WETA-TV
Washington, D.C. United States |
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Channels | Digital: 31 (UHF) Virtual: 26 |
Affiliations |
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Owner | Greater Washington Educational Telecommunications Association |
First air date | October 2, 1961 [1] |
Call letters' meaning | Greater Washington Educational Telecommunications Association |
Sister station(s) | WETA (FM) |
Former channel number(s) |
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Former affiliations |
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Facility ID | 65670 |
Transmitter coordinates | Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found. |
Licensing authority | FCC |
Public license information: | Profile CDBS |
WETA-TV (channel 26) is the primary PBS member television station in Washington, D.C. Owned by the Greater Washington Educational Telecommunications Association, it is a sister station to NPR member WETA (90.9 FM). The two outlets share studios in nearby Arlington County, Virginia;[2] WETA-TV's transmitter is located in the Tenleytown neighborhood in Northwest Washington.
Among the programs produced by WETA-TV that are distributed nationally by PBS are the PBS NewsHour, Washington Week,[3] and several cultural and documentary programs, such as the Ken Burns documentaries[4] and A Capitol Fourth.
Contents
History
In 1952, the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) allocated 242 channels for non-commercial use across the United States; channel 26 was allocated for use in Washington, D.C.[5] In 1953, the Greater Washington Educational Television Association (GWETA) was formed to file for a channel 26 construction permit, joining the D.C. Board of Education.[6] The Board of Education would drop its bid in 1954.[7] GWETA credits Elizabeth Campbell with having founded the organization.[8] In the early days, before it was granted a license for its own channel, GWETA produced educational programming for WMAL-TV and WTTG.[9][10]
An application was finally filed on May 3, 1961, and approved on June 12, for a construction permit for the channel.[11] GWETA was eventually granted a license by the FCC to activate channel 26; WETA-TV first signed on the air on October 2, 1961, with the first televised class being aired on October 16.[12] WETA originally operated out of Yorktown High School in Arlington;[12]:{{{3}}} the station later relocated its operations to the campus of Howard University in 1964.[11]:{{{3}}} Rapid growth led a station that had been described as having "a rough time meeting the monthly bills" in 1963[13] to even pursue thoughts of a second channel in 1965.[14] In 1967, WETA began producing Washington Week in Review (now simply titled Washington Week), a political discussion program that became the station's first program to be syndicated nationally to other non-commercial educational stations and is now the network's longest-running public affairs program.[15]
Around 1970, the Greater Washington Educational Television Association changed its name to the Greater Washington Educational Telecommunications Association to reflect the oversight of the new WETA (FM). In 1971, the station begin producing shows for the newly-formed National Public Affairs Broadcast Center (later National Public Affairs Center for Television), a group led by PBS for its news programming.[16][17] In 1972, the producing organization National Public Affairs Center for Television merged into WETA.[18][19] In 1992, WETA broadcast the first publicized over-the-air high-definition television signal in the United States.[20] In 1995, WETA acquired CapAccess, an interactive computer network. From that acquisition, WETA helped connect public schools, public libraries and local government agencies to the Internet.[21]
In 1996, WETA launched its first national educational project, LD Online, a website that seeks to help children and adults reach their full potential by providing accurate and up-to-date information and advice about learning disabilities and ADHD. It was joined in 2001 by Reading Rockets, a multimedia project offering information and resources on how young kids learn to read, why so many struggle, and how caring adults can help. In 2003, Reading Rockets spun off Colorín Colorado, a free web-based service that provides information, activities, and advice for educators, and Spanish-speaking families of English language learners (ELLs).[22] To support the parents and educators of older students who struggle with reading, WETA launched Adlit.org in 2007. AdLit.org is a multimedia educational initiative offering research (articles, instructional strategies, school-based outreach events, professional development webcasts, and book recommendation) to develop teens' literacy skills, prevent school dropouts, and prepare students for the demands of college.[23] Seeing a need to educate the public about brain injuries, in 2008 WETA, in partnership with the Defense and Veterans Brain Injury Center, launched BrainLine.org. The site features videos, webcasts, recent research, personal stories, and articles on preventing, treating, and living with traumatic brain injuries.[24]
In 1997, WETA tested its new full-power digital transmitter by broadcasting the first-ever high definition telecast of a live Major League Baseball game to the National Press Club; the digital facility was activated for full-time broadcasting in November 1998.[25]
With the national closure of the PBS Kids network in 2005, WETA did not become a PBS Kids Sprout partner.[26] By April 2006, the station had added World programming to a subchannel prior to its January 2007 launch as a nationwide network.[27] In 2007, WETA started broadcasting a children's channel. In February 2009, WETA only aired a daily three-hour children's morning block on its primary channel, clearing the afternoon for general audience programs like Charlie Rose, travel shows, repeats of the previous night's prime time shows, movies, documentaries, and miniseries.[26]
WETA decided to drop Create due to the network moving to being fee-based on July 1, 2012, and perceived lack of programming flexibility. WETA How-To lifestyle programming replaced Create in January 2012. How-To was replaced by WETA UK on July 4, 2012, after an analysis of audience and local viewers' demand for British programs.[28]
Technical information
Subchannels
The station's signal is multiplexed:
Channel | Res. | Aspect | Short name | Programming |
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26.1 | 720p | 16:9 | WETA-HD | Main WETA-TV programming / PBS |
26.2 | WETA UK | WETA UK | ||
26.3 | 480i | KIDS | PBS Kids | |
26.4 | WORLD | World | ||
26.5 | 720p | METRO | WETA Metro |
Channel 26.2, "WETA UK", is a subchannel programmed in-house with a schedule of shows produced in the United Kingdom. Channel 26.5, "WETA Metro", is also produced in-house and focuses on timeshifted rebroadcasts of news programming and reruns that interest a local audience.
Analog-to-digital conversion
WETA-TV shut down its analog signal, on UHF channel 26, on June 12, 2009, the official date on which full-power television stations in the United States transitioned from analog to digital broadcasts under federal mandate. The station's digital signal continued to broadcasts on its pre-transition UHF channel 27.[31] Through the use of PSIP, digital television receivers display the station's virtual channel as its former UHF analog channel 26.
References
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External links
- Official website
- WETA's First Broadcast: A New Era (1961) – documentary produced by WETA-TV
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