Television station in Indiana, United States
WFFT-TV
(channel 55) is a
television station
in
Fort Wayne, Indiana
, United States, affiliated with the
Fox
network. Owned by
Allen Media Group
, the station maintains studios and transmitter facilities on Hillegas Road in Fort Wayne.
History
[
edit
]
As an independent station
[
edit
]
WFFT-TV signed on the air on December 21, 1977, as an
independent station
. Many shows on the station during its early days had not been seen in the
market
since their original airing on network television; among the classic series it aired were
The Little Rascals
,
Superman
,
Batman
,
Battlestar Galactica
,
Star Trek
,
Night Gallery
,
The Wild Wild West
and
McHale's Navy
. For a time, the station carried
ABC
shows that were preempted by
WPTA
(channel 21), which usually included shows that were part of the
ABC Late Night
block.
Innovations
[
edit
]
In January 1978, just one month after it signed on, the
Midwestern United States
suffered through a snowstorm known as the "
Great Blizzard of 1978
". Due to the severity of the storm, engineers were trapped at the station, and rather than sign off the air as they normally would, they got permission from management to simply continue transmitting. They filled the time with information about the weather situation (to the degree that they could given their limited resources), and
public domain
films
and videos from the station's library. The appeal of 24-hour broadcasting was so popular, it later ended up staying on the air all night each Friday and Saturday on a regular basis during a time when the other Fort Wayne stations would sign-off around 1 or 2nbsp;a.m.; it filled the overnight timeslot with a feature film showcase called
Nite Owl Theatre
, which began with the opening refrain of "
(I've Been) Searchin' So Long
" by
Chicago
as its theme music.
In later years, Friday late nights featured classic
horror movies
such as:
Frankenstein
,
Dracula
,
The Wolfman
,
The Mole People
and
Invasion of the Body Snatchers
hosted by a character called "The Shroud" on
Nightmare Theatre
(of which only one episode is currently known to exist
[3]
). The station provided a much-needed alternative to viewers in the Fort Wayne area (particularly younger viewers) with its array of cartoons, movies, and old sitcoms. This was especially important for those who did not have cable and could not watch regional or national
superstations
such as
WTTV
from
Indianapolis
or
WGN-TV
from
Chicago
.
At one time, WFFT was voted the #1 independent station in the United States, a feat that was especially remarkable since Fort Wayne was one of the smallest markets in the country at the time to have an independent station. Beginning in 1982, the station carried programming from
CNN Headline News
during various parts of the day, including the overnight hours on weekdays. It also provided some coverage of local events such as the
Three Rivers Festival
. The station served as the official Fort Wayne outlet for
Chicago Cubs
baseball.
Local children's programming
[
edit
]
Happy's Place
was an afternoon children's television program that aired on WFFT-TV in the 1980s and 1990s. The program was known for its two-hour block of children's programming that initially aired from 3 to 5 p.m. and included
DuckTales
,
Inspector Gadget
,
The Smurfs
,
He-Man
,
Saber Rider
and
G.I. Joe
. The show was based on an original program called
Happy's Hour
, that had begun broadcasting on
WTVQ
, Channel 62, in
Lexington, Kentucky
in 1976. On it, Tim Eppenstein played the character of Happy, and Mike McMellon provided the voice of Froggie. Parents had a place to sit on the side and were not shown to be part of the TV audience. During commercial breaks, a part-time clown, inventor, and entrepreneur,
Mike Fry
, donned a
hobo clown
costume and would entertain the children in the audience.
[4]
In the early 1980s, WFFT planned a similar show for the Ft. Wayne market. A local clown, 'Chuckles', played by Charles Willer, turned down the Happy part when the station asked him to retire his other character as a condition of employment. Fry was then hired to play the part of Happy.
[4]
He also had a raspy-voiced sidekick named 'Froggie,' a frog
puppet
voiced by Craig Beaverson.
[a]
Characters 'Chester T. Fox' (Paul Moring) and 'Lawn Boy' (Rick Miller) were added later.
[5]
Fry left the show in 1990 to concentrate on his business interests, and the role of Happy was filled by Phillip Colglazier.
[b]
[6]
In the mid-to-late 1990s, amidst the station's shift away from programming that was produced locally at its studios, the
Happy's Place
program was retooled. Segments were taped on location (and sometimes even in transit) and featured area attractions such as the
Fort Wayne Children's Zoo
. This format did not last long and the show was eventually canceled.
