WTSP
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WTSP | |
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St. Petersburg / Tampa, Florida | |
Branding | Tampa Bay's 10 |
Slogan | Enjoy It. We Do. |
Channels | 10 (VHF) analog, 24 (UHF) digital |
Affiliations | CBS |
Owner | Gannett |
Founded | July 17, 1965 |
Call letters meaning | W Tampa-St. Petersburg |
Former callsigns | WLCY (1965-1978) |
Former affiliations | Independent (July 1965-August 1965) ABC (September 1965-December 1994) |
Transmitter Power | 316 kW Analog 625 kW Digital 316 kW Digital CP |
Website | www.tampabays10.com |
WTSP, "Tampa Bay's 10" is a CBS-affiliate television station on the west coast of Florida (Tampa–St. Petersburg DMA 12). It broadcasts its analog signal on VHF channel 10, and its digital signal on UHF channel 24. Its transmitter is located in Holiday, Florida.
Because its transmitter location is further north than the others (in order to protect Miami's WPLG), WTSP's signal cannot be seen well in Sarasota County, and viewers without cable must rely on WINK-TV in Fort Myers for CBS programming. In addition, unlike the other Tampa network affiliates, WTSP's signal reaches as far north as Levy County and Marion County.
Contents |
[edit] History
The station began broadcasting on July 17, 1965, as WLCY-TV, an ABC affiliate, after a lengthy court battle that lasted nearly ten years between five prospective owners seeking the license. Rahall Communications, which also owned WLCY-AM 1380 (now Disney's WWMI) and WLCY-FM 94.9 (now Cox's WWRM), was awarded the original license for Channel 10.
The station was granted affiliation with the ABC television network, but the station spent the first month and a half as an independent station, as previous ABC affiliate WSUN-TV channel 38 went to court to keep the affiliation. WLCY ultimately won, and they formally switched to ABC in a special ceremony on September 1, 1965.
The station was originally housed in a building in downtown St. Petersburg and relocated to brand new broadcasting facilities on Gandy Boulevard in 1968 with WLCY Radio 138.
Early personalities included Dick Crippen, who originally presented weather and then sports; Marshall Cleaver, Al Stockmeyer, Art Johnson, and Karol Kelly, many of whom also hosted programs for WLCY radio. Marshall Cleaver was the original news anchor for much of the 1960s and early 1970s.
The station also aired such original children's programs as Submarine 10, Romper Room, 10 Ultimate and This Side Up, and original talk shows such as The John Eastman Show, The Liz Richards Show and the popular Murphy in the Morning.
[edit] The 1970s
In 1971, WXLT (later WWSB) Channel 40 in Sarasota formed as the area's ABC affiliate as WLCY's signal could not come in well in most of Sarasota County as WLCY's transmitter was (and still is) in Holiday.
In 1976, former WFLA anchor Arch Deal became the news director and main anchor for Eyewitness News. WLCY also broadcast the first 5:30 newscast in the Bay Area during the late 1970s up until 1980 when the newscast was moved to 6pm. Ratings for the station during the early to mid 1970s were dismal, however, compared to longtime Bay Area stations WTVT and WFLA-TV and, as a result, the station nearly lost its ABC affiliation. Part of the problem was its transmitter location in Holiday, in the southwestern corner of Pasco County (all other stations broadcasted from Riverview, in Hillsborough County). Also, the station broadcasted at a lower power than the Tampa stations. The location and power was due to the fact that the station was short-spaced with Miami's ABC affiliate, WPLG ch.10 (which was WLBW when WLCY-TV signed on).
However, on September 12, 1978, WLCY-TV was purchased by Gulf Broadcasting. New owner Allen Henry (WINS New York fame) and General Manager Larry Clamadge immediately began to turn the station around, changing the call letters to WTSP-TV that year and hiring several new personalities that would change the entire face of the station. (WTSP, ironically, was originally the calls for AM 1380 when that station was owned by the St. Petersburg Times in the 1940s and 1950s.) This was similar to what Roone Arledge had done for ABC News that same year. Beginning in 1979, Don Harrison (previously from KMSP-TV in Minneapolis-St. Paul), Liz Ayers, Wally Kinnan and Dick Crippen were the new anchors of the Channel 10 evening newscasts. Ratings surged, making the Tampa Bay market more competitive. In 1979, Channel 10 acquired the original, and famous, "Sunset 10" logo (which was later duplicated by its sister station KTSP in Phoenix, Arizona) along with the "Action News" format.
