WREG-TV
| Memphis, Tennessee | |
|---|---|
| Branding | WREG CBS 3 HD |
| Slogan | News Channel 3: On Your Side |
| Channels | Digital: 28 (UHF) Virtual: 3 (PSIP) |
| Subchannels | 3.1 CBS HD 3.2 NewsChannel 3 Anytime 3.3 Antenna TV |
| Translators | K62DA Malden MO |
| Affiliations | CBS Television Network |
| Owner | Local TV, LLC (Local TV Tennessee License, LLC) |
| First air date | January 1, 1956 |
| Call letters' meaning | variation of original calls |
| Former callsigns | WREC-TV (1956-1971) |
| Former channel number(s) | Analog: 3 (VHF, 1956-2009) |
| Transmitter power | 906 kW |
| Height | 313 m |
| Facility ID | 66174 |
| Transmitter coordinates | 35°10′52″N 89°49′56″W / 35.18111°N 89.83222°W |
| Website | WREG.com |
WREG-TV is Memphis, Tennessee's CBS television affiliate, operating on digital channel 28, and uses PSIP 3 as its virtual channel. The station is owned by Local TV, which took over all of the television stations formerly owned by The New York Times Company on May 7, 2007. Its transmitter is located in Memphis.
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[edit] History
WREG-TV first went to air on New Year's Day 1956 as WREC-TV. Owned by electrical engineer and radio dealer Hoyt Wooten along with WREC radio (AM 600 and FM 102.7, now WEGR), the station began regular broadcasts the next day. The calls stood for Wooten's radio store, the Wooten Radio-Electric Company. It took the CBS affiliation from WHBQ-TV because WREC-AM had been a CBS affiliate since 1929. Studios were located in the Peabody Hotel in downtown Memphis. Wooten had actually applied for one of the first television licenses in the country, in 1928.
For its first six years, WREC-TV was the only locally-owned station in Memphis (WHBQ-TV was owned by General Tire and WMC-TV was owned by Scripps). However, in 1963, Wooten sold WREC-AM-FM-TV to Cowles Communications. In turn, Cowles sold WREC-TV to the New York Times in 1971 and the call letters changed to WREG-TV; it later sold the radio stations to other interests. Four years later in 1975, the Times built new facilities for WREG on one of the highest points on Chickasaw Bluff, overlooking the Mississippi River. The station also maintains studio space in the Peabody Place shopping center, adjacent to the Peabody Hotel, marking a partial return of sorts to its early years.
For more than two decades, WREG has been in a Nielsen ratings war for first place with longtime powerhouse WMC-TV. But WREG never actually won a ratings period until February, 2006. That was the debut of a new anchor team with years of experience at other stations in the Memphis market. Claudia Barr was previously a main anchor at competitor WHBQ (Memphis's FOX affiliate) and Richard Ransom was previously a morning anchor and reporter at WMC (Memphis's NBC affiliate). Ransom and Barr replaced longtime anchors Jerry Tate and Pam McKelvy. Since that time, WREG has won the all-important 10pm ratings battle three times more often than WMC. The number of victories for the important morning news battle anchored by Kris Anderson and Markova Reed is just as dominant.
WREG often works together with a sister Local TV station, WHNT-TV in Huntsville, Alabama. The two often share resources on large stories, such as the April 2007 trial of Mary Winkler. For the first week of the trial, WREG worked from the satellite truck of WHNT. During the second week, WHNT worked from WREG's truck. Also, reporters from one station often do live reports for the other. Further, WHNT also airs News Channel 3 Knowledge Bowl on its digital sub-channel.
[edit] Digital television
The station's digital channel is UHF 28, multiplexed:
| Virtual Channel |
Video | Aspect | Programming |
|---|---|---|---|
| 3.1 | 1080i | 16:9 | Main WREG-TV programming / CBS |
| 3.2 | 480i | 4:3 | News Channel 3 Anytime |
| 3.3 | Antenna TV |
The station became a charter affiliate of Tribune Broadcasting's multicast channel Antenna TV upon its launch on January 1, 2011 and is carried on digital subchannel 3.3.[1] The network, whose programming consists of classic sitcoms from the 1950s to the 1990s during the afternoon and evening, and movies during the morning and late night hours, debut on Local TV, LLC-owned stations in other markets as well as stations owned by Antenna TV's parent company Tribune Company on the same date.
[edit] Analog-to-digital transition
On June 12, 2009, WREG-TV continued on its pre-transitional digital channel when the analog to digital conversion completed.[2]
[edit] Programming history
Throughout the early 1960s into the late 1980s, WREC/WREG claimed to possess the largest motion picture library of any TV station in the United States, which was evidenced in its daily (late afternoons and late nights) and weekend programming lineup at the time. The station used some of those features for theme weeks (e.g., "Godzilla Week", "John Wayne Week"), which proved to be very popular with viewers. However, like most major network affiliates in the early 1980s, channel 3 began cutting back on the heavy amount of movie airings that occupied much of its off-network schedule, a move prompted by the presence of cable, VCRs, and the emergence of then-independent competitors WPTY-TV in 1978 and WMKW (now WLMT) in 1983.