Joining, leaving and rejoining Fox
[
edit
]
WFFT became a charter affiliate of
Fox
at the network's launch on October 9, 1986, and was branded as "Super 55 Fox" in the early to mid 1990s; the station was carried on cable providers in the southeastern portion of the
South Bend
market during that time, as that region lacked a Fox affiliate until
WSJV
affiliated with network in October 1995. The station moved away from local productions in the mid-1990s. WFFT's programming?apart from the required Fox schedule?was centered around syndicated fare including daytime
talk
and
court shows
, and reruns of network
sitcoms
. After the launch of
UPN
on January 16, 1995, WFFT began carrying the fledgling network through a secondary affiliation. The network's programming eventually moved to
CBS
affiliate
WANE-TV
(channel 15) full-time on a new second
digital subchannel
by the mid-2000s; when UPN and rival netlet
The WB
were shut down to form a combined network in 2006, WPTA gained the resulting
CW+
affiliation for its own subchannel. WFFT changed its on-air branding from "Fox 55" to "Fox Fort Wayne" on January 1, 2008, to reflect its various cable channel positions in the market.
Fox announced on June 20, 2011, that it would end its affiliation with WFFT and sister station KSFX-TV (now
KOZL-TV
) in
Springfield, Missouri
; its Fort Wayne affiliation moved to
MyNetworkTV
affiliate
WISE-DT2
on August 1. Nexstar had earlier lost the Fox affiliation for
WTVW
in
Evansville, Indiana
, following a dispute with the network over
retransmission consent
fees that it wanted its stations to pay to the network.
[7]
[8]
WFFT, along with
WXIN
in Indianapolis, had been the longest-tenured Fox affiliates in Indiana (Nexstar later voluntarily disaffiliated another Indiana station, WFXW?now
WAWV-TV
?in
Terre Haute
, from Fox in favor of switching the station's affiliation back to ABC, the network it was affiliated with until 1995).
On July 25, 2011,
Nexstar Broadcasting
filed an antitrust lawsuit against
Granite Broadcasting
, claiming that the company tried to monopolize advertising sales through its
shared services agreement
with WPTA (owned by
Malara Broadcast Group
) and the five network affiliations shared between WPTA and WISE-TV (WPTA carries ABC on its primary channel and The CW on a second digital subchannel, while WISE-TV carries
NBC
on its primary channel as Fox and MyNetworkTV shared that station's second digital subchannel). Nexstar sought a judgment to force either WPTA-TV or WISE-TV to give up at least one of the three Big Four affiliations they had
[9]
(the impetus of the lawsuit became ironic as Nexstar, which itself maintains outsourcing agreements with stations it does
not
own outright in most of the markets where it
does
own a TV outlet, later created a virtual
quadropoly
composed of
four
network
-
affiliated
stations
in
Little Rock, Arkansas
, through its 2012 acquisition of 15 stations from
Newport Television
).
[10]
WFFT reverted to independent status on August 1, 2011, which made Fort Wayne one of the only television markets in the United States with all three legacy broadcast networks (ABC, CBS and NBC) with primary affiliations, and all three current post-1986 networks (Fox, The CW and MyNetworkTV) carried as digital multicast channels in a market with four commercial full-power stations. As an independent, the station filled its prime time schedule with a mix of entertainment newsmagazines and sitcoms on weeknights, a two-hour "Saturday Crimetime" block of
police procedural
series on Saturdays and family movies on Sundays.
[11]
On February 6, 2013, as part of a settlement of Nexstar's lawsuit against Granite, the company announced that the Fox affiliation would return to WFFT; the switch was effectively reversed on March 1, 2013, making WFFT the only former Fox affiliate owned or managed by Nexstar that was affected by the 2011 dispute with Fox to rejoin the network.
[12]
[13]
[14]
The first Fox program to air on WFFT when it rejoined the network was an episode of
Kitchen Nightmares
.
Nexstar announced on June 13, 2016, that it would sell WFFT-TV and four other stations to
Heartland Media
, through its USA Television MidAmerica Holdings
joint venture
with MSouth Equity Partners, for $115 million. The sale was required as part of Nexstar's planned merger with
Media General
to comply with
Federal Communications Commission
(FCC) ownership caps; Media General was the owner of rival WANE-TV.
[15]
In early March 2018, the station removed the "Local" branding originated during its Nexstar ownership and independent period, returning to the previous "Fox 55" branding.
On October 1, 2019,
Allen Media Group
agreed to purchase 11 stations, including WFFT-TV, from Heartland Media for $290 million. The sale was approved by the FCC on November 22, 2019 and was completed on February 11, 2020.