WTSP is also a station of firsts. In October of 1979, the station acquired "Sky 10," Tampa Bay's first television news helicopter. This stunned the local news community and showed that Channel 10 was serious about local news coverage. It was the only local news helicopter to broadcast the infamous Skyway Bridge disaster on live television in May 1980. Another technological advance was Tampa Bay's first satellite news truck called "Star 10" that beamed signals from far away locations to WTSP's Gandy Blvd. headquarters. WTSP also acquired Tampa Bay's first Doppler radar in the Southeastern U.S. in 1980 and was one of the first television stations in the country to use a computer in weather forecasting.
[edit] The 1980s
In late 1982, news anchor Don Harrison left the WTSP to become an anchor at upstart cable channel CNN2, now CNN Headline News. John Wilson replaced Harrison as anchor. On January 9, 1983, Sheryl Browne, from WKYC-TV in Cleveland joined John Wilson at the anchor desk on "Action News," rounding out the station's main anchor team.
Longtime WTSP chief meteorologist Dick Fletcher joined the station in March 1980 and became famous for his forecasting during Hurricane Elena in 1985. Award-winning reporter Mike Deeson and legendary sports anchor Ken Broo also bolstered the station in the early 1980s.
WTSP was the second television station in the Bay Area to launch an hour long 6 PM newscast in 1986. Rival WTVT had been the first to do so many years earlier and WTSP attempted it in an effort to pass WTVT to the top of the local news ratings. The effort only lasted until 1987, however.
In 1988, Vincent Barresi joined WTSP as General Manager and Vice-President. Previously, he held the same position at Philadelphia's WKBS-TV, where he signed that station off for the last time in August 1983. [1]
Taft Broadcasting purchased the station along with 4 other Gulf properties in 1985. Then, in 1988, Taft sold its independent stations and Fox affiliates to TVX, and sold most of its network affiliates, including WTSP, to Great American Broadcasting (which became known as Citicasters by 1995).
In March of 1989, one of the first computer espionage scandals in the nation broke, when news director Terry Cole hired Michael Shapiro away from rival WTVT where he was a news manager and computer security officer. Shapiro repeatedly broke into the newsroom computer system of his former employer using a modem at his home - apparently with Cole's knowledge. Both were fired and were sentenced by Florida court to probation for the incident. In June of 1989, "Action 10 News" became "NewsCenter 10" and a 5 p.m. newscast was launched. Although in third place, ratings did recover to be competitive with WFLA.
[edit] The 1990s
General Manager Barresi left the station in 1991, replaced by Steve Mauldin. Mauldin led the station until 1998.
In December of 1991, news anchor Sheryl Browne left the station and was replaced by Sue Zelenko, who previously co-anchored the newscast for WJRT in Flint, Michigan. John Wilson, who announced his departure on Thanksgiving of 1992, officially left WTSP in January of 1993. Weekend anchor and reporter Dave Wagner and 11 p.m. anchor Sue Zelenko became the new anchor team alongside Dick Fletcher and Al Keck on "10 News." Pat Minarcin, a veteran of the broadcast industry, then took over for Wagner in August of 1994.
New World Communications bought two of WTSP's sister stations, KTSP (now KSAZ) in Phoenix and WDAF-TV in Kansas City. However, it did not buy WTSP since it already owned WTVT. New World also arranged for its stations to affiliate with the Fox network, causing WTVT to drop its CBS affiliation.
At the same time, Scripps Howard also arranged for several of its stations (including WFTS, which was about to lose its Fox affiliation to WTVT) to affiliate with ABC. As a result, WTSP was to lose its ABC affiliation, and gain the CBS affiliation instead. CBS's programming moved to WTSP in December 1994, in a 3-way affiliation switch that caused much viewer confusion. The change to CBS occurred on December 12, 1994, and resulted in the station moving from third to second place in the local news ratings although a later resurgent WTVT and competition from newly started WFTS would make second place a toss up for the rest of the 1990s. WFLA would serve as the market leader.
