11/29/2023 0 Comments History of vice media![]() The Advocate | Times Union | Beaumont Enterprise | Connecticut Post | The Courier | Edwardsville Intelligencer | Greenwich Time | Houston Chronicle | Huron Daily Tribune | Laredo Morning Times | Manistee News Advocate | The Middletown Press | Midland Daily News | Midland Reporter-Telegram | New Haven Register | The News-Times | The Norwalk Hour | Plainview Daily Herald | The Pioneer | The Register Citizen | San Antonio Express-News | San Francisco Chronicle | Seattle Post-Intelligencer | The Telegraph | Connecticut MagazineĬleveland Advocate | Eastex Advocate | The Lake Houston Observer | The Potpourri | The Villager | La Vos de Houstonīest | Car and Driver | CDS Global | Cosmopolitan | Country Living | Dr. Since 1995, the '5' has been enclosed in a red square. This logo was designed by Wyman & Cannan (now Bill Cannan & Company), and has been the only logo used by the station as WCVB-TV. This is a unique logo for a TV station as it features a (thick) outlined upward curving arrow, creating a stylized but hidden "5". Fox would get its own station in Boston in 1987, when it bought WXNE-TV (UHF channel 25) from the Christian Broadcasting Network and renamed it WFXT (although it has since been sold and re-sold). That station was sold to allow Metromedia to acquire WCVB (to comply with FCC rules in effect at the time that limited the number of VHF stations owned by a single company to only five), and it is believed that Metromedia gave Hearst a right of first refusal offer if WCVB ever went up for sale again. Channel 5 was included in the original deal, but was concurrently spun off to the Hearst Corporation, which had purchased fellow ABC affiliate KMBC-TV in Kansas City, Missouri from Metromedia in 1982. Boston Broadcasters sold WCVB to Metromedia in 1982 for $220 million, the costliest sale ever made for a local station at the time and in 1986, Metromedia sold its television stations to the News Corporation (then-owners of the 20th Century Fox film studio), which later used Metromedia's group of independent stations to launch the Fox network on October 9. WCVB used an old International Harvester dealership in Needham to serve as its studio facility, which the station continues to operate from to this day. ![]() However, the Herald-Traveler refused to hand over its facilities to the new VHF channel 5, forcing the station to rent tower space for its transmitter from WBZ-TV (VHF channel 4) during the final months of its operation, the original WHDH-TV was court-ordered to sign off daily at 1am so that WCVB-TV could test its equipment. ![]() The original channel 5 signed off for the last time on March 18, 1972, and was replaced by the new WCVB-TV early the next morning on the 19th. The new channel 5 needed to have a different call sign (due to FCC rules at the time that stated that radio and television stations in the same market, but with different ownership were required to have different call signs). In 1969, a local group, Boston Broadcasters, won a construction permit to build a new station on channel 5 under the callsign of WCVB-TV.
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