NBC Weather Plus

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NBC Weather Plus
NBC Weather Plus logo.svg
WeatherPlus.jpg
TypeDefunct Digital broadcast television network (weather/meteorology)
CountryUnited States
SloganLocal Weather Forecasts
Programming
Picture format480i (SDTV)
Ownership
OwnerNBCUniversal and NBC affiliates (exact share unknown)
History
LaunchedNovember 15, 2004 (2004-11-15)
ClosedDecember 31, 2008 (2008-12-31) (national network)
2009–2015 (local stations)

NBC Weather Plus was an American weather-oriented digital broadcast and cable television network owned as a joint venture between NBC Universal and the local affiliates of the NBC television network. [1] The service, which was broadcast in standard definition, was carried on the digital subchannels of many NBC affiliates and on the digital tiers of cable providers (through a local affiliate).

Overview[]

NBC Weather Plus primarily competed with cable network The Weather Channel, as well as a similar digital multicast network, The Local AccuWeather Channel.

The network also provides forecast content for both NBC News and MSNBC's news programs;[2] Weather Plus staff also appeared on most of the programs (although Today mainly used certain meteorologists from the network as substitutes for the program's separate weather anchors). In 2006, after MSNBC moved its operations to 30 Rockefeller Plaza in New York City's Midtown Manhattan district (integrating its operations with NBC News), Weather Plus moved into fellow sister network CNBC's Global Headquarters in Englewood Cliffs, New Jersey.[2]

In addition to the network, Weather Plus staff provided weather updates for CNBC and MSNBC; MSNBC also aired "sample" hours of the network during the morning hours on certain major holidays. In addition, Weather Plus was promoted during NBC's NFL pre-game show Football Night in America, and was used to provide the temperature and weather conditions at gametime for each week's NBC Sunday Night Football game during the NFL season. During significant national weather events (such as a major winter storm), Weather Plus meteorologists conducted live reports for NBC Nightly News to provide analysis (all of these services are now provided by The Weather Channel).

History[]

NBC Weather Plus was unveiled at the NBC affiliate meeting in 2004.[3] The network debuted on November 15, 2004, with NBC's New York City owned-and-operated station WNBC serving as the test station. At the time, the network was operating out of the offices of NBC News' affiliate newsgathering service, NBC News Channel, in Charlotte, North Carolina. NBC and MSNBC weather anchors and meteorologist staff the network to start.[4] Raycom Media agreed by April 2005 to affiliated its 13 NBC stations' subchannel with NBC Weather Plus,[5]

On March 30, 2005, Sunbeam Television, Liberty Corporation, Sunbelt Communications and Bonneville International announced that 30 stations of their station would launch the network bring coverage up to 67% of U.S. households.[3] Weather Plus was moved to NBC News division in 2007 after NBC Station Group President Jay Ireland returned to General Electric.[2]

Closure[]

Former logo for NBC Plus.

In September 2008, Landmark Media Enterprises sold The Weather Channel to a consortium of NBC Universal, and private equity firms Blackstone Group and Bain Capital. Shortly afterward, on October 7, 2008, NBC Universal announced that it would phase out Weather Plus by December 31, 2008, after the NBC affiliates expressed a desire to shut the service down.[2] Though NBC cited its purchase of The Weather Channel as a factor in the shutdown,[6] it was stated that the network's closure would have occurred even if the acquisition had not happened.[2]

Segments featuring on-camera personalities were discontinued on October 24, 2008. Afterwards until the network formally ceased operations, it ran only a loop of various national satellite, radar and temperature maps accompanied by music, local weather maps inserted by the network's affiliates, and Weather Plus University. With this, the remaining on-camera meteorologists from Weather Plus were referred to on other NBC News and MSNBC programs as only "NBC meteorologists," before eventually being mentioned as being part of the Weather Channel's staff. The Weather Channel's main Atlanta staff also began appearing on NBC News programs, either from the cable channel's Atlanta headquarters, NBC's New York City operations or via satellite on-location during weather events. In early December 2008, the website of Weather Plus was redirected to The Weather Channel's website.

