The WB: Difference between revisions

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Content deleted Content added
Ruzz99 (talk | contribs)
in the section '2003-2006: Decline' corrected spelling of soap opera from soup opera
→‎Network closure: no need for any bold here...
Line 58: Line 58:
Starting on [[August 14]], [[2006 in television|2006]] with the [[The CW Daytime|Daytime WB]] block, the WB '[[Digital on-screen graphic|bug]]' was removed from the lower right corner of the TV screen and was replaced with a countdown of days until The CW launched. Some stations which converted to [[MyNetworkTV]] or became independent stations received a logo-free feed of the network, while others took the main feed and overlaid their local logo bug over the CW logo.
Starting on [[August 14]], [[2006 in television|2006]] with the [[The CW Daytime|Daytime WB]] block, the WB '[[Digital on-screen graphic|bug]]' was removed from the lower right corner of the TV screen and was replaced with a countdown of days until The CW launched. Some stations which converted to [[MyNetworkTV]] or became independent stations received a logo-free feed of the network, while others took the main feed and overlaid their local logo bug over the CW logo.


The WB closed on Sunday, [[September 17]], [[2006 in television|2006]] with '''''[[The Night of Favorites and Farewells]]''''', a five-hour block of [[Television pilot|pilot]] episodes of their past signature series. The schedule was as follows (times listed are [[North American Eastern Time Zone|Eastern]] and [[Pacific Standard Time|Pacific Time]] zones):
The WB closed on Sunday, [[September 17]], [[2006 in television|2006]] with ''[[The Night of Favorites and Farewells]]'', a five-hour block of [[Television pilot|pilot]] episodes of their past signature series. The schedule was as follows (times listed are [[North American Eastern Time Zone|Eastern]] and [[Pacific Standard Time|Pacific Time]] zones):


*5 p.m. - ''[[Felicity]]''
*5 p.m. - ''[[Felicity]]''

Revision as of 21:36, 24 August 2007

The WB Television Network
TypeDefunct broadcast television network
Country
AvailabilityNational,  Canada, and  Mexico (Northern)
OwnerTime Warner[1]
Key people
David Janollari, President
Launch date
January 11, 1995
DissolvedSeptember 17, 2006
Official website
www.thewb.com(redirects to The CW's official Site)

The Warner Bros. Television Network, casually referred to as The WB, or sometimes as The Frog (referring to the network's former mascot, the animated character Michigan J. Frog), was a television network in the United States, founded as a joint venture between the Warner Bros. film studio and Tribune Company on January 11, 1995.

On January 24, 2006, CBS Corporation and Warner Bros. Entertainment announced plans to launch The CW Television Network in the fall of 2006. This new joint venture network features programming from both The WB and UPN. The WB shut down on September 17, 2006 followed by the opening of its replacement, the new CW Network.

History

Much like its competitor UPN, The WB was a reaction primarily to new FCC deregulation of media ownership rules under the Telecommunications Act of 1996, and partly to the success of the upstart Fox and first-run syndicated programming during the late 1980s and early 1990s such as Baywatch and Star Trek: The Next Generation, as well as the erosion in ratings suffered by independent television stations due to the growth of cable television and movie rentals.

1995-1997: Humble Beginnings

The WB began its life in January of 1995, programming just 2 hours one night a week (Wednesday). The WB's first programs were mostly sitcoms targeted at an ethnically diverse audience. Even though four of the five shows shown in the netlet's first nine moths (The Wayans Bros., The Parent 'Hood, Sister, Sister (picked up after being cancelled by ABC), and Unhappily Ever After) were renewed beyond the first year, none of them made a significant impact.

The WB began programming on Sunday nights in the 1995-1996 season, but none of the new shows (including the Kirk Cameron vehicle Kirk and night-time soap opera Savannah) managed to garner much viewing interest. Still, the network continued to expand in the 1996-1997 season, adding programming on Monday nights. This season gave the WB modest hits in the family drama 7th Heaven and comedies The Steve Harvey Show and The Jamie Foxx Show.

