WPSG

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WPSG
Wpsg cw current.PNG
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
United States
ChannelsDigital: 33 (UHF)
Virtual: 57
BrandingThe CW Philly
CBS 3 Eyewitness News on The CW Philly (newscasts)
Programming
Affiliations57.1: The CW / CBS (alternate)
57.2: Charge!
57.3: Comet
57.4: TBD
57.5: Circle
Ownership
OwnerCBS Television Stations
(ViacomCBS)
(Philadelphia Television Station WPSG, Inc.)
KYW-TV
History
First air date
June 15, 1981 (40 years ago) (1981-06-15)
Former call signs
  • WWSG-TV (1981–1985)
  • WGBS-TV (1985–1995)
Former channel number(s)
  • Analog:
  • 57 (UHF, 1981–2009)
  • Digital:
  • 32 (UHF, 2002–2019)
Former affiliations
  • FNN and SelecTV (1981–1983)
  • PRISM (1983–1985)
  • Independent (1985–1995)
  • UPN (1995–2006)
Call sign meaning
Paramount Stations Group
(former owner of WPSG, and predecessor of CBS Television Stations)
Technical information
Licensing authority
FCC
Facility ID12499
ERP1,000 kW
HAAT386.7 m (1,269 ft)
Transmitter coordinates40°2′33″N 75°14′32″W / 40.04250°N 75.24222°W / 40.04250; -75.24222
Links
Public license information
Profile
LMS
Websitecwphilly.com

WPSG, virtual channel 57 (UHF digital channel 33), is a CW owned-and-operated television station licensed to Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, United States. Owned by the CBS Television Stations subsidiary of ViacomCBS, it is part of a duopoly with CBS owned-and-operated station KYW-TV (channel 3). Both stations share studios on Hamilton Street north of Center City Philadelphia, while WPSG's transmitter is located in the city's Roxborough section.

History[]

WGLV-TV (1953–1957)[]

The channel 57 frequency was originally assigned to Easton, Pennsylvania where it was home to WGLV-TV, a dual ABC/DuMont affiliate owned by the Easton Express newspaper, which first signed on the air June 26, 1953; it would later be affiliated to the NTA Film Network from 1956. The station struggled to get an audience mainly because it was a UHF station at a time when television manufacturers were not required to offer UHF tuners. Its fate was sealed in 1957, when the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) collapsed the Lehigh Valley into the Philadelphia television market. The Philadelphia stations built tall towers in the city's hilly Roxborough neighborhood, adding Easton and the rest of the Lehigh Valley to their city-grade coverage. WGLV went dark on November 1 of that year, and several years later the FCC reassigned the channel 57 allocation to Philadelphia.

Rebirth (1981–1995)[]

Channel 57 as a Philadelphia station first signed on the air on June 15, 1981, as WWSG-TV, named for station founder William S. Gross. The station aired business news programming from the Financial News Network during the day and subscription television programming from SelecTV at night. The station's original studio facilities were located on North 20th Street in Philadelphia. The station ultimately dropped the FNN feed when it decided to switch to a full-time subscription format eighteen months later, picking up the now-defunct PRISM pay-cable service (a forerunner to Comcast SportsNet Philadelphia) in 1983.

In March 1985, Gross sold channel 57 to Milton Grant,[1] who immediately purchased an inventory of strong programming. Many of these shows were Viacom-syndicated programs that were formerly seen on WKBS-TV (channel 48) before that station ceased operations in August 1983. On October 20, 1985, Grant relaunched channel 57 as WGBS-TV, a general entertainment independent station with a typical mix of cartoons, sitcoms, movies, dramas and sports. Westerns also aired for several hours a day on weekends. Under Grant, WGBS adopted a very slick on-air look, even by major market independent standards. The station boldly branded itself as "Philly 57", and also used CGI graphics of near-network quality. The station's announcer, Kim Martin (then an announcer at WPEN radio, now WKDN), offered bold, brash and entertaining voice-overs. WGBS' then-sister stations, WBFS-TV in Miami and WGBO-TV in Chicago, adopted a similar look.