Citicasters merged with Jacor in September 1996. Three months later, in December 1996, Jacor traded WTSP to Gannett in return for six of Gannett's radio stations — KIIS-AM (now KTLK) and KIIS-FM in Los Angeles, California, KSDO-AM and KSDO-FM (now KLQV) in San Diego, California and WDAE and WUSA-FM (now WMTX) in Tampa, Florida. (Gannett held on to its five remaining radio stations — WGCI-AM (now WGRB-AM) and WGCI-FM in Chicago, Illinois, KHKS-FM in Dallas, Texas and KKBQ-AM (now KBME-AM) and KKBQ-FM in Houston, Texas — until December 1997, when they were sold to Chancellor Media, which later merged with Capstar Broadcasting to become AMFM, Inc. Ironically, Jacor and Chancellor/AMFM would both be eventually swallowed up by Clear Channel. The San Diego stations, which have since been sold to other interests, now run a primarily Spanish-language format; KKBQ-FM is now owned by Cox Enterprises.)
In January of 1998, Reginald Roundtree replaced Pat Minarcin as the lead male anchor of "10 News". Minarcin later sued the station for age discrimination. On October 14, 2002, the station launched a new news format and image. A new, state of the art digital newsroom was also constructed for WTSP's news staff.
[edit] Now
In the February 2006 Nielsen Sweeps, Channel 10 was #1 at 5 p.m. (where it airs Dr. Phil) and #2 at 6 p.m., and recently won the ratings (Feb. 2006) at 11 p.m., beating WFLA. The ratings slipped in the July 2006 though, and WTVT was rated #1 at 5 p.m. Longtime news anchor Sue Zelenko anchored her last newscast on April 23, 2004. Heather Van Nest (who used to anchor news at WJXT in Jacksonville, and anchored the morning newscasts at WTSP) is now co-anchoring with Reginald Roundtree and a new morning news team is being featured.
[edit] Life Around the Bay
In 2002, in a strategic move to boost ratings, Dr. Phil which aired at 3 p.m. moved to 5 p.m. and Tampa Bay's 10 News at 5:00 moved to 4 p.m., and the station named the 4:00 newscast Life Around the Bay, which focuses more on offbeat feature stories and community stories than the past 5:00 news. The current anchors are former weekend sports anchor Dave Wirth and former noon news anchorwoman, Marty Matthews. Life Around the Bay also features weather updates, and the headlines of the day in the last 5 minutes of the newscast.
Life Around the Bay is the only 4 p.m. newscast in the Tampa Bay market.
WTSP originally launched the first 4pm newscast in the Bay Area called "First News at 4" in 1997. The newscast, anchored by Marty Matthews and Dave Wagner with Linda Gialanella on weather, was anchored from the station's main news set but featured lighter stories. The newscast, which was a half-hour long, ran until 1999. The 2002, the concept was relaunched as "Life Around the Bay" with Marty Matthews having anchored both formats.
[edit] Studio 10
On September 11, 2006, WTSP began broadcasting a program in the 10-11:00 a.m. timeslot entitled "Studio 10", replacing The Tony Danza Show. The program, hosted by Michelle Phillips and Tim Wilkins, is meant to compete with rival WFLA's "Daytime" program, which features products and services sponsored by commercial advertisers. The new program features an adjoining kitchen and living room set in a studio separate from WTSP newscasts.
[edit] Digital Television
WTSP broadcast the first true HD program in the Tampa Bay area on June 3, 2006 at 8 p.m., a hurricane special anchored by 26-year veteran meteorologist Dick Fletcher. A second HD program aired on October 22, 2006 called "Enjoy it, we do", named for the station's slogan, and showcased a variety of local attractions. Rumors have circulated that WTSP intends to broadcast the first Tampa Bay area newscast in HD, as other Gannett owned stations have, sometime in early 2007. This would require an upgraded news set, although it is believed that WTSP's studios were previously upgraded for HD broadcasting capabilities in 2002. Though on March 4th, it was announced that rival WTVT would broadcast the first Tampa Bay area newscast in HD. [1]
Just recently, WTSP launched "10 Weather Now", on subchannel 24.2 (10.2 through PSIP), which has local weather 24 hours a day, 7 days a week, which primarily competes with WFLA's Storm Team 8 Weather Plus feature. The slogan for 10 Weather Now is "You are never more than 1 minute away from local weather".
