American communications holding company
BHC Communications, Inc.
was the holding company for the broadcast property of
Chris-Craft Industries
. BHC stands for "broadcasting holding company".
[3]
History
[
edit
]
The firm was originally incorporated in 1977 as
BHC, Incorporated
by
Chris-Craft Industries
to hold its two existing incorporated
independent television stations
, KCOP Television (
KCOP
in Los Angeles) and Oregon Television (
KPTV
in
Portland
,
Oregon
), within BHC's Chris-Craft Television subsidiary. That same year, Chris-Craft purchased a share of
20th Century Fox
. In 1981, the 20th Century Fox share, then at 20 percent, was traded for 19% of
United Television
.
[3]
United owned three other television stations: independent
KMSP-TV
in
Minneapolis
,
ABC
affiliate
KTVX
in
Salt Lake City
, and
NBC
affiliate KMOL-TV (now
WOAI-TV
) in
San Antonio
.
Warner Communications, Inc.
purchased a 42.5 percent share in BHC for $200 million in convertible preferred stock. With the Time, Inc./Warner Communications, Inc. merger into Time-Warner, Inc., BHC got a return of some stock held by Warner, cash, and Time Warner convertible preferred stock in Time Warner, a total of valued at $2.3 billion over a six-year period. With this settlement, BHC was reincorporated as BHC Communications, Inc. with stock restructured with two classes of stock giving Chris-Craft most of the voting power. Some BHC's shares were distributed to other Warner stockholders made it a publicly traded corporation. Some the payment were used to buy back BHC class A shares.
WWOR-TV
, an independent station (and national
superstation
) in the New York City area, was purchased in 1992 for $313 million. In 1995, United Sales Enterprises was formed to hand national spot advertising time for all BHC/United stations.
[3]
Chris-Craft TV teamed up with
MCA Television
for a syndicated programming block,
Hollywood Premiere Network
, for only the 1990?1991 season.
[4]
In the early 1990s, BHC Television formed an alternative programming consortium,
Prime Time Entertainment Network
, with other station groups and Time Warner-owned
Warner Bros. Domestic Television
that was planned to expand into the fifth television network.
[5]
In January 1995, BHC affiliated all of its stations, except the Salt Lake City and San Antonio outlets, with the newly launched
United Paramount Network
, which it fully owned and financed but ran with
Paramount
/
Viacom
, the network's producer. In December 1996, Paramount exercised its option to buy half of the Network by paying half of the losses ($160 million). Included in the deal was to continue selling UPN "
Star Trek: Voyager
" instead of placing it in syndication.
[3]
In the late 1990s, BHC acquired two television stations, WHSW (now
WUTB
) in Baltimore, Maryland, and
WRBW
in Orlando, Florida, it resulted in the increase of BHC's number of television stations to ten.
In 1999, Viacom announced plans to merge with CBS Corporation. Because of a regulation upheld by the FCC years ago, prohibiting companies from owning two broadcast networks. Viacom's announcement raised questions regarding the future of Chris-Craft and Viacom's joint ownership of UPN. In Viacom and Chris-Craft's original agreement, two options for exiting the partnership had been determined?buying out the other partner or paying for what the partner had invested up to that date and providing funds for the future operation of UPN. Either option would cost Viacom substantial sums of money. Industry analysts agreed that Chris-Craft could emerge the winner and offered other possible scenarios?that Viacom might offer Chris-Craft some of its stations in exchange for severing the partnership or that Chris-Craft might sell Viacom's share to another company.
In 2000, a lawsuit was filed by BHC against the
Viacom
-
CBS
merger as BHC saw this as a breach of the UPN partnership. BHC lost the suit and sold its remaining ownership in UPN to Viacom for $5 million. Shortly thereafter, Chris-Craft announced that it was getting out of broadcasting after losing $500 million on UPN, the possibility of UPN shutting down or having their affiliation pulled. Many industry observers thought Viacom would end up getting the stations, but Viacom's bid lost out to
News Corporation
's
Fox Television Stations
, resulting in a sale which closed on July 31, 2001.
[6]
[2]
Former stations
[
edit
]
(
**
) ? indicates station built and signed-on by BHC Communications.
