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The WB Television Network
TypeDefunct online network (2008-2013)
Defunct broadcast television network (1995–2006)
Country
United States
AvailabilityNational
OwnerWarner Bros. Entertainment (Time Warner)[1]
Key people
Susanne Daniels,
Jordan Levin,
David Janollari,
Robert Bibb,
Lewis Goldstein
Launch date
January 11, 1995 (1995-01-11) (television)
April 28, 2008 (2008-04-28) (online)
DissolvedSeptember 17, 2006 (2006-09-17) (television)
Late 2013 (online)
Official website
www.thewb.com
Replaced byThe CW (terrestrial broadcasting)
Warner Bros. Television Media to Go (online)

The WB Television Network (commonly shortened to The WB and short for Warner Bros.) was a former broadcast and internet television network in the United States, that in its original television incarnation was launched on January 11, 1995[2] as a joint venture between the Warner Bros. Entertainment division of Time Warner and the Tribune Broadcasting division of the Tribune Company, with the former acting as controlling partner. On January 24, 2006, CBS Corporation and Warner Bros. Entertainment announced plans to shut down the network and launch The CW later that same year.[3] The WB Television Network shut down on September 17, 2006, and merged with UPN (which had shut down two days earlier) to form The CW.

As a television network, it aired programs targeting mostly teenagers and young adults, with the exception of its Saturday morning lineup of shows called Kids' WB, which was geared towards children. It was relaunched as an online network on April 28, 2008 by Time Warner. The website allowdc users to watch shows of the former television network, as well as original programming and shows formerly hosted on the now-defunct In2TV service. In late 2013, the website was discontinued. It now redirects to a website called Warner Bros. Television Media to Go, a promotional website for programs made by Warner Bros. Television. The website could only be accessed within the United States.[4][5]

History

Origins (prior to 1995)

Much like its competitor UPN, The WB Television Network was created in reaction primarily to new FCC deregulation of media ownership rules that repealed the Financial Interest and Syndication Rules, and partly to the success of the upstart Fox and first-run syndicated programming during the late 1980s and early 1990s such as Baywatch, Star Trek: The Next Generation and War of the Worlds, as well as the erosion in ratings suffered by independent television stations due to the growth of cable television and movie rentals. The network can also trace its beginnings to the Prime Time Entertainment Network, a programming service operated as a joint venture between Time Warner and the Chris-Craft Industries group of stations.

On November 2, 1993, the Warner Bros. Entertainment division of Time Warner announced the formation of The WB Television Network, with the Tribune Company holding a minority interest; as such, Tribune Broadcasting signed agreements to affiliate its then-seven television stations – all of which were independent stations,[6][7] and included the television group's flagship station WGN-TV in Chicago (in a separate agreement signed the following month[8]), as well as WPIX in New York City and KTLA in Los Angeles – with the network (only five of these stations, plus a sixth that Tribune acquired the following year, would join The WB at launch, as Tribune's independent stations in New Orleans and Atlanta that had originally been tapped to become WB charter stations respectively joined ABC (though WGNO would not switch to that network until 1996, spending the year prior as a WB affiliate) and CBS as a result of Fox's affiliation deals with the original affiliates of those networks). Although Tribune had minority interest, its stations would not have been considered owned-and-operated stations of The WB since Time Warner had a majority stake and thus held controlling interest in the network. In order to give the network time to fill gaps in markets where the network was unable to find an affiliate at launch, The WB later announced on December 3, 1993 that WGN-TV's superstation feed would provide additional national distribution for the network as a cable-only affiliate.[9]

The WB originally was slated to launch with two nights of primetime programming in the first year, with two additional nights of primetime, a late primetime half-hour strip, 4½ hours of weekday daytime programming and a four-hour Saturday morning children's lineup in the second year; by the third year, a fifth night of primetime and 1½ hours of weekday programming outside of primetime would have been added, followed by an additional hour of primetime and 1½ hours on weekday afternoons by year four, and a seventh night of primetime in the fifth year of operation.[6] However, the plan was scaled back dramatically, as the network launched with only one night of primetime programming; and by September 1995, The WB added only one additional night (Sundays), along with a three-hour Saturday morning and one-hour weekday morning children's block.[10]

Warner Bros. Entertainment appointed many former Fox network executives to run the network, including the network's original chief executive Jamie Kellner, who served as president of Fox from 1986 to 1993; and president of programming Garth Ancier, who was the programming chief of Fox from 1986 to 1989.

File:The WB logo.svg
Original WB logo used on the television channel. This logo was originally displayed upright, though it was shown at the titled angle seen here from 1999 to 2006.

1995–97: Beginnings

The WB Television Network began its life on January 11, 1995, with the premiere of The Wayans Bros. as its first program.[2] The classic Warner Bros. cartoon character Michigan J. Frog appeared on-air as the network's official mascot, and would remain as part of the network's branding in one form or another until 2005. The WB's schedule was similar to Fox's when it launched, as it started with one night a week of programming (essentially rendering its affiliates as nominal independent stations initially) and then gradually added additional nights of programming over the course of several seasons: the network started with a two-hour Wednesday night lineup of sitcoms, airing from 8–10 p.m. ET. The network's first programs were mostly sitcoms targeted at an ethnically black audience, though several series during the network's first five years were also targeted at families.

