KDKA-TV
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
| KDKA-TV | |
|---|---|
| Image:KdCBS 2.JPG | |
| Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
<tr><th style="vertical-align: top; text-align: right;">Branding</th><td style="text-align: left;">KDKA-TV or KDKA-TV 2</td></tr><tr><th style="vertical-align: top; text-align: right;">Slogan</th><td style="text-align: left;">Local News First</td></tr> | |
| Channels | 2 (VHF) analog, 25 (UHF) digital |
| Affiliations | CBS (secondary until 1955) |
| Owner | CBS Corporation |
| Founded | January 11, 1949
<tr><th style="vertical-align: top; text-align: right;">Call letters meaning</th><td style="text-align: left;">taken from sister radio station KDKA-AM</td></tr><tr><th style="vertical-align: top; text-align: right;">Former callsigns</th><td style="text-align: left;">WDTV (1949-55)</td></tr><tr><th style="vertical-align: top; text-align: right;">Former affiliations</th><td style="text-align: left;">DuMont (1949-55) (secondary, 1949-58)</td></tr> <tr><th style="vertical-align: top; text-align: right;">Website</th><td style="text-align: left;">www.kdka.com</td></tr> |
KDKA-TV is the CBS owned and operated (O&O) television station in Pittsburgh. It broadcasts its analog signal on VHF channel 2, and its digital signal on UHF channel 25 from its transmitter in Pittsburgh.
Contents |
[edit] History
[edit] As WDTV
The station went on the air on January 11, 1949 as WDTV (W DuMont TeleVision), owned and operated by the DuMont Television Network. It originally broadcast on channel 3, moving to channel 2 in 1952 to alleviate interference with WNBK in Cleveland (now WKYC-TV, which for several years was a sister station to KDKA-TV).
At the time, Pittsburgh was the sixth-largest market in the country (behind New York, Chicago, Los Angeles, Philadelphia, and Washington). However, WDTV's only competition came from UHF stations, as well as grade B signals from stations in Johnstown ,Wheeling , and Youngstown. In fact, no other commercial VHF stations signed on in Pittsburgh until 1957 (the only other VHF station in town was educational WQED-TV). At the time, UHF stations were unviewable without a very expensive converter. Even with a converter, the signals from these stations were barely viewable.
As a result, WDTV had a de facto monopoly on Pittsburgh television; Pittsburgh became the strongest market for DuMont (and therefore, WDTV its flagship station). Owning the only viewable station in such a large market gave DuMont considerable leverage in getting its programs cleared in large markets where it didn't have an affiliate. As CBS, NBC and ABC had secondary affiliations with WDTV, this was a strong incentive to stations in large markets to clear DuMont's programs or risk losing valuable advertising in the sixth-largest market. WDTV aired all DuMont network shows live, and cherry-picked the best shows from the other networks, airing them on kinescope on an every-other-week basis.
WDTV's sign-on was also significant because it was now possible to feed live programs from the East to the Midwest and vice versa. In fact, its second broadcast was the activation of the coaxial cable linking the two regions. It would be another two years before the West Coast received live programming, but this was the beginning of the modern era of network television.
By 1954, DuMont was in serious financial trouble. Paramount Pictures, which owned a stake in DuMont, vetoed a merger with ABC-who had merged with United Paramount Theaters, Paramount's former theater division, a year before. Since the FCC had ruled that Paramount controlled DuMont and there were still lingering questions about whether UPT had actually broken off from DuMont, Paramount didn't want to risk the FCC's wrath.
Desperate for cash, DuMont was forced to sell WDTV to Westinghouse Electric Corporation for $9.75 million in late 1954. While the sale gave DuMont a short-term cash infusion, it eliminated DuMont's leverage in getting clearances in other major markets. Within two years, the DuMont network was no more.
After the sale closed in 1955, Westhinghouse changed WDTV's calls to KDKA-TV, after KDKA-AM 1020, the world's first licensed commercial radio station. It became a primary CBS affiliate, retaining secondary affiliations with NBC until 1957 (when WIIC-TV, now WPXI, signed on) and ABC until 1958 (when WTAE-TV signed on). It became the flagship station of Westinghouse's broadcasting arm, Group W. (The WDTV calls now reside on a CBS affiliate in Weston, West Virginia, which is unrelated to the current KDKA-TV.)
[edit] As KDKA-TV
As a CBS affiliate, KDKA-TV dominated the ratings. It was not uncommon for newscasts anchored by Bill Burns to draw a 50 percent share of audience (or higher). The station was known from the 1960s through the 1990s to pre-empt CBS programs that received low ratings, usually replaced by locally produced shows, high-rated syndicated programming, and Pittsburgh Pirates baseball games. Even the daytime soap opera As The World Turns wasn't immune as KDKA pre-empted the serial for a large portion of its still-continuing run, most notably in the 1960s (for movies), and from 1978 to 1990, where the 2 to 3PM hour usually reserved for the national CBS feed of ATWT was replaced by the popular talk program "Pittsburgh 2Day." After Pittsburgh 2Day's cancellation in 1990, KDKA would later give in to pressure from both CBS and ATWT fans to air the show. In September 2006 it moved Guiding Light from its longtime 3 PM slot to 10 AM, placing Dr. Phil at 3.
