PBS Wisconsin explained

PBS Wisconsin
Logo Alt:In a blue san-serif font called PBS Sans, the current PBS logo, rendered with a circle featuring its 'head' logo within, then "PBS" in bold text, is followed by the word "Wisconsin" in a lighter typeface.
Digital:see
Affiliations:PBS, APT
Country:United States
Former Affiliations:NET (1954–1970)
Type:Non-commercial educational broadcast television network
Servicename1:Sister stations
Service1:Wisconsin Public Radio

PBS Wisconsin (formerly Wisconsin Public Television or WPT) is a network of non-commercial educational television stations operated primarily by the Wisconsin Educational Communications Board and the University of Wisconsin–Madison. It comprises all of the PBS member stations in the state outside of Milwaukee (which has its own PBS stations).

The state network is available via flagship station WHA-TV in Madison and five full-power satellite stations throughout most of Wisconsin. As of April 5, 2009, all stations have converted to digital-only transmissions. PBS Wisconsin is also available on most satellite and cable television outlets. WHA-TV, along with Chicago-based WTTW, serve the Rockford, Illinois, television market exclusively through cable and satellite, as Rockford is one of a few television markets in the United States that lacks a PBS station of its own.

Until the gradual move of instructional broadcasting to IPTV services, the network, as Wisconsin Public Television, was the main conduit of educational television, GED preparation and instructional television programming produced by the WECB, which aired through PBS, Annenberg Media, those stations serving portions of Wisconsin without a WPT station, and other educational television distributors. As of October 2014, the WECB now distributes this programming exclusively online, allowing the over-the-air network to carry PBS programming full-time.

History

WHA-TV signed on the air on May 3, 1954, as the first educational station in Wisconsin and the seventh in the United States. WHA-TV is the only public television station in the country that maintains a three-letter callsign, and one of only three analog-era UHF stations altogether (along with WHP-TV in Harrisburg, Pennsylvania, and WWJ-TV in Detroit) with a three-letter callsign.

Wisconsin was a relative latecomer to educational television, despite its earlier leading role in educational radio. Channel 21's radio sister, WHA-AM, is one of the oldest educational radio stations in the world. By the time channel 21 signed on, UW had already launched a radio network that evolved into today's Wisconsin Public Radio. However, for most of the time from the 1950s through the 1970s, it was one of only three stations in the state that was a member of National Educational Television (NET) and its successor, PBS. The others were WMVS (channel 10) and WMVT (channel 36) in Milwaukee. The only other areas of the state outside of Milwaukee and Madison that had a clear signal from an NET/PBS member station were the northwest (from Duluth, Minnesota's WDSE-TV) and the southwest (from the Twin Cities' KTCA-TV). During the late 60s and into the early 70s, commercial station KFIZ-TV in Fond du Lac was contracted by the UW-Madison Board of Regents to simulcast portions of WHA-TV's broadcast day, bringing WHA's programming into the Green Bay and Milwaukee markets.[1]

In 1971, the state legislature created the Wisconsin Educational Communications Board, activating five stations as semi-satellites of WHA-TV during the 1970s; the network launched using new studio facilities located within Vilas Hall on the UW–Madison campus, along with WHA-TV and WHA radio. The first was WPNE-TV in Green Bay in 1972, ending KFIZ-TV's part-time affiliation with WHA (and hastening its demise only two months after WPNE went on the air). This was followed by WHWC-TV in Menomonie and WHLA-TV in La Crosse in 1973; WHRM-TV in Wausau in 1975 and WLEF in Park Falls in 1977, most taking call signs that originated from their co-owned radio counterparts. Originally, programming origination was split between WHA-TV and WPNE-TV. The stations adopted the on-air name of "Wisconsin Public Television" in 1986, and by then WHA-TV had become the sole originating station. Transmission and station identification is based out of ECB's Madison facility; all stations still maintain studios at their respective universities but have generally been deprecated with the evolution of public broadcasting and technology.

From 1960 to 2007, WHA-TV/WPT aired same-day tape-delayed coverage of some Wisconsin Badgers football and men's basketball home games, which was produced in association with UW-Madison's athletic department. This ended in 2007 with the Big Ten Conference's new media rights deals (including the new Big Ten Network cable channel).[2] The state network offers tape-delayed broadcasts of Badgers men's and women's hockey, women's basketball and volleyball throughout the year over the secondary Wisconsin Channel.[3]

In 2018, Wisconsin Public Television collaborated with the American Archive of Public Broadcasting to preserve digitized items in the WPT collection.[4]

On November 4, 2019, Wisconsin Public Television was renamed PBS Wisconsin, aligning itself with the new national PBS brand identity unveiled the same day.[5]