Early on, the new channel 57 competed with Vineland, New Jersey-based WSJT (channel 65, now Univision owned-and-operated station WUVP-DT) to fill the void left by the departure of WKBS two years earlier. However, channel 65 suffered from a poor signal in the northern portion of the market. At the same time, channel 57 became the broadcast home of the NHL's Philadelphia Flyers, remaining the hockey team's broadcast television home until the 2008–09 season (except for a brief period from 1993 to 1998, when the Flyers aired on WPHL-TV, channel 17). Additionally, Wilmington, Delaware-based WTGI (channel 61, now Ion Television O&O WPPX-TV) signed on in the summer of 1986 as a general entertainment independent station, but its schedule was composed largely of low-budget programs. At the end of 1986, WSJT's owners, the Asbury Park Press, conceded and sold the station to the Home Shopping Network while other stations picked up some of WSJT's syndicated shows. WTGI, meanwhile, switched to a format featuring paid programming and religious programs in January 1987. By then, WGBS had clearly established itself as the third independent in Philadelphia.

WGBS prospered even in the midst of a battle for its survival—and that of its owner. Milton Grant had hoped to have his stations become regional or national superstations. In his bid to boost his stations' status, Grant wound up overpaying for programming. He soon became so badly overextended that Grant Broadcasting was forced to file for Chapter 11 bankruptcy in late 1986.[2] Under the bankruptcy deal, WGBS cut back on the number of runs it had on each show causing programs to be seen at less duration. Still, in 1989, Grant Broadcasting was forced into receivership after the company failed to meet the terms of its bankruptcy agreement. Combined Broadcasting, a creditor-controlled holding company, took control of the former Grant stations. Combined put the stations up for sale in 1993, but it would be two years before Combined found a buyer, and only then in a roundabout way.

Attempted sale to Fox (1993)[]

Combined's first attempt to sell WGBS-TV came in August 1993, when Fox Television Stations announced that it would purchase channel 57 and make it Philadelphia's new Fox station. The deal would have left existing Fox affiliate WTXF-TV (channel 29) without an affiliation.[3] WTXF's owner, Paramount Stations Group (a subsidiary of Paramount Pictures), strongly criticized Fox's plans to pull its affiliation, fueling existing speculation that Paramount was planning to join with Chris-Craft Industries to create a new network;[3] when what eventually became the United Paramount Network (UPN) was announced that October as a joint venture of the two companies (with Paramount holding only a programming partnership until it purchased 50% of the network in 1996), WTXF was named as its Philadelphia affiliate.[4]

However, on November 19, 1993; the New York City chapter of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP) filed a formal objection to Fox's planned purchase of WGBS due to concerns about Fox's ownership structure. The NAACP contended that Fox's then-owner, News Corporation—based in Australia at the time—was the de facto parent company of Fox Television Stations' holding company, Twentieth Holdings Corporation (THC). News Corp's chairman, Rupert Murdoch, owned 76 percent of THC's stock in his own name; he had become an American citizen in 1985 so he could buy U.S. television stations. The NAACP contended that News Corp owned at least 36% of THC's stock, including all of the common stock. FCC regulations limit foreign ownership of broadcast outlets to 25 percent.[5] As FCC approval did not come before the planned January 30, 1994 completion of the deal, Combined walked away from the $57 million sale a few weeks later, preserving WTXF's Fox affiliation.[6]

