WSMV-TV

WSMV-TV
WSMV-TV
Wsmv 2008.png
Nashville, Tennessee
Branding WSMV Channel 4 (general)
Channel 4 News (newscasts)
Slogan Working 4 You
Channels Digital: 10 (VHF)
Virtual: 4 (PSIP)
Subchannels (see article)
Affiliations NBC
Owner Meredith Corporation
First air date September 30, 1950
Call letters' meaning We Shield Millions (V for "Vision" added to differentiate from WSM radio)
Former callsigns WSM-TV (1950-1981)
Former channel number(s) Analog:
4 (1950-2009)
Former affiliations All secondary:
ABC (1950-1954)
CBS (1950-1953)
DuMont (1950-1956)[1]
Telemundo (DT2; 2006-2010)
Transmitter power 60 kW
Height 413 m
Facility ID 41232
Transmitter coordinates Coordinates: 36°08′28″N 86°51′44″W / 36.1412°N 86.8623°W / 36.1412; -86.8623 36°08′28″N 86°51′57″W / 36.1410°N 86.8657°W / 36.1410; -86.8657
Website www.wsmv.com

WSMV-TV, virtual channel 4, is the NBC-affiliated television station serving the Nashville, Tennessee area. It broadcasts its digital signal on VHF channel 10. Owned by Meredith Corporation, its transmitter and tower are located adjacent to its studios on Knob Road in west Nashville, south of Charlotte Pike. Current syndicated programming on WSMV includes The Dr. Oz Show, The Twilight Zone and Access Hollywood.

Contents

Digital programming

Channel Video Aspect Name Programming
4.1 1080i 16:9 WSMV-DT Main WSMV-TV programming / NBC
4.2 480i 4:3 WSMV-DT2 Currently on-air with no programming

WSMV previously aired programming from the NBC-owned Spanish-language network, Telemundo, on its DT2 subcarrier,[1] since the Nashville DMA lacks a Telemundo affiliate of its own. The subchannel began airing in the summer of 2006, and was discontinued on December 31, 2010. WSMV management has indicated that programming on WSMV-DT2 will not be replaced, and that the subcarrier's spectrum will be used for non-OTA broadcast purposes. This move left the Nashville area with TeleFutura affiliate WLLC-LP channel 42 as its only Spanish-language outlet.

Analog-to-digital conversion

In 2009, WSMV-TV turned off its analog transmitter and remained on its pre-transition channel 10.[2][3] However, through the use of PSIP, digital television receivers display WSMV-TV's virtual channel as 4.

History

Early years

WSMV began broadcasting as WSM-TV on September 30, 1950 at 1:10 p.m. It was Nashville's first television station and the second in Tennessee, behind WMCT (now WMC-TV, also an NBC affiliate) in Memphis. It was owned by the locally-based National Life and Accident Insurance Company along with WSM radio (650 AM & 95.5 FM); the AM station is renowned for broadcasts of the country music show "The Grand Ole Opry," which has been heard since 1925. The stations took its callsign from their parent's slogan, "We Shield Millions."

The television station has been an NBC affiliate from the very first day, though it also carried some programming from CBS, DuMont, and ABC. Affiliation with CBS ended in 1953 when WSIX-TV channel 8 (now WKRN-TV channel 2) signed on as a CBS primary affiliate. WSM shared ABC programming with WSIX-TV for a year until WLAC-TV channel 5 (now WTVF-TV) signed on as the CBS primary affiliate, leaving WSIX-TV as the ABC affiliate. Before the advent of satellite delivery, network programming was delivered to WSM-TV by microwave transmission from WAVE in Louisville, Kentucky.

Growth, 1960s and 1970s

WSM-TV originally was headquartered in south Nashville at 15th Avenue South and Compton Avenue, near the present Belmont University. In 1957, the station attempted to a build a larger tower in west Nashville near Charlotte Avenue. During the construction process, the new tower's supporting wires failed. This caused the tower to collapse, which took the lives of several people. Afterward WSM-TV purchased its present property on Knob Road (farther west of the previous site) and built a tower there in a forested section away from potential damage to life and property.