The service formally shut down operations on December 31, 2008. While some of its affiliates switched to other networks, the remaining affiliates running them as local weather services.[7] Many operating under the unofficial brand, "NBC Plus". This option allowed the equipment that had been used to insert local content onto the former national feed of NBC Weather Plus to remain in use. The network's forecast system and maps continued to be used until 2010 for studio segments on CNBC and MSNBC, with Weather Channel branding along the top-third banner, before being replaced entirely with graphics used by The Weather Channel by mid-2010 (the graphics system used for Weather Plus's national feed remains in use on NBC's Early Today as of 2014).

Until 2011, several NBC owned-and-operated stations ran a barebones variant of Weather Plus, which was finally replaced with a localized news and lifestyle service called NBC Nonstop (which was replaced by Cozi TV in 2012). Other stations have discontinued their use of Weather Plus in order to take advantage of upgraded weather technology after converting to high-definition news production, or switched to an entertainment-based multicast network featuring programming more palatable to different advertisers. WVIR-TV kept the Weather Plus look until reportedly May 2015 when it was replaced by WeatherNation.

Programming[]

National programming[]

From its launch until the network discontinued on-camera segments in October 2008, NBC Weather Plus maintained a wheel format for its forecast segments, which were scheduled at fixed timeslots each half-hour:[8]

Timeslot Segment Description
Top of hour-:04 past the half-hour Local Forecast Weather inserts from the local Weather Plus affiliate
:04-:06 past the half-hour Coast To Coast Regional forecasts for the Northeastern, Midwestern, Southeastern, Southwestern and Northwestern United States
:07.30-:09.30 past the half-hour Local Forecast Weather inserts from the local Weather Plus affiliate
:09.30-:13.30 past the half-hour Seasonal Weather Outlook A summary of ongoing or forecasted severe weather; the segment focused primarily on tropical weather from July to November and winter weather from December to March
:15-:19 past the half-hour Local Forecast Weather inserts from the local Weather Plus affiliate
:19-:21 past the half-hour Plus Five Forecast Five-day national weather and temperature forecast
:22.30-:24.30 past the half-hour Local Forecast Weather inserts from the local Weather Plus affiliate
:24.30-:28.30 past the half-hour Weather News A selected weather- or climate-related news report from NBC News or an NBC-affiliated station

NBC Weather Plus' programming is mostly recorded; outside of at least one live update hourly between 4:00 a.m. and 11:00 p.m. local time provided by the affiliates,[9] a digital video jukebox system is used to shuffle certain segments (particularly during seasonal outlook and weather news segments as well as the network's late night programming), except in the event of severe weather of particular significance ongoing in the U.S. A viewer that watched NBC Weather Plus in any given day would be able to see a weather news segment that originally aired in the morning repeated long into the night, the same weather information that aired at 11:00 p.m. airing at 4:00 a.m., and the same seasonal outlook (severe weather, tropical weather, or winter weather) segment that originally aired in the morning repeating long into the late afternoon. In the latter instance, this was an issue as updated information may not have been available during any type of severe weather (unless very significant) that was ongoing.

Some of the segments featured on the network used different titles at times if it is a sponsored forecast segment such as State Farm Road Coverage, which replaced Coast To Coast. The network also produced Weather Plus University, a half-hour program focusing on educating viewers about weather, and featured segments from NBC News and NBC affiliates relating to climate.

During severe weather events, national segments, at the affiliates' discretion, could be replaced with either news simulcasts or a constant radar display; in turn, this coverage could be picked up by the national Weather Plus feed (live if possible) during the "Coast To Coast" and/or "Plus Five Forecast" segments. During the network's "Weather Alert" mode, specifically when a major severe weather event was occurring or a dangerous hurricane is preparing to make landfall, regular programming was interrupted to provide constant coverage. Most of NBC Weather Plus' affiliates used a respective combination of the station and "Weather Plus" branding, for both the subchannel and for the station's general weather branding during newscasts and weather updates on the NBC affiliate's main channel. After the shutdown of the digital network, many NBC affiliates continued to use the "Weather Plus" brand as part of their on-air weather branding, although most have switched to other brands in the succeeding years.