Later that year, Westinghouse Broadcasting, owners of then-NBC affiliate KYW-TV, reached an agreement with CBS to switch channel 3 and two of Westinghouse's other stations to CBS. New World Communications had recently partnered with Fox in most of the markets where the company owned stations, and emerged as a candidate to purchase CBS' longtime owned-and-operated station WCAU-TV (channel 10). Fox also entered into the bidding for WCAU just in case New World's offer either fell through or in case New World chose to affiliate WCAU with NBC. However, on August 31, 1994, Viacom (which had acquired Paramount several months earlier) announced that it would sell WTXF to Fox for over $200 million;[7] NBC and CBS then opted to make a complicated multi-market station swap which gave WCAU to NBC. Using the cash received from Fox for channel 29, Viacom then bought WGBS and its Miami sister station, WBFS-TV.[8] As soon as the deal was announced, Viacom announced that both stations would join UPN. The purchase effectively resulted in Viacom buying out its partners' stakes in Combined Broadcasting; as the owner of the majority of the programs seen on channel 57's schedule back in 1985, Viacom was one of Grant's former creditors and a part-owner of Combined. Grant had been under particularly strong pressure to repay his debt to Viacom prior to filing bankruptcy.

UPN 57 WPSG (1995–2006)[]

WGBS became Philadelphia's UPN station when the network launched on January 16, 1995. Soon afterward, the station began taking on the look of an O&O. The on-air branding changed to "UPN Philly 57", and finally "UPN 57", the graphics got simpler, and Martin was replaced by the more staid Larry Van Nuys. The "UPN 57" branding was kept for the remainder of the network's run, with the exception of a short-lived branding change to simply "UPN" in September 2002, when the network debuted a new logo and on-air identity. This lasted exactly one season, and by the fall of 2003, the station's branding reverted to "UPN 57". However, many Delaware Valley residents still call the station "Philly 57," a measure of how effective Grant's aggressive efforts to market the station had been.

Viacom officially became the sole owner of WGBS on August 25, 1995, the same day Fox closed on its purchase of WTXF. On December 11 of that year, Viacom changed the station's call letters to WPSG (reflecting its operation by the Paramount Stations Group subsidiary). Viacom bought CBS in 2000, creating a duopoly with KYW-TV; WPSG's operations later migrated into KYW-TV's studios at Independence Mall. That same year, Viacom also purchased Chris-Craft's 50% share of UPN for $5.5 billion,[9] this resulted in WPSG becoming UPN's largest owned-and-operated station (taking that distinction away from Secaucus, New Jersey-licensed New York City station WWOR-TV, it and Chris-Craft's other UPN stations were stripped of their statuses as O&Os due to the Viacom buyout and were eventually sold to Fox Television Stations, one of which was subsequently traded to Paramount).

In recent years, WPSG tried to reposition itself as more of a local station, using the slogan So Philly, So You! (spelled as So Philly, So U! during the waning days of its UPN run). Weekend movie marathons, usually hosted by local personalities (or KYW/WPSG staff like Sean Murphy), have become commonplace, and during the late 2000s, the station broadcast the Philadelphia version of Gimme the Mike!, a competition for aspiring singers. In recent years, WPSG has become Philadelphia's leading sports station. Since the late 1990s, it has acquired over-the-air rights to Major League Baseball's Philadelphia Phillies and the NBA's Philadelphia 76ers in addition to its long-standing coverage of the Flyers (although the majority of those teams' games are broadcast on Comcast SportsNet). Phillies games moved to WPHL in November 2008. When Viacom split into two companies in 2005, WPSG became part of the CBS Corporation, along with the rest of Viacom's broadcasting interests (the original Viacom was renamed CBS Corporation, while the company that split from CBS and acquired the company's film and most cable television assets, save for Showtime Networks, took the Viacom name).

The CW (2006–present)[]

On January 24, 2006, WPSG parent CBS Corporation and the Warner Bros. Television unit of Time Warner announced that the two companies would shut down UPN and The WB and merge some of their programs onto a new, jointly-owned network called The CW Television Network.[10][11] As part of the deal, the new network signed a 10-year affiliation contract with 11 of CBS' UPN stations, including WPSG. Channel 57 was the largest UPN owned-and-operated station to join the new network. However, it would not have been an upset had Philadelphia's WB station, WPHL (which joined another newly launched service called MyNetworkTV), been chosen instead. Representatives for The CW were on record as preferring The WB and UPN's "strongest" stations, and Philadelphia was one of the few markets where the affiliates of both networks were both relatively strong ratings performers.