Even though four of the five shows that debuted in the netlet's first nine months – The Wayans Bros., Unhappily Ever After, The Parent 'Hood and Sister, Sister (the latter of which was picked up by the network after being cancelled by ABC) – were renewed beyond the first year, none of them made a significant impact. The WB expanded its programming to Sunday nights for the 1995–1996 season, but none of the new shows (including the Kirk Cameron vehicle Kirk and night-time soap opera Savannah) managed to garner much viewing interest.

The network also launched the Kids' WB programming block in September 1995, which featured a mix of existing Warner Bros. animated series originating either on Fox Kids or in syndication (such as Tiny Toon Adventures and Batman: The Animated Series), with newer shows (such as Freakazoid!, Histeria!, Pinky and the Brain and Batman Beyond). The WB continued to expand in the 1996–1997 season, adding programming on Monday nights.[11] This season gave The WB modest hits in the family drama 7th Heaven and comedies The Steve Harvey Show and The Jamie Foxx Show.

Michigan J. Frog, the network's former mascot.

1997–2000: Courting the teen market

The WB first began to experience success with Buffy the Vampire Slayer (a series based on the 1992 feature film of the same name), which became a hit with critics when it premiered as a mid-season replacement in March 1997. It debuted with the highest Monday night ratings in the network's history, attracting not only new teenage viewers, but new advertisers as well.[12]

Inspired by Buffy's success, The WB intentionally shifted the focus of its programming, trying to capture what it perceived to be a heavily fragmented market by marketing to the under-courted teen demographic. While the Fox network, the previous destination for teen television (with shows such as Beverly Hills, 90210 and Parker Lewis Can't Lose), began to court older audiences with shows such as Ally McBeal, The WB began to craft its identity with teen-targeted programs. The network's breakout hit and, arguably, its signature series was Dawson's Creek, which debuted in January 1998 to what were then the highest ratings in the network's history. It quickly became the highest-rated show on television among teenage girls, and the most popular show on The WB. The popularity of the show helped boost the network's other shows, such as Buffy, which served as its lead-in on The WB's new night of programming also launched in January 1998, known as "New Tuesday," and 7th Heaven, which enjoyed a massive 81% increase in viewership that season.

With three hit shows in its roster, The WB continued to build its teen fanbase the following season with college drama Felicity and the wicca-themed Charmed, both of which set new records for the network when they premiered with 7.1 and 7.7 million viewers, respectively (Charmed had the highest-rated premiere on the network until Smallville broke its record, debuting to 8.4 million viewers in October 2001). At the start of the 1998–99 season, the network expanded its programming to Thursday nights. That season, 7th Heaven garnered The WB the highest ratings it would ever see – the show's February 8, 1999 episode attracted 12.5 million viewers – and the series overtook Dawson's Creek as the network's highest-rated program.

For the 1999–2000 season, the network expanded once again, adding programming on Friday nights.[13] New shows that season included Roswell, Popular, and the Buffy the Vampire Slayer spin-off Angel, the latter of which premiered with 7.5 million viewers – the second-highest rated premiere for the network at the time. During this season, The WB was the only network to have gains in its total audience viewership and in each key demographic.

2000–03: Broadening the focus

As the teen boom of the late 1990s began to wane, The WB attempted to broaden the scope of its primetime lineup. Although teen fare like Popular and Roswell had premiered to strong ratings, both series saw serious ratings erosion in their sophomore seasons, leading the network to cancel both (Roswell, like Buffy the Vampire Slayer, would end up being revived by rival network UPN). Meanwhile, even though ratings for 7th Heaven, Buffy and Charmed remained consistent, viewership for flagship series such as Felicity and Dawson's Creek began sagging. The network realized that it could no longer rely merely on the tastes of young teenage girls, and thus began moving back into more family-friendly fare, attempting to launch a successful sitcom, and generally targeting a more diverse audience.

This new strategy came as The WB dropped to sixth place in the ratings (behind UPN) during the 1999–2000 season, losing 19% of its household audience; network executives attributed the ratings decline in large part due to the Tribune Company's October 1999 removal of WB network programming from WGN-TV's superstation feed on the pretense that the network's national distribution was large enough that it was no longer necessary for WGN to broadcast The WB's programs outside of Chicago,[14][15] this effectively reduced The WB's potential household audience by 10 million homes (WGN-TV continued to carry WB programming over-the-air and on cable within the Chicago area until the network shut down in 2006) – the network made several affiliation deals during the prior four years with various station owners (such as Sinclair Broadcast Group and Pappas Telecasting Companies), buoyed by the September 1998 launch of The WB 100+ Station Group, a national cable-only service that served most of the 110 smallest Nielsen media markets in the United States that did not have enough broadcast stations to support an over-the-air affiliate.[16]

Despite the slight downturn in the network's fortunes, there were a few bright spots during the era. Gilmore Girls, which debuted in 2000, netted meager ratings when it debuted in a tough Thursday timeslot, but subsequently grew into one of the network's most successful shows after moving to Tuesdays in 2001, where it remained for seven seasons (moving The CW for its last season). Also in the fall of 2000, the sitcom Sabrina, the Teenage Witch moved from ABC to The WB as part of its Friday night schedule; the show continued on its new home for three more seasons before ending in 2003. In 2001, the Superman-inspired Smallville debuted with 8.4 million viewers, the highest premiere in the history of the network; that show was also important because it was one of the few series that drew a substantial male viewership. 2001 also saw the launch of the Reba McEntire vehicle Reba, arguably the network's most successful comedic series. Other series to gain attention during this time period were the family drama Everwood, and the short-lived but critically acclaimed soap satire Grosse Pointe.

