WTXL-TV

WTXL-TV


Tallahassee, Florida-
Thomasville/Valdosta, Georgia
United States
City Tallahassee
Branding WTXL ABC 27 (general)
WTXL ABC 27 (newscasts)
Bounce Tallahassee
(DT2)
Slogan Dedicated to You
Channels Digital: 27 (UHF/PSIP)
Subchannels 27.1 ABC
27.2 Bounce TV
27.3 WeatherNation TV
27.4 QVC
Owner Calkins Media
(Sale to Raycom Media pending)
(WTXL-TV License, LLC)
First air date September 16, 1976
Sister station(s) WAAY-TV, WWSB
Former callsigns WECA-TV (1976–1984)
Former channel number(s) Analog:
27 (UHF, 1976–2009)
Digital: 22 (UHF, -2009)
Transmitter power 1,000 kW
Height 518 m
Class DT
Facility ID 41065
Transmitter coordinates 30°40′6″N 83°58′10″W / 30.66833°N 83.96944°W / 30.66833; -83.96944
Website wtxl.tv

WTXL-TV is the ABC-affiliated television station for North Florida and South Georgia. Licensed to Tallahassee, Florida, it broadcasts a high definition digital signal on UHF channel 27 from a transmitter, near unincorporated Fincher (in northwestern Jefferson County, Florida), along the Georgia state line. Owned by Calkins Media, WTXL has studios on Commerce Boulevard in Midway, Florida.

Digital channels

Channel Video Aspect PSIP short name Programming [1]
27.1 720p 16:9 WTXL-HD Main WTXL-TV programming / ABC
27.2 480i 4:3 WTXL-SD Bounce TV
27.3 WXNOW WeatherNation TV
27.4 QVC QVC

History

The station debuted on September 16, 1976 as WECA-TV and was owned by local businessman Evans Craig Allen. In the early years, its slogan was "We Can Do It!" which was a play on the call letters. The station was the second commercial station to sign-on in the market. Prior to channel 27's arrival, CBS affiliate WCTV had been the sole commercial outlet in the area and carried ABC in off-hours.

Tallahassee had a very long wait for a second station, even though it had been big enough to support at least two stations by the late-1950s and three by the 1960s (the only other VHF station in the market was non-commercial PBS member WFSU-TV). However, the Tallahassee market is one of the largest geographic markets east of the Mississippi, stretching across most of the central Florida Panhandle and much of Southwestern Georgia. UHF stations do not carry well across large areas, making potential station owners skittish about applying for the available UHF channels in the area. By the 1970s, however, cable had gained enough penetration to make a UHF station viable.

Its original studios were on Thomasville Road (U.S. 319/SR 61) in Tallahassee, and it aired an analog signal on UHF channel 27 from a transmitter located at the facilities. By its fourth year of broadcasting, WECA used the slogan "Up & Coming".[2]

In 1984, Allen sold the station to Tallahassee 27 Limited Partnership, led by former Senator Joseph Tydings and former Representative Louis Frey, Jr.. The call letters were the changed to the current WTXL-TV on June 25. The station's history page claims the new owners took over in 1985, but according to Federal Communications Commission (FCC) files, the call letters were switched in 1984.[3]

In September 1998, WTXL established a cable-only affiliate of The WB. Known as "WBXT" and originally on-air as "WB 28" (based on the cable channel location), it was part of the national WB 100+ service. Since it was available exclusively on cable, the call sign was fictional in nature and thus not officially recognized by the (FCC). WTXL provided local advertisement and performed promotional duties for "WBXT". On April 1, 2005, UPN affiliates WFXU/WTLF switched to The WB through The WB 100+. UPN promptly signed with WCTV which launched a new second digital subchannel to carry the network.[4] As a result, the "WBXT" operation was shut down.

In 2001, Media Ventures Management (then owner of WTXL) entered into an operational outsourcing agreement with rival NBC affiliate WTWC-TV (owned by the Sinclair Broadcast Group) which resulted in that station controlling WTXL and "WBXT". On March 17, 2002, this outlet merged all of its operations into WTWC's studios (on Deerlake South in unincorporated Leon County, Florida northwest of Bradfordville). The agreement between WTXL and WTWC was the first of its kind in the United States and was something similar to arrangements known today as local marketing and shared service agreements. The Southern Broadcast Corporation (now Calkins Media) acquired WTXL's license on November 30, 2005 but allowed the outsourcing agreement to continue. On February 20, 2006, the partnership between the two stations was dissolved when the Southern Broadcast Corporation gave notice to terminate the agreement with Sinclair. As a result, WTXL moved out of the WTWC building.[5][6]

After leaving WTWC's facilities, WTXL temporarily rented studio space from WFSU-TV on the campus of Florida State University. On June 20, 2006, this station broke ground on new studios in a commercial park in nearby Midway.[7][8] The station fully moved into the new facility in August 2007. WTXL has been digital-only since February 17, 2009. Until April 27, 2011, WTXL served as the longtime default ABC affiliate for Albany, Georgia as that area did not have an affiliate of its own. On that date, WALB added ABC to its second digital subchannel.

On April 11, 2016, it was reported that Calkins would exit the broadcasting industry and sell its stations to Raycom Media.[9]

News operation

WTXL presently broadcasts 36 hours of locally produced newscasts each week (6 hours on weekdays and 3 hours on weekends).

WTXL has traditionally been a distant runner up in the ratings to longtime dominant WCTV. WTWC has never been a contender in the market because its two attempts to air local newscasts were both unsuccessful. The second news department operated by that station was ultimately shuttered due to poor viewership and budget cuts. Throughout the duration of the operational outsourcing agreement between WTXL and WTWC, this ABC station produced some limited newscast programming on WTWC.

More specifically, WTXL's on-air team provided WTWC with weekday morning local news and weather cut-ins seen at 7:27 and 8:26 during its airing of Today. There were also news and weather briefs aired weeknights at 5:58 and 6:28 on the NBC outlet. The aforementioned programming was taped in advance since WTXL already had prior commitments with its own local newscasts. In addition, there was severe weather coverage presented on WTWC when conditions warranted (such as during a tornado warning).

On January 15, 2000 through a news share arrangement, WTXL began producing a weeknight prime time broadcast for "WBXT" called WB 28 News at 10. Airing for thirty minutes, the show was seen exclusively on cable and billed as the market's only prime time local show seen in the 10 p.m. time slot. Since the WB station periodically changed channels locations on area cable systems, the name was changed to reflect this. It was later called WB 11 News at 10 and then WB 6 News at 10. The "WBXT" newscast produced by WTXL was eventually canceled in September 2003.[10]

In August 2007 after assuming operations independent of WTWC, WTXL debuted a new set from brand new state-of-the-art studios built on Commerce Boulevard featuring the same design scheme as sister station WAAY-TV. At the same time, this outlet became the first television station in the market to upgrade local newscasts to high definition level. Corresponding with the launch of Bounce TV on WTXL-DT2, the market's only weeknight local newscast in early prime time was added to the subchannel's schedule. The show, known as Bounce TV News at 7, could be seen for thirty minutes featuring a separate graphics package and music theme from the main channel's broadcasts. For an unknown reason, the show was dropped after its October 25, 2013 airing.

References

External links

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