WNCN

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For the former New York City radio station called WNCN-FM, see WAXQ.
WNCN
Image:17WNCN.PNG
Goldsboro / Raleigh / Durham / Fayetteville, North Carolina
Branding NBC17
Channels 17 (UHF) analog,
55 (UHF) digital
Affiliations NBC
Owner Media General
Founded October 17, 1988
Call letters meaning North Carolina's NBC (or North Carolina's News, from before NBC acquisition)
Former callsigns WYED-TV (1988-1994)
Former affiliations Independent (1988-95) & The WB (January-September 1995)
Website www.nbc17.com

WNCN ("NBC17") is the NBC affiliate in the Triangle region of North Carolina (the Raleigh-Durham-Fayetteville DMA), broadcasting on analog channel 17 and digital channel 55. It is licensed to Goldsboro, but its studios are just outside of downtown Raleigh. The station is carried on cable channel 6 in Raleigh and cable channel 2 in Durham and Chapel Hill. WNCN's transmitter is located in Garner, North Carolina.

Contents

[edit] History

WNCN began life on October 17, 1988 as WYED-TV, a small station airing some children's programming during the morning and the Home Shopping Network the rest of the day. WYED was the first (and only) television station of George Beasley's Beasley Broadcasting Group (Beasley got his start in 1961 by signing on WPYB radio in nearby Benson, NC). Studios were located in Clayton at 622 S. Barbour St., and a 1,550-foot tower nearby broadcast 2.6 million watts of power. In 1992, WYED added some barter cartoons and some low budget barter syndicated shows such as talk/reality and game shows.

In 1994, Outlet Communications of Providence, Rhode Island bought the station, and on January 1, 1995, changed its call letters to WNCN (North Carolina's News). The new WNCN increased its signal to 5 million watts, boosting its coverage area to the entire Triangle. The station also added more sitcoms and first-run syndicated shows. It began to carry programming from the WB network in January 1995.

A month later, NBC announced that it would move its Triangle affiliation to WNCN. Outlet had very good relations with NBC; it owned two of NBC's strongest affiliates, WJAR in Providence, Rhode Island and WCMH-TV in Columbus, Ohio. Channel 17 immediately began to run NBC programming pre-empted by the network's existing affiliate, WRDC-TV, which had been one of NBC's lowest-rated affiliates for several years. NBC had been looking for a way to get on another station for some time, especially since WRDC frequently preempted its programming. WNCN completely replaced WRDC as the Triangle's NBC station in September after WRDC's affiliation contract ran out, sending the WB affiliation to WRAZ-TV. At that time, WNCN launched newscasts at 6am, 7pm and 11pm. It also moved into WLFL's former studios in North Raleigh.

NBC merged with Outlet in 1996. Of note, this resulted in NBC's first UHF O&O since the 1950's, when the network owned WBUF-TV in Buffalo, New York (which ironically also broadcasted on channel 17; now occupied by PBS station WNED-TV) and WNBC in Hartford on channel 30 (the "NBC" stood for New Britain, Connecticut; the station has since been re-acquired by NBC as WVIT).

In 2000, WNCN abandoned its 1,550-foot tower in Clayton for a 2,000-foot perch on an arm of Capitol Broadcasting Company's new digital candleabra tower eight miles closer to Raleigh. WNCN-DT signed on at UHF channel 55 at the same time.

WNCN is the fourth station in the Triangle to affiliate with NBC. NBC had first aired on WTVD-TV from 1954 to 1956, then WRAL-TV from 1956 to 1962. After WRAL became a full-time ABC affiliate in 1962, WTVD shoehorned CBS and NBC onto its schedule until 1968, when WRDU-TV signed on channel 28 that year. Channel 28 changed its calls to WPTF-TV in 1978 and WRDC in 1991. When WNCN became a full NBC affiliate, it marked the first time that network's full schedule had aired in the Triangle since WRAL added ABC part-time in 1959.