Time Warner moved operational duties for The WB from Warner Bros. Entertainment over to its Turner Broadcasting System division in 2001, before reassigning the network's operations back to the Warner Bros. unit in 2003.

2003–06: Decline

Despite some early success, the network struggled to shift its focus from the female 12–24 demographic to the broader 12–34 range. In 2005, the network retired Michigan J. Frog, as the network's trademark mascot. The WB Television Network's then-entertainment president David Janollari, explained in July 2005 at the network's summer press tour that "[Michigan] was a symbol that perpetuated the young-teen feel of the network. That's not the image we [now] want to put to our audience."[17]

Still, the move did not seem to help the network. The period from 2003 to 2005 produced only three viable new series, One Tree Hill, Beauty and the Geek and Supernatural (all of which ultimately moved to successor network The CW), and even still their ratings paled in comparison to the ratings peaks of Dawson's Creek, which had ended its run in 2003. Ratings dropped for shows like Angel (which was canceled in 2004), and the network failed to launch new hit shows to take their places.

Although The WB's well-known inability to launch successful comedy series was nothing new (Reba being the sole exception), this period saw the network struggling to establish new dramas as well. High-profile failures included Birds of Prey (inspired by the Batman mythos, and which premiered with an impressive 8 share), Tarzan, Jack & Bobby, The Mountain, the Jerry Bruckheimer-produced Just Legal, the Marta Kauffman-created Related, and the Rebecca Romijn vehicle Pepper Dennis.

During the 2004–05 season, The WB finished behind rival UPN for the first time in four years, and fell even further behind in the fall of 2005. Both networks fell behind Spanish language network Univision in the overall 18–34 demographic.

2006: Network closure

On January 24, 2006, CBS Corporation and Warner Bros. Entertainment announced plans to shut down both UPN and The WB and partner to launch an entirely new network that would include series from both networks, known as The CW.[18][3] Over the next nine months, it was to be seen which shows from the two networks would cross over to The CW, as well as which stations aligned with either predecessors-to-be would become future affiliates of the new network. In the end, 7th Heaven, Beauty and the Geek, Gilmore Girls, One Tree Hill, Reba, Smallville, and Supernatural were chosen to move from The WB to The CW's Fall 2006 schedule. 7th Heaven and Reba were originally canceled after the 2005–06 season, but were ultimately renewed at the last minute with 13-episode deals (the former show was later given a full-season order, while the latter served as a midseason replacement and, in spite of becoming The CW's highest-rated comedy of the 2006–07 season, ended rather abruptly). Supernatural, which entered its ninth season in 2013,[19] is currently the last surviving series from The WB on the CW network schedule.

Tribune Broadcasting also committed 16 of its then-19 WB affiliates to serve as the network's core affiliates (though it relinquished its stake in The WB shortly after the launch announcement for The CW, in order to avoid handling shutdown costs for The WB,[20] and would not take on an ownership stake in The CW) – alongside 11 UPN O&Os named as charter stations by CBS Corporation. Starting on August 14, 2006 with the Daytime WB block, the WB logo 'bug' was dropped from on-screen use and was replaced by a countdown of days until The CW's premiere. Some stations which affiliated with MyNetworkTV (itself created in response to Tribune and CBS receiving affiliation deals with The CW, leaving UPN affiliates owned by Fox Television Stations, a subsidiary of MyNetworkTV's original parent company News Corporation, with the prospect of ending up as independents) or became independent stations received a logo-free feed of the network, while others took the main feed and overlaid the station's own logo bug over The CW's logo.

The WB aired its final night of programming on September 17, 2006 with The Night of Favorites and Farewells, a five-hour block of pilot episodes of the network's past signature series. Commercial breaks featured re-airings of past image campaigns and network promotions, along with promo spots given to cable networks carrying these shows in off-network syndication and ads for each series' TV-on-DVD box set.[21] The final 60-second clip featured many of the network's well-known stars during the 11-year run of the network, ending with the statement "For 11 years, you brought us into our homes. We made you smile and tugged at your heart. Faces you'll always remember. Names you'll never forget. The faces that touched our hearts. The WB says goodbye. A Network that defined a generation says goodbye. Join us one last time. And now, we say goodbye. From all of us at The WB, Thank you." The final image of the montage was The WB's former mascot Michigan J. Frog (who was shown as a silhouette due to being retired as the network's mascot the year before), who is shown taking his hat off and bowing, thanking the audience for watching the network for 11 years and marking the end of The WB.