Local forecasts[]

NBC Weather Plus gave 24 minutes of programming time per hour to its affiliates to air pre-recorded local forecast segments conducted by weather staff from local NBC-affiliated stations, running eight times an hour. In addition, current weather conditions for a given area and surrounding areas within the affiliate's viewing area or state; regional and five-day forecasts; and almanacs (featuring the day's observed high and low temperatures) were also provided during the local segments.

Local version of NBC Weather Plus from Milwaukee's WTMJ-TV, showing an ad in the top-left corner, local branding above the Weather Plus logo, and time in the bottom-left.

The forecast segment seen in place of the local forecasts on the national feed (which was streamed on the network's website where a local Weather Plus feed was not available for streaming, and was not carried on satellite via DirecTV, Dish Network or C band services) cycled through daily forecasts and composite satellite/radar loops for the respective regions of the Northeastern, Southeastern, Midwestern, Northwestern and Southwestern United States. Music associated with the local forecast segments came from commercial sources, including 615 Music, which composed the music package (mostly the tracks from Positive Pop Grooves, with the other tracks being DJ Gruv, Voccho, Sneez and Pyraflex) used by NBC Weather Plus' weather radar forecasts from 2005 to 2008.

The "L" bar[]

The network utilizes an on-screen graphic, known as the "L-bar," to display local weather forecasts on the left and bottom third of the screen to provide local weather information on a continuous basis, even during commercial breaks, national weather segments and Weather Plus University. The sidebar displayed sponsorship tags on the top left (which were more often seen on local feeds, and was removed during Weather Plus University), current weather conditions (sky condition, temperature, wind speed/direction and humidity) for the affiliate's city of service and other cities within the viewing area or state on the middle left; station identification on the bottom left (in which affiliates augmented their logo above the Weather Plus logo); and the current time and on some stations, perpetual station identification text on the lower left. The bottom right two-thirds of the bar displayed 24-hour and five-day forecasts for each city (with the 24-hour forecasts also incorporating forecasted precipitation amounts).

A planned revamp of Weather Plus prior to the shutdown announcement (from KOMU-TV).

Similar to The Weather Channel's Local on the 8s segment in the hour after sunset (which determined the usage of daypart-based icons partly on the time of sunset in a given locality), an occasional bug in the "L-bar" displayed weather icons incorporating the sun when detailing the current sky condition for some observation sites at night. If an observation site was located within or near a larger city, the forecast for the next closest reporting station would be shown instead (for example, on Dallas affiliate KXAS-TV's Weather Plus subchannel, the current conditions for Fort Worth Alliance Airport were displayed alongside the forecast for nearby Dallas). The current conditions for a single city cycled for 20 seconds; while the 24-hour and five-day forecasts cycled for 10 seconds. In the case of Sacramento affiliate KCRA, the current conditions cycled continuously and the current time was placed on the right-hand side in the lower-right third. The national feed featured a different "L-bar," which cycled through current conditions, 24-hour and five-day forecasts for 50 major U.S. cities.

Prior to the announcement of Weather Plus' shutdown, the network had planned to revamp the "L-bar". The redesigned graphic was adopted by at least one former Weather Plus affiliate, WKYC-TV in Cleveland, Ohio, following the closure of Weather Plus when it reformatted its weather subchannel into a local format, before the station converted the subchannel into a local radar loop, and later True Crime Network.[10]

Notable former on-air staff[]

Affiliates[]

Former affiliates[]

Crystal128-tv.svg This film, television or video-related list is incomplete; you can help by with reliably sourced additions.

+ Indicates an affiliate converted to The Local AccuWeather Channel following the shutdown of Weather Plus.

City of license/market Station Owner at network's shutdown
(current owner in parentheses)
Subchannel status/notes

Alabama[]

Birmingham WVTM 13.2 Media General
(now owned by Hearst Television)
Subchannel now affiliated with MeTV
Huntsville WAFF 48.2 Raycom Media
(now owned by Gray Television)
Subchannel now affiliated with Bounce TV
MobilePensacola WPMI-TV 15.2 Newport Television
(now owned by Deerfield Media and operated by Sinclair Broadcast Group)
Subchannel now operating as a local weather service, as "Local 15 Weather Plus Network"
Montgomery WSFA 12.2 Raycom Media
(now owned by Gray Television)
Subchannel now affiliated with Bounce TV

