WTVT

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WTVT
Image:Fox13tampabay.jpg
Tampa, Florida
Branding FOX13
Slogan The Most Powerful Name in Local News /
We've Got You Covered
Channels 13 (VHF) analog,
12 (VHF) digital
Affiliations Fox
Owner Fox Television Stations Group(via New World Communications of Tampa)
Founded 1955
Call letters meaning Walter Tison, Virginia Tison (original owner and his wife)
Former affiliations CBS (1955-94)
Website www.myfoxtampabay.com

WTVT is a television station in Tampa, Florida. It is an owned and operated station of the Fox Broadcasting Company. It broadcasts its analog signal on VHF channel 13, and its digital signal on VHF channel 12. WTVT's transmitter is located in Riverview, Florida.

Contents

[edit] History

The station first started broadcasting on April 1, 1955, as a CBS affiliate. It was the third station in Tampa Bay, behind WSUN-TV (channel 38, now WTTA) and WFLA-TV (channel 8), then owned by the Tampa Tribune. WTVT is also the second-oldest surviving station, behind WFLA.

Originally, the Federal Communications Commission awarded the channel 13 license to the Tampa Times, a now-defunct newspaper which owned WDAE radio (620 kHz.). The FCC, however, had second thoughts on whether the license should be awarded to a newspaper company, and so reversed itself and awarded the station to the Tampa Television Company headed by Tampa Bay radio veteran Walter Tison, who intended to open a studio in nearby St. Petersburg. The Times appealed the FCC's decision, but lost. WTVT's call letters stand for the initials of Walter Tison and his wife, Virginia Tison. Like many other stations located on "unlucky" channel 13, WTVT used a black cat as its mascot for several years.

In 1956 the Tampa Television Company merged with the Oklahoma Publishing Company of Oklahoma City. Oklahoma Publishing's broadcast subsidiary, the WKY Television System, would later be known as Gaylord Broadcasting, named for the family who owned the company. Gaylord would serve as WTVT's longest-standing owner, owning the station for 31 years.

The Gaylords made WTVT's news operation their main focus. In 1958, WTVT became the second station in the country to introduce daily editorials, and was also the first Florida station to run an hour-long news block, comprising of 45 minutes of local news (under the title Pulse 13) combined with the then-15-minute network newscast. By 1962, WTVT had overtaken WFLA-TV as the number-one station in the Tampa Bay market, retaining that position for over 25 years. This was largely because of the longevity of many of the station's personalities. For instance, Roy Leep was the station's weatherman from 1957 until 1997, and Hugh Smith was the station's main anchor from 1963 to 1991, spending most of that time doubling as news director. Channel 13 dropped the Pulse 13 moniker from its newscasts in the late 1980s, renaming them as Eyewitness News.

In 1987 WTVT was sold to Gillett Broadcasting. In the early 1990s Gillett restructured, changing its name to SCI Broadcasting. In 1993 SCI filed for bankruptcy, and its stations (including WTVT) were sold to New World Communications. By that time, WTVT was pre-empting CBS This Morning for a locally-produced morning news show, as well as pre-empting all but one hour of Saturday cartoons.

In late 1993, the Fox Broadcasting Company won the rights to air the games of the National Football Conference of the National Football League from CBS, beginning in 1994. As a result, Fox began looking for more VHF affiliates, and signed a long term deal with New World, switching most of its stations, including WTVT, to Fox. WTVT dropped its CBS affiliation in December 1994, becoming a Fox affiliate. The former Fox affiliate, WFTS (channel 28), affiliated with ABC as part of a deal between ABC and WFTS' owners, the E.W. Scripps Company. The longtime ABC affiliate, WTSP (channel 10) then became a CBS affiliate.

As Fox did not air any national shows, WTVT could now air more local news, and began to broadcast almost 50 hours of local news a week. At one point, WTVT aired more hours of local news than any other station in the country. News became WTVT's focus, as the station chose not to renew the more expensive syndicated programming it had run while a CBS affiliate, running cheaper first-run syndicated talk and reality shows instead.

Fox bought most of the New World stations in 1997, making WTVT a Fox owned-and-operated station. Under Fox ownership the station added more high-budget syndicated shows and a few off-network sitcoms to its lineup, and changed its brand to Fox 13.

WTVT was the first TV news station in Florida to use radar in its weather presentation, and has made many advancements with the technology. Its newest advancement is SkyTower VIPIR, combining the already existing SkyTower radar system with VIPIR technology, which is also used by competitor WFLA-TV and the cable-only news channel Bay News 9. On May 25, 2006, the station's radar was made even more powerful and is now "SkyTower HD VIPIR", the most powerful high definition broadcast Doppler radar in America. [1] WTVT was also one of the first to use computer graphics in weather forecasts in the late-1970s, originally called "Weathervision" (no relation to the weather reporting company of the same name). The station also has the most meteorologists on a news team, with five meteorologists, and the only station with all of them American Meteorological Society certified.