The final night of WB programming netted relatively low ratings. The network scored a 1.0 household rating (1% of all U.S. television households) and a share of 2, meaning just 2% of viewers were tuned into The WB on its final night.[22] This is mostly due to the fact that some WB affiliates in certain areas joined MyNetworkTV, another upstart network that debuted two weeks before The CW's launch (on September 5), leaving The WB's final two weeks of programming unavailable in those areas. After its closure, the network's URLs were redirected to The CW's website. By March 30, 2008, the URLs redirected to the Warner Bros. Studios homepage. On April 28, 2008, it then redirected to the TheWB.com beta website.

The CW maintained many operational and scheduling elements from The WB; when it launched on September 18, 2006, The CW initially maintained The WB's scheduling model[3] as The WB ran 30 hours of network programming each week (13 of which were devoted to primetime shows) in comparison to UPN's 12 hours of programming weekly (10 hours of which were in primetime); it also inherited The WB 100+ Station Group – which became The CW Plus – though the distribution model of The CW Plus started to differ from The WB 100+ by mixing digital subchannel affiliations, alongside the cable-only affiliates and few conventional affiliate stations. The CW continued the Daytime WB block – which became The CW Daytime (and was reduced from two hours to one in 2010), although two blocks that moved to The CW from The WB would eventually be discontinued: Kids' WB continued on The CW until May 17, 2008, when it was replaced with The CW4Kids after 4Kids Entertainment began programming The CW's Saturday morning block through a time-lease agreement (Kids' WB was later relaunched as an online portal); The CW discontinued its Sunday primetime schedule in September 2009, effectively ending the EasyView block in the process.

2008–present: Entering the Internet

Warner Bros.' television arm planned on resurrecting The WB Television Network in the form of a website at TheWB.com, the website domain used for the official site of the broadcast network. The site streamed free episodes of series that were broadcast during The WB network's 1995–2006 run, including Gilmore Girls, Smallville, Everwood, Buffy the Vampire Slayer, Dawson's Creek, One Tree Hill, Roswell and What I Like About You.

Warner Bros. also introduced original serialized web content produced by such well-known television producers as Josh Schwartz and McG for The WB website when it was launched in August 2008, including Sorority Forever, Pushed, Rockville, CA, The Lake and Children's Hospital (the latter's popularity was sustained enough to receive a run and eventual move to cable television as a regular series on Cartoon Network's Adult Swim). Many other well-known Warner Bros.-produced series that did not air on The WB Television Network, including Friends and The O.C. were also made available on the site. However, the site didn't contain episodes of Charmed or Felicity, which were two of The WB's most popular shows, as Charmed is owned by CBS Television Distribution and Felicity is owned by Disney-ABC Domestic Television.

The new incarnation of the TheWB.com began in beta testing on April 28, 2008 and officially launched on August 27.[23][24] The site – whose business model resembles that of Hulu – is ad-supported and geared primarily to women ages 15–39. In addition to older full-length series (among which also include All of Us, Hangin' with Mr. Cooper, Martin, Jack & Bobby and Veronica Mars), the site features new short series and vignettes. Each of these 10-episode programs run for five minutes. Comcast offers over 1,000 episodes from the Warner Bros. Television library on its video on demand service.[25] While Warner Bros. Entertainment, a division of Time Warner, did not promote the site in any multimedia ads, it had drawn about 250,000 unique viewers a month, according to MindShare's Mr. Chapman, who had been tracking the site. Some of its original material had been offered on partner sites such as MySpace and Facebook. Data compiled by comScore Video Metrix showed that 62 percent of visitors to the site were female.

An original series, Sorority Forever, from McG, had its premiere on the site on September 8, 2008. By 2012, it had accrued more than 7.3 million views from The WB site and partner sites. An original reality series, Rich Girl, Poor Girl from Laguna Beach and Newport Harbor executive producer Gary Auerbach, in which two teenagers from different economic and social backgrounds swap lives (similar to Wife Swap and A Walk in Your Shoes), had ranked among the top 100 programs in the teenage category on iTunes since its October 20, 2008 debut.[26]

In late 2013, for currently no given reason, the website was shut down. It now redirects to a website called Warner Bros. Television Media to Go. Said website cannot stream full episodes of shows, and is instead merely a promotional tool for Warner Bros. Television-produced series. However, The WB's sister website Kids' WB is still up and running.

Internet advertising

The clothing retailer H&M, not a traditional television advertiser, sponsored Sorority Forever and had some of its clothing worn by characters in the series. Unilever’s Axe brand has sponsored Children's Hospital. ”If an advertiser has an interest in a series we have in production, we can work in their products or even adjust our launch dates if they want to tie it in to a special promotion,” said Craig Erwich, executive vice president, Warner Horizon Television, who oversees TheWB.com.[27]

Differences between The WB and the "Big Four" networks

Scheduling

At the time of its shutdown, The WB ran only two hours of primetime network programming on Monday through Fridays and five hours on Sundays, compared to the three Monday through Saturday and four Sunday primetime hours offered by the Big Three networks (unlike The WB, UPN never carried any weekend primetime programming, though it did offer a movie package to its affiliates on weekend afternoons until 2000, when the latter was replaced with a two-hour repeat block of UPN programs). This primetime scheduling allowed for many of the network's affiliates to air local newscasts during the 10-11 p.m. (ET/PT) time period.