Stations formerly owned by BHC Communications
[3]
City of license
/
Market
|
Call sign
|
Channel
|
Years owned
|
Current status
|
Phoenix, AZ
|
KUTP
**
|
45
|
1985?2001
|
MyNetworkTV
affiliate owned by
Fox Television Stations
|
Los Angeles, CA
|
KCOP-TV
|
13
|
1977?2001
[a]
|
MyNetworkTV affiliate owned by Fox Television Stations
|
San Francisco, CA
|
KBHK-TV
|
44
|
1983?2001
|
Independent
KPYX
owned by
CBS News and Stations
|
Orlando, FL
|
WRBW
|
65
|
1998?2001
|
MyNetworkTV affiliate owned by Fox Television Stations
|
Baltimore, MD
|
WUTB
|
24
|
1998?2001
|
TBD
affiliate owned by
Deerfield Media
[b]
|
Minneapolis
?
St. Paul, MN
|
KMSP-TV
|
9
|
1981?2001
[c]
|
Fox
owned-and-operated (
O&O
)
|
New York City, NY
|
WWOR-TV
|
9
|
1992?2001
|
MyNetworkTV affiliate owned by Fox Television Stations
|
Portland, OR
|
KPTV
|
12
|
1977?2001
[a]
|
Fox affiliate owned by
Gray Television
|
San Antonio, TX
|
KMOL-TV
|
4
|
1981?2001
[c]
|
NBC/
The CW
affiliate
WOAI-TV
owned by
Sinclair Broadcast Group
|
Salt Lake City, UT
|
KTVX
|
4
|
1981?2001
[c]
|
ABC
affiliate owned by
Nexstar Media Group
|
- ^
a
b
Owned directly by Chris-Craft prior to the formation of BHC in 1977.
- ^
Operated by
Sinclair Broadcast Group
.
- ^
a
b
c
Owned by United Television prior to its merger with Chris-Craft in 1981.
United Television
[
edit
]
United Television was a corporation operating multiple television stations founded in 1956 to run station
KMSP-TV
in
Minneapolis
. In 1975, United purchased
KTVX-TV
, a Salt Lake City ABC affiliate, and
KMOL-TV
, a
San Antonio
NBC affiliate. Fox purchased an interest in the company making it a subsidiary, and in 1980, briefly consider purchasing NBC affiliate
WRBT
in
Baton Rouge
prior to the interest change in 1981.
[7]
In 1981, BHC/Chris-Craft traded its interest in 20th Century Fox to
Marvin Davis
and
Marc Rich
for a 19% interest in United. BHC upped its stake in United to 50.1 percent of common stock in 1983. A UHF station was acquired that same year in San Francisco. In the final quarter of 1985, United started a new UHF station in
Phoenix
,
KUTP
. Loaning its name to a network joint venture of its parent corporation BHC with
Paramount Pictures
, most of United stations switch programming to
United Paramount Network
.
In January 1998, United Television acquired a third UHF station in Baltimore for $80 million, changed its call letters to WUTB, and made the station a UPN affiliate. United, in October 1997, agreed to purchase
WRBW
(channel 65), a UHF station and UPN affiliate in Orlando, Florida, for $60 million and possible further considerations.
[3]
In April 1998, United took a minority stake in
Bohbot Entertainment & Media
.
[8]
20th Century Fox later returned to interest in the broadcast industry when in 1986, it purchased 6 stations from
Metromedia
, which these stations became affiliated with Fox's new Fox Broadcasting Company, which was first aired in late 1986. Fox later reacquired United Television's stations as part of the acquisition of BHC by the latter in 2001.
References
[
edit
]
- ^
"SEC"
.
- ^
a
b
"Fox Entertainment Group Inc. 2001 Annual Report"
.
EDGAR
. Fox Entertainment Group. September 28, 2001. p. 6
. Retrieved
May 31,
2013
.
- ^
a
b
c
d
e
f
g
"History of BHC Communications, Inc"
.
Funding Universe
. Retrieved
July 20,
2009
.
- ^
"MCA TV Spins The Bottle"
.
Variety
. April 10, 1995
. Retrieved
April 6,
2017
.
- ^
King, Susan (January 23, 1994).
"Space, 2258, in the Year 1994"
.
Los Angeles Times
. p. 4
. Retrieved
June 25,
2009
.
- ^
Hofmeister, Sallie (August 12, 2000).
"News Corp. to Buy Chris-Craft Parent for $5.5 Billion, Outbidding Viacom"
.
The Los Angeles Times
. Retrieved
March 23,
2011
.
- ^
"WRBT May be Sold to 20th Century Fox," State Times Advocate, Baton Rouge, LA, November 15, 1980, Page 12-A
- ^
Freeman, Michael (April 13, 1998).
"Bohbot financial report discloses Chris-Craft stake"
.
Mediaweek
. Archived from
the original
on March 14, 2014
. Retrieved
March 13,
2014
.