WTVT is the only station in the market to have two women regularly anchoring a newscast; Denise White and Kathy Fountain anchor the 5:00 p.m. news.

WTVT began to adopt its current logo, which is similar to that of the Fox News Channel, in December 2005 as part of a new 11:00 newscast, although they did not completely switch to it until February 2006. The station was the first Fox O&O to use this logo style, which is gradually being adopted by its sister stations in other markets.

WTVT currently has the Tampa Bay area's most watched morning show, and the stations' 5:00 and the 10:00 p.m. newscasts are number one in their time periods.

[edit] Newscasts/Locally Produced Programming

Present logo used for NewsEdge at 11 starting December 2005, and all newscasts and programming since February 2006
Enlarge
Present logo used for NewsEdge at 11 starting December 2005, and all newscasts and programming since February 2006

[edit] Weekdays

  • Good Day Tampa Bay: 5:00-9:00 a.m.
Anchors: Anne Dwyer (5-9 a.m.), Tom Curran (5-7 a.m.), Russell Rhodes (7-9 a.m.)
Weather: Dave Osterberg
Traffic: Jennifer Epstein
  • FOX13 News at Noon: 12:00-12:30 p.m.
Anchor: Denise White
Weather: Howard Shapiro
  • Your Turn (local debate/discussion show) 12:30-1:00 p.m.
Host: Kathy Fountain
  • FOX13 5:00 News: 5:00-5:30 p.m.
Anchors: Denise White, Kathy Fountain
Weather: Paul Dellegatto
  • FOX13 5:30 News: 5:30-6:00 p.m.
Anchors: Frank Robertson, Cynthia Smoot
Weather: Paul Dellegatto
Sports: Chip Carter
  • FOX13 6:00 News: 6:00-7:00 p.m.
Anchors: John Wilson, Kelly Ring
Weather: Paul Dellegatto
Sports: Chip Carter
  • FOX13 10:00 News: 10:00-11:00 p.m.
Anchors: John Wilson, Kelly Ring
Weather: Paul Dellegatto
Sports: Chip Carter
  • NewsEdge at 11:00: 11:00-11:35 p.m.
Anchor: Mark Wilson
Weather: Paul Dellegatto
Sports: Chip Carter
NewsEdge Reporter: Gloria Gomez

[edit] Weekends

  • Good Day Tampa Bay Weekend: 6:00-9:00 a.m.
Anchors: Bill Murphy, Laura Moody
Weather: Andy Johnson
Traffic: Scott Crowder or Kathy Sousawitz
  • FOX Thirteen Magazine: (Teen produced newscast) 10:30-11:00 a.m. (Saturdays)
  • FOX13 6:00 News: 6:00-7:00 p.m. :
Anchors: Lloyd Sowers, Deborah Bowden
Weather: Jim Weber,
Sports: Chris Field (Saturday), Chip Carter (Sunday)
  • FOX13 10:00 News: 10:00-11:00 p.m.
Anchors: Lloyd Sowers, Deborah Bowden
Weather: Jim Weber
Sports: Chris Field (Saturday), Chip Carter (Sunday)

[edit] NewsEdge at 11:00

NewsEdge at 11:00 is an 11:00-11:35 p.m. newscast on WTVT hosted by Mark Wilson (with Lloyd Sowers or Frank Robertson filling in if Wilson is off). It is described as a fast-paced, Fox News Channel-type news show, with shorter report segments, and a more tabloid-feel. The newscast is split in to multiple parts, which mainly are: "Top Stories", "48 Hour Forecast", "FOX Up Front", "FloridaEdge", "NationalEdge", "FOX Focus", "WeatherEdge", "SportsEdge", and "The Lightning Round". The Lightning Round is a 5-minute debate/opinion segment which features the host, the meteorologist, and the sports anchor, along with a "special guest" debating somewhat controversial news topics. NewsEdge was, and still is somewhat, considered independent from WTVT's main news operation, and at one point, NewsEdge had different graphics and a different theme than the main news operation until the NewsEdge graphics and theme were integrated into the main news operation in February of 2006. Fox Television Stations Group, which owns WTVT, is using Tampa as the test market for this 11:00 p.m. newscast format. If successful, the plan is to have all Fox owned and operated stations producing news at 11:00 p.m.. Similar to this, sister stations KDFW in Dallas-Fort Worth, WDAF in Kansas City, WITI in Milwaukee, and KSAZ in Phoenix currently have a 10 p.m. newscast as a Fox O&O in the Central and Mountain Time Zones.