Starting in 1993, KDKA stopped running CBS This Morning and instead ran syndicated Disney cartoons, an unusual move for a major-market station. It resumed carrying the CBS morning show several years later.
In 1994 Westinghouse made a deal with CBS to convert the entire Group W television unit -- which included KDKA, KYW-TV in Philadelphia, WBZ-TV in Boston, WJZ-TV in Baltimore and KPIX-TV in San Francisco -- to CBS owned-and-operated affiliates. KDKA and KPIX were already CBS affiliates; while KYW and WBZ were NBC stations and WJZ was an ABC station. The conversion was complete by the fall of 1995. Part of the deal required KDKA to run the entire CBS lineup without pre-emption, except in the case of breaking news or weather.
In early 1996, Westinghouse merged with CBS, making KDKA-TV a CBS owned-and-operated station, after four decades as being simply a CBS affiliate. Viacom merged with CBS in 2000, making KDKA a sister station with Pittsburgh UPN affiliate WNPA-TV (now WPCW). Ironically, in 1994, Viacom purchased Paramount, which figured so prominently in DuMont's collapse, and in fact had announced plans to launch UPN prior to being acquired by Viacom.
In 2001, KDKA began producing a 10 p.m. newscast on WPCW. In 2005, KDKA added a two hour morning newscast on WPCW. Today, KDKA-TV is owned by CBS Television Stations, while KDKA Radio is owned by CBS Radio. Both companies are subsidiaries of the CBS Corporation.
KDKA is also available on cable in Johnstown, Altoona, and Wheeling.
[edit] Ratings
KDKA is the most-watched local news station at noon, 6pm, and 11pm, following the November 2006 Nielsen ratings period. Because of the station's CBS affiliation, it is normally presumed that the noon newscast will do well, as it is preceded by The Price Is Right. Ratings: [[1]]
[edit] Recent logo/call letters controversy
KDKA-TV used the distinct "stylized 2" "Group W" font for its logo for some years after it became a CBS O&O, dropping it in 2003 in favor of a plainer "2." (See below.) After KDKA dropped the font, it adopted a much plainer logo similar to that of other CBS O&Os. This led to speculation that the station might soon call itself "CBS2", following the lead of WCBS-TV in New York, KCBS-TV in Los Angeles and WBBM-TV in Chicago in the near future. This was reinforced when the station updated the logo again in September 2005, this time more mimicking that of WBBM-TV.
However, the station has continued to refer to itself as KDKA-TV or KDKA-TV 2.
[edit] Newscasts
Weekdays
- KDKA-TV Morning News - 5:00-7:00 a.m. - Sonni Abatta, Keith Jones, Meteorologist Rebecca Hower, and Jim Lokay with traffic
- KDKA-TV Morning News on the CW (WPCW) - 7:00-9:00 a.m. - Sonni Abatta, John Cater, Meteorologist Rebecca Hower, and traffic with Jim Lokay
- KDKA-TV News at Noon - 12:00-12:30 p.m. - Sonni Abatta, Stacy Smith, and Rebecca Hower
- KDKA-TV News at 4 - 4:00-5:00 p.m. - Patrice King Brown, Stacy Smith and Chief Meteorologist Jeff Verszyla.
- KDKA-TV News at 5 - 5:00-6:00 p.m. - Ken Rice, Kristine Sorensen, Jeff Verszyla, and Bob Pompeani on sports
- KDKA-TV News at 6 - 6:00-7:00 p.m. - Patrice King Brown, Stacy Smith, Jeff Verszyla, and Bob Pompeani
- The Ten o'clock News on the CW (WPCW-TV) - 10:00 p.m.-10:35 p.m. - Ken Rice and Jeff Verszyla
- KDKA-TV News at 11 - 11:00 -11:35 p.m. - Patrice King Brown, Ken Rice, Jeff Verszyla, and Bob Pompeani
Saturdays
- KDKA-TV Saturday Morning - 6:00-8:00 a.m. - Brenda Waters and Jon Burnett with weather.
- KDKA-TV News at 6 - 6:00-6:30 p.m. - Don Cannon, Stephanie Watson, Jon Burnett, and Bob Pompeani or John Steigerwald on sports.
- KDKA-TV News - 7:00-7:30 p.m. - Don Cannon and Stephanie Watson, Jon Burnett, and Bob Pompeani or John Steigerwald on sports.
