edit] WCFT
WCFT signed on the airwaves from Tuscaloosa on June 7, 1965. The call letters stood for Chapman Family Television, the original licensee. The original owner was a consortium of eight Tuscaloosa businessmen who saw the benefits of a television station, in both business and community service. WCFT began as an independent station, but because it did not return a profit suitable to the original owners, they sold the station to Hattiesburg, Miss.-based Service Broadcasters in 1967. The new owners rejuvenated the station by pumping money into it. They purchased new equipment and improved the station's image. Like WBMG-TV in Birmingham, WCFT picked up CBS and NBC programming not cleared by WAPI-TV (now WVTM-TV). In 1970, WCFT became an official CBS affiliate. WCFT had better luck with news than WBMG -- by the early 1980s, WCFT was the leading local news station in Tuscaloosa (with newscasts called "Eyewitness News"). It not only trounced WBMG, but it beat out all of the Birmingham stations as well. In 1977, Arbitron made Tuscaloosa its own television market, ranking below number 170. Service Broadcasters sold WCFT to Allbritton in 1995. Its transmitter is located near Windham Springs, Alabama.
[edit] WJSU
On October 29, 1969, the station now known as WJSU began broadcasting as WHMA-TV, channel 40 as a primary CBS affiliate with a secondary NBC affiliation. The station was operated by the Anniston Broadcasting Company, which was owned by members of the family of Harry M. Ayers (the station's namesake). The Ayers family also owned the Anniston Star newspaper and radio stations WHMA-FM 100.5 (now WWWQ-FM in Atlanta) and WHMA-AM 1390. The station's inaugural general manager, Harry Mabry, came to Anniston from Birmingham, where he had been news director of WBRC in Birmingham for several years. Mabry already was familiar with Anniston, though, having been an announcer on WHMA-AM over fifteen years earlier.
WHMA-TV ultimately served approximately 100,000 households in east central Alabama, and management fought almost constantly to maintain its own Arbitron market between Birmingham and Atlanta. This was a maneuver critical to the station's survival, as it made possible the station's "Number 1" status in the all-important ratings race. Despite being the only station located within the Anniston/East Alabama market, its so-called ratings "victories" garnered it access to national advertisers. In 1970, WHMA-TV dropped NBC programming in favor of full-time CBS coverage after WAPI became the sole NBC affiliate for all of central Alabama that year.
In 1984, the FCC forced the Ayers family to sell the station, citing cross-ownership regulations that the Commission has since abandoned. Later, in a mid-1980s deal that concerned tax-avoidance more than profit, ownership of the station was transferred to the trustees of Jacksonville State University and the call letters were changed to WJSU-TV. The station was ultimately sold in the 1990s to current owners Flagship Broadcasting.
[edit] ABC 33/40
In 1995, Birmingham's longtime ABC affiliate, WBRC, was sold to Fox. However, WBRC's contract with ABC didn't run out until September 1996, giving ABC a year to find a new affiliate in Birmingham. After being turned down by its original choices, WTTO and WBMG, ABC reached a unique deal with Allbritton. WCFT would become an ABC affiliate, and WJSU would become an ABC affiliate as well as part of a local marketing agreement (LMA) with Flagship Broadcasting. The two stations would act as full-powered satellites of WBMA, a low-powered station based in Birmingham.
The new station debuted on September 1, 1996. Its first slogan was "We're Building Our Station Around You," which was also used on WKYC-TV in Cleveland for some years. This was quite accurate because the programming consultants of ABC 33/40 surveyed numerous amounts of people across central Alabama about what they wanted in a station. They also literally built a new station in Birmingham from that information they gathered. The station achieved early success with their newscasts, due in part to hiring many well-known Birmingham television personalities, including news anchors Brenda Ladun and Linda Mays, sports anchor Mike Raita and meteorologists James Spann and Mark Prater, all of whom had worked at WBRC. Later, Pam Huff, a former news anchor on WVTM, was hired to anchor the station's early morning newscasts. Since then, 33/40 has changed its slogan from "Where News Comes First" back to the original slogan of "We're Building Our Station Around You"; it is now "Alabama's News Leader." ABC 33/40 has had a long-standing tradition in that when any county in their viewing area is under a tornado warning, the station preempts regular programming for live, non-stop coverage.