Arizona[]

Phoenix KPNX 12.2 Gannett Company
(now known as Tegna)
Subchannel was operating as a local weather service, as "12 News Weather Plus",[11] now affiliated with AccuWeather (branded as "12 News Weather")

California[]

Fresno KSEE 24.2 Granite Broadcasting
(now owned by Nexstar Media Group)
Subchannel now affiliated with Bounce TV
Los Angeles KNBC 4.2 NBC Owned Television Stations Subchannel now affiliated with Cozi TV
Sacramento KCRA-TV 3.2 Hearst-Argyle Television Subchannel now affiliated with MeTV
SalinasMonterey
Santa Cruz
KSBW 8.2 Hearst-Argyle Television Subchannel now affiliated with ABC[12]
San Diego KNSD 39.2 NBC Owned Television Stations Subchannel now affiliated with Cozi TV
San FranciscoOakland
San Jose
KNTV 11.2

Colorado[]

Denver KUSA-TV 9.2 Gannett Company
(now known by Tegna)
Subchannel now affiliated with Cozi TV

Connecticut[]

HartfordNew Haven WVIT 30.2[11] NBC Owned Television Stations Subchannel now affiliated with Cozi TV

District of Columbia[]

Washington, D.C. WRC-TV 4.2 NBC Owned Television Stations Subchannel now affiliated with Cozi TV

Florida[]

Fort Myers WBBH-TV 20.2 Waterman Broadcasting Corporation Subchannel now affiliated with Heroes & Icons
Jacksonville WTLV 12.2 Gannett Company
(now known by Tegna)
Subchannel now affiliated with Antenna TV
WJXX 25.2 Moved to ABC-affiliated WJXX's second subchannel in 2008; Subchannel now operating as a local weather service, looping "First Coast News Live Doppler"
MiamiFt. Lauderdale WTVJ 6.2 NBC Owned Television Stations Subchannel now affiliated with Cozi TV
Orlando WESH 2.2 Hearst-Argyle Television Subchannel now affiliated with MeTV
Tampa WFLA-TV 8.2 Media General
(now owned by Nexstar Media Group)
Subchannel now affiliated with Court TV
West Palm Beach WPTV-TV 5.2 E. W. Scripps Company Subchannel now affiliated with MeTV

Georgia[]

Albany WALB 10.2 Raycom Media
(now owned by Gray Television)
Subchannel now affiliated with ABC affiliate; weather service was then exclusive to Mediacom as "WALB 24/7 Weather," before the programming was dropped altogether and switched to Bounce TV
Atlanta WXIA-TV 11.2 Gannett Company
(now known by Tegna)
Subchannel now a VHF simulcast of MyNetworkTV affiliated sister station WATL

Hawaii[]

Honolulu KHNL 13.2 Raycom Media
(now owned by Gray Television)
Subchannel now an independent station

Idaho[]

PocatelloIdaho Falls KPVI 6.2 Sunbelt Communications Company
(now owned by Cox Media Group)
Subchannel now affiliated with Court TV

Illinois[]

Chicago WMAQ-TV 5.2 NBC Owned Television Stations Subchannel now affiliated with Cozi TV
Peoria WEEK-TV 25.2 Granite Broadcasting
(now owned by Quincy Media)
Subchannel now affiliated with ABC

Indiana[]

Fort Wayne WISE-TV 33.3 Granite Broadcasting
(now owned by Quincy Media)
Subchannel now affiliated with True Crime Network; main channel now affiliated with The CW Plus
Evansville WFIE-TV 14.2 Raycom Media
(now owned by Gray Television)
Subchannel was operating as a local weather service, as 14Xtra, Now MeTV

Iowa[]

Des Moines WHO-TV 13.2 Local TV
(now owned by Nexstar Media Group)
Subchannel now operating as a local weather service, as "Iowa's Weather Channel"
WaterlooCedar Rapids KWWL 7.2 Quincy Media Subchannel now affiliated with The CW

Kentucky[]

Louisville WAVE 3.2 Raycom Media
(now owned by Gray Television)
Subchannel now affiliated with Bounce TV

Louisiana[]