WSM-TV shared its broadcast facilities with new public station WDCN-TV channel 2 (now WNPT-TV channel 8) beginning in 1962. In 1963, NL&AI built new studios for WSM-AM-FM-TV adjacent to the transmission tower on Knob Road. This left WDCN as the sole occupant of the south Nashville building, where that station remained until 1976. In 1974, NL&AI reorganized itself as a holding company, NLT Corporation, with the WSM stations as a major subsidiary.

The WSM stations' close ties to Nashville's country music business has meant that the Knob Road facility and/or its personnel was, from time to time, used for the recording of network and syndicated programs featuring Nashville-based performers. This was especially the case during the 1960s and 1970s. Most if not all of these shows were packaged by Show Biz, Inc., headquartered in Nashville and a subsidiary of Holiday Inn. Show Biz, Inc. produced The Porter Wagoner Show, That Nashville Music, The Bill Anderson Show, and several other programs seen throughout the U.S., especially on stations in the Southern and rural Midwestern U.S. The company dissolved in the late 1970s when its president, Jane Grams, became vice president and general manager of WTVC-TV in Chattanooga, Tennessee. However, the Show Biz programs were seen on some stations well into the early 1980s.

Ownership changes since 1981

NLT was taken over by American General, a Houston-based insurer, in 1980. The new owners were not interested in NLT's non-insurance businesses, and opted to sell off WSM-AM-FM-TV, the Opry and Opryland USA. Gaylord Entertainment Company bought the Opry, Opryland USA and WSM-AM-FM. Gaylord would have bought WSM-TV as well, but was already at the Federal Communications Commission's television ownership limit at the time; the FCC has since practically abandoned such restrictions. Instead, Gillett Broadcasting (property of George N. Gillett Jr.) bought WSM-TV on November 3, 1981 and changed the callsign to WSMV, in order to trade on the well-known WSM identity while at the same time separating it from its former radio sisters (later, the TV and radio stations would engage in news department cross promotions). Soon afterward, the radio stations moved out of the Knob Road facility into new studios at the Opryland Hotel. WSMV was later sold on June 8, 1989, to Cook Inlet Television Partners, an Alaska-based company which was a subsidiary of an Alaska Native Regional Corporation;[4] Cook Inlet, in turn, sold it on January 5, 1995 to Meredith Corporation, its present licensee.[5]

WSMV was not part of the affiliation deal between Meredith and CBS (however, two other Meredith stations, then-independent KPHO-TV in Phoenix, Arizona and then-NBC affiliate WNEM-TV in Saginaw, Michigan, were) because the purchase was announced more than one month after the affiliation deal had been finalized. As a result, WSMV became the only NBC affiliate in Meredith's present-day station group.

Past staff and programs

The station's former staff include Pat Sajak (announcer and weekend weatherman from 1974 to 1977), Robin Roberts (sports anchor and reporter from 1986 to 1988), John Tesh (news anchor in 1975-1976), John Seigenthaler, Jr. (weekend anchor in the late 1980s) and Huell Howser (features reporter in the 1970s).

Ralph Emery, the longtime country music disc jockey on WSM-AM for many years, hosted morning (and at times, afternoon) shows on WSM(V) from the mid-1960s until the early 1990s; for much of that time, they were the highest-rated locally-produced early morning shows on American television. They featured performances by prominent country stars like Tex Ritter and current star Lorrie Morgan; also, the studio band consisted of top-notch Music Row session musicians.

Larry Munson, WSM-TV's sports director from 1956 until 1967 and later known as the play-by-play announcer for radio broadcasts of Georgia Bulldogs football, created and hosted a long-running hunting and fishing show called The Rod & Gun Club. Paul Eells replaced Munson as sports director in 1967. Like his predecessor, Eells served as the voice of the Vanderbilt Commodores football team during his time at WSM. Eells left to become the sports director at KATV in Little Rock, Arkansas in 1978. There, he also served as radio play-by-play announcer for the Arkansas Razorbacks for 28 years until his death in 2006.