- The Ten o'clock News on the CW (WPCW-TV) - 10:00-10:35 p.m. - Don Cannon or Stephanie Watson and Jon Burnett.
- KDKA-TV News at 11 - 11:00-11:35 p.m. - Don Cannon and Stephanie Watson, Jon Burnett, and Bob Pompeani and John Steigerwald on sports.
Sundays
- KDKA-TV News - 6:30-7:00 p.m. - Don Cannon and Stephanie Watson, Jon Burnett with weather, and Bob Pompeani and John Steigerwald on sports.
- The Ten o'clock News on the CW - 10:00 p.m.-10:35 p.m. Don Cannon or Stephanie Watson and Jon Burnett..
- KDKA-TV News at 11 - 11:00-11:35 p.m. - Don Cannon and Stephanie Watson, Jon Burnett, and Bob Pompeani or John Steigerwald on sports.
[edit] Personalities
[edit] Anchors
[edit] Anchor/Reporters
[edit] Weather
KDKA uses AccuWeather from State College. For their radar they use VIPIR and StormTracker radars.
- Jon Burnett (Weather Forecaster)
- Rebecca Hower (Meteorologist)
- Jeff Verszyla (Chief Meteorologist)
- Dennis Bowman (AMS Meteorologist) - freelancer.
[edit] Sports
- Bob Pompeani
- John Steigerwald
- Mike Zappone - freelancer.
[edit] Heath Team
[edit] Reporters
- Bob Allen
- Mary Berecky (Westmoreland County Bureau Chief)
- Dave Crawley (KD Country)
- Jon Delano (Money and Politics Editor)
- Marty Griffin (Investigator)
- Ross Guidotti (Butler/Beaver/Lawrence Bureau Chief)
- Harold Hayes
- Lynne Hayes-Freeland
- David Highfield
- Ralph Iannotti
- Mary Robb Jackson
- Jim Lokay (Traffic and Transportation Reporter)
- Paul Martino (Investigator)
- Alison Morris
- Andy Sheehan (Investigator)
- John Shumway
- Brenda Waters
- Yvonne Zanos (Consumer Editor)
[edit] Former Personalities
- Jennifer Antkowiak (1993-2006) (anchor)
- Sheila Hyland (2006) (anchor)
- Kym Gable (2006) (reporter)
- Kelli Olexia (2001-2005) (anchor)
- Bruce Pompeani (1996-2005) (anchor)
- Susan Barnett (1999-2003) (anchor/reporter)
- Gabrielle DeRose (2001-2003) (weekend anchor/reporter)
- Wayne Van Dine (1978-2003) (reporter)
- Bob Kudzma (1968-2002) (meteorologist)
- Bill Flanagan (1982-2003) (business reporter)
- Larry Richert (1990-2001) (weather)
- Jacque Smith (1995-2000) (weekend anchor/reporter)
- Stu Emry (1989-1999) (reporter)
- Ray Tannehill (1976-1999) (anchor)
- Lynn Sawyer (1977-1999) (consumer reporter)
- Paul Steigerwald (1987-1998) (sports)
- Patti Burns (1974-1997) (reporter/anchor)
- C.S. Keys ( -1995) (weather)
- Al Julius (1973-1978; 1981-1991) (commentator)
- Ron Klink (1977-1991) (weekend anchor/reporter)
- John Sanders ( -1990) (sports)
- Bill Burns (1953-1989) (anchor)
- Alan Cutler (1984-1987) (sports)
- Dick Stockton (1967-1971) (sports)
- Marie Torre (1962-1977) (anchor/reporter)
- Eddie Alexander ( ) (sports)
- Bill Currie ( ) (sports)
- Steve Talbot ( ) (sports)
- Ken Meese ( ) (sports)
- Jessica Borg ( ) (anchor/reporter)
[edit] Local Programming
[edit] Present
Weekdays
- "Pittsburgh Today Live" - 9:00-10:00 a.m. - Kristine Sorensen or Jon Burnett and Rebecca Hower.
- The Nightly Sports Call (WPCW), following the Ten o'Clock News - Bob Pompeani, John Steigerwald, or Mike Zappone
Weekends
- The Hines Ward Show, Saturday Nights following KDKA-TV News at 11
- Hometown High-Q, Saturday Mornings at 11 and 11:30
- KD/PG Sunday Edition, Sunday Mornings
- The Lynne Hayes-Freeland Show,Sunday Mornings
- The Nightly Sports Call (WPCW), following the Ten o'Clock News - Bob Pompeani, John Steigerwald, or Mike Zappone
- KDKA Sports Showdown, Sunday Night following KDKA-TV News at 11
- The Sunday Business Page, Sunday Mornings
[edit] Seasonal
- The Free-Care Fund (Holiday Season)
[edit] Past
- Steelers Trivia Challenge
- The Jerome Bettis Show
- Evening Magazine
- Pittsburgh 2Day
- Punchline
- Wake Up With Larry Richert
[edit] Trivia
- Pop singer Christina Aguilera made her first TV appearance on KDKA-TV.