Baton Rouge WVLA 33.2 White Knight Broadcasting
(operated by Communications Corporation of America; now operated by Nexstar Media Group)
Subchannel now affiliated with Laff
Lafayette Served by Lake Charles affiliate KPLC-TV 7.2 and Baton Rouge affiliate WVLA 33.2
Lake Charles KPLC-TV 7.2 Raycom Media
(now owned by Gray Television)
Subchannel now affiliated with The CW
New Orleans WDSU-TV 6.2 Hearst-Argyle Television Subchannel now affiliated with MeTV

Maine[]

Bangor WLBZ 2.2 Gannett Company
(now known by Tegna)
Subchannels were operating as a local weather service, as "Newscenter Weather Plus", both are now affiliated with True Crime Network
Portland WCSH 6.2

Maryland[]

Baltimore WBAL-TV 11.2 Hearst-Argyle Television Subchannel now affiliated with MeTV

Massachusetts[]

Boston WHDH-TV 7.2 Sunbeam Television Subchannel now affiliated with This TV; main channel now an independent station

Michigan[]

Detroit WDIV-TV 4.2 Post-Newsweek Stations
(now known as Graham Media Group)
Subchannel now affiliated with This TV[11]
Marquette WLUC 6.2 Barrington Broadcasting
(now owned by the Sinclair Broadcast Group)
Subchannel now affiliated with Fox
Traverse CityCadillac WPBN 7.3
WTOM-TV 4.3
Subchannel now serves as 720p simulcast of ABC-affiliated sister station WGTU

Minnesota[]

Duluth KBJR 6.3 Granite Broadcasting
(now owned by Quincy Media)
Subchannel was operating as a local news and weather service, as "News Now", now affiliated with Heroes & Icons and MyNetworkTV
MinneapolisSt. Paul KARE 11.2 Gannett Company
(now known by Tegna)
Subchannel now affiliated with Court TV

Mississippi[]

HattiesburgLaurel WDAM 7.3 Raycom Media
(now owned by Gray Television)
Subchannel now affiliated with ABC
Jackson WLBT 3.2 Subchannel now affiliated with Bounce TV

Missouri[]

ColumbiaJefferson City KOMU-TV 8.2 University of Missouri Subchannel is now dark
Kansas City KSHB-TV 41.2 E. W. Scripps Company Subchannel now affiliated with Cozi TV
St. Louis KSDK 5.2 Gannett Company
(now known by Tegna)
Subchannel now affiliated With Bounce TV [11]
Springfield KYTV 3.2 Schurz Communications
(now owned by Gray Television)
Subchannel was affiliated with WeatherNation TV, now affiliated as a secondary affiliate with ABC via KSPR-LD

Nebraska[]

Hastings/Lincoln/Kearney KHAS-TV 5.2 Hoak Media
(now owned by Legacy Broadcasting, LLC)
Subchannel now a simulcast of KSNB-TV from Superior, Nebraska; station is now known as KNHL

Nevada[]

Las Vegas KVBC 3.2 Sunbelt Communications Company
(now owned by Sinclair Broadcast Group)
Subchannel now affiliated with Estrella TV
Reno KRNV 4.2 Sunbelt Communications Company
(now owned by Cunningham Broadcasting; operated by Sinclair Broadcast Group)
Subchannel now affiliated with Dabl

New Mexico[]

AlbuquerqueSanta Fe KOB-TV 4.2 Hubbard Broadcasting Subchannel now affiliated with This TV

New York[]

Albany WNYT 13.2 Hubbard Broadcasting Subchannel was operating as a local news and weather service, as "WNYT NC 13 Now", moved to 13.3, now an affiliate of Heroes & Icons
Buffalo WGRZ 2.2 Gannett Company
(now known by Tegna)
Subchannel now affiliated with Antenna TV
New York City WNBC 4.2 NBC Owned Television Stations Subchannel now affiliated with Cozi TV
Rochester WHEC 10.2 Hubbard Broadcasting Subchannel was operating as a local weather service, as "News 10 NBC Pinpoint Weather", moved to 10.3, now an affiliate of MeTV
Syracuse WSTM-TV 3.3 Barrington Broadcasting
(now owned by the Sinclair Broadcast Group)
Subchannel now operating as Comet TV

