Diemazz

t844t
Category:712 deaths
WUSN
Abyss (computer game)
Ciboney
Image:Flag of Kyrgyzstan svg
Death row
Bauru (sandwich)
WVUE
The Abyss (Entourage)
Czech people
Sergey Lavrov
Qinhuangdao
Mark Holton
Boustani
Calorie restriction
WRKI
WROU
TechTV
Walkden
Buhl Building
Darren McMullen
Central Asian music
Nestorian Schism
Aman Verma
WWRM
Stratton Oakmont
Kevin Spirtas
Assebroek
69 eyes
Miwa,
WRXQ
Erika Christensen
Tiempagora
WWLP
Alcohol tolerance
Li Jiongxiu
Ekadasi
Alulim
Abyss Web Server
Wei Daijia
Delphic Hymns
Aven Amentza
WYCR


WTEN / WCDC-TV
Image:WTEN.png

WTEN: Albany / Schenectady / Troy, New York
WCDC: Adams / Pittsfield, Massachusetts
Branding WTEN (general)
News 10 (newscasts)
RTN 10 (on DT3)
Slogan The News Station
Channels Analog:
WTEN: 10 (VHF)
WCDC: 19 (UHF)

Digital:
WTEN: 26 (UHF)
WCDC: 36 (UHF)

Translators W04AE Herkimer
Affiliations ABC
Local WX (on WTEN-DT2)
RTN (on WTEN-DT3)
Owner Young Broadcasting
(Young Broadcasting of Albany, Inc.)
First air date WTEN: October 14, 1953
WCDC: February 5, 1954
Call letters’ meaning WTEN: channel TEN (10)
WCDC: derived from WTEN's former callsign WCDA
Former callsigns WTEN:
WROW-TV (1954-1957)
WCDA (1957-1960)
WCDC:
WMGT (1954-1957)
Former channel number(s) WTEN: 41 (1954-1957)
WCDC: 74 (1954-1957)
Former affiliations WTEN:
CBS (1954-1977)
WCDC:
DuMont (secondary, 1954-1956)
CBS (1954-1977)
Transmitter Power WTEN:
316 kW (analog)
700 kW (digital)
WCDC:
447 kW (analog)
48 kW (digital)
Height WTEN:
305 m (1,001 ft) (analog)
426 m (1,398 ft) (digital)
WCDC:
637 m (2,090 ft) (analog)
631 m (2,070 ft) (digital)
Facility ID WTEN: 74422
WCDC: 74419
Transmitter Coordinates WTEN:
42°38′14.2″N 73°59′53.4″W / 42.637278, -73.998167
WCDC:
42°38′13.7″N 73°10′6.2″W / 42.637139, -73.168389 (WCDC-TV)
Website wten.com

WTEN is the ABC-affiliated television station for the Capital District of New York State and western New England. Licensed to Albany, the station broadcasts an analog signal on VHF channel 10 and a digital signal on UHF channel 26. Its transmitter is located on Mount Pinnacle in New Scotland. WTEN operates a full-time satellite, WCDC-TV. Licensed to Adams, Massachusetts, this station broadcasts an analog signal on UHF channel 19 and a digital signal on UHF channel 36. WCDC's transmitter is located on Mount Greylock, the highest peak in Massachusetts. There is no on-air reference to the station but it is mentioned in WTEN's legal ID, EEO public file report, and on the "News 10 Storm Tracker Weather Channel".

WCDC's signal reliably covers the western half of Massachusetts, southern Vermont, northern Connecticut, and southwestern New Hampshire. The station, along with MyNetworkTV affiliate WNYA, can be considered rimshot signals into the Springfield / Holyoke, Massachusetts television market. Despite WCDC being located in Berkshire County, Massachusetts, Time Warner cable systems in the county carry WTEN's signal instead of WCDC¹. Owned by Young Broadcasting, the stations have studios on Northern Boulevard in Albany. Syndicated programming on WTEN and WCDC include: Wheel of Fortune, Jeopardy!, The Doctors, and Merv Griffin's Crosswords.

