WYTU-LD
WYTU-LD, virtual channel 63 (UHF digital channel 16), is a low-powered Telemundo-affiliated television station licensed to Milwaukee, Wisconsin, United States. Owned by Chicago-based Weigel Broadcasting, it is sister to CBS affiliate WDJT-TV (channel 58), Class A MeTV owned-and-operated station WBME-CD (channel 41) and Racine-licensed independent station WMLW-TV (channel 49). The four stations share studios in the Renaissance Center office complex on South 60th Street in West Allis (with a Milwaukee postal address); WYTU-LD's transmitter is located in Milwaukee's Lincoln Park (next to the transmitter belonging to ABC affiliate WISN-TV, channel 12).
Milwaukee, Wisconsin United States | |
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Channels | Digital: 16 (UHF) WYTU, 35 (UHF) WFBN Virtual: 63 (PSIP) WYTU, 23 (PSIP) WFBN |
Branding |
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Slogan |
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Programming | |
Subchannels | See below |
Affiliations | |
Ownership | |
Owner | Weigel Broadcasting (Channel 41 and 63 Limited Partnership) |
WDJT-TV, WBME-CD, WMLW-TV | |
History | |
Founded | February 17, 1981 |
First air date | July 31, 1989 |
Former call signs | W46AR (1989–1999) WYTU-LP (1999–2012) |
Former channel number(s) |
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Call sign meaning | WYTU-LD - Y TÚ, Spanish for 'and you' WFBN-LD - Focus Broadcasting Network (calls originated with first owners of WGBO in the 1980s) |
Technical information | |
Licensing authority | FCC |
Facility ID | 71424 |
ERP | 7 kW |
HAAT | 300.3 m (985 ft) |
Transmitter coordinates | 43°6′42″N 87°55′50″W |
Translator(s) |
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Links | |
Public license information | Profile LMS |
Website | telemundowi |
Even though WYTU-LD has a digital signal of its own, its broadcasting radius does not reach all of southeastern Wisconsin. Therefore, the station can also be seen through a 16:9 widescreen standard definition simulcast on WDJT-TV's fourth digital subchannel in order to reach the entire market. This relay signal can be seen on UHF channel 29.4 (or virtual channel 58.4 via PSIP) from the same Lincoln Park transmitter facility. WYTU is also relayed on WMYS-LD (channel 69.2) in South Bend, Indiana and WFBN-LD (channel 35.2) in Rockford, Illinois.
The station airs all of Telemundo's schedule, along with Spanish-language coverage of Sunday afternoon Milwaukee Brewers baseball home games, using camera positions shared with Fox Sports Wisconsin. WYTU-LD is also available via Spectrum's systems throughout their entire state service area as far west as La Crosse & as far north as Bayfield,[1] making for a rare example of an intra-region superstation in the digital age.
History
The station has mostly been a feeder of the entire schedule of Univision and Telemundo through most of its history, with new local programming being added to the schedule as the station (and Telemundo's schedule) has gained strength. In 1999, Weigel dropped Univision in a compensation dispute and affiliated with Telemundo, and within the year, the station moved to UHF channel 63 from channel 46 as "W63CU", in order to accommodate WDJT's channel 46 digital signal and the company's move to one tower in Lincoln Park for all its operations. In mid-December 2003, the station took the lettered call sign "WYTU-LP" as it began to solicit local advertising from the growing Latino population in the Milwaukee area and Weigel began to push for extended cable coverage by including it in retransmission consent negotiations for WDJT.
The station signed on its digital signal on UHF channel 17 on December 10, 2007.[2] Unlike the channel 13 digital signal of WMLW (which receives interference from WZZM in Grand Rapids), WYTU-LD's digital signal reaches the southern portion of the adjacent Green Bay/Appleton DMA, and is somewhat unrestricted as WXMI, the former occupant of channel 17 in the Grand Rapids market, now broadcasts on digital channel 20, although that station's Muskegon translator W17DF-D also broadcasts on channel 17. As a result of carriage agreements by Time Warner Cable and Charter Communications for access to the WDJT signal and to provide network service to areas without a Telemundo affiliate, WYTU is carried through the entirety of the state, especially after Time Warner and Charter's merger into Spectrum in 2017. Currently, due to different lineups and carriage contracts among the providers which will eventually be united in Spectrum's next agreement with Weigel, the availability of the station's high definition feed depends on the individual system.
In January 2009, WYTU was added to sister station WBME's digital signal on digital subchannel 49.4, calls which changed on August 16, 2012 as part of the channel swap between WBME and WMLW to allow WMLW to launch full-power, high-definition operations.[3]
The station's analog signal on channel 63 did not broadcast the Telemundo Wisconsin schedule from June 12, 2009 onward, when Weigel decided to convert that signal to an enhanced nightlight service instead, carrying WDJT's CBS schedule for the benefit of those viewers who were not yet prepared for the digital transition for full-power stations. The special agreement to carry CBS in an analog form ended on January 1, 2010, and from then until 2011, WYTU-LP carried the MeTV lineup, while Telemundo Wisconsin remained a digital-only offering via WYTU's digital signal and WMLW-DT4.[4] On February 11, 2013, the Federal Communications Commission cancelled WYTU's analog license.[5]
The station converted their low-power channel 17 digital signal into a 720p high-definition signal on July 25, 2012, in time for Telemundo's Spanish-language coverage of the 2012 Summer Olympics. Following the Games, the station carried, for the first time in team history, Green Bay Packers preseason football with Spanish language play-by-play in full high definition on its designated digital signal. These broadcasts are simulcast in the Green Bay market over English-language MyNetworkTV affiliate WACY-TV (Channel 32). In summer 2014, the standard definition simulcast on WMLW-DT4 began to scale network content to standard-definition widescreen depending on Active Format Description codes sent out over the Telemundo network feed.