- KDKA was also the home of early work by comedian and Pittsburgh native Dennis Miller, who in the early '80s hosted a local weekend entertainment show called Punchline that was produced by KDKA.
- KDKA is credited with the first "network" TV feed in world history.
- The station had the world's first father-daughter broadcast team. Beginning in the 1970s, KDKA's noon news broadcast was anchored by veteran Pittsburgh anchorman Bill Burns and his daughter Patti Burns, often referred to as the "Patti and Daddy show."
- The station is one of the few east of the Mississippi River (along with KYW, KQV, and KTGG) whose call letters begin with "K."
- KDKA is one of only four CBS O&O stations (in addition to KUTV in Salt Lake City, WCCO in Minneapolis and WJZ in Baltimore) that doesn't use the
"CBS Mandate" for the on-air name (CBS [channel #] [city/market descriptor]).
[edit] Slogans/Brandings
- "Eyewitness News"
- "Hometown Advantage"
- "Local News First" - KDKA slogan from 2005-present
[edit] News Music
(Past and Present)
- (1) "Advantage" by Gari Communications, Inc. (1992-97) [[2]]
- (2) "Signature Theme Package" by Jon Gorr Music (1997-98) [[3]]
- (3) "KDKA-TV Prime" by Sound Byte, Inc. (1998-present) [[4]]
--Introductions--
[edit] Logos
[edit] Contact Info
KDKA-TV
One Gateway Center
Pittsburgh, PA 15222
News Hotline: 1-800-882-22222
Main Switchboard: 412-575-2200
News Desk 2: 412-575-2245
Newsroom Fax: 412-575-2871
Consumer Editor Yvonne Zanos: 412-575-2234
Marketing: 412-575-3275
Programming: 412-575-2347
Engineering: 412-575-2439
Public Events/Talent Appearances: 412-575-2365
[edit] External links
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KDKA 2 (CBS) - WTAE 4 (ABC) - WPXI 11 (NBC) - WQED 13 (PBS) - WQEX 16 (AS) - WPCW 19 (The CW) - WPMY 22 (MNTV) - WNPB 24 (PBS/WVPB) - WIIC 29 (MTV2) - WBYD 35 (Ind) - WGPT 36 (PBS/MPT) - WPCB 40 (CSTV) - WLLS 49 (A1) - WPGH 53 (Fox) - WBGN 59 (Ind) - W63AU 63 (Ind) - WPTG 69 (Ind) | |||
| Local cable television channels | |||
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WPSU 3 (PBS) - WJAC 6 (NBC) - WWCP 8 (FOX) - WTAJ 10 (CBS) - WPCW 19 (The CW)1 - WATM 23 (ABC) - WHVL 29 (MNTV) - W36BE 36 / W39BE 39 (ABC) - WKBS 47 (CSTV) - WLLS 49 (A1)
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| Out-of-market stations available on cable Note: Not all stations are available in all areas. | |||
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Pittsburgh:
KDKA 2 (CBS) -
WTAE 4 (ABC) -
WPXI 11 (NBC) -
WPMY 22 (MNTV) -
WPGH 53 (FOX) | |||
| Local cable television channels | |||
|
WTRF 7 (CBS) - WTOV 9 (NBC) - WJPW-CA 18 / WVTX-CA 28 (Ind/WBGN) - WSSS-LP 29 (MTV2) - W41AA 41 (PBS/WVPB) - WWVW-LP 56 (JTV) | |||
| Pittsburgh market stations serving the area | |||
|
KDKA 2 (CBS) - WTAE 4 (ABC) - WPXI 11 (NBC) - WQED 13 (PBS) - WPMY 22 (MNTV) - WPGH 53 (Fox) | |||
| Youngstown market stations received in area | |||
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WFMJ 21 (NBC) - WKBN 27 (CBS) - WYTV 33 (ABC) See also: Broadcast television stations in the Cleveland, Youngstown, Columbus, Parkersburg, Zanesville and Pittsburgh markets
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KDKA 2 (Pittsburgh) - KYW 3 (Philadelphia) - WTAJ 10 (Altoona) - WHP 21 (Harrisburg) - WYOU 22 (Scranton) - WSEE 35 (Erie) | |
| See also: ABC, CW, Fox, MyNetworkTV, NBC, PBS, and Other stations in Pennsylvania
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Categories: Television stations in Pittsburgh | Television stations in Johnstown/Altoona | Television stations in Wheeling / Steubenville | Television stations in Pennsylvania | CBS network affiliates | CBS Corporation television stations | 1949 establishments | Channel 2 TV stations in the United States | Westinghouse Broadcasting