Over the years, WREG has produced many local programs and series, such as Knowledge Bowl (mentioned above) and Mid-South Outdoors (later known as News Channel 3 Outdoors). Additional news programs are Live at 9, which has a talk show format and Informed Sources, which airs weekly on Sundays to talk about current local issues.
WREG is one of the few CBS stations that pre-empts the Saturday Early Show in favor of a Saturday morning newscast. Syndicated programs on Channel 3 include Inside Edition, Jeopardy!, Entertainment Tonight, and The Insider.
On Sunday, June 13 at 10:00 p.m., WREG-TV became the third station in the Memphis area to broadcast local newscasts in High Definition. The switch came with some updates to the newsroom set and new graphics but have had major technical glitches during the initial week of the switch to HD. Both of its main rivals, WMC-TV and WHBQ-TV respectively, have already made the switch to HD news.
[edit] Current on-air staff
Current Anchors
- Kris Anderson - Daybreak/noon anchor
- Claudia Barr - 5, 6 and 10 p.m. anchor
- Alex Coleman - Live @ 9, 4 and 4:30pm anchor
- Marybeth Conley - Live @ 9 anchor
- Richard Ransom - 5, 6 and 10 p.m. anchor
- Markova Reed - Daybreak anchor
- Stephanie Scurlock - Daybreak weekend anchor
- April Thompson - 4 and 4:30pm anchor
- Dennis Turner - Daybreak weekend anchor
Reporters
- Melissa Moon - general assignment reporter
- Keli Rabon - Investigative reporter
- Scott Noll - Investigative reporter
- Candace McCowan - Daybreak reporter
- Natasha Chen - general assignment reporter
- George Brown - WREG.com
Weather Team
- Tim Simpson - 4, 4:30 & 6 p.m. chief meteorologist
- Jim Jaggers - 5 & 10 p.m. meteorologist
- Todd Demers - Daybreak/noon meteorologist
- Austen Onek - weekend meteorologist
Sports Team
- Glenn Carver - sports director
- Mike Ceide - weekend sports anchor
[edit] News personnel
- John Gwin, Joel Rosenber, Ed Randle - Daybreak News director
- George Brown - Web Content Manager for WREG.com; formerly of WMC
- Faith Hannah, Eric Lipford, Rich Holden - Daybreak Producers
- Jen Cates - Live @ 9, producer
[edit] Former on-air staff
- Paul Dorman
- Pam Crittendon
- John Powell
- Fred Cook
- Pam McKelvy Hammer (now at WKIM-FM)
- Joe Larkins (retired)
- Natalie Allen (now at CNN and CNN International)
- Mike Lawhead
- Carolyn Brookter
- Jerry Tate (retired)
- Cindy Whipple
- Rick Jackson
- Jim Jenkins
- Fran Curran
- Kimberly Van Scoy
- Rob Sylvestor
- Susie Robinette
- Gene Hocutt
- Sharon Crews
- Dorothy Tucker
- Brian Teigland (deceased)
- Theo Travers (now at Nickelodeon)
- Tom Stocker
- Larry Ennis
- Jeff Beimfohr (now at WPTY)
- Jim Bonds
- Olin Morris
- Sheryl Kahn
- Earle Farrell (now at WHBQ-TV)
- Ray Pohlman
- De Anna Sheffield
- Jennifer Van Vranken
- Cheryl Kepes
- Annie Kim
- Brian Kuebler
- Amy Speropoulos (now at WMC-TV)
- Christine Connolly (now at KRON-TV; San Francisco)
- Norm Brewer (deceased)
- David Sandifer
- Tom Powell (now at WSJV-TV)
- Omari Flemming (now at WTXF-TV)
- Mike Matthews
[edit] News/Station presentation
[edit] Newscast titles
- NewsWatch 3 (1970s-early 1980s)
- News 3 (1980s-1993)
- NewsChannel 3 (1993–present)
[edit] Station slogans
- Hello Memphis (1982–1985; during period station used Frank Gari's "Hello News")
- Memphis & Channel 3 (1987–1992)
- Where Local News Comes First (1997–1998)
- Your 21st Century Starts Here (1998–2000)
- On Your Side (2000–present)
[edit] References
[edit] External links
- WREG.com (Official Website)
- WREG-TV Live Streaming Video Page
- Query the FCC's TV station database for WREG
- BIAfn's Media Web Database -- Information on WREG-TV
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