The WB never ran network programming on Saturday nights – despite the fact that the network maintained a children's program block on Saturday mornings – allowing affiliates to run syndicated programs, sports, movies or network programs that were preempted from earlier in the week due to special programming in the 8–10 p.m. (ET/PT) time period. The network's Sunday schedule was originally three hours when The WB began programming that night in September 1995, but expanded to five hours (from 5–10 p.m. ET/PT) in 2002, with the creation of the "EasyView" repeat block – which featured episodes of select primetime shows from the previous week during the first two hours of the network's Sunday lineup (that block was retained by The CW, which initially adopted The WB's scheduling model until it turned Sunday programming over to its affiliates in September 2009).

In comparison to ABC and CBS, The WB also had the fewest hours devoted to daytime programming on weekdays between 2000 (when the network dropped the weekday morning block of Kids' WB programs) and 2006, running only two hours of programming each weekday afternoon (compared to 4½ hours on CBS and four hours on ABC) – NBC in comparison ran only three hours of daytime programming each weekday (not counting its morning news program Today) until 2000, when it scaled back its daytime programming block to two hours. Because of these reasons, the schedules of The WB's affiliates were largely composed of syndicated programming.

Affiliate distribution

The WB, in its conventional television network form, is the only English-language broadcast network that historically did not have any owned-and-operated stations, and one of only four without any O&Os in the three largest markets of New York City, Los Angeles and Chicago (along with the DuMont Television Network, UPN and The CW). Although Tribune Broadcasting maintained an ownership stake in The WB, its stations in the three respective markets (WPIX, KTLA and WGN-TV) were actually affiliates of the network as Tribune did not hold a controlling ownership interest in The WB Television Network to allow its stations to be constituted as WB O&Os (by 2005, Tribune owned 22.5% of the network, Time Warner held the controlling 77.5% interest). Time Warner did not have a station group of its own at the time (and still does not in the present day), although its Turner Broadcasting System division does own Atlanta independent station WPCH-TV (then the superstation feed of TBS as WTBS-TV), which never carried WB programming due to the network's affiliation with Tribune-owned WATL.

Unlike the other major networks, The WB distributed its programming in markets that did not have enough commercial stations to support a standalone WB affiliate to cable-only outlets: Chicago-based superstation WGN America carried the network's programming from January 1995 to October 1999, which was also available in areas that did have enough stations to allow both The WB and UPN to be carried on separate affiliates – instead of carrying both networks on one station – but where The WB did not yet have a full-time affiliate. While viewers in the Chicago area saw primetime and Kids' WB programming on separate stations until 2004 (primetime shows on WGN-TV, children's programs on WCIU-TV), the WGN superstation feed carried The WB's entire schedule during the four-year period that it carried the network.

In September 1998, The WB launched an alternate national feed for small and certain mid-size markets of the United States (generally those within the bottom 110 Nielsen media markets) called The WB 100+ Station Group.[28][29][30] The service's affiliates were cable-only television channels (mainly operated by area cable providers), though The WB 100+ was also carried on full-power or low-power stations in some markets. The service offered its own master schedule with syndicated programs (including some feature films and infomercials) airing outside of network programming hours; the addition of local advertisements and newscasts were at the discretion of the local distributor. Most of the stations that were part of The WB 100+ Station Group joined The CW Plus after The CW's September 2006 launch, though most of the cable-only affiliates that became part of The CW Plus have since been replaced by or converted into digital subchannels carried by major network affiliates.

Toledo, Ohio's WT05 was The WB's only cable-exclusive affiliate that was not part of The WB 100+ Station Group; the channel's owner Block Communications (which operates area cable provider Buckeye CableSystem) handled programming of the channel, running its own schedule of syndicated programs during non-network hours – a model WT05 maintains as a CW affiliate.

News programming

News programming on The WB's affiliates was similar to Fox stations at the time in that the quantity of newscasts varied from station to station. Roughly half of The WB's approximately 200 affiliates aired a local newscast in the 10–11 p.m. ET/PT (9–10 p.m. CT/MT) time slot at some point during or throughout their affiliations with the network. Fundamentally, the newscast schedules on WB affiliates varied considerably between stations compared to those affiliated with ABC, CBS, NBC and especially Fox. Generally, most WB affiliates ran a two-hour extension of a morning newscast and a half-hour or hour-long 10 p.m. newscast; though there were a few larger market stations that maintained in-house news departments that also produced midday newscasts and had morning newscasts that began in the traditional 5-7 a.m. timeslots; early evening newscasts were largely absent on most of these stations.