[edit] Newscasts
[edit] Weekdays
- Tampa Bay's 10 News This Morning (5 a.m.-7 a.m.)
- Anchors: Mario Diaz & Ginger Gadsden
- Weather: Anna Allen
- Traffic: Meredyth Censullo
- Tampa Bay's 10 News at Noon (Noon-12:30 p.m.)
- Anchors: Mario Diaz & Ginger Gadsden
- Weather: Anna Allen
- Life Around the Bay (4 p.m.-5 p.m.)
- Anchors: Marty Matthews & Dave Wirth
- Weather: Dick Fletcher
- Tampa Bay's 10 News at 6:00 (6 p.m.-6:30 p.m.)
- Anchors: Heather Van Nest & Reginald Roundtree
- Weather: Dick Fletcher
- Sports: Justin Allen
- Tampa Bay's 10 News at 11:00 (11 p.m.-11:35 p.m.)
- Anchors: Reginald Roundtree & Heather Van Nest
- Weather: Dick Fletcher
- Sports: Justin Allen
[edit] Saturdays
- Tampa Bay's 10 News Saturday Morning (6 a.m.-8 a.m.)
- Anchor: Bill McGinty
- Weather: Sherry Ray
- Tampa Bay's 10 News at 6:00 (6 p.m.-6:30 p.m.)
- Anchor: Jennifer Howe
- Weather: Randy Rauch
- Sports: Angela Jacobs
- Tampa Bay's 10 News at 11:00 (11 p.m.-11:35 p.m.)
- Anchor: Jennifer Howe
- Weather: Randy Rauch
- Sports: Angela Jacobs
[edit] Sundays
- Tampa Bay's 10 News at 6:30 (6:30 p.m.-7 p.m.)
- Anchor: Jennifer Howe
- Weather: Randy Rauch
- Sports: Angela Jacobs
- Tampa Bay's 10 News at 11:00 (11 p.m.-11:35 p.m.)
- Anchor: Jennifer Howe
- Weather: Randy Rauch
- Sports: Angela Jacobs
[edit] Past Personalities
- John Wilson, 6 and 11pm anchor (1981–1993) (now on Fox 13 in Tampa)
- Sheryl Browne, 6 and 11pm anchor (1983–1992)
- Don Harrison, 6 and 11pm anchor (1979-1982)
- Liz Ayers, 6 and 11pm anchor (1979-1983)
- Arch Deal, evening anchor/news director (1976–1978)
- R.A. Campbell, anchor (1976)
- Bob Bates, anchor (1978–1980)
- Gary Rebstock, anchor (1978–1979)
- Francie Murphy, anchor (1978–1979)
- Dennis Roper, anchor (1979–1984)
- Mark Feldstein, I-Team (1980–1985)
- Ken Krawley, I-Team (1985–1992)
- Sue Zelenko, 6/11pm anchor (1991–2004)
- Pat Minarcin, 6 and 11pm anchor (1994–1998)
- Al Ruechel, morning/noon anchor (1986–1996) (lead anchor at Bay News 9, Tampa, FL as of June 2006)
- Marlene Schneider, anchor (1985–1992)
- Jane Akre, anchor (1991–1995)
- Dave Wagner, anchor (1987–1999) (at WLWT Ch. 5, Cincinnati, OH as of June 2006)
- Miles O'Brien, reporter (1984–1986) (now with CNN)
- Rod Challenger, news director/anchor (1978–1979)
- Jule McGee, reporter (1965–1967)
- Stan Grams, first WLCY-TV weatherman (1965-1969)
- Sonny Daye, weather personality (1969-1976)
- Wally "The Weatherman" Kinnan (1978–1980)
- Dennis Feltgen, meteorologist (1989–1999)
- Jim Wegner, meteorologist (1980s)
- Jim Brihan, meteorologist (1980s)
- Mike Ferell, meteorologist (1987–1993)
- Dick Crippen, sports director (1965–1981)
- Ken Broo, sports director (1981–1987) (at WLWT Ch. 5, Cincinnati, OH as of June 2006)
- Steve Talbot, sports director (1987–1988)
- Al Keck, sports director (1988–2001) (at WFTS Ch. 28, Tampa, FL as of June 2006)
- John Nugent, sports director (2001–2006)
- Bill Campbell,"Campbell's Corner"/reporter (1975–1993)
- Bill Murphy, "Murphy in the Morning" (1985–1991) (now on WTVT)
- Myrtle Smith-Carroll, reporter, host "Youth & You"(1978–1983)
- Julie Brannon, "PM Magazine" (1986–1989)
- Andrea McDaniel, reporter (1982–1985)
- Madeline Holland, morning anchor (1991–1995)
- John O'Connor, "PM Magazine"/anchor (1986–1989)
- Laura York, weather (1996-2001)
- Mary Beth Byrd, morning anchor (1996-2001)
- David Klugh, morning/noon anchor (1991-1999)
- Paul Morill, freelance weather (2004-2005)
- Gemma Gaudette, morning anchor (2004-2006)
