Everything about Wnyw totally explained
» For the former shortwave radio station WNYW, see WNYW (shortwave); For its replacement, see WYFR:
For this and other stations that previously used the WNEW callsign, see WNEW.
WNYW, channel 5, is the
flagship television station of the
News Corporation-owned
Fox Broadcasting Company, located in
New York City. The station's transmitter is atop the
Empire State Building, and its studio facilities are in the
Yorkville section of
Manhattan. WNYW is a sister station to
Secaucus, New Jersey-based
WWOR-TV (channel 9), the New York area's
MyNetworkTV affiliate.
In the few areas of the eastern United States where viewers can't receive Fox network programs over-the-air, WNYW is available on satellite via
DirecTV, which also provides coverage of the station to
Latin American countries and on
JetBlue's
LiveTV inflight entertainment system. WNYW is also available on cable in the
Caribbean.
History
The station traces its history to 1938, when television set and equipment manufacturer
Allen B. DuMont founded
W2XVT (re-named as
W2XWV in 1944), an experimental station. On
May 2,
1944, the station received its commercial license — the third in New York City — as
WABD, after DuMont's initials. It was one of the few stations that continued broadcasting during
World War II, making it the fourth-oldest continuously broadcasting commercial station in the United States. The station originally broadcast on channel 4 (now occupied by
WNBC-TV) and moved to channel 5 on
December 15,
1945.
Soon after channel 5 received its commercial license, DuMont Laboratories began a series of experimental
coaxial cable hookups between WABD and W3XWT, a DuMont-owned experimental station in
Washington, D.C. (now
WTTG). These hookups were the beginning of the
DuMont Television Network, the world's first licensed commercial television network. DuMont began regular network service in 1946, with WABD as the flagship station. In 1954, WABD and DuMont moved into the $5 million DuMont Tele-Centre at 205 East 67th Street, inside the shell of the space formerly occupied by
Jacob Ruppert's Central Opera House. A half-century later, the station is still headquartered in the same building, which was later renamed the Metromedia Telecenter, and is known today as the Fox Television Center.
By February 1955, DuMont realized it couldn't continue in network television, and decided to shut down network operations and operate WABD and its Washington sister station, WTTG (also operating on channel 5), as independents. After DuMont aired its last network broadcast in August 1956, DuMont spun off WABD and WTTG as the "DuMont Broadcasting Corporation", which later changed its name to
Metropolitan Broadcasting Corporation. In 1958, Washington-based investor
John W. Kluge acquired controlling interest in Metropolitan Broadcasting, and installed himself as the company's chairman. WABD's operations were merged with Kluge's New York radio stations, WNEW (1130 kHz., now
WBBR) and WNEW-FM (102.7 MHz., now
WWFS), and channel 5's call letters were changed on
September 7,
1958 to
WNEW-TV to match its new radio sisters. Metropolitan Broadcasting would change its name to
Metromedia in 1961.
In the 1960s, WNEW-TV ran on a low budget like the other two major New York independents, WOR-TV (now WWOR-TV) and
WPIX. But in the late 1960s and early 1970s, channel 5 benefited from Metromedia's aggressiveness in acquiring movies, cartoons, and first-run syndicated shows, some of which (including
Wonderama) were produced by Metromedia. By the 1970s the station was New York's leading independent, and WNEW-TV was also popular in most of upstate New York, and portions of
New Jersey,
Connecticut, and eastern
Pennsylvania, where the station was available on cable until the late 1980s.
In 1986
Rupert Murdoch's
News Corporation, who owned a controlling interest in the
20th Century Fox film studio, purchased the Metromedia television stations, including WNEW-TV. The station's call letters were changed in March of that year to
WNYW, and it and the other Metromedia stations formed the cornerstone of the Fox network, with WNYW as the flagship station. Initially, WNYW's schedule changed little, as Fox only aired network programming on weekends.
Murdoch had one local obstacle to overcome before his purchase of channel 5 could become final. The News Corporation had been publishing the
New York Post since
1976, and
Federal Communications Commission rules of the time didn't allow common ownership of newspapers and broadcast licenses in the same city. Murdoch was granted a temporary waiver of this prohibition in order to complete the Metromedia television purchase. The News Corporation would sell the
Post in
1988, but reacquired the paper
five years later with a permanent waiver of the
cross-ownership rules.