The WB affiliate body had fewer news-producing stations in comparison to stations aligned with the Big Three television networks (NBC, ABC and CBS) and considerably fewer than Fox (which has only around 70 stations with in-house news departments, with most of its stations outsourcing their news programming to a competitor). When the network launched in January 1995, The WB automatically gained five affiliates with functioning news departments through the initial agreement with Tribune Broadcasting, all of whom founded their news operations as either independent stations or during early affiliations with other networks including DuMont: WGN-TV/Chicago, WPIX/New York City, KTLA/Los Angeles, KWGN-TV/Denver and WLVI-TV/Boston (a fifth news-producing station owned by Tribune at the time, WGNX/Atlanta, was to become a WB charter affiliate but instead affiliated with CBS after WAGA-TV ended its association with that network to join Fox in December 1994, through a groupwide affiliation deal between Fox and WAGA owner New World Communications).[31] KPLR-TV/St. Louis (which would not be acquired by Tribune until 2003, when it bought the station from ACME Communications) also continued to produce a 9 p.m. newscast as a WB affiliate; while Phoenix, Arizona's KTVK began running expanded newscasts shortly before joining The WB at the network's launch (it had earlier lost the ABC affiliation to KNXV-TV, The WB affiliation moved to KASW, which KTVK began managing under a local marketing agreement upon its sign-on, the following year).

In the late 1990s, Tribune asked the company's remaining WB-affiliated stations that did not run newscasts to form news departments: KDAF/Dallas-Fort Worth, KHWB/Houston, KSWB-TV/San Diego and WPHL-TV/Philadelphia were the only ones to form their own news operations, all debuting their newscasts in 1999 (WPHL had already run a 10 p.m. newscast starting in 1996 through an agreement with The Philadelphia Inquirer, before WPHL took over production of the program; KSWB and WPHL would both shutter their news departments in 2005, outsourcing production of their 10 p.m. newscasts to NBC owned-and-operated stations in the respective markets, KSWB returned to in-house newscast production after it dropped its affiliation with WB successor The CW for Fox in August 2008).[32][33][34] KNTV/San Jose became the largest news-producing WB affiliate by market size to be owned by a company other than Tribune (and the network's only affiliate to produce early evening newscasts) after it terminated its ABC affiliation, and began carrying WB programming (in a partial simulcast with then-sister station KBWB-TV) in 2000, before affiliating with – and then ultimately being purchased by – NBC in 2002.

Sinclair Broadcast Group also operated several WB affiliates with local news departments: Raleigh's WLFL was the only WB affiliate owned by Sinclair that had an existing news operation at the time it joined the network (the station began producing a 10 p.m. newscast in 1992, six years before WLFL ended its Fox affiliation to join The WB); the company's Tampa, Buffalo, Milwaukee, Cincinnati, Las Vegas and Norfolk[35] WB affiliates began producing their own newscasts through Sinclair's local/national hybrid news format News Central in the early 2000s. All seven stations' news departments were shut down in 2006 due to companywide cutbacks in Sinclair's news operations and the discontinuance of News Central.[36] Of the former WB affiliates that produced newscasts during their affiliation with the network, only WGN-TV, WPIX, KTLA, KDAF and KIAH (all of whom became affiliates of The CW) continue to maintain self-supporting news departments as of July 2013 (KPLR and KWGN respectively merged their news departments with those of Fox affiliates KTVI and KDVR through a 2008 management agreement between Tribune and Local TV, while WLVI's news department was shut down after Tribune sold the station to Sunbeam Television in 2006, with production of its 10 p.m. newscast taken over by new sister station WHDH).

In most markets, the local WB affiliate either outsourced news programming to an NBC, ABC or CBS station in the market (either due to insufficient funds for production of their own newscasts or in later years after the FCC permitted duopolies in markets with eight or more stations in 2000, the station being operated through a legal duopoly or operational agreement with a major network affiliate) or opted to carry syndicated programming in the hour following The WB's primetime programming. As with Fox affiliates, WB-affiliated stations whose newscasts were produced by a same-market competitor tend to have fewer programming hours devoted to news than the station producing the broadcasts.

Programming

Children's programming

The WB debuted the Kids' WB children's program block in September 1995; it initially featured a mix of Warner Bros.' most popular shows (such as Tiny Toon Adventures, Animaniacs, and later Batman: The Animated Series, all of which originated either on Fox Kids or in syndication) with newer series (such as Freakazoid!, Histeria!, Superman: The Animated Series, Road Rovers, Pinky and the Brain and Batman Beyond). After the Turner Broadcasting System was acquired by Time Warner in 1996, Kids' WB formed an alliance with Cartoon Network, with an increasing amount of programs being shared between the block and the cable channel over time.

In February 1999, Kids' WB began running the American dub of the Japanese animated series Pokémon, The WB acquired the U.S. rights from TV Tokyo earlier that year; the series ultimately became a widespread pop culture phenomenon with the added exposure on the network. Kids' WB also acquired the English-language version of Yu-Gi-Oh!, which also saw the type of viewer popularity experienced by Pokémon. Between 2000 and 2005, Kids' WB experimented with some live-action programming, though it continued to run mainly animated series. A television series adaptation of R. L. Stine's The Nightmare Room debuted on the block in 2001, it was cancelled after one season. It also aired the live-action made-for-TV movie Zolar, as well as the JammX Kids All-Star dance specials.