WPSG continued to carry UPN programming until the network shut down on September 15, 2006; The CW commenced operations three days later on September 18. In a surprising move, WPSG announced in the summer of 2006 that it would revive the "Philly 57" moniker as part of the station's new branding, "CW Philly 57"–an apparent nod to that nickname being used a decade after it was first retired. However, on-air promotions refer to the station as "CW Philly". In addition, WPSG would continue to broadcast Phillies, Flyers and Sixers games, a move that had been uncertain after the station became a CW affiliate.

On April 2, 2007, WPSG and KYW-TV relocated their operations to new studios at 1555 Hamilton Street in Philadelphia, near the Community College of Philadelphia.

On December 4, 2019, CBS Corporation and Viacom remerged into ViacomCBS.[12]

Newscasts[]

In September 2002, KYW radio (1060 AM) and KYW-TV launched a weekday morning news program called KYW NewsRadio This Morning on WPSG. Originally anchored by KYW anchor Beth Trapani, the broadcast was essentially an embellished radio newscast with simple graphics and video borrowed from KYW-TV. Trapani was succeeded as anchor by Ed Abrams, who gave way in turn to Lesley Van Arsdall. The news program did surprisingly better than expected but the effort would eventually come to an end on May 30, 2005. The following day, a new program called Wakeupnews (with the lowercase UPN logo font within the appropriate place in the logo), produced by Traffic Pulse, premiered in the four-hour timeslot previously held by KYW NewsRadio This Morning. The newscast carried on into WPSG's affiliation with The CW, adopting new graphics on September 18, 2006 and de-emphasizing the spacing in the name which formed a reference to its former affiliation, becoming simply Wake Up News.

To compete with WPHL-TV's outsourced and WTXF-TV's in-house prime time newscasts, KYW-TV began to produce a 10:00 p.m. newscast for WPSG on February 2, 2009, titled Eyewitness News at 10 on The CW Philly. This partnership would extend into the mornings on June 29, 2009, when Wake Up News was replaced with a two-hour extension of KYW-TV's Eyewitness News This Morning. The morning newscast continued until summer 2015, when a new morning programming lineup for the station was implemented and several changes occurred within KYW, including Ukee Washington being reassigned to the weeknight anchor position following the firing of weeknight anchor Chris May and the departure of anchor Erika Von Tiehl.[13]

Technical information[]

Subchannels[]

The station's digital signal is multiplexed:

Channel Video Aspect PSIP Short Name Programming[14]
57.1 1080i 16:9 WPSG Main WPSG programming / The CW
57.2 480i Charge! Charge!
57.3 Comet Comet
57.4 TBD TBD
57.5 Circle Circle

WPSG shares Comet with Rival station WPHL-TV on its 4th subchannel.

Analog-to-digital conversion[]

WPSG shut down its analog signal, over UHF channel 57, on June 12, 2009, as part of the federally mandated transition from analog to digital broadcasts. The station's digital signal continued to broadcast on its pre-transition UHF channel 32.[15][16] Through the use of PSIP, digital television receivers display the station's virtual channel as its former UHF analog channel 57, which was among the high band UHF channels (52-69) that were removed from broadcasting use as a result of the transition.

Out-of-market coverage[]

Unlike WTXF and WPHL, WPSG is carried in fewer locations in central New Jersey. In early November 2012, at the request of Tribune Broadcasting's New York City CW affiliate WPIX, CW network programming seen on WPSG began to be blacked out in portions of New Jersey that are part of the New York City television market; the blackout request was lifted later that month on November 27, 2012. In Warren County, it is carried on cable in Phillipsburg. In Hunterdon and Somerset counties, WPSG is carried on Comcast (formerly Patriot Media) channel 17. WPSG, along with sister station KYW-TV and the other Philadelphia television stations, are also carried in Lambertville in Hunterdon County.