Dan Miller was co-anchor of the main evening newscasts for nearly 40 years, except from August 1986 until March 1995. During this period, Miller spent time in Los Angeles as a news anchor at KCBS-TV, and as sidekick to friend and former WSMV colleague Pat Sajak on his short-lived late-night talk show The Pat Sajak Show. Miller returned to WSMV in 1992 to host 5 O'Clock with Dan Miller , which ran from 1992-93. Miller returned to anchoring duties for the evening newscasts in March 1995, continuing until his death in 2009. Miller died unexpectedly of a heart attack on April 8, 2009, while visiting The Masters golf tournament in his hometown of Augusta, Georgia.[6]

In 1974, Bill Hall, an African-American, joined the staff as a weather reporter. He briefly worked as a week-end news anchor in 1976 before moving into his role leading the weather team in 1977. His unique style and personality made him one of Middle Tennessee's most well known local television personalities. He punctuated his weather discussions with comments about gardening, cooking, and hunting and fishing. During his WSM-WSMV career, Hall also hosted Land and Lakes, an outdoors show focusing on local hunting and fishing adventures. He retired in 2005.[7] [8] [9]

Recent events

Early in 2006, WSMV attracted some attention by becoming the largest-market NBC affiliate to refuse to carry the controversial NBC show The Book of Daniel on its programming schedule, after the premiere episode. This action, along with that of several smaller affiliates in the Midwest and South, prompted NBC to cancel the series after only three episodes.

In early March 2009, it was announced that WSMV's master control operations would be hubbed at WGCL-TV in Atlanta, another Meredith station. The new hub operation is expected to launch in summer 2009.

News operation

Beginning in the mid-1970s, WSM-TV developed a strong news division that, in the 1980s, won numerous regional and national awards (Peabody Awards among them) for in-depth and investigative reporting. Mike Kettenring was the news director for much of that period.

In recent times, WSMV has alternated with WTVF for first place in the Nashville ratings. Generally speaking, the station takes a softer approach to news than WTVF. The reverse was true in the 1980s, as WSMV earned awards for hard-hitting investigative stories, while WTVF took a more cautious approach. While WTVF usually leads the way in the city of Nashville itself, WSMV generally leads in Nashville's more conservative suburbs, as well as outlying rural parts of the market, many of whose residents recall readily the station's past association with WSM-AM.

In September 1973, WSM/WSMV decided to fill the 6:30-7 p.m. time slot opened up by the Prime Time Access Rule in 1971 by expanding its 6 p.m. newscast. This has proven so successful that to this day WSMV programs a newscast from 6 p.m. to 7 p.m. (although it is now broken up into two 30-minute segments). Upon the success of the WSM/WSMV expanded 6 p.m. newscast (and after years of low-rated syndicated offerings in the 6:30 slot), WTVF followed suit in 1989 by expanding its 6 p.m. newscast to one hour length. WSMV and WTVF are among the very few stations in the Central Time Zone to run news at 6:30 presently (stations elsewhere have attempted it since the 1970s with varying degrees of success). WKRN is the only traditional network affiliate in the Nashville market to run only a half hour of news at 6 p.m., with Wheel of Fortune (hosted by former WSM personality Pat Sajak) airing at 6:30.

During the May sweeps period that began on April 26, 2007, WSMV debuted its own live news helicopter known as Air 4, becoming the second station in Nashville to do so (WTVF's news helicopter Sky 5 debuted a year earlier, in 2006). On September 15, 2008, beginning with the 5:00 p.m. newscast, WSMV became the second Nashville station (behind WTVF) to broadcast local news in High Definition.