[edit] Screenshots

[edit] Branding/Slogans

Years Non-Newscast Branding Newscast Branding Slogan
1956-1958 Channel 13 Newsroom Unknown
1958-1980 Channel 13 Pulse The Heartbeat of a Changing World
1983-1985 Big 13 Pulse 13 News Big 13: Where News Comes First!
1985-1989 WTVT 13 Pulse 13 News News Comes First./People Make the Difference.
1989-1996 Channel 13 Channel 13 Eyewitness News Coverage You Can Count On / Florida's News Leader
1996-1997 Fox 13 Fox 13 Eyewitness News Coverage You Can Count On / Florida's News Leader
1997-present Fox 13 Fox 13 News Just One Fox (?-?) / We've Got You Covered (2004-present) / The Most Powerful Name in Local News (2005-present)

[edit] Logos

[edit] Key Personalities

[edit] Current Personalities

John Wilson and Kelly Ring
Enlarge
John Wilson and Kelly Ring
Mark Wilson
Enlarge
Mark Wilson
  • Chip Carter, sports director
  • Paul Dellegatto, chief meteorologist
  • Kathy Fountain, host of "Your Turn" during the noon and anchor of the 5 p.m. newscast
  • Bill Murphy, "Good Day Tampa Bay" weekend anchor, host of locally popular "One Tank Trips" segment.
  • Laura Moody, "Good Day Tampa Bay" weekend anchor
  • Kelly Ring, 6 p.m. and 10 p.m. anchor (Ring is now her maiden name, her name since 1995 being Kelly Bulleit)
  • John Wilson, 6 p.m. and 10 p.m. anchor, Trivia: (Sons are WTVT NewsEdge anchor Mark Wilson, and notable actor Patrick Wilson)
  • Denise White, noon and 5 p.m. anchor
  • Cynthia Smoot, 5:30 p.m. anchor
  • Frank Robertson, 5:30 p.m. anchor (married to WTVT anchor Kathy Fountain)
  • Anne Dwyer, "Good Day Tampa Bay" weekday anchor
  • Tom Curran, "Good Day Tampa Bay" weekday 5-7 a.m. anchor
  • Russell Rhodes, "Good Day Tampa Bay" weekday 7-9 a.m. anchor
  • Dave Osterberg, "Good Day Tampa Bay" meteorologist
  • Eric Seidel, Consumer Lawyer
  • Mark Wilson, NewsEdge at 11 anchor
  • Gloria Gomez, NewsEdge at 11 reporter
  • Doug Smith, investigative reporter
  • Dr. Joette Giovinco ("Dr. Jo"), medical reporter
  • Deborah Bowden, reporter, weekend 6 p.m. and 10 p.m. anchor
  • Lloyd Sowers, reporter, weekend 6 p.m. and 10 p.m. anchor
  • Nancy Perla, general assignment reporter
  • Ray Collins, Sarasota/Manatee County reporter
  • Howard Shapiro, noon meteorologist
  • Jennifer Epstein, "Good Day Tampa Bay" Traffic Analyst
  • Nerissa Prest (from WFLA will be joining Good Day Tampa Bay sometime in 2007. According to the St. Petersburg Times.
  • Liane Jackson, Good Day Tampa Bay reporter

[edit] Former Personalities

This film, television, or video-related list is incomplete; you can help by expanding it.
  • Roy Leep (1957-1997), chief meteorologist (retired)
  • Tom Dunn (1962-1964), reporter/anchor (deceased)
  • Hugh Smith (1963-1991), anchor (retired)
  • Sol Fleischman (1957-1974), sports anchor
  • Andy Hardy (1964-1996), sports anchor (deceased)
  • John Nicholson (1970s-1980s), 11pm anchor
  • Rod Challenger (-1978), anchor
  • Tony Zappone (1965), (1977-1982), news correspondent
  • Terry Casey (1985-1989), 6/11pm news commentary
  • Kelly Craig (1985-1990), 6 & 11pm anchor (now at WTVJ)
  • Eric Chilton (1997-2002), morning meteorologist (now at WFMY)
  • Stan Jayson (1991-2001), reporter
  • Bill Keneely (1980-1982), meteorologist (now at The Weather Channel)
  • Ken Krawley (1992-1996), investigative reporter
  • Jessica Yellin (2000-2002), reporter (now at ABC News)
  • Brian Goff (1995-2006), morning/noon reporter (retired)
  • Kerry Sanders (1987-1992), reporter (now at NBC News)
  • Steve Wilson, investigative reporter, (now at WXYZ)
  • Alan Wendt, reporter (1976-1993)
  • Leslie Spencer, anchor (1970s-1990s)
  • Karen King, morning anchor
  • Stacy Strazis, "Good Day, Tampa Bay" (1994-1997)
  • Karen Borta (?-1995), anchor/reporter (now at KTVT/KTXA)
  • Amani Channel (Late 1990s-2006), anchor (now at the Black Family Channel)
  • Jack Harris (1983-1989) "Pulse PLUS!" host. (now appearing on WFTS)

[edit] External links

Fox Network Affiliates in the state of Florida

WSVN 7 (Miami) - WTVT 13 (Tampa) - WPGX 28 (Panama City) - WFLX 29 (West Palm Beach) - WAWS 30 (Jacksonville) - WOFL 35 (Orlando) - WFTX 36 (Cape Coral) - WTLH 49 (Bainbridge / Tallahassee) - WOGX 51 (Ocala / Gainesville)

See also: ABC, CBS, CW, MyNetworkTV, NBC, PBS, Religious, Spanish and Other stations in the state of Florida