- Jeff Berardelli, meteorologist (1999-2003) (Now at WCBS)
- Darryl David, 5pm anchor (1989-1991)
- Jineane Ford, 5pm anchor (1989-1991) (at KPNX Ch. 12, Phoenix, AZ as of June 2006)
- Lisa Foronda, weekend anchor (1992-1997)
- Lynna Lai, morning reporter/anchor (mid 1990s)
- John Harding, morning anchor (2000-2004)
- Jeff Hullinger, weekend sports anchor/reporter (2004-2006)
- Michelle Caruso-Cabrera, reporter (1994-1998) (Now with CNBC)
- Debra Becker, reporter (1990s)
- David Snepp, reporter (1980s)
- Mark Douglas, reporter (1980s-90s) (Now with WFLA)
- Brian Goff, reporter (1980s-90s)
- Jerry Johnson, sports anchor/reporter (1982-2001)
- Bill McGinty, reporter/anchor (1994-2007)
[edit] Key Personalities
- Anna Allen, Morning and Noon Meteorologist
- Justin Allen, Sports Anchor
- Angela Atalla, General Assignment Reporter
- Dave Balut, Investigative Reporter
- Valerie Boey, General Assignment Reporter
- Dave Bohman, General Assignment Reporter
- Kathryn Bursch, General Assignment Reporter
- Meredyth Censullo, Traffic Reporter
- Mike Deeson, General Assignment Reporter
- Mario Diaz, Morning and Noon Anchor/Reporter
- Sara Dorsey, General Assignment Reporter
- Dick Fletcher, Chief Meteorologist
- Ginger Gadsden, Morning and Noon Anchor/Reporter ( Originally repoted for USA TODAY)
- Alexandra Hackett, General Assignment Reporter
- Jennifer Howe, Weekend 6 p.m. and 11 p.m. Anchor/Reporter
- Angela Jacobs, Sports Anchor/Reporter
- Isabel Mascareñas, Education Reporter
- Marty Matthews, Anchor/Reporter/"Life Around the Bay" Anchor
- Randy Rauch, Weekend Meteorologist
- Sherry Ray, Saturday Morning Meteorologist/"Life Around the Bay" reporter
- Reginald Roundtree, 6 p.m. and 11 p.m. Anchor/Reporter
- Preston Rudie, General Assignment Reporter
- DeAnna Sheffield, General Assignment Reporter
- Heather Van Nest, 6 p.m. and 11 p.m. Anchor/Reporter
- Dave Wirth, Anchor/Reporter/"Life Around the Bay" Anchor
- Beau Zimmer, General Assignment Reporter
[edit] Syndicated Programming
- Who Wants to Be a Millionaire (weekdays 9-10 am)
- Dr.Phil (weeknights 5-6 pm)
- Wheel of Fortune (weeknights 7-7:30 pm) (moving to WFTS-TV in Fall, 2007)
- Jeopardy! (weeknights 7:30-8 pm) (moving to WFTS-TV in Fall, 2007)
[edit] Slogans
- "WLCY-TV: Where The Action Is!" (1965)
- "Take A Look (at Channel 10)" (1979-1981)
- "Count On the Action News Team!" (1980s)
- "Stay In Touch With 10" (mid-1980s)
- "NewsCenter 10: In the Center of it All" (1989–1992)
- "10 News: News You Can Use" (1992–1994)
- "Where News Comes First" (1994–1995)
- "The Next Generation of News" (1994–1996)
- "Keep Your Eye on Tampa Bay's 10" (1994–1996; used to promote CBS's move to WTSP)
- "We've Got You Covered" (1996–1998)
- "People You Can Count On" (1998–2001)
- "Covering Tampa Bay" (2001–2002)
- "Enjoy It. We Do." (2002—present)
- "You'll Be Seeing Red" promo for the revamped Channel 10 (2002)
[edit] Previous Logos
First WTSP "Sunset 10" logo, in 1979. The "Tampa-St. Petersburg" mention is used only in print ads -- at the time, its city-of-license was Largo. The call letters' fonts were derived from ABC's Still The One promotion in 1977. |
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[edit] Old Ads
Rebel Without a Cause on Dialing for Dollars in 1977. |
[edit] Trivia
- P&P Cable Holdings, an owner of low-powered television stations in Michigan, used WTSP's current logo as the basis of the logos for WUHQ-LP in Grand Rapids and WLLZ-LP in Traverse City.