On May 26, 2011, WSMV debuted an hour-long 4 p.m. newscast, serving as a replacement for The Oprah Winfrey Show, which ended its 25-year run the day before; as a result of this addition, along with other non-news local programming such as More at Midday and Better Nashville, WSMV no longer has enough hours of syndicated daytime programming to back up its strong news programming outside of NBC network programming.[10]

On March 5, 1973, the Vanderbilt Television News Archive recorded off the air of WSM-TV a special broadcast of The Today Show aimed toward veterans of the Vietnam War returning home to the U.S[11]. Two months later, on May 1, another broadcast of Today was recorded concerning the Watergate scandal[12]. On both of these broadcasts, Pat Sajak, who had recently joined the WSM radio and TV staff, anchored the five-minute cut-in local newscasts. As it was not the general policy of the Archive to record special programs such as these or local Nashville programming, these probably represent the only known broadcasts of WSM-TV news available for public viewing, prior to the widespread popularity of video cassette recorders in the late 1970s. Because of the equipment at the time, though, the broadcasts were recorded in black and white.

The Archive, prior to the advent of satellite technology in the 1980s, taped all NBC News broadcasts from the airwaves of WSM/WSMV.

News/station presentation

Newscast titles

  • Views of The News (1950s)
  • Dateline Nashville (late 1950s)
  • Dateline Today (6 p.m. newscast)/The Ten O'Clock News (10 p.m. newscast; 1960s–1970)
  • Channel 4 News (1970–present)[13]
  • The Scene at 6 (6 p.m. newscast)/The Scene at 10 (10 p.m. newscast; 1970–2001)[14][15]
  • The Channel 4 News (1993–2001)[16]

Station slogans

  • King 4 (1960–1961)
  • It's The Time of Your Life on WSM-TV (1965)
  • Color 4 (1966–1968)
  • Have a Ball This Fall on Color 4 (Fall 1966)
  • Today's News is History Tomorrow (1969–1970)
  • Nashville's Total News is on Channel 4 (1970–1971)
  • Channel 4 News is On the Scene (1971–1972)
  • The #1 News Team in Nashville (1972–1973)
  • Hour Team/No. 1 NeWSMen (1973–1975)
  • First Team for Hour News (1977–1978)
  • 4 Country (1978–1980)
  • We're 4 (1980–1981; used during period station used "We're 4" by Klein &)
  • Hello Nashville, Channel 4 Loves You (1981–1989; used during period station used Frank Gari's "Hello News")[17]
  • Hello, Nashville! Be There! (1983–1984; localized version of NBC's "Be There" campaign)
  • 4 The Family (1985–1993)
  • Say Hello (1991–1992; used during period station used Frank Gari's "Hello News")
  • THE Channel 4 News (1993–1997)
  • Working 4 You (1996–2002 and 2005–2009)
  • Coverage You Can Count On (2002–2005)
  • Working For You in High Definition (2009–present)
Television.svg This film, television or video-related list is incomplete; you can help by expanding it with reliably sourced additions.

News team

Current on-air staff[18] (as of October 8, 2011)

Anchors

  • Alan Frio - Saturdays at 6, Sundays at 5 and weekends at 10 p.m.
  • Jennifer Johnson - weekdays at 4 and 4:30 p.m., and weeknights at 6:30 p.m.
  • Demetria Kalodimos - weekdays at 4, and weeknights at 5, 6 and 10 p.m.
  • Jonathan Martin - weekend mornings Channel 4 News Today
  • Tom Randles - weeknights at 5, 6, 6:30 and 10 p.m.
  • Ian Reitz - weekday mornings Channel 4 News Today (4-7 a.m.)
  • Holly Thompson - weekday mornings Channel 4 News Today (4-7 a.m.) and weekdays at noon

Channel 4 Pinpoint Weather Team

  • Lisa Spencer (AMS Certified Broadcast Meteorologist and NWA Seals of Approval) - chief meteorologist; weekdays at noon, and weeknights at 5 and 6 p.m.
  • Paul Heggen (AMS Seal of Approval) - meteorologist; weekday mornings Channel 4 News Today (4-7 a.m.)
  • Dan Thomas (AMS Certified Broadcast Meteorologist Seal of Approval) - meteorologist; weeknights at 4, 6:30 and 10 p.m.
  • Nancy Van Camp (AMS Certified Broadcast Meteorologist Seal of Approval) - meteorologist; weekend mornings, Saturdays at 6, Sundays at 5 and weekends at 10 p.m.

