WCGV-TV
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| WCGV-TV | |
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| Milwaukee, Wisconsin | |
| Branding | My 24 |
| Channels | Analog: 24 (UHF) Digital: 25 (UHF) |
| Affiliations | My Network TV |
| Owner | Sinclair Broadcast Group (officially WCGV-TV, Inc.) |
| Founded | March 24, 1980 |
| Call letters meaning | Wisconsin's Choice for Great Viewing |
| Former affiliations | Independent (1980-1986), (January 1998-August 1998) Fox (1986-1994), UPN (1995-1998, August 1998-September 2006) CBS & NBC (secondary, 1981-1995) The Tube (March-December 2006 on DT2) |
| Website | ThatTVWebsite.com (combined site for WVTV/WCGV) |
WCGV-TV (Channel 24) is a television station located in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, affiliated with MyNetworkTV. Its signal covers most of southeastern Wisconsin, including the cities of Racine, Kenosha, Sheboygan and Waukesha. The station is owned by Sinclair Broadcast Group as part of a duopoly in Milwaukee with WVTV, and the station's transmitter site is on Milwaukee's northwest side.
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WCGV signed on the air on March 24, 1980. It was owned by B&F Broadcasting. At the time, it ran religious shows, old movies, cartoons, and drama shows during the day. At night, the station ran a pay-TV service called SelecTV, a premium movie service whose programming was scambled over the air; subscribers needed to buy a converter box to see first-run movies or, on Friday nights, adult programming from The Playboy Channel.
However, as cable TV became widespread, WCGV dropped the pay TV service in 1983, and eventually became a more serious contender against now-sister station WVTV for the title of the area's leading independent station. The station was known simply as 'TV-24'. By then the station was owned by Arlington Broadcasting, which also owned WTTO Channel 21 Birmingham.
On March 15, 1987, WCGV joined Fox at the last minute after turning down the network offer in 1986, becoming 'Fox 24'. The station joined on the condition that it be allowed to pre-empt Joan Rivers' late night talk show. By 1988, the station scored a major coup by acquiring the air rights to the Milwaukee Brewers and the Milwaukee Bucks, both previously seen on now-sister station WVTV. At this time, the station was based in studios on N. 27th St. which were formerly the home of WITI (Channel 6) until WITI's move to newer studios in Brown Deer in 1978. In the late 1980's Arlington Broadcasting was sold and became known as HR (as in Hal Roach Studios, of Little Rascals/Our Gang fame) Broadcasting.
WCGV along with WTTO Birmingham came under the ownership of Abry in 1990. The station continued with the general entertainment format along with Fox shows. WCGV entered into a local marketing agreement with Gaylord's WVTV in 1994. The two stations also merged operations, and WCGV moved into WVTV's studios at N. 35th St. and Capitol Drive.
WITI-TV became the new Fox affiliate in 1994 as a result of a deal between its owner (New World Communications) and Fox. WCGV lost the Fox affiliation on December 1, 1994; however, it did not take the CBS affiliation dropped from WITI (which went to WDJT-TV), as the station would become a charter UPN affiliate in January 1995, following a pattern in which many former Fox affiliates in markets where New World owned a station decided to join either UPN or fellow upstart network WB. At this time the station was identified as "UPN 24", with a generic logo consisting of the station's call letters and channel number beneath the primary color UPN 'shapes' logo of that time.
In 1995, Abry would be acquired by Sinclair making them the owners of WCGV, WTTO, and other Abry stations. WVTV was purchased by Glencairn Corp. (which was owned by a former Sinclair executive). This arrangement, however, prompted Jesse Jackson and his Rainbow/PUSH coalition to bring forward litigation, citing their concerns on racial issues in the face of one entity holding two broadcast licenses in a market. (WVTV finally became fully owned by Sinclair in 2000, after the FCC overturned the rules that had prohibited duopolies.)
In January 1998, WCGV/Sinclair decided to drop the UPN affiliation over ratings and monetary matters, as did several other Sinclair stations in other markets when Sinclair signed a lucrative affiliation deal with The WB (which included WVTV) to shift several stations from UPN. For eight months, the station returned to being independent. However, it saw its ratings drop without the network. It also received complaints from vocal Star Trek fans who had to watch Voyager on stations from other markets or tape trade. Sinclair would then reverse its decision, and re-affiliated with UPN on August 4. Three months after reaquiring the UPN affiliation, WCGV made up for the pre-emptions by airing an all-day Voyager marathon, showing all 13 episodes missed over the last half of the 1997-98 season, with UPN's blessing. However, the station continued to omit the mention of UPN from its own branding, and called itself "Channel 24" until the beginning of the 2001-2002 TV season, when it readopted the "UPN 24" branding.
WITI was not interested in airing Fox Kids programming after it became a Fox station; therefore, Fox Kids continued to air on WCGV for ten years after the affiliation switch (which included the station continuing to maintain a Fox 24 Kids Club through most of these years). However, as time went on, WCGV began to use its own logo bug to cover all Fox logos, and advertise the block sparingly on UPN's behest (which had its own children's block airing on the station up until its end in 2003). The station declined to renew the children's block, now known as Fox Box/4Kids TV, after the fall of 2004, and subsequently 4Kids TV moved to independent WMLW (Channel 41), where it now airs Sunday mornings.