News operation
[
edit
]
WFFT presently broadcasts 17 hours of locally produced newscasts each week (with three hours each weekday, and an hour each on Saturdays and Sundays); in addition, the station also airs a half-hour weekly sports wrap-up show, titled
The Locker Room
, airing on Sunday evenings after the 10 p.m. newscast.
[11]
For most of the station's history, WFFT did not have a regular newscast. In 1980, it formed its initial news department and aired a half-hour prime time news program known as
The 10 O’Clock Report
; this was established during a time of heavy competition from other newscasts. As an independent, WFFT did not have network shows that could lead into its newscast, so consistent viewership and ratings were difficult to maintain. The news team consisted of only five people, and personnel would shoot and edit their own video.
[16]
After that broadcast's cancellation a year later, WFFT delivered news bulletins in prime time for almost two decades.
On April 6, 2009, the station launched its second news operation and prime time broadcast known as
Fox Fort Wayne News First at 10
(now
Fox 55 News First at 10
since March 2018). It was the last Fox affiliate in Indiana to launch a news department, but the only local affiliate in the country to launch a new newscast in 2009. Airing for 35 minutes on weeknights and anchored by broadcast veteran Jim Blue, the show competed with a half-hour 10 p.m. newscast on WISE-DT2 that was produced by WPTA and WISE-TV's
Indiana's NewsCenter
operation.
[17]
[18]
As with the 1980 production, personnel served as multi-platform journalists, shooting and editing their own stories. There was no sports department until the newscast's expansion following the loss of the Fox affiliation. The newscast was the only one in Fort Wayne to receive an
Emmy Award
nomination for "Best Evening Newscast" from the
National Academy of Television Arts and Sciences
-Lower
Great Lakes
Chapter that year.
[19]
When the station became an independent on August 1, 2011, WFFT expanded the 10 p.m. newscast to one hour; the newscast then expanded to weekend evenings on October 1, 2011 (also running for one hour); the Thursday preceding the latter expansion (September 29), WFFT became the first television station in the Fort Wayne market to begin broadcasting its local newscasts in
high definition
.
[20]
[21]
Blue eventually left WFFT, returning to
WNWO-TV
in
Toledo, Ohio
. Dan Ball took over as the news director following Blue's departure after a turbulent departure from KSNV-TV in March 2012.
[22]
Ball was the news director from January 2013 until leaving two years later in January 2015 for
KMIR-TV
in
Palm Springs, California
.
[23]
Audra Streetman temporarily took over as the main news anchor before leaving in May 2015 to also join KMIR-TV. Streetman and Blue currently co-anchor the 5?7 a.m. morning show.
[24]
On February 13, 2023, WFFT began airing hour-long 5 p.m. and 6 p.m. local newscasts, marking the news department's first expansion in over a decade.
[25]
Technical information
[
edit
]
Subchannels
[
edit
]
The station's signal is
multiplexed
:
Analog-to-digital conversion
[
edit
]
WFFT began broadcasting its digital signal on UHF channel 36 in 2003. Until December 2007, the signal transmitted programming only in
standard definition
at an
effective radiated power
of 980
watts
limiting reception to within miles of the station. In May 2009, the digital signal was upgraded to full power. It now broadcasts high definition programming in the
720p
format, although it aired in
1080i
between leaving and rejoining the Fox network.
[29]
WFFT shut down its analog signal, over
UHF
channel 55, at 6:01 p.m. 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 remained on its pre-transition UHF channel 36,
[30]
using
virtual channel
55.
On
January 1
, 2014, WFFT began carrying
Bounce TV
on a newly created digital subchannel 55.2.
[31]
On March 19, 2018, WFFT began carrying Antenna TV on digital channel 55.3. The network was previously seen on WANE-DT2 from 2011 to 2017.
Out-of-market carriage and removal from out-of-market cable providers
[
edit
]
As of March 2012, WFFT is only available over-the-air in
Grant County
. Despite this, WFFT was formerly carried by
Bright House Networks
in
Marion
, along with WXIN.
From January 2009 until WFFT's signal was removed by Bright House Networks systems in Grant County in March 2012, the station and WFWA remained on the cable system as well as
Comcast
in
Blackford County
(both with WXIN in-market).
[
citation needed
]
This was due to contractual agreements by the Fox network itself which disallow signal duplication of network programming by an out-of-market signal despite the station's longtime service to each area, a source of controversy already in other duplicative market areas in the past, as was the case in October 2008 when WANE-TV was pulled from Bright House.
WFFT, and all other Fort Wayne television stations, also have had their coverage in
Ohio
limited to
Paulding County
and
Van Wert County
since about 2000 due to the presence of network-affiliated stations in
Lima, Ohio
, as well as
Dayton
and Toledo.