Sports team

  • Rudy Kalis - sports director; weeknights at 6 and 10 p.m.
  • Chris Harris - sports anchor; Saturdays at 6, Sundays at 5 and weekends at 10 p.m., also sports reporter

Reporters

  • Nancy Amons - general assignment, investigative ("I-Team") and technology reporter
  • Terry Bulger - Breakfast with Bulger and Bulger's Beat
  • Kimberly Curth - general assignment reporter
  • Josh DeVine - general assignment reporter
  • Dennis Ferrier - general assignment reporter
  • Jeremy Finley - investigative reporter ("I-Team")
  • Larry Flowers - Rutherford County reporter; also photographer
  • Carley Gordon - Clarksville reporter; also photographer
  • Jennifer Herron - weekday morning and afternoon traffic reporter
  • Cara Kumari - State Capitol reporter
  • Deanna Lambert - general assignment reporter
  • Caroline Moses - investigative reporter ("I-Team")
  • Regina Raccuglia - general assignment reporter
  • Forrest Sanders - Clarksville reporter; also photographer
  • Cynthia Williams - general assignment reporter

Notable former on-air staff

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

References

  1. ^ http://www.wsmv.com/tvlistings/index.html
  2. ^ "DTV Tentative Channel Designations for the First and Second Rounds". FCC.gov. http://hraunfoss.fcc.gov/edocs_public/attachmatch/DA-06-1082A2.pdf. Retrieved 2008-07-01. 
  3. ^ "DTV Transition Status Report". FCC.gov. 2008-02-04. http://fjallfoss.fcc.gov/cgi-bin/ws.exe/prod/cdbs/forms/prod/cdbsmenu.hts?context=25&appn=101231951&formid=387&fac_num=41232. Retrieved 2008-07-01. 
  4. ^ THE MEDIA BUSINESS; WSMV-TV Is to Be Sold, The New York Times, February 10, 1989.
  5. ^ Company News; Meredith to Acquire TV Station from Cook Inlet, The New York Times, August 20, 1994.
  6. ^ WSMV notice of Dan Miller's death
  7. ^ "RESOLUTION NO. RS2006-1126". COUNCIL OF THE METROPOLITAN GOVERNMENT OF NASHVILLE AND DAVIDSON COUNTY. January 9, 2006. http://www.nashville.gov/mc/resolutions/term_2003_2007/rs2006_1126.htm. Retrieved 20 May 2011. 
  8. ^ Duke, Jan (29 November 2005). "Nashville's Favorite Weatherman, Bill Hall is Retiring From Channel 4 this Week". About.com Nashville. http://nashville.about.com/b/2005/11/29/nashvilles-favorite-weatherman-bill-hall-is-retiring-from-channel-4-this-week.htm. Retrieved 20 May 2011. 
  9. ^ "Bill Hall hangs up his weather hat". Nashville City Paper. 30 November 2005. http://nashvillecitypaper.com/content/city-news/bill-hall-hangs-his-weather-hat. Retrieved 20 May 2011. 
  10. ^ Channel 4 News at 4:00 Starts Today
  11. ^ http://tvnews.vanderbilt.edu/diglib-fulldisplay.pl?SID=20111027341766357&code=tvn&RC=659421&Row=23
  12. ^ http://tvnews.vanderbilt.edu/diglib-fulldisplay.pl?SID=20111027341766357&code=tvn&RC=659422&Row=22
  13. ^ WSMV 2008 News Open (10pm) [720p Test]
  14. ^ WSM Scene At Six Open 1976
  15. ^ WSMV "The Channel 4 News"-The Scene at 10 Open 1994
  16. ^ WSMV Channel 4 news 10pm open Nov 1996-Aug 1997
  17. ^ WSMV NBC-4 Hello Nashville Campaign promo (1994)
  18. ^ Meet The News Team, WSMV.com. Retrieved 10-8-2011.

External links


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