WKEF
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WKEF-TV | |
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Dayton, Ohio | |
Branding | ABC 22 |
Slogan | Dayton's News Source |
Channels | 22 (VHF) analog, 51 (UHF) digital |
Affiliations | ABC (1966-1980 & since 2004) |
Owner | Sinclair Broadcasting Group |
Founded | August 22, 1964 |
Call letters meaning | Kathrine Elizabeth Flynn |
Former callsigns | WONE (1964-1965) |
Former affiliations | Independent (1964-1966) NBC (1980-2004) |
Website | ABC 22 Website |
WKEF is a broadcast television station in Dayton, Ohio, affiliated with the ABC network. It broadcasts on channel 22. WKEF is owned by the Sinclair Broadcast Group with its transmitter is located in Dayton. It is the sister station of Fox Broadcasting Company affiliate WRGT-TV.
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[edit] History
Channel 22 signed on August 22, 1964 as WONE-TV. Conventional wisdom suggested that it would take the ABC affiliation, since it was Dayton's third commercial station. However, it started as an independent station since the Dayton market was decently covered by WKRC-TV in Cincinnati and WTVN-TV (now WSYX) in Columbus. However, ABC wanted its own affiliate in Dayton. As such, beginning in 1965, WONE began running ABC prime time shows and sports, plus any daytime ABC shows that WKRC pre-empted. WONE had no local newscasts at the time.
Soon after the station joined ABC, it was sold to Springfield Television Corporation (owner of WWLP in Springfield, Massachusetts), and renamed WKEF. By the end of the 1970s ABC had finally gained an equal footing with CBS and NBC (with shows such as Happy Days), and was unhappy with the Cincinnati/Dayton arrangement. ABC affiliates in Cincinnati and Columbus were preempting decent amounts of daytime programming, late night shows and some of the weekend kids shows. ABC wanted a station in Dayton that could run its whole schedule and be able to reach Cincinnati and Columbus. It also wanted a station that had local news. WKEF began a newscast in 1978, but this was not enough to save its affiliation with ABC.
So on January 1, 1980 when WDTN's affiliation contract with NBC expired, ABC quickly moved its affiliation there. WKEF was then left to take the NBC affiliation. Unlike its ABC deal, WKEF now ran NBC's entire schedule.
In 1984, the Springfield Television group (WKEF, WWLP and KSTU in Salt Lake City, Utah) was sold to Adams Communications. Adams broke up the group in the late 80s, selling WKEF to KT Communications in 1989. KT, in turn, sold WKEF to Max Television (later Max Media) in 1995.
In 1998, WKEF was sold to Sinclair in a group deal. Sinclair was already managing WRGT owned by Sullivan, and Sinclair moved WRGT's operations to WKEF's studio. In 2001, Sinclair bought most of Sullivan's stations, but could not buy WRGT because the FCC does not allow common ownership of two of the four highest-rated stations in a market. Also, the Dayton market has only six full-power commercial stations — too few to permit duopolies. Accordingly, WRGT was sold to Cunningham Broadcasting, whose stock is almost entirely owned by the Smith family, founders of Sinclair. This effectively gave Sinclair a duopoly in Dayton.
On August 30, 2004 WDTN again took the opportunity to sign up with the more popular network, dropping ABC to switch back to NBC. Thus, as of August 2004, WKEF became an ABC affiliate again. WKEF now runs the entire ABC schedule, though only a few months after becoming an ABC affiliate again, the station, and all other Sinclair-owned ABC affiliates including sister WSYX in Columbus as well as two other ABC affiliates in Ohio, preempted the movie Saving Private Ryan. Its newscast contains some elements of Sinclair's "News Central." In the 1980s, WKEF's news programs were known as 22 Alive! News.
Ratings wise, its newscasts have always been a distant third place behind WHIO-TV and WDTN. On some nights (usually Sundays because of ABC programming) there are times that WKEF is runner-up to WHIO. On June 5, 2006, WKEF debuted a morning newscast, which will help them compete with WHIO and WDTN's news departments.
For many years, WKEF produced the daily children's program Clubhouse 22 hosted by Malcolm McLeoud in the early 1970s with Joe Smith taking over in the mid 1970s. Their cohorts included Duffy the Dog,Stan The Man and later Dr. Creep (played by Barry Hobart). Dr. Creep was also the host of WKEF's weekly horror movie presentation, Shock Theater.
[edit] The Tube
WKEF aired The Tube on their digital substation and was on Time Warner Cable's digital lineup on channel 723. It's airing ended December 31, 2006.