On March 2, 2006 Sinclair announced that Channel 24 was to be the Milwaukee affiliate for MyNetworkTV, which was created by Fox Television Stations Group in the wake of the January 24, 2006 announcement that the UPN and WB networks would cease operations in September 2006, and merge into one network, The CW. Sister station WVTV, the former WB affiliate, is Milwaukee's CW affiliate. This resulted in the Milwaukee duopoly becoming one of five My Network TV/CW duopolies owned and/or controlled by Sinclair; the other four are KVMY/KVCW in Las Vegas, Nevada, WABM/WTTO in Birmingham, Alabama, WUXP/WNAB in Nashville, Tennessee and WRDC/WLFL in Raleigh/Durham, North Carolina.
In the interim two weeks between the beginning of MyNetworkTV and UPN's end in early to mid-September, WCGV still showed select UPN programming on Sunday afternoons, airing Friday Night Smackdown, followed by Girlfriends, Everybody Hates Chris, All of Us from 12pm-5pm, all which were renewed by The CW and moved to Channel 18.
Currently, Channel 24's weekday schedule consists of mostly syndicated off-network sitcoms such as Frasier (in a long-time after primetime double run at 9pm), and The George Lopez Show, along with many former UPN and Fox sitcoms in their off-network runs. The Simpsons has been syndicated on the station since September 1994 (four months before the station lost Fox), and airs weeknights at 6pm and 10pm, followed by Family Guy in both timeslots. During daytime from 11am-2pm, Channel 24 airs Maury followed by The Jerry Springer Show (which has a weeknight midnight repeat), and Jerry spin-off The Steve Wilkos Show.
During the weekend, the station airs off-network dramas like 24, The Shield, and ER. On Sunday evenings, the one evening MyNetworkTV does not program, Channel 24 airs a syndicated film. The rest of the weekend features a variety of movies, sitcoms, dramas, and syndicated poker tournaments. The station had continued to air Milwaukee Bucks games, sharing rights with FSN Wisconsin until the end of the 2006-07 season, when the team became FSN-exclusive [1].
The station currently airs very little children's programming, with only Liberty's Kids carried on weekday mornings (one episode Monday-Thursdays, two on Friday, all at 7am) and Wild America on Saturday morning to fulfill minimum FCC educational/informational programming requirements. The station continues to sign off for 4 1/2 hours on early Monday mornings, most likely because Shepherd's Chapel, which airs their program on the station in the late night hours under a paid programming arrangement, only provides five shows a week, which air on Tuesday-Sunday mornings.
On June 28, 2007, Time Warner Cable began carrying WCGV's digital signal on their southeastern Wisconsin systems on Channel 524, along with WVTV on Channel 518, after Sinclair and Time Warner came to a compensation agreement for the stations [2]. Charter Communications, the other dominant cable provider in the area, came to a compensation agreement in April 2007, but has not announced when WCGV-DT and WVTV-DT will be added to their HD lineup.
On March 23, 2006, Sinclair announced that it would start multicasting The Tube onto the digital subcarriers of many of its stations across the country. The channel launched on WCGV's DT2 subchannel on June 15, 2006 [3]. On December 31st, The Tube was dropped by WCGV due to new E/I regulations put into effect by the FCC, and the network went out of business on October 1, 2007, probably from several factors including the dropping by Sinclair.
- WCGV is one of a few stations to have been affiliated with both News Corporation-owned networks, Fox and My Network TV.
- Official Station Website (shared with WVTV)
- History of Milwaukee television
- Query the FCC's TV station database for WCGV
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| Local television stations |
WTMJ 4 (NBC, WX+ on DT2) - WITI 6 (FOX) - WMKE-CA 7 (A1) - WMVS 10 (PBS/MPTV) - WISN 12 (ABC) - W16BS 16 (Silent) - WVTV 18 (The CW) - WCGV 24 (MNTV) - WVCY 30 (FN) - |
| Cable-only out-of-market stations | |
| Local cable television channels | |
| See also |
Broadcast television stations in Madison, Green Bay, Chicago and Grand Rapids, MI |
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WISC-DT 3.2/"My Madison TV" (Madison) - KBJR-DT 6.2 (Superior) - WKBT-DT 8.2 (La Crosse) - WCGV 24 (Milwaukee) - WACY 32 (Appleton/Green Bay) |
| See also: ABC, CBS, CW, Fox, NBC, PBS and Other stations in Wisconsin |
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Corporate Staff: David D. Smith (COB and President & CEO) · Frederick G. Smith · J. Duncan Smith · Robert E. Smnith · Daniel C. Keith · Martin R. Leader · Lawrence E. McCanna · Basil A. Thomas · David B. Amy · Lucy A. Rutishauser · Barry M. Faber · David R. Bochenek · Nat S. Ostroff · Donald H. Thompson · Thomas I. Waters III · Darren Shapiro · Gregg Siegel · Jeff Sleete · M. William Butler · Steven M. Marks · Delbert R. Parks III · Joe DeFeo |
| Annual Revenue: $1.24 billion USD (2004) · Employees: Unknown at this time. · Stock Symbol: NASDAQ: SBGI · Website: www.sbgi.net |