In the last decade, WNCN's newscasts have never achieved Nielson ratings above WRAL (CBS 5) and WTVD (ABC 11); However, they have been far more competitive than WPTF's efforts at local news programs ever had been (channel 28 dropped newscasts shortly after becoming WRDC).

NBC17 recently launched a new hour-long local newscast at 7 p.m. Monday - Friday. The station aired a half-hour 7 p.m. newscast when it launched as an NBC affiliate in 1995, but the newscast was canceled due to low ratings.

On January 9, 2006, NBC Universal announced it was putting WNCN up for sale[1] along with three other stations located in Birmingham, Alabama; Columbus, Ohio; and Providence, Rhode Island. On April 6, 2006, it was announced that Media General would acquire these stations.[2] This will make WNCN a sister station to WNCT-TV in Greenville. The sale was finalized on June 26, 2006. [1] For the time being, no new changes for the station are expected.

[edit] Trivia

  • When WNCN was owned by NBC Universal, it was one of three network-owned stations on the UHF dial alongside KNSD in San Diego and WVIT in Hartford.
  • Under the network's ownership at the time, WNCN was the other owned and operated station of any network alongside ABC-owned WTVD.
  • The call sign WNCN originally belonged to a classical music radio station (104.3 FM) in New York City.


[edit] Logos

[edit] Newscasts

  • NBC17 Today - 5-7AM
    • with Sharon Tazwell, Donald Jones, Bill Reh (weather), Nikki Morse (traffic)
  • NBC17 News at 6PM - 6-6:30PM weeknights(every day)
    • with Melanie Sanders, Wes Hohenstein(chief meteorologist), Maya Starks (sports)
  • NBC17 News at 7pm - 7-8pm
    • same presenters as 6pm newscast
  • NBC17 News at 11PM - 11-11:35PM(every day)
    • same presenters as 6pm newscast
  • NBC17 Saturday Today - 6-7AM & 9-10AM (Saturday)
  • NBC17 News at 11PM - 11-11:30PM (Saturday & Sunday)
    • with Carolyn Costello, Geneen Anderson (weather), Chad Sokol (sports)
  • NBC17 Sunday Today - 6-8AM & 9-10AM (Sunday)
    • with Verna Collins
  • NBC17 At Issue (Community Affairs) - 11-11:30AM
    • with Verna Collins

[edit] Notes and References

  1. ^ Cox, Jonathan B.. "NBC to sell station: Network puts 3 others on the block", Raleigh News & Observer, January 10, 2006.
  2. ^ "Triangle's NBC affiliate station to be sold", Raleigh News & Observer, April 6, 2006.

[edit] External links

Broadcast television in the Raleigh/Durham/Fayetteville market  (Nielsen DMA #29)

WUNC 4 / WUNU 31 / WUNP 36 (PBS/UNC-TV) - WRAL 5 (CBS) - WTVD 11 (ABC) - WNCN 17 (NBC) - WLFL 22 (The CW) - W24CP 24 (3ABN) - WTNC 26 (TFU) - WRDC 28 (MNTV) - WRAY 30 (S@H/JTV) - WACN-LP 34 (DS) - WUVC 40 (UNI) - WHFL-LP 43 (Worship) - WZGS 44 (Telemundo) - W45CN 45 / W45CO 45 / W63CW 63 / W64CN 64 (TBN) - WRPX 47 / WFPX 62 (i) - WRAZ 50 (Fox) - WWIW-LP 66 (DS) - W67CD 67 (A1) - W68BK 68 (Educational)


Local cable television channels

News 14 Carolina


Out-of-market broadcast television available on cable in some parts of the market

WECT 6 (NBC, Wilmington)

NBC Network Affiliates in the state of North Carolina

WECT 6 (Wilmington) - WITN 7 (Washington) - WXII 12 (Winston-Salem) - WNCN 17 (Goldsboro / Raleigh) - WCNC 36 (Charlotte)

See also: ABC, CBS, Fox, PBS, UPN, WB and Other stations in North Carolina