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Throughout the years, WMTW has been ranked at a distant third behind WGME and WCSH. With its statewide resources including sister station [[WLBZ]] in [[Bangor, Maine|Bangor]], WCSH has long been the market leader. WGME has recently begun to perform well weeknights at 11 o'clock and is gaining popularity in other time slots. The station, in partnership with [[Time Warner Cable]], operates a 24-hour cable news station on channel 9 ("WMTW All News Channel") throughout the Portland market. The cable station repeats local newscasts that air on channel 8. It does not simulcast live newscasts that are seen on the main WMTW channel. The channel relocated to the digital tier on May 5, 2009. <ref>http://www.timewarnercable.com/NewEngland/support/policies/channelchange.html</ref> Unlike most ABC affiliates, the station does not broadcast local news during the week in the 5 o'clock hour. WMTW schedules its weeknight news team for the 11 P.M. Sunday newscast during sweeps periods. Although the station does not air weekend morning news, there are live weather updates provided during ''[[Good Morning America]] Weekend Edition''.
Throughout the years, WMTW has been ranked at a distant third behind WGME and WCSH. With its statewide resources including sister station [[WLBZ]] in [[Bangor, Maine|Bangor]], WCSH has long been the market leader. WGME has recently begun to perform well weeknights at 11 o'clock and is gaining popularity in other time slots. The station, in partnership with [[Time Warner Cable]], operates a 24-hour cable news station on channel 9 ("WMTW All News Channel") throughout the Portland market. The cable station repeats local newscasts that air on channel 8. It does not simulcast live newscasts that are seen on the main WMTW channel. The channel relocated to the digital tier on May 5, 2009. <ref>http://www.timewarnercable.com/NewEngland/support/policies/channelchange.html</ref> Unlike most ABC affiliates, the station does not broadcast local news during the week in the 5 o'clock hour. WMTW schedules its weeknight news team for the 11 P.M. Sunday newscast during sweeps periods. Although the station does not air weekend morning news, there are live weather updates provided during ''[[Good Morning America]] Weekend Edition''.


WMTW claims to be the only Portland [[television station]] to have live doppler radar but it does not own or operate a [[weather radar]] of its own. Instead, the station uses live [[NOAA]] [[National Weather Service]] (NWS) radar data that originates from their Local Forecast Office in [[Gray, Maine|Gray]]. During weather segments, it is presented in a forecasting system known as "News 8 First Warning Live Doppler". A live video feed of this system is offered on WMTW's website. On August 30, 2007, WMTW launched "News 8 NOW" on its second digital subchannel. It is part of [[The AccuWeather Channel]] and features local news, weather, and sports updates. There are also national weather forecasts that are provided by [[AccuWeather]]. Several public service announcements ans station promotions air on the subchannel as well. "News 8 NOW" is offered on Time Warner and [[Comcast]] digital cable channel 165 as well as its website. In the Summer of 2008, WMTW was given several awards. This included: "New England Emmy Award for Outstanding Newscast", "[[RTNDA Edward R. Murrow Award|Edward R. Murrow Award for Continuing News Coverage]]", and "[[Associated Press|AP]] Station of the Year Honor". The station has begun promoting its weekday morning newscast as having the top stories and a weather forecast in the first eight minutes.
WMTW claims to be the only Portland [[television station]] to have live doppler radar but it does not own or operate a [[weather radar]] of its own. Instead, the station uses live [[NOAA]] [[National Weather Service]] (NWS) radar data that originates from their Local Forecast Office in [[Gray, Maine|Gray]]. During weather segments, it is presented in a forecasting system known as "News 8 First Warning Live Doppler". A live video feed of this system is offered on WMTW's website. On August 30, 2007, WMTW launched "News 8 NOW" on its second digital subchannel. It is part of [[The AccuWeather Channel]] and features local news, weather, and sports updates. There are also national weather forecasts that are provided by [[AccuWeather]]. Several public service announcements and station promotions air on the subchannel as well. "News 8 NOW" is offered on Time Warner and [[Comcast]] digital cable channel 165 as well as its website. In the Summer of 2008, WMTW was given several awards. This included: "New England Emmy Award for Outstanding Newscast", "[[RTNDA Edward R. Murrow Award|Edward R. Murrow Award for Continuing News Coverage]]", and "[[Associated Press|AP]] Station of the Year Honor". The station has begun promoting its weekday morning newscast as having the top stories and a weather forecast in the first eight minutes.


==News team==
==News team==

Revision as of 20:53, 22 June 2009

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WMTW is the ABC-affiliated television station for southern Maine and northern New Hampshire that is licensed Poland Spring. It broadcasts a high definition digital signal on VHF channel 8 from a transmitter near West Baldwin. Owned by Hearst-Argyle Television, the station has studios on Danville Corner Road along I-95 / Maine Turnpike in Auburn and secondary facilities in the Time and Temperature Building on Congress Street in downtown Portland. [1] Syndicated programming on WMTW includes: Wheel of Fortune, Jeopardy!, Dr. Phil, and Ellen.