Logo for Daytime WB.

With Cartoon Network now outrating Fox Kids and The WB sharing more of its children's programming with the cable channel, The WB announced on May 31, 2005 that it would discontinue Kids' WB's weekday afternoon block, as it became financially unattractive due to broadcast stations shifting their afternoon target audiences more exclusively to adults by filling the slot with talk shows and sitcom reruns, figuring that children's viewing options in that time period had gravitated more towards cable television. Kids' WB's weekday programming continued, but with redundant programs and theme weeks until December 30, 2005 (the block began to increasingly promote Cartoon Network's afternoon Miguzi block and the Kids' WB Saturday morning lineup during the transition). The weekday block was replaced by a block called "Daytime WB" on January 2, 2006, which featured repeats of sitcoms and drama series; five days later, the Kids' WB Saturday morning lineup was expanded by one hour.

The Daytime WB block continued on The CW, unofficially renamed The CW Daytime (though occasional on-air promos for the block do not refer to this name), The CW also kept the Kids' WB name for the network's Saturday morning children's programming. However on October 2, 2007, The CW announced that it would discontinue the Kids' WB block, due to the effects of children's advertising limits imposed by the FCC's E/I rules and competition with kid-oriented cable channels. The Kids' WB block aired for the last time on May 17, 2008, replaced with a new block programmed in conjunction with 4Kids Entertainment called The CW4Kids (which was replaced by Vortexx in September 2012, after Saban Brands and Kidsco Media Ventures took over programming the block as part of its acquisition of much of 4Kids's program library[37]). As a result of its distribution deal with The CW, 4Kids ran Saturday morning blocks for two networks during the 2008–09 season, as it already programmed Fox's 4Kids TV block (which ended on December 27, 2008).[38]

Like its parent network, Kids' WB was revived as an online-only network in August 2008. In addition to select previous Kids' WB programs, the site also features other archived programs to which Time Warner owns or holds distribution rights, and programs seen on Cartoon Network and Boomerang.

Affiliates

In 2005, The WB had an estimated audience reach of 91.66% of all U.S. households (equivalent to 90,282,480 households with at least one television set); the network was carried by 177 VHF and UHF stations in the United States. The WB was also available in Canada on cable and satellite providers through affiliates that are located within proximity to the U.S.-Canadian border (whose broadcasts of WB shows were subject to simultaneous substitution laws, if a Canadian network held the broadcast rights), and through two affiliates owned by Tribune (KTLA/Los Angeles and WPIX/New York City) that are classified in that country as superstations, as well as the superstation feed of Chicago affiliate WGN-TV.

Station standardization

When The WB launched in 1995, the network began branding most of its affiliates as "WB" or "The WB", followed by the channel number. This meant that, for example, WPIX/New York City and KPLR-TV/St. Louis were both referred to as "WB11" (though WPIX branded as "The WB, Channel 11" until 1996, and KPLR as "St. Louis 11" until 1998). Fox originated such naming schemes, and CBS uses similar on-air branding for most of its owned-and-operated stations (NBC and ABC also utilize similar, but less extreme, naming schemes). While Fox and UPN mandated their respective naming schemes on all stations, The WB did not. Therefore, other WB affiliates opted to use different naming schemes: WGN-TV/Chicago branded as "WGN Channel 9" (or simply "WGN") with The WB's logo placed within the right curve of the station's "9 as an upside-down G" logo after the network launched, and next to a boxed "9" from 2002 to 2006.

Most of the Tribune Company's WB affiliates only used the network's logo within the logos of each station or used "The WB" name after the callsign in its on-air branding (an example was Los Angeles affiliate KTLA, which branded as "KTLA, The WB", after dropping its longstanding and genericized "Channel 5" brand in 1997). Many WB affiliates used another form of standardized branding: the network's Lakeland, Florida affiliate (serving Tampa) acquired the WWWB call letters and branded on-air as "The WB 32." Other stations would take on a 'by city' branding approach (for example, KHWB/Houston was called "Houston's WB" and WLVI-TV/Boston was called "Boston's WB" – both used the "WB (channel number)" branding prior to incorporating the station's city of primary service); some stations which followed this scheme used a regional name instead of a specific city (such as "Capital Region's WB" for WEWB/Albany, New York or "Hawaii's WB" for KFVE/Honolulu, Hawaii), while others also incorporated the channel number (such as WPHL-TV/Philadelphia as "Philadelphia's WB17", or Mobile, Alabama's WBPG as "The Gulf Coast's WB55"). Many stations affiliated with The WB 100+ Station Group also followed either one of these variations on "The City/Region's WB" scheme (though the group's cable-only affiliates also used fictional call signs).