The WB also added the Kids' WB programming block in 1995, which mixed Warners' biggest hit shows (Tiny Toon Adventures, Animaniacs and later Batman: The Animated Series, all of which originated either on FOX, Fox Kids or in syndication) with new productions and original shows.

1997-2000: Courting the Teen Market

The WB first began to taste success with Buffy the Vampire Slayer, which became a hit with critics when it appeared as a mid-season replacement in March of 1997. It debuted with the highest Monday night ratings in the network's history, attracting not only new teenage viewers, but new advertisers as well.[2]

Inspired by Buffy's success, The WB intentionally shifted the focus of its programming, trying to capture what it perceived to be a heavily fragmented market by marketing to the under-courted teen demographic. While the FOX network, the previous destination for teen television, began to court older audiences with shows such as Ally McBeal, The WB began to craft its identity with teen-targeted programs. The network's breakout hit and, arguably, its signature series was Dawson's Creek, which debuted in January of 1998 to what were then the highest ratings in the network's history. It quickly became the highest rated show on the television among teenage girls, and the most popular show on the network. The popularity of the show helped boost other network shows, such as Buffy, which served as its lead-in on The WB's new night of programming, known as "New Tuesday," and 7th Heaven, which enjoyed a massive 81% increase in viewership that season.

With three hit shows in its roster, The WB continued to build its teen fanbase the following season with college drama Felicity and the wicca-themed Charmed, both of which set new records for the network when they premiered with 7.1 and 7.7 million viewers, respectively. The network also expanded by beginning to program on Thursday nights. That season, 7th Heaven garnered The WB the highest ratings it would ever see. The episode airing February 8, 1999 attracted 12.5 million viewers. That season also saw 7th Heaven overtake Dawson's Creek as the network's highest rated show.

In the 1999-2000 season, The WB expanded once again, adding Friday night programming. New shows that season included Roswell, Popular, and Angel, which premiered with 7.5 million viewers, the second highest premiere for the net at the time. During this season, The WB was the only network to have gains in its audience and each key demographic.

2000-2002: Broadening the Focus

As the teen boom of the late 90's began to wane, The WB attempted to broaden the scope of its line-up. Although teen fare like Popular and Roswell had premiered to strong ratings, both series saw serious ratings erosion in their sophomore seasons, leading the network to cancel both (Roswell would end up being revived by rival network UPN). Meanwhile, ratings for flagship series such as Felicity and Dawson's Creek also began sagging. The WB realized that it could no longer rely merely on the tastes of young teenage girls, and thus began moving into more family-friendly fare, attempting to launch a successful sitcom, and generally targeting a more diverse audience.

Despite the slight downturn in the network's fortunes, there were a few bright spots during the era, namely the premieres of two new hit series. Gilmore Girls, which debuted in 2000, netted meager ratings when it debuted in a tough Thursday timeslot, but subsequently grew into one the network's most successful shows. In 2001, Smallville debuted with 8.4 million viewers, the highest premiere in the history of The WB. The latter show was also important because it was one of the few shows that drew a substantial male viewership. In its sophomore season, the show overtook 7th Heaven to become the network's most watched show. 2001 also saw the launch of Reba, arguably the network's only successful comedic series. Other series to gain attention during this time period were the family series Everwood and the short-lived but critically-acclaimed soap satire Grosse Pointe.

2003-2006: Decline

Despite some early success, the network struggled to shift its focus from the female 12-24 demographic to the more broad 12-34 range. In 2005 The WB abandoned its trademark mascot, Michigan J. Frog, as the network's iconic emblem. David Janollari, The WB's President of Entertainment, explained in July at the network's summer 2005 press tour that the animated character "perpetuated the young-teen feel of the network, and that is not the image we want to put to our audience."