Contents

Digital TV & programming

WTEN's digital broadcast, in addition to its main signal on the first subchannel, offer two additional channels. On WTEN-DT2 and Time Warner digital cable channel 554 is the "News 10 Storm Tracker Weather Channel". The weather channel can also be seen via live streaming video on WTEN's website. On WTEN-DT3 and Time Warner digital cable channel 1897 is Equity Broadcasting's Retro Television Network which is known on-air as "RTN 10". WCDC's digital signal does not offer the 24-hour local weather channel or RTN. However, Time Warner digital cable systems around Berkshire County, Massachusetts offer them on the same channels..

Virtual
Channel
Physical
RF Channel
Video Aspect Programming
10.1 26.1 720p 16:9 main WTEN programming / ABC HD
10.2 26.2 480i 4:3 "News 10 Storm Tracker Weather Channel" (24-hour local weather channel)
10.3 26.3 480i 4:3 "RTN 10"

In 2009, WTEN and WCDC will remain on their respective, pre-transition channel numbers (26 and 36).[1] [2] [3] Through the use of PSIP, digital television receivers will display virtual channels for both stations corresponding to their present analog channel numbers.

History

WTEN began broadcasting on October 14, 1953 as WROW-TV from a temporary 100-foot (30 m) mast which limited its signal to the immediate Albany/Schenectady/Troy area. It went to full power and a permanent antenna tower a few months later. The station was initially a CBS affiliate broadcasting on channel 41. It was owned by Hudson Valley Broadcasting Company along with WROW-AM.

Before WROW-TV went on the air, stations' owners brought a run down building located outside of Troy's city limits for their fledging stations. It was once a retirement home for Nuns from The Sisters of St. Joseph of Carondelet.

A year later in 1954, WROW-TV was operating in the red and was losing money, prompted the company's original owners to sell its controlling stake in Hudson Valley Broadcasting to a New York City based investors led by legendary radio broadcaster/author Lowell Thomas and his manager/business partner Frank Smith whom he later, became President of Hudson Valley Broadcasting.

Following the takeover, Smith recruited a young 29 year-old product manager from Lever Brothers named Thomas S. Murphy, to run WROW-TV and WROW-AM radio as it's first Station Manager. Despite of not having any broadcast experience, Murphy's leadership and his conservative financial restraint help bring WROW-TV to profitability 3 years later in 1957.

In the spring of 1956, its call letters were changed to WCDA when it opened satellite station WCDB on channel 29 in nearby Hagaman, to reach areas which the channel 41 signal couldn't reach[4]. The calls were changed again to the current WTEN in 1957, when the station moved to Channel 10 and the WCDB satellite was discontinued. In December 1957, Hudson Valley Broadcasting merged with Durham Broadcasting, owners of WTVD in Durham, North Carolina to form Capital Cities Television Corporation (predessor of Capital Cities Communications which WTEN was it's flagship station at the time.

In 1966, WTEN and WROW-AM/FM moved to its new state-of-art boadcasting facility on the north-side of Albany on Northern Boulevard which WTEN remains to this day (WROW AM-FM moved out of the facility in 1993). A year later, it's old studio in Troy was burned down by arson fire.

In 1968, Capital Cities sold the original three stations of the group (WTEN, WPRO-TV in Providence, Rhode Island and WJRT-TV in Flint, Michigan) to Poole Broadcasting. Nine years later, Poole sold WTEN, WJRT, and WPRO (now WPRI-TV) to Knight-Ridder. The new owner signed an affiliation deal with ABC which resulted in WTEN swapping affiliations with WAST (now WNYT) to become the market's ABC affiliate. Young Broadcasting bought WTEN and its sister station WKRN-TV in Nashville from Knight-Ridder upon the latter's exit from broadcasting.

WTEN signed on its digital signal on UHF channel 26 in 2004 and began offering high-definition service. WTEN's HDTV signal can also be seen on Time Warner digital cable channel 1810.