Notes
[
edit
]
- ^
Froggie/Beaverson had his own morning program on WFFT, entitled
Froggie's Pad
.
Froggie's Pad
featured children's cartoons such as
ThunderCats
and
SilverHawks
.
- ^
Chris Danielson, dressed in the same Happy the hobo apparel, had temporarily taken over the role in 1988 when Fry had knee surgery.
[6]
References
[
edit
]
- ^
Miller, Mark K. (October 1, 2019).
"Byron Allen Buying 11 Stations For $290M"
.
TVNewsCheck
. NewsCheckMedia
. Retrieved
October 1,
2019
.
- ^
"Facility Technical Data for WFFT-TV"
.
Licensing and Management System
.
Federal Communications Commission
.
- ^
"WFFT TV-55 ? Nightmare Theatre With The Shroud ? 1957's "The Deadly Mantis" Broadcast (Circa-1980)"
.
The Northeast Ohio Video Hunter
. March 20, 2015.
- ^
a
b
The Toy Story: An Inventor's Dream Come True
, archived from
the original
on October 21, 2006
- ^
When Happy Met Froggie
, archived from
the original
on April 23, 2012
- ^
a
b
McIntyre, Janet,
Seeking a Cookie Fortune
- ^
"Fox Moves Afills In Springfield, Ft. Wayne"
.
TVNewsCheck
. NewsCheck Media. June 20, 2011
. Retrieved
June 20,
2011
.
- ^
Malone, Michael (July 19, 2011).
"Nexstar's Fort Wayne Fox Going Independent"
.
Broadcasting & Cable
.
NewBay Media
.
- ^
Jessell, Harry A. (July 25, 2011).
"Nexstar Files Antitrust Suit Against Granite"
.
TVNewsCheck
. NewsCheck Media.
- ^
Knable, Kate (January 29, 2013).
"Almost 30 Lose Jobs at KARK, KLRT as TV Owners Consolidate"
.
Arkansas Business
. Arkansas Business Limited Partnership
. Retrieved
January 29,
2013
.
- ^
a
b
Nexstar's Fort Wayne Fox Going Independent
,
Broadcasting & Cable
, July 19, 2011.
- ^
Ft. Wayne Fox Affiliation Returns To WFFT
,
TVNewsCheck
, February 6, 2013.
- ^
Nexstar, Granite Settle Antitrust Lawsuit, Returning Fox Affiliation to Fort Wayne’s WFFT
,
TVSpy
, February 6, 2013.
- ^
Malone, Michael (February 6, 2013).
"Nexstar's WFFT Fort Wayne Back in Fox Fold"
.
Broadcasting & Cable
. Retrieved
February 6,
2013
.
- ^
"Prather Buys 5 TVs From Nexstar-Media Gen"
.
TVNewsCheck
. June 13, 2016
. Retrieved
June 13,
2016
.
- ^
WFFT’s first, short-lived newscast
,
Fort Wayne Daily News
, February 20, 2009
- ^
[1]
Archived
February 14, 2009, at the
Wayback Machine
- ^
[2]
Archived
March 14, 2009, at the
Wayback Machine
- ^
Local Fox news gets Emmy nod
,
The Journal Gazette
, May 13, 2010.
- ^
WFFT Ft. Wayne Unveils Post-Fox Lineup
,
TVNewsCheck
, July 19, 2011.
- ^
[3]
Archived
September 30, 2011, at the
Wayback Machine
- ^
"Co-anchor Dan Ball ousted at KSNV-TV | Las Vegas Review-Journal"
. Reviewjournal.com. March 21, 2012
. Retrieved
July 22,
2015
.
- ^
"Ball signs on as new WFFT anchor - Fort Wayne Business Weekly: Breaking News"
. Fwbusiness.com. January 16, 2013
. Retrieved
July 22,
2015
.
- ^
"Audra Streetman - KMIR News | Palm Springs, California"
. Kmir.com. August 20, 2014
. Retrieved
July 22,
2015
.
- ^
Amato, Kymmi (February 7, 2023).
"FOX 55 News adding hour-long weeknight newscasts at 5 and 6 pm"
.
Fox 55 Fort Wayne
. Retrieved
February 17,
2023
.
- ^
RabbitEars TV Query for WFFT
- ^
[4]
Archived
December 27, 2013, at the
Wayback Machine
- ^
"RabbitEars.Info"
. RabbitEars.Info
. Retrieved
July 22,
2015
.
- ^
"Wane 15"
.