Still, the move did not seem to help the network. The period from 2003 to 2005 produced only three viable new series, One Tree Hill, Beauty and the Geek, and Supernatural (all of which have since moved to successor network The CW), and even still their ratings paled in comparison to the ratings peaks of Dawson's Creek, which had signed off in 2003. Ratings dropped for shows like Angel (which was canceled in 2004), and the network failed to launch new hit shows to take their places. Although The WB's well-known inability to launch successful comedy series was nothing new, this period saw the network struggling to establish new dramas as well. High-profile failures included Birds of Prey, Tarzan, Greg Berlanti's Jack and Bobby, The Mountain, Jerry Bruckheimer's Just Legal, Marta Kauffman's Related and the Rebecca Romjin vehicle Pepper Dennis.

During the 2004-2005 season, The WB finished behind rival UPN for the first time in several years, and fell even further behind in the fall of 2005. Both networks fell behind the Spanish language network Univision in the overall 18-34 demographic. In 2004, Warner Brothers filmed a one-hour pilot; the pilot was based on the soap opera Dark Shadows . It was to be in the 2004-2005 season, but the WB decided not to pick it up and was not produced. The pilot aired at a Dark Shadows festival.

It was estimated in 2005 that The WB was viewable by 91.66% of all households, reaching 90,282,480 houses in the United States. The WB was carried by 177 VHF and UHF stations in the U.S., counting both owned-and-operated and affiliated stations (the owned and operated stations were not actually operated by Warner Bros. or Time Warner; instead, Tribune owned and operated these stations, thus its stake in the network). The WB could also be seen in smaller markets on cable-only stations, many of these through The WB 100+ Station Group - available to TV markets below the number 100 in viewership as determined by Nielsen in a packaged format, with a master schedule; the addition of local advertisements and news were at the discretion of the local distributor, often a local television station or cable television provider.

File:Wbsignoff.jpg
The final image broadcast on the WB was of former mascot Michigan J. Frog taking a final bow after a clip montage thanked the audience for eleven years of service.

Network closure

Starting on August 14, 2006 with the Daytime WB block, the WB 'bug' was removed from the lower right corner of the TV screen and was replaced with a countdown of days until The CW launched. Some stations which converted to MyNetworkTV or became independent stations received a logo-free feed of the network, while others took the main feed and overlaid their local logo bug over the CW logo.

The WB closed on Sunday, September 17, 2006 with The Night of Favorites and Farewells, a five-hour block of pilot episodes of their past signature series. The schedule was as follows (times listed are Eastern and Pacific Time zones):

Commercial breaks featured re-airings of past image campaigns and network promotions. This plan involved promo spots given to the cable networks carrying these shows in off-network syndication, along with ads for each series' TV-on-DVD box set.[3] Michigan J. Frog was brought back one last time, and a silhouette of him taking a last bow was the last image ever broadcast on the network.

After the network's closure, The WB's URLs were redirected to The CW's website.

The final night of WB programming netted relatively low ratings. The WB scored a share of 2, meaning just 2% of viewers were tuned in to the WB on its final night.[4] This may mostly be due to certain areas whose WB affiliates became MyNetworkTV affiliates, leaving The WB's final two weeks of programming unavailable in those areas.

Children's programming

The WB added the Kids' WB programming block, following its launch, which mixed Warners' biggest hit shows (Tiny Toon Adventures, Animaniacs and later Batman: The Animated Series, all of which originated either on Fox, Fox Kids or in syndication) with new productions and original shows.

After the TurnerTime Warner merger in 1996, Kids' WB! formed an alliance with Cartoon Network, and over time, they shared more and more programming.

1998-2000

In March 1999, The WB also launched the American version of Pokémon in the Kids' WB! blocks, which they acquired from syndication (TV Tokyo) earlier that year and became a widespread pop-culture phenomenon. WB also acquired the English-language version of the second series Yu-Gi-Oh!, also sharing the phenomenon that Pokémon left behind.

2000-2005

The Kids' WB! aired mainly animated series but also aired some live-action programming. Kids' WB! aired a television version of R.L. Stine's The Nightmare Room in 2001, though it didn't make it past a season. They also aired a live-action movie known as Zolar, as well as the JammX Kids All-Star Dance Specials.