North Carolina[]

Charlotte WCNC-TV 36.2 Belo
(now owned by Tegna)
Subchannel now affiliated with True Crime Network
Goldsboro
RaleighDurham
WNCN 17.2 Media General
(now owned by Nexstar Media Group)
Currently a primary CBS affiliate after NBC moved to WRAL-TV in 2016, Subchannel now affiliated with Court TV
GreensboroWinston-SalemHigh Point WXII 12.2 Hearst-Argyle Television Subchannel now affiliated with MeTV
Wilmington WECT 6.2 Raycom Media
(now owned by Gray Television)
Subchannel now affiliated with Bounce TV

Ohio[]

Cincinnati WLWT 5.2 Hearst-Argyle Television Subchannel now affiliated with MeTV
Cleveland WKYC-TV 3.2 Gannett Company
(now known by Tegna)
Was operating as a local weather service, as "3 Weather", [11] now affiliated with True Crime Network
Columbus WCMH-TV 4.2 Media General
(now owned by Nexstar Media Group)
Subchannel now affiliated with Court TV
Lima WLIO 35.3 Block Communications Subchannel is now dark, main channel is now on channel 8
Steubenville
Wheeling, West Virginia
WTOV 9.2 Cox Enterprises
(now owned by the Sinclair Broadcast Group)
Subchannel now affiliated with Fox
Toledo WNWO 24.2 Barrington Broadcasting
(now owned by the Sinclair Broadcast Group)
Subchannel was affiliated with America One, now affiliated with Stadium

Oklahoma[]

Oklahoma City KFOR-TV 4.2 Local TV
(now owned by Nexstar Media Group)
Subchannel now affiliated with Antenna TV
Tulsa KJRH 2.2 E. W. Scripps Company Subchannel was affiliated with Live Well Network, now affiliated with Bounce TV

Oregon[]

Portland KGW 8.2 Belo
(now owned by Tegna)
Subchannel was affiliated with Live Well Network, now affiliated with True Crime Network

Pennsylvania[]

JohnstownAltoona
State College
WJAC-TV 6.2 Cox Enterprises
(now owned by the Sinclair Broadcast Group)
Subchannel now affiliated with MeTV
LancasterHarrisburg
LebanonYork
WGAL 8.2 Hearst-Argyle Television Subchannel now affiliated with MeTV
Philadelphia WCAU 10.2 NBC Owned Television Stations Subchannel now affiliated with Cozi TV
Pittsburgh WPXI 11.2 Cox Media Group Subchannel now affiliated with MeTV

Rhode Island[]

Providence WJAR 10.2 Media General
(now owned by Sinclair Broadcast Group)
Subchannel now affiliated with MeTV

South Carolina[]

Columbia, South Carolina WIS 10.2 Raycom Media
(now owned by Gray Television)
Subchannel now affiliated with The CW
GreenvilleSpartanburg
Asheville
WYFF 4.2 Hearst-Argyle Television Subchannel now affiliated with This TV
Myrtle Beach WMBF 32.2 Raycom Media
(now owned by Gray Television)
Subchannel now affiliated with Bouce TV

South Dakota[]

Sioux Falls KDLT 46.2 Red River Broadcasting Subchannel now affiliated with Antenna TV

Tennessee[]

Chattanooga WRCB 3.2 Sarkes-Tarzian, Inc. Subchannel now affiliated with TheGrio
Knoxville WBIR-TV 10.2 Gannett Company
(now known by Tegna)
Subchannel now affiliated with MeTV
Memphis WMC-TV 5.2 Raycom Media
(now owned by Gray Television)
Subchannel now affiliated with Bounce TV

Texas[]