Digital television

The station's digital signal is multiplexed.

Virtual
Channel
Video Aspect Programming
8.1 720p 16:9 main WMTW programming / ABC HD
8.2 480i 4:3 "News 8 NOW" (The AccuWeather Channel)

Repeaters

In 2005, WMTW activated two repeaters to make up for lost coverage when it signed off from its longtime transmitter site on Mount Washington, New Hampshire. This includes one in Colebrook, New Hampshire and another in White River Junction, Vermont. Under normal conditions, the translators should have been built before WMTW moved its transmitter to Baldwin in order to comply with FCC regulations. However, Canadian communications authorities had to agree to the proposed locations for the translators and this delayed construction until after WMTW activated its new transmitter. Colebrook is part of the Portland market but White River Junction is considered to be part of the Burlington, Vermont / Plattsburgh, New York DMA.

This location is in the coverage area of NBC affiliate WNNE (that is also owned by Hearst-Argyle) which is a semi-satellite of NBC affiliate WPTZ, another Hearst-Argyle station. Although WNNE's transmitter is located on Mount Ascutney, well south of White River Junction, it operates a repeater in Lebanon. FCC regulations do not usually allow that two or more stations from two or more different markets have coverage of the same location (in this case, White River Junction). This rule, however, does not apply to repeaters. Incidentally, White River Junction is within the fringe area of sister station WMUR.

Call letters Channel City of license Transmitter location
W26CQ 26 Colebrook, New Hampshire northeast of town in Colman State Park
W27CP 27 White River Junction, Vermont Mascoma

History

File:Wmtw old.jpg
WMTW's previous logo used from 2000-2005

The station signed on for the first time on August 31, 1954. It has always been an ABC affiliate though it aired some DuMont programming for a year. Its sign-on made Portland one of the smallest markets in the country with three network affiliates on the VHF band. It is also the longest-tenured primary ABC affiliate in New England. The station originally broadcast from Mount Washington, the highest peak in the northeastern United States. This gave WMTW one of the largest coverage areas of any station east of the Mississippi River. In addition to its main coverage area of southern Maine and eastern New Hampshire, it could also be seen in parts of New York, Massachusetts and Vermont. The station also had significant viewership across the Canadian border in Montreal, which was almost five times as large as the population of WMTW's American coverage area. It was considered to be the northern Vermont and Montreal ABC affiliate of record until WVNY signed on in 1968. Even after WVNY signed on, WMTW still had a large audience in northern Vermont. WMTW stayed on most Montreal cable systems until the early-1990s. WMTW's transmitter tower had been originally been designed in 1940 by Edwin Armstrong for one of the first FM radio stations in the country.

WMTW built a new tower there in the 1960s but Armstong's tower remained as a standby. Jack Paar of Tonight Show fame owned the station WMTW for a short period in the 1960s after he left national television. He hosted several programs on WMTW during that time. The station had to leave Mount Washington in 2002 due to part of the FCC's digital television mandate. Two FM stations currently occupy separate broadcast facilities on the top of the mountain. The FCC requires analog stations to broadcast alongside their digital counterparts until 80% of the viewing audience can watch the digital signal. Had WMTW-DT been built on the mountain, it would have had to operate at low power due to the lack of commercial electric power (WMTW was legally the power company in the area). A low-powered signal would have resulted in an inadequate signal for Portland and the more populated areas of the market. WMTW built a new tower in Baldwin and signed-off from Mount Washington for the last time on February 5, 2002. Obviously, the new transmitter site does not serve as large an area as the Mount Washington tower did, but it provides a better signal to the highly populated areas of the market. In 2004, WMTW was sold to a new owner, Hearst-Argyle Television. In 2007, the station dropped its longtime use of the -TV suffix. On June 12, 2009, WMTW remained on channel 8 when the analog to digital conversion was completed. [2][3]

Sister radio stations

There was a WMTW-AM 870 in Portland that was a news-talk station. It was sold by Harron Communications, the now-former owners of WMTW-TV to Nassau Broadcasting Partners in 2003. Today, it is WLVP and is an ESPN Radio affiliate. This station, along with WLAM-AM 1470 and WHXR-FM 106.7 were all branded as "Newsradio WMTW". This set of stations aired and produced local news and talk programs as well as simulcasts of WMTW-TV's newscasts and carried the now defunced news radio service of the Associated Press. In addition, there have been several stations known as WMTW-FM co-owned with channel 8. The first became WHOM 94.9 (which continues to transmit from Mount Washington), and the second was the FM sister station to WMTW-AM which was located on 106.7 MHz. It is also owned by Nassau, and is currently WHXR. An earlier WMTW-FM was not connected to any other WMTW apart from also transmitting from Mount Washington.