2006

As Kids' WB shared more and more of its programming with Cartoon Network, because of the 1996 Turner-Time Warner merger and the fact that Cartoon Network was outrating Fox Kids, airing Kids' WB! became financially unattractive as broadcast stations started showing only live-action talk shows and sitcom reruns in the afternoon to compete and go after a different audience, figuring children had all moved to watching cable networks in the afternoons.

On May 31, 2005, The WB announced the discontinuation of the weekday Kids' WB! block as of January 2, 2006. Kids' WB! continued to air weekdays after this, but with redundant programming and theme weeks until January, and more promotion of Cartoon Network's afternoon Miguzi block and Kids' WB! Saturday during the transition. After Daytime WB started, Kids' WB! Saturday morning lineup was expanded by one hour.

The block continues on The CW, which replaced The WB in their merger with UPN beginning September 18, 2006. It has been unofficially dubbed The CW Daytime, however, on-air promos for the block do not give it an actual name.

Station standardization

When The WB was launched during the mid-1990s, the network began branding most of its stations as "WB" or "The WB", then the channel number, with the call signs nearby. The call signs were minimized to the smallest FCC-approved size by the end of the decade.

New York and St. Louis

This meant that, for example, WPIX in New York and KPLR in St. Louis were now both referred to as "WB11". Fox originated such naming schemes, and CBS uses the CBS Mandate on all of their O&O stations. NBC and ABC utilize similar, but less extreme, naming schemes.

While Fox and UPN mandated their respective naming schemes on all stations, The WB did not.

Chicago and Los Angeles

Thus, not all WB affiliates followed the naming scheme. WGN-TV in Chicago (on the local feed only as the superstation feed stopped carrying WB programming feed in 1999) used the name "WGN 9 Chicago" in its ID with The WB's logo within the right curve of the station's "9 as an upside-down G" logo at the network's start, and next to a boxed "9" after the station re-imaged in 2001. Most of Tribune's WB affiliates only used the network logo in their station's logo or use "The WB" name after the calls. An example was Los Angeles affiliate KTLA, whose station ID was "KTLA, The WB".

Other affiliates

Most WB affiliates also had another standardization name branding scheme: (City name)'s WB. For example, KHCW (formerly KHWB) in Houston was called "Houston's WB," WLVI in Boston was called "Boston's WB," KDAF in the Dallas / Fort Worth area of Texas was called "Dallas/Ft. Worth's WB" and WDCW (former WBDC) in Washington, D.C. was called "Washington's WB." Some stations which followed this scheme used a regional name instead of a specific city, such as "Capital Region's WB" for WCWN in Albany, New York (formerly WEWB), or "Hawaii's WB" for KFVE in Honolulu, Hawaii and "East Tennessee's WB" for WBXX in Knoxville, Tennessee while others incorporated the channel number, such as WPHL-TV in Philadelphia ("Philadelphia's WB17"), or Mobile, Alabama's WBPG ("The Gulf Coast's WB55"). Many WB 100+ stations also followed either one of these variations on the "The City/Region's WB" scheme.

Legacy

Despite its closure, The WB lives on in a number of ways:

  • Kids' WB continues to preserve the WB name.
  • The "W" half of The CW stands for Warner Bros. ( The "C" stands for "CBS", which owned UPN).
  • Services offered by The WB carried over to The CW, like Daytime WB (now The CW Daytime) and EasyView.
  • Though it did not start on the network, How the Grinch Stole Christmas began airing in the late 1990s on The WB, due to its ownership by Time Warner's TBS division, after a long run on CBS. The special moved to ABC in the 2006 holiday season.

See also

Footnotes

  1. ^ Sources vary as to the exact composition of The WB's ownership. According to at least one source, as of 2001, the ownership was split among Time Warner (64%), Tribune Company (25%), and Jamie Kellner's firm ACME Communications (11%) [1]. Published reports in early 2006, dealing with the launch of The CW, suggested Tribune was at the time the only minority shareholder, with just 22.5%, which it would be relinquishing [2] in order to avoid shutdown costs for The WB [3].
  2. ^ [4]
  3. ^ [5]
  4. ^ [6]

External links