Starting in the late summer of 1986, WNYW produced the nightly newsmagazine
A Current Affair, one of the first shows to be labeled under the tag "
tabloid television". Originally a local program, it was first anchored by
Maury Povich, formerly of WTTG (and who would later do double-duty, albeit briefly, on WNYW's newscasts as an anchor). Within months of its launch,
A Current Affair was on the other Fox-owned stations, and in 1988 the series went into national syndication, where it remained until its cancellation in 1996.
On
August 2,
1988, the station abruptly dropped the morning cartoons in favor of a morning newscast called
Good Day New York. WNYW became the first Fox-owned station with a weekday morning newscast, and within five years of its launch it became the top-rated morning show in the New York market. Today it remains a viable competitor to the network morning shows, and the success of
Good Day New York led to other Fox-owned stations launching morning shows of their own, including:
Fox Morning News on WTTG,
Fox News in the Morning on
WFLD-TV in
Chicago, and
Good Day L.A. on
KTTV in
Los Angeles.
As Fox continued to expand its primetime hours to an eventual seven nights by 1992, WNYW's schedule continued to feature children's programs from
Fox Kids during afternoons, and sitcoms in early evenings. As the decade progressed, the station added talk/reality shows and court shows during middays. From 1999 until 2001, WNYW was the broadcast home of the
New York Yankees, displacing long-time incumbent WPIX.
In 2001, Fox bought most of the television interests of
Chris-Craft Industries, including WNYW's former rival, WWOR-TV. In the fall of 2001, WNYW dropped the
Fox Kids weekday block and moved it to WWOR-TV, where it ran for a few more months before being cancelled at the end of the year. Some office functions have been merged, but most of the stations' operations remain separate. Fox announced plans to merge the two stations' operations in 2004, with WWOR-TV moving from its studios in
Secaucus, New Jersey to the Fox Television Center. However, it backed off later in the year under pressure from New Jersey's congressional delegation.
On
September 11, 2001, the transmitter facilities of WNYW as well as eight other local television stations and several radio stations were destroyed when two hijacked airplanes crashed into and destroyed the
World Trade Center towers. Since then, WNYW has been transmitting its signal from the
Empire State Building.
Digital television
The station's digital signal is multiplexed.
| Channel |
Programming |
| 5.1 / 44.1 |
main WNYW/Fox programming |
| 5.2 / 44.2 |
WWOR-TV/MyNetworkTV simulcast |
Post-analog shutdown
After the analog television shutdown and digital conversion, which is tentatively scheduled to take place on February 17, 2009, WNYW will remain on its current pre-transition channel number, 44. However, through the use of
PSIP, digital television receivers will display WNYW's
virtual channel as 5.
News
The station is home to one of America's longest-running primetime local newscasts.
The 10 O’Clock News (now
Fox 5 News at Ten) premiered on
March 13,
1967, as New York's first primetime newscast.
The 10 O'Clock News each night began with the simple, but now-famous announcement: "It's 10:00 p.m. ...
Do you know where your children are?" was used in this program first, and while its exact origins are unknown. Staff announcer
Tom Gregory was one of the first people to say this famous line. Other television stations in the country have adopted this for their own 10 p.m. (or 11 p.m.) slots (which may depend on the start of the local
youth curfew in each market). Celebrities were often used in the 1980s to read the slogan.
Another popular segment on
The 10 O'Clock News, starting in 1975 and continuing to 1985, were nightly
op-ed debates which pitted conservative Dr. Martin Abend against liberal Professor Sidney Offit. The debates were often shrill and frequently descended into acrimonious personal invective. In their tone, they were spoofed most famously on
Saturday Night Live in the "Point/Counterpoint" sketches of
Weekend Update, with
Dan Aykroyd in the Dr. Abend-type role and
Jane Curtin as the equivalent of Professor Offit.
WNYW also aired a 7:00 p.m. newscast from 1987 to 1993, known as
Fox News at Seven.
In August 1988, WNYW launched
Good Day New York, a program comparable to the
Today Show,
Good Morning America or
The Early Show. In 1991 a new and eventually very popular music package was composed for the show by
Edd Kalehoff, a New York composer who is best known for composing the themes and music cues for several game shows, notably
The Price is Right.
Since the Fox takeover, WNYW's newscasts have become more tabloid in style and has been fodder for jokes, even to the point of being parodied on
Saturday Night Live, and the consumer reporting segment
The Problem Solvers receiving the same treatment on
The Daily Show.
WNYW was portrayed in an episode of the Fox animated comedy
Futurama, titled "
When Aliens Attack", in which the station was accidentally knocked off the air by
Philip J. Fry in 1999. That resulted in angry Omicronians invading Earth in the year 3000 (having received the broadcast signal 1000 years later being 1000
light-years away) and demanding to see the end of a program which had been cut off for them.