Stations

Full-power stations

There are six full-power stations in the state network, each located in major cities throughout the state, and all are broadcast on the UHF band. On April 5, 2009, the state network ended analog service for all stations, which map to their former analog channel location; WLEF's analog signal was terminated on February 3, 2009. All digital facilities and channels in the network except for WLEF were designed for pre- and post-transition use.[6]

WPNE moved its physical channel from 42 to 25 on July 1, 2018, and WHLA moved its physical channel from 30 to 15 on September 7, 2018, both as part of the FCC's spectrum repacking, but both stations continue to use their virtual channel mappings.[7]

StationCity of licenseCall sign meaningERPHAATTransmitter coordinatesFirst air datePublic license infoFacility ID
WHA-TV21 (20) From sister station WHA radio4540NaN0 6096
WHLA-TVLa Crosse31 (15) WHA - La Crosse 400 kW 345.51NaN1 18780
WHRM-TV20 (24) WHA - Rib Mountain400 kW 3870NaN0 73036
WHWC-TV28 (27) WHA - West Central400 kW 3500NaN0 18793
WLEF-TV36 (36) Lee E. Franks
(former WECB executive director)
400 kW 4450NaN0 [8] 63046
WPNE-TV38 (25) Public Broadcasting Northeast400 kW 3750NaN0 18798

Technical information

Subchannels

All transmitters broadcast the same four digital subchannels.[9]

Channel! scope = "col"
Res.AspectShort nameProgramming
xx.1(Station call sign)-HD PBS
xx.2WPT2 Wisconsin Channel
xx.3WPT3 Create
xx.4WPT4 PBS Kids

Translators

A translator network also serves portions of the state where over-the-air reception for a full-power station is hindered by area topography (or in the case of Door County, distance from Green Bay), and to fill in holes between full-power stations. All of the listed translators are owned by the WECB, and flash-cut from analog to digital in the first two weeks of November 2008, including adding the subchannel services.[10] Each translator has its virtual channel mapped to the channel number of the closest full-power station to the translator.[11]

Network programming in Milwaukee and Superior–Duluth

PBS Wisconsin's public affairs programming is carried by WMVS in Milwaukee, including Here and Now, while Duluth's WDSE airs the shows in northeast Minnesota and northwest Wisconsin. The two stations also air the state network's live teen issues program Teen Connection quarterly with PBS Wisconsin, along with political debates and other important events originating from the Capitol such as the State of the State address and biennial budget address produced by the state network; in turn some Milwaukee PBS programming (such as Outdoor Wisconsin) and MPTV-produced debates air on PBS Wisconsin, with programs such as Wisconsin Foodie in turn airing on WMVS. Some of the state network's tape-delayed sports coverage airs in Milwaukee on WMVT.

In March 2021, PBS Wisconsin, by way of WHA-TV, was quietly added to Dish Network's Duluth–Superior local feed in standard definition.[12]

National presentations

See also

Notes and References

  1. News: Fond du Lac to Lose Station. AP. November 29, 1972. Wisconsin State Journal. May 26, 2018. en. Newspapers.com.
  2. Web site: Sports . www.madison.com . January 11, 2022 . https://web.archive.org/web/20110611050417/http://www.madison.com/tct/sports/188213 . June 11, 2011 . dead.
  3. Web site: WPT Sports: UW Men's Hockey on Wisconsin Public Television. Wisconsin Public Television. December 13, 2018.
  4. Web site: PBS Wisconsin. americanarchive.org. May 27, 2020.
  5. Web site: PBS begins rollout of electric-blue brand refresh. Goldsmith. Jill. Current. November 4, 2019 . en-US. December 3, 2019.
  6. Web site: WHA-TV ending analog broadcasts April 5. Richgels. Jeff. 77 Square. April 6, 2009.
  7. Web site: Wisconsin Public Television Contact US (Programming and station notes). June 1, 2018. November 15, 2012.
  8. https://licensing.fcc.gov/cgi-bin/prod/cdbs/forms/prod/getimportletter_exh.cgi?import_letter_id=84175&.pdf FCC History Cards for WLEF-TV
  9. Web site: Wisconsin Public Television to Launch New Digital Broadcast Lineup. October 6, 2008. April 6, 2009.
  10. Web site: Translators Conversion Schedule. Wisconsin Public Television. April 6, 2009. https://web.archive.org/web/20090405174549/http://www.wpt.org/digitaltv/translators.cfm. April 5, 2009. dead.
  11. Web site: Antennas and Reception. Wisconsin Public Television. April 6, 2009. https://web.archive.org/web/20090405190011/http://www.wpt.org/digitaltv/faq_antennas_reception.cfm. April 5, 2009. dead.
  12. News: PBS Wisconsin Available in Superior for First Time. Ellis. Jon. April 11, 2021. Northpine.com. April 13, 2021.
  13. Web site: Chemistry Professor Bassam Z. Shakhashiri Is Making Science Fun for the Holidays. December 23, 2019 .