Amarillo KAMR-TV 4.2 Nexstar Media Group Subchannel now simulcasts MyNetworkTV affiliate KCPN-LD
Brownsville KVEO 23.2 Communications Corporation of America
(now owned by the Nexstar Media Group)
Subchannel now affiliated with CBS
DallasFort Worth KXAS-TV 5.2 NBC Owned Television Stations Subchannel now affiliated with Cozi TV
El Paso KTSM 9.2 Communications Corporation of America
(now owned by the Nexstar Media Group)
Subchannel now affiliated with Estrella TV
Houston KPRC-TV 2.2 Post-Newsweek Stations
(now known as Graham Media Group)
Subchannel now affiliated with Start TV
Lubbock KCBD 11.2 Raycom Media
(now owned by Gray Television)
Subchannel now affiliated with Circle
San Antonio WOAI-TV 4.2 Newport Television
(now owned by the Sinclair Broadcast Group)
Subchannel now affiliated with Antenna TV
Tyler-Longview KETK-TV 56.2 Communications Corporation of America
(now owned by the Nexstar Media Group)
Subchannel now affiliated with Grit
WacoTemple KCEN 6.2 Frank Mayborn Enterprises, Inc.
(now owned by Tegna)
Subchannel now affiliated with Cozi TV

Utah[]

Salt Lake City KSL-TV 5.3 Bonneville International Subchannel was operating as a local weather service, as "Live 5 Weather Channel", now affiliated with This TV

Vermont[]

BurlingtonPlattsburgh, New York WPTZ 5.2 Hearst-Argyle Television Subchannel now affiliated with The CW

Virginia[]

Charlottesville WVIR 29.2 Waterman Broadcasting Corporation Subchannel now affiliated with WeatherNation TV
Richmond WWBT 12.2 Raycom Media
(now owned by Gray Television)
Subchannel now affiliated with MeTV

Washington[]

KennewickPasco
Richland
KNDU 25.3 The KHQ Television Group Subchannel now affiliated with sports and weather service, as SWX Right Now
Seattle KING-TV 5.2 Belo
(now owned by Tegna)
Subchannel was affiliated with Live Well Network,[11] now affiliated with True Crime Network
Spokane KHQ-TV 6.2 The KHQ Television Group Subchannel now operating as a local sports and weather service, as SWX Right Now
Yakima KNDO 23.3

West Virginia[]

Charleston-Huntington W50DL 50 Eagle Broadcasting Group Station now affiliated with Cozi TV. Was the only non-NBC affiliate to carry NBC Weather Plus.

Wisconsin[]

Milwaukee WTMJ-TV 4.2 Journal Broadcast Group
(now owned by The E. W. Scripps Company)
Subchannel was affiliated with The Local AccuWeather Channel, now affiliated with Bounce TV

References[]

  1. ^ WPXI.com (2008-12-01). "Channel 11 News Announces Changes To Weather Team". Internet Archive Wayback Machine. Archived from the original on June 7, 2011. Retrieved 2013-01-18.
  2. ^ Jump up to: a b c d e Greppi, Michelle (2008-10-07). "NBC Shutting Down Weather Plus". . Archived from the original on 2008-11-19. Retrieved 2008-10-07.
  3. ^ Jump up to: a b Romano, Allison (March 30, 2005). "NBC Adds Weather Plus Affils". Broadcasting & Cable. Retrieved September 8, 2017.
  4. ^ Kerschbaumer, Ken (November 14, 2004). "Peacock Plays Weather Vane". Broadcasting & Cable. Retrieved September 8, 2017.
  5. ^ "Raycom Launches The Tube Music Network". Billboard. Billboard-Hollywood Reporter Media Group. Mediaweek. April 25, 2005. Retrieved September 7, 2017.
  6. ^ Guthrie, Marisa; Malone, Michael (2008-10-07). "NBC Universal Shutting Down Weather Plus". Broadcasting & Cable. Archived from the original on November 21, 2010. Retrieved 2008-10-09.
  7. ^ Romano, Allison (January 19, 2009). "Cutting Bait On Subchannels". Broadcasting & Cable. Retrieved March 8, 2018.
  8. ^ NBC Weather Plus Television Schedule
  9. ^ NBC launches Weather Plus
  10. ^ http://www.wkyc.com/video/weather/weather_plus/ WKYC (3 Weather) live stream featuring the revamp NBC Weather Plus L-bar.
  11. ^ Jump up to: a b c d e f "Station Ownership in the Top 25 Markets" (PDF). broadcastingcable.com. January 24, 2009. Retrieved 28 July 2012.
  12. ^ Central Coast ABC Programming from KSBW

External links[]

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