On October 1, 2007, station owner Young Broadcasting launched Equity Broadcasting's Retro Television Network on WTEN's DT3 digital subchannel. This launch is part of a test of the network with sister stations WBAY in Green Bay, Wisconsin and KRON in San Francisco. The network features classic sitcoms and dramas. It remains to be seen if this channel will be offered on Time Warner digital cable systems in the Capital District and / or Berkshire County (MA).

In an effort to cut costs, Young Broadcasting eliminated 10 positions from WTEN on January 31, 2008, fueling speculations that the company might sell the station in order to pay down its financial debt.

WCDC

WCDC began broadcasting on February 5, 1954 as WMGT (Mount Greylock Television) on channel 74 as an independent station, affiliated with the DuMont network. The tower location on Mount Greylock helped WMGT serve first as the market's secondary affiliate of DuMont and later as a major boost to WCDA.

In December 1954, WMGT moved to channel 19, extending the station's range to the New York Capital Region. In February 1956, the station was forced off the air when a storm damaged its transmitting tower.[5] When it returned to the air in 1957, the call letters were changed to the current WCDC and the station had become a relay of WCDA in Albany. The WCDC call letters were derived from WTEN's former calls WCDA and its Hagaman relay, WCDB. The WMGT call sign has been used on the NBC affiliate in Macon, GA on Channel 41 since 1983.

WCDC's digital signal on UHF channel 36 signed on nearly 18 months before WTEN's did. However, it not upgrade to high-definition programming until WTEN-DT signed on. WCDC's digital signal is currently not offered on Time Warner digital cable systems in Berkshire County (MA).

WCDB

Prior to WCDA's move to channel 10, a second satellite was operated by WCDA located on channel 29 in the Montgomery County village of Hagaman. The station, with the call letters of WCDB, signed off the air in 1959 after the WCDA move rendered WCDB superfluous (even though it did provide some primary CBS coverage to Utica). The WCDB calls would return to the air in 1978 and serve the student-run radio station at the University at Albany.

News operation

WTEN's nightly 6 o'clock news open.

For many years, WRGB had the leading local news production in the Capital Region followed by WNYT and WTEN. In 1993, WRGB was quickly eclipsed by WNYT. Since then, WTEN has consistently ranked third in the ratings. For a period in the early-2000s, WTEN passed WRGB. In 2005, WTEN launched a 24-hour local weather channel on its second digital subchannel known as the "News 10 Storm Tracker Weather Channel". WTEN's regional weather radar is known as "News 10 Storm Tracker HD Doppler".

Newscast titles

News team

Anchors
(in alphabetical order)

Personality Position WTEN Since
Steve Ammerman News 10 at 5, 6, and 11pm 1997
Christina Arangio News 10 at 5:30 and 11pm 2007
Mark O'Brien News 10 in the Morning 2007
Elisa Streeter News 10 at 5, 5:30, and 6pm 1989
Anya Tucker News 10 at 6 and 11pm (weekends) 2005

Storm Tracker 10 Meteorologists
(in order of rank)

Personality Position WTEN Since
Steve Caporizzo News 10 at 5, 5:30, 6, and 11pm (Chief Meteorologist) /Host of: "Pet Connection" specials seen six times a year 1989
Andy Gregorio News10 in the Morning 1997
Katie Virtue News10 at 6 and 11pm (weekends), News10 at Noon 2005


Sports

Personality Position WTEN Since
Jamie Seh News10 at 6 and 11pm/Host of: Friday Night Frenzy 2006

Reporters
(in alphabetical order)

Personality Position WTEN Since
Eric Egan General Assignment Reporter 2007
Demetra Ganias General Assignment Reporter 2006
John McLoughlin General Assignment Reporter/Managing Editor (since 2003) 1972
Jeff Stoecker General Assignment Reporter 2005
Latricia Thomas General Assignment Reporter 2005

Past personalities

WTEN and WCDC's "News 10 Storm Tracker Weather Channel".