In Middlesex County, it was carried on Comcast (formerly Storer Cable) on analog channel 22 from 1985 to January 2007, when it was moved to digital cable channel 254 to "preserve bandwidth"; sister station KYW returned to the Comcast lineup on digital channel 256 after a 14-year absence in December 2007. In Monmouth and Ocean counties, WPSG is also carried on Comcast digital channel 254; Comcast added WPSG's HD feed to its Toms River and Long Beach Island lineups in Ocean County and southern Middlesex County as well as Roosevelt in Monmouth County and in Lambertville on August 22, 2012 on digital channel 911.[17]

The station is not available to Cablevision customers in Lakewood, Seaside Heights in Ocean County and southern Monmouth County, even though Cablevision carries other Philadelphia stations on these systems. Cablevision's Allentown system, in extreme western Monmouth County, carries WPSG (and other broadcast television stations from the Philadelphia and New York City markets). Comcast also carried WPSG on channel 11 in Lebanon, Pennsylvania until 2021 when the station, along with several other Philly stations, were removed by Comcast systems in that area.[18] Blue Ridge Communications carries WPSG on its Northern Lancaster County, Pennsylvania system. DirecTV and Dish Network do not carry any Philadelphia stations in any area outside the Philadelphia market.

References[]

  1. ^ "Changing Hands." Broadcasting, March 18, 1985, pg. 86
  2. ^ "Grant Broadcasting goes into Chapter 11." Broadcasting, December 15, 1986, pp. 47-48. [1][2]
  3. ^ a b Benson, Jim (August 19, 1993). "Fox dumps Par affil for indie". Variety. Retrieved September 26, 2014.
  4. ^ Flint, Joe (November 1, 1993). "It's Warner v. Paramount" (PDF). Broadcasting & Cable. pp. 1, 6. Retrieved September 26, 2014.
  5. ^ Wharton, Dennis (November 22, 2014). "NAACP decries Fox's TV station ownership". Variety. Retrieved September 26, 2014.
  6. ^ Flint, Joe (March 1, 1994). "Delay foils Fox bid for WGBS". Variety. Retrieved September 26, 2014.
  7. ^ Shister, Gail (September 1, 1994). "The Fox Network To Buy Channel 29". Philadelphia Inquirer. Retrieved September 26, 2014.
  8. ^ "In Brief" (PDF). Broadcasting & Cable. October 17, 1994. p. 80. Retrieved September 26, 2014.
  9. ^ Hofmeister, Sallie (August 12, 2000). "News Corp. to Buy Chris-Craft Parent for $5.5 Billion, Outbidding Viacom". The Los Angeles Times. Retrieved March 23, 2011.
  10. ^ 'Gilmore Girls' meet 'Smackdown'; CW Network to combine WB, UPN in CBS-Warner venture beginning in September, CNNMoney.com, January 24, 2006.
  11. ^ UPN and WB to Combine, Forming New TV Network, The New York Times, January 24, 2006.
  12. ^ "Bob Bakish's Memo to ViacomCBS Staff: Merger "a Historic Moment"". The Hollywood Reporter. December 4, 2019.
  13. ^ "Web Page Under Construction".
  14. ^ RabbitEars TV Query for WPSG
  15. ^ "DTV Tentative Channel Designations for the First and Second Rounds" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on August 29, 2013. Retrieved March 24, 2012.
  16. ^ CDBS Print
  17. ^ "Slide show | DSLReports, ISP Information".
  18. ^ "Some TV Stations From Neighboring Markets Will Soon No Longer Be Available". Comcast. Retrieved June 18, 2021.

External links[]

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