[edit] Controversy over Ellen
In 1997, WBMA/WCFT/WJSU refused to air the famous "puppy episode" of Ellen DeGeneres' sitcom, Ellen. The station cited a need to respect the family values of the largely conservative evangelical community in the region as the basis of its decision. Some gay rights and civil libertarian activists decried the decision as a blatant example of censorship; indeed, in response, ABC sent a special satellite feed of the show to a community center in Birmingham and about 1,000 people, mainly local gays, lesbians, and their supporters, watched as DeGeneres came out of the closet.
When the same episode ran as a rerun on the network that same season, WBMA/WCFT/WJSU aired the program.
[edit] Newscast titles
- Good Morning Alabama - 5:00-7:00AM (Anchors: Pam Huff and Tracy Haynes)
- ABC 33/40 News @ 11:00AM - 11:00-11:30AM (Anchors: Linda Mays and Tracy Haynes)
- ABC 33/40 News @ 5:00 - 5:00-5:30PM (Anchors: Pam Huff and Linda Mays)
- ABC 33/40 News @ 6:00 - 6:00-6:30PM (Anchors: Dave Baird and Brenda Ladun)
- ABC 33/40 News @ 10:00 - 10:00-10:35PM (Anchors: Dave Baird and Brenda Ladun)
[edit] Saturday
- ABC 33/40 News @ 6:00 - 6:00-6:30PM (Anchors: Roy Hobbs -News; Ashley Brand - Weather; Jeff Speegle - Sports)
- ABC 33/40 News @ 10:00 - 10:00-10:35PM (Anchors: Roy Hobbs - News; Ashley Brand - Weather; Jeff Speegle - Sports)
[edit] Sunday
- ABC 33/40 News @ 5:00 - 5:00-5:30PM (Anchors: Roy Hobbs -News; Ashley Brand - Weather; Jeff Speegle - Sports)
- ABC 33/40 News @ 10:00 - 10:00-10:35PM (Anchors: Roy Hobbs - News; Ashley Brand - Weather; Jeff Speegle - Sports)
- The Zone with Mike Raita - 10:35-11:05PM (Sports talk, with Sports Director Mike Raita and Doug Segrest and Ray Melick, sports columnists with the Birmingham News)
- Auburn Football Review - 11:05-11:35PM (during the college football season only)
[edit] Trivia
- ABC 33/40 operates a number of Sky Cams throughout the state which send a live shot and weather information from that site. ABC 33/40 is assisted in this venture by regional banking giant Compass Bank. There are skycams in Downtown Birmingham, Inverness, Gadsden, Demopolis, Hamilton, Jasper, Mount Cheaha, Tuscaloosa, Cullman, Clanton and Gulf Shores. The Tuscaloosa TowerLink camera, located on the old Channel 33 broadcast tower, caught footage of an F4 tornado that hit Tuscaloosa in December 2000 [1]. TowerLink is also at WBMA-LP's tower in Birmingham and WJSU's tower in Anniston.
- In September 2006, ABC 33/40 moved "All My Children" from 10 a.m., where it had aired on tape-delay since WBRC was an ABC affiliate, to 12 Noon. This is the first time since the ABC daytime drama began in 1970 that it has aired at the time of the daily network feed in the Birmingham market.
[edit] Related items
[edit] External links
- ABC 33/40 Homepage
- Query the FCC's TV station database for WBMA-LP
- Query the FCC's TV station database for WCFT
- Query the FCC's TV station database for WJSU
Broadcast television in the Central Alabama (Birmingham / Anniston / Tuscaloosa) market (Nielsen DMA #40) |
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WBXA-CA 2 (MTV2) - WBRC 6 (Fox) - WVUA-CA 7 (i/A1/ShopNBC) - WCIQ 7 / WBIQ 10 (PBS/APT) - WVTM 13 (NBC) - WOTM-LP 19 (Ind) - WTTO 21 / WDBB 17 (The CW) - WUOA 23 (i/A1) - WJXS 24 (FamNet) - WBUN-CA 28 (Daystar) - WCFT 33 (ABC) - W34BI 34 (HSC) - WJSU 40 (ABC) - WIAT 42 (CBS) - WPXH 44 (i) - W49AY 47 (Ind/Rel.) - WOIL-LP 47 (Daystar)- W55BJ 55 (LeSea/GEB)- WBMA 58 (ABC) - WTJP 60 (TBN) - WABM 68 (MNTV) |
WDHN 18 (Dothan) - WAAY 31 (Huntsville) - WNCF 32 (Montgomery) - WBMA-LP 58 / WCFT 33 / WJSU 40 (Birmingham / Tuscaloosa / Anniston) |
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See also: CBS, CW, Fox, MyNetworkTV, NBC, PBS, and Other stations in Alabama |