Who owns wfaa




















Belo had purchased a station outside the area as early as But in , Belo executives announced the acquisition of six television stations, then the largest purchase of broadcast properties by a single company.

The local television company became a national player, an event Segura in her corporate history called transforming.

Huey said that while the national scale changed the small, familial feel of an earlier era, the fundamental values stayed the same. Become a business insider. Get the latest headlines delivered to your inbox every weekday.

By signing up you agree to our privacy policy. Stand with us in our mission to discover and uncover the story of North Texas. More from Homepage. Dallas County and other North Texas governments face deadline to prevent loss of rental relief cash. State suspends license of former Dallas Fire-Rescue paramedic seen kicking homeless man.

I looked at the latest electricity prices in Texas and got a shock. Texas Republican state Sen. Are you ready for another big freeze? This guide can help you pick a portable power station. The A. Belo Corporation, owner of The Dallas Morning News, had attempted to launch a new television station in Dallas two years earlier, when it applied for a construction permit to build transmitter and broadcasting facilities for a proposed station that would have transmitted on VHF channel Complicating matters, the agency's moratorium on new license applications, which the FCC instituted to sort out the backlog of prospective applicants that already filed to build such operations, left Belo with the sole recourse of acquiring a television station that was already on the air if it wanted to own one in the Dallas-Fort Worth area.

The station was the first television property to be owned by the Dallas-based company, and also served as the flagship station of its broadcasting division until Belo merged with the Gannett Company in WFAA is one of a relatively limited number of broadcast television stations located west of the Mississippi River whose call letters begin with a "W"; the FCC normally assigns call signs prefixed with a "K" to television and radio stations with cities of license located west of the river and broadcast call signs prefixed with a "W" to stations located east of the river.

DuMont shut down in , amid various issues that arose from its relations with Paramount that hamstrung it from expansion. Although it had been apparent from the start that Dallas and Fort Worth which Arbitron originally designated as separate media markets were going to be collapsed into a single television market due to their close proximity, Fort Worth Star-Telegram owner Amon G.

After ownership of Carter Publications transferred to his familial heirs after Carter suffered a fatal heart attack two years before, in early , NBC threatened to strip WBAP-TV of its affiliation if it did not agree to move its transmitter eastward to reach the entire Dallas area. Belo had attempted to get an exclusive NBC affiliation first, and approached the network with an offer to make WFAA its exclusive affiliate for the entire market.

Carter's heirs—who initially did not want to move the transmitter closer to Dallas, in their aim to continue Carter's legacy of civic boosterism for Fort Worth—eventually agreed to NBC's demands that it move WBAP-TV's transmitter facilities to Cedar Hill, installing a transmitter antenna on a 1,foot m candelabra tower that was already shared by WFAA and KRLD-TV, and operate it at a higher effective radiated power strong enough to adequately cover Dallas.

Channel 8 became known for its heavy schedule of local programs during the period from the s through the s. The most popular was a show aimed at younger audiences; Jerry Haynes hosted a local children's program on the station on-and-off from to Originally debuting in March as Mr.

Peppermint, Haynes who donned a red- and white-striped jacket and straw hat in his portrayal of the titular character, accompanied by a candy-striped cane starred alongside a variety of puppet characters performed by Vern Dailey and presented various segments from educational content to cartoon shorts; five years after ending its original nine-year run on WFAA in , the program was revived as the half-hour magazine-style educational series Peppermint Place in , running for 21 additional years—expanding into syndication for its final seven—until the program ended its collective year run in July In , WFAA became the first television station in the market to use a videotape recorder for broadcasting purposes; the station would gradually shift much of its locally produced programming from a live to a pre-recorded format, outside of newscasts, sports and special events, and eventually became one of the first television stations in the U.

During the —59 television season, WFAA served as the taping location for Jack Wyatt's ABC true crime reality series, Confession, in which assorted criminals explained why they chose to reject the mores of society and turn to crime. The first live telecast to originate from the building was Young America Speaks, a week intercollegiate debate tournament series the first such program ever televised , which aired until June of that year.

Texas oil magnate Tom Potter filed a separate application for the Channel 8 license and was ultimately awarded the permit over Hoblitzelle. The station first signed on the air at 8 p. Potter founded and operated the station through the Lacy-Potter TV Broadcasting Company, which he partially controlled. The station originally operated from studio facilities located at Harry Hines Boulevard and Wolf Street, north of downtown Dallas.

When the station commenced its full schedule on September 18, KBTV had broadcast for only four hours of programming per day.

It originally operated as a primary affiliate of the DuMont Television Network and a secondary affiliate of the short-lived Paramount Television Network; under the arrangement, through an agreement between Lacy-Potter and Paramount Pictures, the station agreed to air 4. The A. Belo Corporation, owner of The Dallas Morning News , had attempted to launch a new television station in Dallas two years earlier, when it applied for a construction permit to build transmitter and broadcasting facilities for a proposed station that would have transmitted on VHF channel Complicating matters, the agency's moratorium on new license applications, which the FCC instituted to sort out the backlog of prospective applicants that already filed to build such operations, left Belo with the sole recourse of acquiring a television station that was already on the air if it wanted to own one in the Dallas—Fort Worth area.

The station was the first television property to be owned by the Dallas-based company, and also served as the flagship station of its broadcasting division until Belo merged with the Gannett Company in



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