Anchors

  • Angela Hampton (6:00/11:00 p.m. anchor, 1995-1997) Now 6:00/11:00 p.m. anchor at WTVD in Raleigh-Durham, N.C.
  • Cary Berglund (Weekend/Noon anchor, 1986-1989) now at KNBC in Los Angeles)
  • Jim Brennan (6:00/11:00 p.m. anchor, 1991-2000) now hosts "New York Week in Review", aired on PBS stations across New York state
  • Greg Floyd - Weekend anchor in the mid 1980's until leaving for WTZA in Kingston, then resurfacing at WXXA and WRGB
  • Marci Elliott (Co-Weeknight News Anchor with Dick Wood, 1980-1989) Now lives in Florida doing freelance commercials, voice overs and acting.
  • Cynthia Fodor (6:00/11:00 p.m. anchor, ?-1990's) Now at KCCI in Des Moines, Iowa and serves as Mid-West Bureau Chief for the nationally-syndicated travel magazine radio show, "The Travel Hour with Stephen Pickford and Friends" (formerly the Travel World Radio Show)
  • Dori Marlin (Morning anchor, 2005-2008) left for evening news spots on WRGB in 2008[6]).
  • Beth McKay (weekday anchor, 1990-1995) Left for KXAS in Dallas; she retired to become a full-time mom.
  • Terry McSweeney (6:00/11:00 p.m. anchor from 2000-2006, 5:00 p.m. anchor 2002-2006); now a freelance reporter at KGO-TV in San Francisco, California)
  • Sue Nigra (News Anchor in the 1990s) Sued the station to get out the contract to work for WRGB.
  • Ryan Nobles (Weekday morning anchor from 2003-2005, Currently Anchor at WWBT in Richmond, Virginia)
  • Mary Caroline Powers (Co-anchored the noon news for many years with Ralph Vartigan. Worked at WRGB during the 1970s and later worked in public television and as an editor at The Saratogian newspaper
  • Sharman Sachetti (Former morning anchor) - as of 2005 a reporter at WFXT in Boston
  • Robin Schwartz, anchor and reporter (Early 1990s-1998), now at WJBK in Detroit
  • Mai Shiozaki (Former freelance morning anchor - was press secretary for National Organization for Women)
  • Alyssa Van Wie (weekend morning anchor 2004-2008)
  • Bruce Williamson - News Anchor Early 60's and early 70's. Became News Director until 1979. (deceased)
  • Dick Wood (Main anchor from 1973-1991), as of 2006 hosts a jazz show on WABY Moon Radio

Meteorologists

  • Bob Gordon (Weatherman during the late 1960s and 1970s) Preceded Bob Kovachick; currently doing infomericals and voice-over commercials.
  • John Guaraldi (meteorologist, 1981-c. mid-90s) Now meteorologist at WPLG-TV in Miami
  • Bob Kovachick (chief meteorologist at WTEN, April 1977-1986) Now at WNYT, was the first credentialed meteorologist in the Albany market)
  • Jeff Smith (Weekend meteorologist 2004-January 2007, now weekend mornings at WABC-TV in New York City)

Sports

  • Bob McNamara (Sports Reporter) early to late 60's before moving to WRGB sometime in early 70's and later to WNYT in the 80's and early 90's (retired)
  • Dan Murphy (Sports Director from 1992-2005 and previously weekend sports), later host of "Murphy's Law" on WOFX radio; now seen on WNYA My 4 Albany).
  • Rip Rowan (Sports anchor from 1968-86) later worked for the Albany-Colonie Yankees AA farm team)
  • Brian Sinkoff (sports director 2005-2008) now host of Sound Off with Sinkoff on WTMM-FM
  • John Spadafora (Weekend sports anchor from 1992-2005) now heads communications for the Albany-Colonie Chamber of Commerce)