[edit] Logos
[edit] Newscasts
[edit] Weekdays
- ABC 22 Good Morning! - 5:00AM-7:00AM (with updates during ABC's Good Morning America)
- Anchor: Asa George
- ABC 22 Dayton's News Source at 6 - 6:00PM-6:30PM
- Anchor: Don Hammond
- ABC 22 Dayton's News Source at 11 - 11:00PM-11:30PM
- Anchors: Mark Pompilio and Michelle Kingsfield (Monday-Thursday); Don Hammond (Friday)
[edit] Weekends
- ABC 22 Dayton's News Source at 6 - 6:00PM-6:30PM
- Anchor: Don Hammond (Saturday); Mark Pompilio (Sunday)
- ABC 22 Dayton's News Source at 11 - 11:00PM-11:30PM
- Anchors: Don Hammond (Saturday); Mark Pompilio and Michelle Kingsfield (Sunday)
[edit] Notable WKEF/WRGT Alumni
- Carl Day, lead anchor, (now @ WDTN-TV)
- Marsha Bonhart, lead anchor, (now @ WDTN-TV)
- Janet McGill, lead weather specialist 1978-94, (married to WHIO-TV's Mike Hartsock)
- Don Brown, Sports Director, (now part-timer @ WHIO-TV)
- Natasha (King) Williams, reporter, (now @ WHIO-TV)
- Laurie Penco, Lead Anchor, 1995-99
- Leif Pedersen-Diaz, Investigative Reporter, 1994-1996 (went to WFOR-TV Miami)
- Andy Banker, reporter/anchor
- Scott Arnold, reporter (went on to WDTN-TV)
- Guy Fogle, Sports
- Mario Barson, Sports
- Roscoe Shaw, Chief Meteorologist (married to former WHIO-TV's Chief Meteorologist Heidi Sonen)
- Karen Jordan, anchor/reporter, now in Chicago WLS-TV
- Cornell Barnard, anchor/reporter
- Kristi Piehl, anchor/reporter
- Gary Somerset, anchor/reporter
- Tina Rezash, lead anchor, (went on to WDTN, now with Dayton Business Journal)
- Mike Bettes, meteorologist (now on The Weather Channel)
- Jo Corey "Miss Jo", 1960s local host of preschooler program "Romper Room."
- Toody the Clown(aka: "Toody Too"..as in "22")1960s children's show host
- Malcolm McLeaud,early 1970s host of "Clubhouse 22"
- Joe Smith,staff announcer and late 1970s host of "Clubhouse 22"
- Barry Hobart "Dr. Creep" host of "Shock Theater" (latter title: "Saturday Night Dead.")
- Bernie Williamson "B.W." a Dayton Daily News columnist who hosted local evening movie program, died in 1980s
- Johnny Walker, staff announcer, public affairs director and host of local segments of the Jerry Lewis MDA Telethon, later president of Hara Arena, died in 2005
[edit] External links
Broadcast television in the Dayton market (Nielsen DMA #58) | |||
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WDTN 2 (NBC) - WHIO 7 (CBS) (Accuweather on DT2) - WPTO 14 (PBS) - WPTD 16 (PBS) - WKEF 22 (ABC) - WBDT 26 (The CW) - WRCX-LP 40 (BFC) - WKOI 43 (TBN) - WRGT 45 (Fox) (MNTV on DT2) - WWRD-LP 55 (HSN) - W66AQ 66 (MNTV) |
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Defunct cable television channels | |||
See also: Broadcast television in the Indianapolis, Columbus, Cincinnati, Fort Wayne, and Lima markets |
WEWS 5 (Cleveland) - WSYX 6 (Columbus) - WCPO 9 (Cincinnati) - WTVG 13 (Toledo) - WLQP-LP 18 (Lima) - WKEF 22 (Dayton) - WYTV 33 (Youngstown) |
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See also: CBS, Fox, NBC, PBS, MyNetworkTV, CW and Other stations in Ohio |
Corporate Staff: David D. Smith (COB and President & CEO) | Frederick G. Smith | J. Duncan Smith | Robert E. Smnith | Daniel C. Keith | Martin R. Leader | Lawrence E. McCanna | Basil A. Thomas | David B. Amy | Lucy A. Rutishauser | Barry M. Faber | David R. Bochenek | Nat S. Ostroff | Donald H. Thompson | Thomas I. Waters III | Darren Shapiro | Gregg Siegel | Jeff Sleete | M. William Butler | Steven M. Marks | Delbert R. Parks III | Joe DeFeo |
ABC Network Affiliates: KDNL | WCHS | WEAR | WGGB | WICD | WICS | WKEF | WLOS | WSYX | WXLV |
The CW Network Affiliates: KOCB | KVCW7 | WLFL8 | WNAB1 | WNUV2 | WTTO / WDBB | WUCW | WVTV |
Fox Network Affiliates: KABB | KBSI | KDSM | KOKH | WBFF | WDKY | WMSN | WPGH3 | WRGT2 | WRLH | WSMH6 | WSYT | WTAT2 | WTTE2 | WUHF4 | WUTV | WVAH2 | WYZZ4 | WZTV |
MyNetworkTV Affiliates: KMYS | KVMY | WABM | WCGV | WDKA5 | WFGX5 | WMMP | WMYA2 | WMYV | WNYO9 | WNYS5 | WPMY | WRDC | WRLH | WSTR | WSYX | WTTA5 | WTVZ | WUXP |
1Sinclair operates this station owned by Tennessee Broadcasting under an outsourcing agreement. Sinclair is looking to acquire the station outright. |
2These stations are nominally owned by Cunningham Broadcasting and operated by Sinclair under local marketing agreements. However, Sinclair effectively owns Cunningham because it controls nearly all of Cunningham's stock. |
3This station is involved in a "news-share" agreement with Cox Enterprises-owned WPXI. |
4Sinclair has ownership interests in these stations, but management capabilities belong to Nexstar Broadcasting Group. |
5Sinclair operates these stations, which are owned by local independent or private companies, with the execption of WTTA where Sinclair CEO David Smith is the station's majority owner. |
6This station is involved in a "news share" with Meredith Corporation-owned WNEM-TV |
7This station is involved in a "news share" with Sunbelt Communications Company-owned KVBC |
8This station is involved in a "news share" with Disney/ABC-owned WTVD. |
9This station is involved in a "news share" with Gannett-owned WGRZ. |
Annual Revenue: $1.24 billion USD (2004) | Employees: Unknown at this time. | Stock Symbol: NASDAQ: SBGI | Website: www.sbgi.net |