In 2002, WNYW added a 90-minute block of newscasts from 5:00 to 6:30 p.m on weekdays, giving the station just under 40 hours of local news per week, which is the most of any television station in New York City. In 2004, two events occurred involving the WNYW news department. Longtime anchor
John Roland, a 35-year veteran of channel 5, retired from the station on June 4, 2004.
Len Cannon, a former
NBC News correspondent who had joined WNYW as a reporter and anchor some time earlier, was initially named as Roland's replacement. Then, several months later, veteran New York City anchorman
Ernie Anastos signed a multi-year contract with WNYW, despite the fact that he was at the time anchoring at
WCBS-TV.
The signing would displace Cannon as lead anchor, and shortly after it was announced, he asked for, and was granted, a release from contractual obligations with the station. Anastos joined WNYW in July 2005, and Cannon joined
KHOU-TV in
Houston as its lead anchor in the spring of 2006.
In areas of New Jersey where the New York and
Philadelphia markets overlap, both WNYW and sister station WWOR-TV share resources with Philadelphia sister station
WTXF-TV. The stations share reporters for these stories.
On
April 3,
2006, WNYW revamped their entire on-air appearance with a new set, new music, new graphics, and a new logo. The new graphics and logo package was later standardized for all of News Corp.'s Fox stations. Channel 5 is also one of the first Fox owned-and-operated stations to launch a
MyFox powered website, which features video, more detailed news, and new community features such as blogs and picture galleries.
As of May 2008, WNYW is one of the two stations in New York that has yet to start broadcasting local news and programming in
High Definition; the other one being
WWOR. WNYW and sister station WWOR have not yet announced plans to do so.
Current personalities
Anchors
Weather
Vanessa Alfano - substitute weather anchor
Craig Allen - weekend meteorologist
Nick Gregory - chief/weekday evening meteorologist
Melissa Magee - Fox 5 Live
Mike Woods - Good Day Wakeup and Good Day New York
Sports
Andy Rosa Adler - weeknights
Duke Castigione - weekends; co-anchors Sports Extra
Carl Reuter - reporter for Sports Extra/substitute sports anchor
Traffic
Ines Rosales - weekday traffic reporter
Carla Quinn - weeknight traffic reporter
Reporters
Notable alumni
Branding and station identity
The station is also known for starting the trend of stations using their network and channel number (or cable channel number) as their on-air name in the United States. After Fox bought the station, it began calling itself Fox Television Channel 5 New York. Soon after the Fox network premiered, the station shortened its on-air name to Fox Channel 5 and later shortened that to the current Fox 5. However, this practice dated in another form to its days as WNEW. For much of the time from at least the 1970s until the Fox takeover, its main ID was "WNEW-TV, channel 5, Metromedia New York."
In the early days after Fox took control, WNYW reporters would end their reports by saying "I'm (name) Fox News, Channel 5". This sign off would later be shortened to Fox News, then later it became Fox 5 News, as to avoid confusion with the Fox News Channel. Ironically, recent changes made to WNYW's logo and newscasts (effective April 2006) bear a close stylistic resemblance to the Fox News Channel.
Successful branding campaigns for WNEW-TV include the long-running "Choice" campaign. Well-known station jingles in the late 1970s and early 1980s included "Take Five!", "The Choice is Channel 5, Metromedia New York 5" and later, "Your Choice is 5."
Channel 5's public service announcements were also a key part of its image for decades. The phrase, It's 10:00 PM...Do you know where your children are? was coined in 1969, and variations of the phrase would spread to television stations nationwide. In addition, WNEW-TV, used PSAs during the 1970s and 1980s that aired during different day parts, such as "Have you done your homework yet?"; "Have you hugged your child today?"; and "It's 6 p.m do you know where your children are?", using a simple slide and staff voiceover.
In 2001, the slogan was "What New Yorkers Watch" derived from the call letters, and was used until the logo was changed in early 2006.
Newscast titles
The Face of the War (1944-1945)
TV5 Late Report (1945-1962)
24 Hours(1962-1967)
The 10 O'Clock News (March 13, 1967-January 21, 2001)
Channel 5 News (1980s)
Fox News (1987-96)
Fox 5 News (1996-present)
See also
DuMont Television Network
Metromedia
WBBR (1130 AM), the former WNEW radio
WTTG, WABD/WNEW-TV/WNYW's longtime sister station in Washington, D.C.
WWFS (102.7 FM), the former WNEW-FMFurther Information
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