- ^
"DTV Tentative Channel Designations for the First and Second Rounds"
(PDF)
. Retrieved
March 24,
2012
.
- ^
WFFT to partner with Bounce TV
External links
[
edit
]
|
---|
Reception may vary by location and some stations may only be viewable with
cable television
|
Full power
|
- WINM
(12.1
TCT
, 12.2
Sonlife
, 12.4
Cozi
, 12.5
Defy
, 12.6 blank, 12.7
Scripps
, 12.8
Quest
, 12.9/.10
[both blank]
)
- WANE-TV
(15.1
CBS
, 15.2
Ion
, 15.3
Laff
, 15.4
Mystery
)
- WPTA
(21.1
ABC
, 21.2
NBC
, 21.3
MNTV
)
- WISE-TV
(33.1
CW+
, 33.2
Crime
, 33.3
Grit
, 33.4
Court
, 33.5
Start
, 33.6
MeTV
, 33.7
Dabl
)
- WFWA
(39.1
PBS
, 39.2
PBS Kids
, 39.3
Create
, 39.4
Explore
, 39.5 local weather/
WXJ58
audio simulcast)
- WFFT-TV
(55.1
Fox
, 55.2
Bounce
, 55.3
ANT
)
|
---|
Low power
|
- WLMO-LD
(2.1
This
, 2.2
Comet
, 2.3
LX
, 2.4
OAN Plus
, 2.5
QVC
, 2.6
QVC2
, 2.7
Shop LC
, 2.8 blank)
- WCUH-LD
(16.1 Info, 16.2
The365
(soon), 16.3
Buzzr
, 16.4
LX
, 16.5
Oxygen
)
- W26DH-D
(26.1
3ABN
, 26.2 3ABN Latino, 26.3
Hope
, 26.4
LLBN
, 26.5/.6/.7/.8/.9
[all blank]
)
- W30EH0-D
(40.1 Info)
- W25FH-D
(43.1 Info, 43.2 Info, 43.4
Buzzr
, 43.4
The365
(soon), 43.5
Novelisima
)
- WFWC-CD
(45.1 Info, 45.2
Get
, 45.3
HSN
, 45.4
Sonlife
, 45.5 Info, 45.6
NTD
, 45.7
Shop LC
)
- WODP-LD
(49.1 Info)
|
---|
ATSC 3.0
| |
---|
Cable channels
| |
---|
Adjacent locals
| Lima, OH
| |
---|
Dayton, OH
|
- WDTN
(2.1
NBC
, 2.2
Mystery
)
- WHIO-TV
(7.1
CBS
, 7.2
MeTV
, 7.3
Laff
)
- WPTD
(16.1
PBS
, 16.2/16.3 Encore, 16.4
Ohio
/
World
, 16.5
Kids
)
- WKEF
(22.1
ABC
, 22.2
Fox
, 22.3
MNTV
/
Nest
)
- WBDT
(26.1
CW
, 26.2
Bounce
)
- WKOI-TV
(43.1
Ion
)
- WRGT-TV
(45.1
Dabl
, 45.2
TBD
, 45.3
ANT
, 45.4
Charge!
, 45.5
Comet
)
|
---|
Grand Rapids, MI
|
- WWMT
(3.1
CBS
, 3.2
Ind.
, 3.3
TBD
)
- WOOD-TV
(8.1
NBC
, 8.2
REW
, 8.3
Grio
)
- WZZM
(13.1
ABC
, 13.2 Local WX, 13.3
Crime
, 13.4
Quest
, 13.5
The 365
, 13.6
Outlaw
, 13.7
QVC
, 13.8
Shop LC
, 13.9
Start
)
- WXSP-CD
(15.1
MNTV
, 15.2
The Nest
, 15.3
Comet
)
- WXMI
(17.1
Fox
, 17.2
ANT
, 17.3
Bounce
, 17.4
Defy
, 17.5
Get
, 17.6
Shop LC
)
- WOTV
(41.1
ABC
, 41.2
CW
, 41.3
Charge!
, 41.4
Dabl
)
- WZPX-TV
(43.1
Ion
, 43.2
Court
, 43.3
Grit
, 43.4
Laff
, 43.5
Mystery
, 43.6
Defy
, 43.7
Scripps News
, 43.8
HSN
, 43.9
QVC2
)
|
---|
|
---|
Defunct
| |
---|
|
Fox
network affiliates licensed to and serving the state of
Indiana
|
---|
Primary*
| |
---|
Secondary**
| |
---|
(*) ? indicates station is in one of Indiana's primary
TV markets
(**) ? indicates station is in an out-of-state TV market, but reaches a small portion of Indiana
|