News operation

File:Wmtw dt2 2008.png
WMTW's "News 8 NOW".

Throughout the years, WMTW has been ranked at a distant third behind WGME and WCSH. With its statewide resources including sister station WLBZ in Bangor, WCSH has long been the market leader. WGME has recently begun to perform well weeknights at 11 o'clock and is gaining popularity in other time slots. The station, in partnership with Time Warner Cable, operates a 24-hour cable news station on channel 9 ("WMTW All News Channel") throughout the Portland market. The cable station repeats local newscasts that air on channel 8. It does not simulcast live newscasts that are seen on the main WMTW channel. The channel relocated to the digital tier on May 5, 2009. [4] Unlike most ABC affiliates, the station does not broadcast local news during the week in the 5 o'clock hour. WMTW schedules its weeknight news team for the 11 P.M. Sunday newscast during sweeps periods. Although the station does not air weekend morning news, there are live weather updates provided during Good Morning America Weekend Edition.

WMTW claims to be the only Portland television station to have live doppler radar but it does not own or operate a weather radar of its own. Instead, the station uses live NOAA National Weather Service (NWS) radar data that originates from their Local Forecast Office in Gray. During weather segments, it is presented in a forecasting system known as "News 8 First Warning Live Doppler". A live video feed of this system is offered on WMTW's website. On August 30, 2007, WMTW launched "News 8 NOW" on its second digital subchannel. It is part of The AccuWeather Channel and features local news, weather, and sports updates. There are also national weather forecasts that are provided by AccuWeather. Several public service announcements and station promotions air on the subchannel as well. "News 8 NOW" is offered on Time Warner and Comcast digital cable channel 165 as well as its website. In the Summer of 2008, WMTW was given several awards. This included: "New England Emmy Award for Outstanding Newscast", "Edward R. Murrow Award for Continuing News Coverage", and "AP Station of the Year Honor". The station has begun promoting its weekday morning newscast as having the top stories and a weather forecast in the first eight minutes.

News team

Anchors

  • Norm Karkos - weekday mornings and Noon
  • Shannon Moss - weekday mornings and Noon
  • Jon Camp - Sunday through Friday nights
  • Tory Ryden - Sunday through Friday nights
  • Jim Keithley - Saturday nights and reporter
  • Tracy Sabol - Saturday nights and reporter

News 8 WMTW First Warning Weather Team

  • Tom Chisholm - Chief seen weeknights
  • Matt Zidle - weekday mornings and Noon
  • Jason Nappi - weekend mornings and "News 8 NOW"
  • Gray Stabley (AMS Seal of Approval) - weekend evenings
  • Russ Murley - fill-in and executive producer

Sports

  • Travis Lee - Director seen weeknights and reporter
  • Dave Guthro - weekends and reporter

Reporters

  • Steve Minich - outdoor and human interest stories
  • Sally Kidd - national correspondent
  • Nikole Killion - weekday morning national correspondent
  • Laurie Kinney - national correspondent
  • Jackie Couture - weekday mornings
  • Keith Baldi
  • Danielle Strauss
  • Will Lewis

Alumni

File:Wmtw cable.JPG
This display was seen on Time Warner Cable channel 9 ("WMTW All News Channel") whenever there was a local newscast broadcasting on WMTW. In this case, it was at Noon during the week.

Anchors

  • Elisa Boxer(-Cook) - married to Doug Cook, now a freelance journalist and children's environmental health advocate
  • Doug Cook - reporter
  • Kerry Kilbride- was with KCAL in LA
  • Jerry D'Amico
  • John Dougherty - Managing Editor
    • currently retired
  • Darya Folsom - now at KRON-TV
  • Michelle Frey - reporter
  • Patrick Greenlaw
  • Denise Keniston - reporter
  • Jeannine Lauber - host of periodic station specials, now documentary producer and Mary Kay consultant
  • Jeff Peterson - now at WGME
  • Rachael Ruble - weekday mornings, now a writer at KCPQ in Seattle, WA
  • Neila Smith
  • Dennis Spellman - now at KIAH

Meteorologists

Reporters

  • Katie Brace - now anchor and reporter at WPTV-TV
  • Gabe Caggiano - now at KZTV
  • Bob Dyk - deceased
  • Bob Elliot - features
    • deceased
  • Marty Engstrom - weather reporter and engineer
    • now retired
  • Lisa Gardner - weekdays
    • now communications manager for Jobs for Maine's graduates
  • Traci Mitchell - weekday morning national correspondent
  • Kathryn Sotnik - weekdays
  • Michael Weber - now at CBS Newspath
  • Christine Young - investigative reporter
  • Ryan Welch - weekend sports anchor and weekday sports reporter

References