On January 8, 2018, the full-power market-wide simulcast of WYTU moved to WDJT-DT4 due to WMLW's merge of their spectrum to the low-power WBME-CD.[6] In addition, This TV (a network formerly owned by Weigel and now owned by Tribune Broadcasting), was moved to WYTU's second subchannel as part of the move and to manage bandwidth.[7]
On September 3, 2018, Weigel launched the new female-focused Start TV network, replacing This after nearly ten years on Weigel channel spaces. The same day saw Weigel's Movies! network move to the newly-launched 63.3 subchannel, moving over from WISN-TV's second subchannel (which was replaced by Justice Network two days earlier).[8] WFBN-LD3 additionally launched a third subchannel for Start TV in Rockford.
Sinclair, Weigel Broadcasting, and Milwaukee PBS decided on a switch date of January 8, 2018 for their various local spectrum moves, which included the market-wide simulcast of WYTU-LD, which moved from WMLW-DT4 to WDJT-DT4.[9]
Programming
Digital channels
The station's digital signal is multiplexed. As mentioned above in Milwaukee, the Telemundo schedule is carried in both standard and high-definition versions. 63.2 was upgraded to a forced 16:9 picture in July 2018 in preparation for its future Start TV affiliation, despite This airing only in 4:3. In 2020, Weigel began to brand the simulcast in South Bend as "Telemundo Michiana".
Channel | Video | Aspect | PSIP Short Name | Programming[10][11][12] |
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63.1 | 1080i | 16:9 | WYTU-HD | Main WYTU-LD programming / Telemundo |
69.2 | TELMNDO | |||
35.2 | 480i | WFBN-LD | ||
58.4 | WYTU SD | |||
63.2 | StartTV | WYTU-LD / Start TV | ||
58.5 | ||||
63.3 | Movies! | Movies! | ||
35.1 | WFBN-LD | Heroes & Icons | ||
35.3 | (blank PSIP) | Start TV | ||
22.11 | 1080i | WIFR-LD | CBS / WIFR-LD programming | |
Currently, Weigel Broadcasting has contracted with Gray Television to rebroadcast CBS affiliate WIFR-LD (channel 23) in the Rockford market, due to WIFR-LD's reallocated physical channel 28 experiencing interference in the northwestern portion of the market with WISN-TV in Milwaukee; it would otherwise be WFBN-LD4.[13]
Newscasts
The station launched a nightly 10-minute newscast in July 2007 within the 10:00 p.m. national edition of Noticiero Telemundo, called Noticiero Telemundo Wisconsin, with production assistance from WDJT.[14] Several on-air reporters and anchors within the WDJT newsroom have been bilingual, allowing reporters to file stories for both stations. The show is pre-recorded before WMLW's 9 p.m. and WDJT's 10 p.m. newscasts. It began to carry an 11 a.m. midday newscast leading into the newly-inaugurated national Noticias Telemundo Mediodía on June 4, 2018.[15]
Recently, local content has made up the bulk of the 35 minutes of the program, with parts of the national newscast and stories from CNN en Español via CNN's Newsource wire service blended into the show. A public affairs program titled ¡Qué Pasa Wisconsin! airs on weekend mornings on the station. Recently that program, along with the 10 p.m. newscast, has been anchored by Jocelyne Pruna.
Local newscasts are broadcast weekdays at 11am, 5pm, and 10pm.
References
- "On or after June 1, 2020, your Spectrum lineup will be changing. Telemundo, Basic channel 206 will replace their current programming feed with WYTU Telemundo" (PDF) (Press release). Charter Communications. May 2020. Retrieved 10 May 2020.
- New low power digital station - MilwaukeeHDTV.org Forums
- Obama urges Congress to delay digital transition amid coupon shortage, Milwaukee Journal Sentinel, January 8, 2009.
- Channels 58, 41 to keep analog broadcasts, Milwaukee Business Journal, June 5, 2009.
- Federal Communications Commission
- "WMLW Milwaukee - Milwaukee Television Re-pack". Retrieved 9 December 2017.
- Foran, Chris (4 January 2018). "Some of Milwaukee's over-the-air TV lineups will change Monday". Milwaukee Journal Sentinel. Retrieved 9 January 2018.
- Foran, Chris (27 August 2018). "Start TV and Justice Milwaukee are in, This TV's out, and Movies! is moving". Milwaukee Journal Sentinel. Retrieved 28 August 2018.
- "Milwaukee Television Re-pack". WMLW Milwaukee. Retrieved 9 December 2017.
- "Digital TV Market Listing for WYTU-LD". RabbitEars.Info. Retrieved August 26, 2019.
- "Digital TV Market Listing for WFBN". RabbitEars.Info. Retrieved August 26, 2019.
- "Digital TV Market Listing for WDJT". RabbitEars.Info. Retrieved 26 August 2019.
- "WIFR Spectrum Reallocation FAQ". WIFR-LD. 22 November 2019. Retrieved 6 February 2020.
- "JS Online: Telemundo goes local with Milwaukee addition to nightly". jsonline.com.
- Miller, Mark (31 May 2018). "WYTU Launching 11 A.M. Newscast June 4". TVNewsCheck. Retrieved 1 June 2018.
External links
- Official website
- History of Milwaukee television
- WYTU in the FCC's TV station database