Reporters

  • Ken Chenault (Reporter, 1985?-1988) Recently worked for WNYW in New York in the early 90's).
  • Renee Chenault (Fattah) (Reporter, 1985?-1988) Recently worked for KYW-TV in Philadelphia before working for crosstown rival station WCAU.
  • Alfreida Graves (Reporter) she was station's first African-American reporter in the early 1970s. She sued WTEN in 1976 in a lawsuit claiming racial bias. The case was reportedly settled out of court. (Whereabouts Unknown).
  • Doug Myers (Reporter and Producer, 1971-1989) Also did morning and weekend news anchoring. Previously, a radio news reporter for WPTR in the late 60's, now communications director for the Albany International Airport.
  • Dick (Hill) McCarthy, (anchor, 1970s, later in communications for New York state. WABY did sports reports
  • Walt McClure (key reporter from 1999-2005) now in the same role at WXXA-TV)
  • Scott Patterson (reporter, 2001-2005), now weekend anchor at KPTM in Omaha, Nebraska)
  • Beth Nichols (Reporter in mid 80's to 1989) among the casualties of mass firings when station changed ownership in 1989.
  • Susan Raff (former business reporter), has been with WFSB since 1995
  • Richard Reingold, (reporter, early 70s, was president and general manager of WUSA-TV, Washington, DC)
  • Richard Roth, (reporter, early 70s, is a CBS News correspondent based in London)
  • Herb Starr (reporter, weekend anchor, 1970-1975) communications director for NY Lieutenant Governor; corporate media advisor. Now a private investor)
  • Vic Vetters (General assignment reporter); now general manager of WKTV in Utica, as well as the latter position WFFF-TV/WVNY in Burlington, Vermont
  • Dick Williams, (reporter-weekend anchor, early 70s, hosts WAGA-TV (FOX 5)'s Georgia Gang in Atlanta)

Miscellaneous

  • Dan Burke (Station manager) 1960-66 became President and CEO of CapCities/ABC before retiring in 1995.
  • Ted Knight (1923-1986) From 1955, he hosted a kids variety show playing 'Windy Knight; was the announcer of 'The Early Movie' show and was a DJ for WROW Radio. Left for Hollywood in 1957.(deceased)
  • George Leighton - (Chief announcer for WTEN - 1950 to 1989) Nicknamed 'The Voice of God'; also was known as 'The Old Skipper' on The Good Ship News - an early morining show for children (1958 - 1968). (deceased March 2000)
  • Thomas S. Murphy (Station Manager of WROW-TV and radio, 1954 - 1960) Rose through the ranks of CapCities until 1966, when he was named Chairman and CEO of the company.
  • John Stewart (Musso)- Co host 'Dialing for Dollars' with Vartigan in the mid to late 60's (retired)
  • Ralph Vartigan (Longtime host of the children's program "The Good Ship News as 'Commander Ralph' and "Young People's News" in the late 70's as 'Mr. Vartigan'; hosted "Dialing for Dollars" and later co-anchor of the noon news)

References

  1. ^ http://hraunfoss.fcc.gov/edocs_public/attachmatch/DA-06-1082A2.pdf.
  2. ^ CDBS Print
  3. ^ CDBS Print
  4. ^ Albany Times-Union, April 22, 1956, page H-4
  5. ^ Albany Times Union, 22 April 1956, Page H-4
  6. ^ http://blogs.timesunion.com/business/?p=5221

¹ - WTEN cable carriage information courtesy Time Warner cable engineering staff, Pittsfield, MA

External links


search:

Site Map: RSS 2.0

Recent Searches: WTEN
Extended harmony
File:Emperor Jimmu jpg
17th century denominations in England
Everlasting Gobstopper
Wars of In Laws II
Evergreen (disambiguation)
Grammy Award for Best Jazz Vocal Performance, Male
Eunomius
PAYD

Related Pages:
"wten weather"
"wten albany"
"wten news"
"wten 10"
"wten albany ny"
"wrgb news channel 6 wten"
"wten albany ny lottery"