See also

Footnotes

  1. ^ Sources vary as to the exact composition of The WB's ownership. According to at least one source, as of 2001, the ownership was split among Warner Bros. (Time Warner) (64%), Tribune Company (25%), and Jamie Kellner's firm ACME Communications (11%) [1]. Published reports in early 2006, dealing with the launch of The CW, suggested Tribune was at the time the only minority shareholder, with just 22.5% (giving Warner Bros. 77.5%), which it would be relinquishing in order to avoid shutdown costs for The WB.[2]
  2. ^ a b Cerone, Daniel Howard (January 2, 1995). "New Year Brings 2 New Networks: WB Television and United Paramount Prepare for Their Premieres This Month. But Can They Really Survive Against the Big Four?". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved September 1, 2013.
  3. ^ a b c UPN, WB to Merge Into CW Network, AdWeek, January 24, 2006.
  4. ^ Tuesday, August 26th, 2008 (2008-08-26). "The WB Rises From Ashes As Competitor To Hulu". Techcrunch.com. Retrieved 2012-11-07.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  5. ^ "The WB.com website". Thewb.com. Retrieved 2012-11-07.
  6. ^ a b Warner Bros., Tribune Broadcasting & Jamie Kellner to Launch WB Network in 1994, TheFreeLibrary.com. Retrieved 12-13-2010.
  7. ^ Tribune Broadcasting Joins with Warner Bros. to Launch Fifth Television Network, TheFreeLibrary.com. Retrieved 7-20-2013.
  8. ^ WB network signs WGN-TV, Broadcasting & Cable, December 6, 1993. Retrieved 5-28-2013 from HighBeam Research.
  9. ^ Time Warner Takes Crucial Step Toward New Network Television: A pact with superstation WGN-TV gives it access to 73% of homes. Analysts say that will still leave gaps., Los Angeles Times, December 4, 1993. Retrieved 12-10-2010.
  10. ^ WB backs off after Paramount successes., HighBeam Research (via Broadcasting & Cable), November 15, 1993.
  11. ^ WB Network Announces New Shows, New Night., TheFreeLibrary.com. Retrieved 12-13-2010.
  12. ^ A.J. Jacobs (1997-04-25). "INTERVIEW WITH A VAMPIRE CHRONICLER | Joss Whedon | Television News | News + Notes | Entertainment Weekly | 1". Ew.com. Retrieved 2012-11-07.
  13. ^ A Sixth Night for WB, for Under 35's Only, The New York Times, May 19, 1999.
  14. ^ WGN Drops WB, Adds Movies, Sitcoms, Multichannel News, September 20, 1999. Retrieved June 22, 2013 from HighBeam Research.
  15. ^ Last night Dawson's last ? WGN ceases to air WB programming, The Charleston Gazette, October 7, 1999. Retrieved June 22, 2013 from HighBeam Research.
  16. ^ TV NOTES; A Mix for WB, New York Times, May 17, 2000. Retrieved 12-10-2010.
  17. ^ Michigan J. Frog has no leg to stand on, TV.com, July 26, 2005. Retrieved May 4, 2013.
  18. ^ UPN and WB to Combine, Forming New TV Network, The New York Times, January 24, 2006.
  19. ^ "'Arrow', 'The Vampire Diaries' and 'Supernatural' Renewed for Next Season". TV By The Numbers. Retrieved 11 February 2013.
  20. ^ Conference Call Regarding "The CW", Tribune Company, January 24, 2006. Retrieved July 20, 2013.
  21. ^ Schneider, Michael (June 29, 2006). "WB revisits glory days". Variety. Retrieved November 7, 2012.
  22. ^ Zap2It.com. "Football Rules Sunday for NBC – NFL also gives CBS a boost; WB signs off quietly – Zap2it". Zap2it.com. Retrieved 2012-11-07.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  23. ^ TheWB.com Set to Launch on August 27th, Mediaweek.com, August 7, 2008
  24. ^ The WB Returns as TheWB.com, The Seattle Times, August 27, 2008
  25. ^ "The WB" Reincarnate: Online and On-Demand, Multichannel News, April 28, 2008
  26. ^ Consoli, John (2009-01-04). "Resurrecting the WB as a Web Contender". NYTimes.com. Retrieved 2012-11-07.
  27. ^ Consoli, John (2009-01-04). "Resurrecting the WB as a Web Contender". Nytimes.com. Retrieved 2012-11-07.
  28. ^ WB 100 Plus Stations Act Locally
  29. ^ The WB 100+ station group hits 8 million, more than doubling its household reach since launch, Time Warner, January 15, 2002.
  30. ^ A Salute to The WB 100+ Station Group on its Fifth Anniversary
  31. ^ McClellan, Steve. "CBS signs WGNX Atlanta." Broadcasting & Cable, November 21, 1994, pg. 8. [3]
  32. ^ KSWB news changes hands; 30 to lose jobs, U-T San Diego, September 22, 2005.
  33. ^ Fox and CW changing channels, U-T San Diego, July 3, 2008.
  34. ^ 'Fox 5': First the bad news and now the good news?, U-T San Diego, August 25, 2008.
  35. ^ WTVZ PONDERS A JUMP INTO THE 10 P.M. NEWS POOL
  36. ^ [4]
  37. ^ Wallenstein, Andrew (July 2, 2012). "Saban Brands to rebuild CW toon block". Variety. Retrieved July 7, 2012.
  38. ^ CW Turns to 4Kids on Saturdays, Variety.com, October 2, 2007