WQCW

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WQCW
Image:WQCW_CW_Logo.PNG
Portsmouth, Ohio
Branding Q
Slogan Who Do You Love?
Channels 30 (UHF) analog,
17 (UHF) digital
Translators WVCW-LP (45, UHF), Huntington, West Virginia
WOCW-LP (21, UHF), Charleston, West Virginia
Affiliations The CW (2006-Present)
Owner Television Properties, Inc.
Founded 1984
Call letters meaning W Quality television, the CW
Former callsigns WUXA (1984-97), WHCP (1997-2006)
Former affiliations Independent (1984-1995)
The WB (1995-2006)
UPN (2000-2006)
Transmitter Power WQCW:
2,040 kW Analog
19.1 kW Digital STA
50 kW Digital CP
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WVCW-LP:
20.8 kW Analog
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WOCW-LP:
25 kW Analog
Website www.wqcw.com

WQCW is the CW affiliate for the Huntington/Charleston, West Virginia television market. It is licensed to Portsmouth, Ohio and is the only commercial station in the market licensed outside of West Virginia. Its transmitter is located in West Portsmouth, Ohio.

The station along with its low-power sister stations became affiliates of The CW Television Network on September 18, 2006.

Contents

[edit] History

The station signed on 1984 as WUXA, an independent station. It became a WB affiliate in 1995 and changed its calls to WHCP (W Huntington-Charleston-Portsmouth) in 1997. UPN programming was added in 2000 after it was dropped from WVAH-TV, although The WB was its primary affiliation, hence its on-air name, WB30. It showed WB programming in-pattern, with UPN programming at odd hours, sometimes after the WB primetime programming ended or on weekends.

Channel 30's transmitter, despite its over 2 million-watt ERP, was (and still is) not strong enough to cover the entire Huntington-Charleston market, even though it identifies itself on-air as "Portsmouth-Charleston." The market, the largest geographic market east of the Mississippi River, covers 61 counties in central West Virginia, eastern Kentucky and southern Ohio. Most of this territory is a very rugged dissected plateau, making UHF reception difficult. WVAH faced similar problems when it originally signed on in 1981 on channel 23, forcing it to move to channel 11 in 1989. WHCP, on the other hand, couldn't move to another channel or increase the power on its transmitter because it would interfere with digital television stations in Roanoke, Virginia and Knoxville, Tennessee. Shortly after it became a WB affiliate, it signed on a low-power satellite in Huntington, WBWV, on channel 69. In 1998, it signed on a low-power satellite in Charleston, WOWB, on channel 53. Even with these satellites, it still has to rely on cable for most of its viewership, especially in the market's share of Kentucky. The station's digital signal, on channel 17, has far better reception.

The station was not carried on DirecTV's Huntington-Charleston local feed when DirecTV began airing local channels because its signal did not meet DirecTV's technical requirements. However, DirecTV added WHCP to its lineup on January 25, 2006. It has always been carried on Dish Network's local feed, however.

When CBS and Time Warner announced formation of The CW in January 2006, it was generally expected that WHCP would join the new network. On March 9, WHCP officially agreed to become a CW affiliate.

On May 26, WOWB and WBWV became WOCW channel 21 and WVCW channel 45, respectively. WHCP followed suit on May 31, changing its calls to WQCW.

[edit] Local Programming

In the last few years, WQCW has been offering more local programming where the majority of it is sports related. The station offers local professional wrestling on Saturday afternoons, from Portsmouth-based promotion Revolutionary Championship Wrestling. During the fall and winter, WQCW is airing taped high school football and basketball games from 9-11 p.m. on Saturday nights. The Monkey Bar is a musical theme performace show shown on late-Saturday night showing off local music talents.

On November 7, 2005 WHCP began airing newscasts at 6 and 10 p.m. to rival WVAH-TV's Fox 11 Eyewitness News at 10. with popular, but controversial local anchor Tom McGee at the helm. It was regarded as very amateurish, with no teleprompters, no IFB system and generally sloppy presentation. Even worse, WHCP never even subscribed to The Associated Press newswire. Not surprisingly, it never seriously threatened the "Big Three" newscasts at 6 p.m. or WVAH's newscast at 10 p.m.

On February 21, 2006, McGee quit the newscast. He claimed that the station made false promises made to the employees over health insurance which never even went into effect and paid some employees with food coupons. He also had a dispute over the addition of a news helicopter. Two days later, on February 23, the entire news staff was fired and the 4-month-old newscast was cancelled. The manager cited low ratings and recent shakeups in the newscasts. However, WQCW still offers a 30 second weather report.

[edit] Previous Logos

[edit] External links