[edit] References
[edit] External links
- WTSP Homepage
- Query the FCC's TV station database for WTSP
- mcsittel.com: 1990s DX screengrabs from Tallahassee -- includes a 1992 WTSP ABC schedule screengrab
- WTSP images/video @ Florida News Center Contains an image and video archive of the intros, teasers, and other on-air segments that WTSP uses; both past and present.
WEDU 3 (PBS) - WFLA 8 (NBC) - WTSP 10 (CBS) - WTVT 13 (Fox) - WLWA-LP 14 (Ind/Rel) - WPDS-LP 14 (Edu.) - W15CM 15 (AS) - WUSF 16 (PBS) - WHRT-CA 17 (Ind) - WSVT-CA 18 (DS) - WARP-CA 20 (MTV2) - WCLF 22 (CTN) - WXAX-LP 26 (AZA) - WFTS 28 (ABC) - WTAM-LP 30 (Multimedios) - WMOR 32 (Ind) - W33CC 33 (AS) - W34AW 34 (3ABN) - WSPF-CA 35 (St. Pete city access) - W36CO 36 (TBN) - WTTA 38 (MNTV) - WWSB 40 (ABC) - W43CE 43 (Ind) - WTOG 44 (The CW) - W48CN 48 (TBN) - WZRA-CA 48 (Ethnic/A1/NTV/CTV/DW) - WRMD-LP 49 (TEL) - WFTT 50 (TFU) - W56EB 56 (TBN) - W60CE 60 (TBN) - WVEA 62 (UNI) - WXPX 66 (ION) |
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Local digital television channels | ||
WYKE-LP 47 (FN) |
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Local cable television channels | ||
Bay News 9 - SNN News 6 - Catch 47 - FSN Florida - Sun Sports |
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Significantly Viewed Out-of-Market Broadcast Stations Reception may vary by geographical location |
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Fort Myers: WINK 11 (CBS) - WFTX 36 (Fox) |
CBS Network Affiliates in the state of Florida | |
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WFOR 4 (Miami) - WCTV 6 (Tallahassee) - WKMG 6 (Orlando) - WTSP 10 (St. Petersburg) - WINK 11 (Fort Myers) - WPEC 12 (West Palm Beach) - WTEV 47 (Jacksonville) - WGFL 53 (High Springs / Gainesville) |
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See also: ABC, CW, Fox, MyNetworkTV, NBC, PBS, Religious, Spanish and Other stations in the state of Florida |
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Other Publications: Army Times Publishing Company | Clipper Magazine | Newsquest Media Group | Nursing Spectrum |
CBS Network Affiliates: KTHV | WFMY | WLTX | WMAZ | WTSP | WUSA |
NBC Network Affiliates: KARE | KNAZ1 | KPNX | KSDK | KUSA | WBIR | WCSH | WGRZ | WKYC | WLBZ | WTLV | WXIA |
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1Subject to sale once a buyer is found. |
Annual Revenue: $7.4 billion USD (2004) | Employees: 52,500 | Stock Symbol: NYSE: GCI | Website: www.gannett.com |