WRC-TV (channel 4) is a
television station in
Washington, D.C., airing programming from the
NBC network. It is
owned and operated by the network's
NBC Owned Television Stations division alongside
Class A Telemundo outlet
WZDC-CD (channel 44). WRC-TV and WZDC-CD share studios on Nebraska Avenue in the
Tenleytown
Tenleytown is a historic neighborhood in Northwest, Washington, D.C.
History
In 1790, locals began calling the neighborhood "Tennally's Town" after area tavern owner John Tennally. Over time, the spelling has evolved and by the 19th century th ...
neighborhood of
Northwest Washington. Through a
channel sharing agreement, the stations transmit using WRC-TV's spectrum from a tower adjacent to their studios.
History
The station traces its roots to
experimental television station W3XNB, which was put on the air by the
Radio Corporation of America, the then-parent company of NBC, in 1939. A construction permit with the commercial
callsign
In broadcasting and radio communications, a call sign (also known as a call name or call letters—and historically as a call signal—or abbreviated as a call) is a unique identifier for a transmitter station. A call sign can be formally assigne ...
WNBW (standing for "NBC Washington") was first issued on channel 3 (60–66 MHz, numbered channel 2 prior to 1946) on December 23, 1941. NBC requested this permit to be cancelled on June 29, 1942; later, the channel 3 allocation was reassigned to
Harrisonburg, Virginia
Harrisonburg is an independent city in the Shenandoah Valley region of the Commonwealth of Virginia in the United States. It is also the county seat of the surrounding Rockingham County, although the two are separate jurisdictions. At the 2 ...
, on which the former Shennandoah Valley Broadcasting Company launched WSVA-TV (now
WHSV-TV) in 1953.
On June 27, 1947, WNBW was re-licensed on channel 4 and signed on the air. Channel 4 is the second-oldest commercially licensed television station in Washington, after
WTTG (channel 5), which signed on seven months earlier in December 1946. WNBW was also the second of the five original NBC-owned television stations to sign-on, behind
WNBT in
New York City and ahead of
WNBQ in
Chicago,
WNBK in
Cleveland and
KNBH in
Los Angeles. The station was operated alongside WRC radio (980 AM, now
WTEM, and 93.9 FM, now
WKYS).
On October 18, 1954, the television station's callsign changed to the present WRC-TV to match its radio sisters. The new calls reflected NBC's ownership at the time by RCA. It has retained its "-TV" suffix to this day, nearly four decades after the radio stations were sold off and changed call letters. The WNBW call sign was later used for the
NBC affiliate in
Gainesville, Florida
Gainesville is the county seat of Alachua County, Florida, Alachua County, Florida, and the largest city in North Central Florida, with a population of 141,085 in 2020. It is the principal city of the Gainesville metropolitan area, Florida, Gaine ...
since the station's launch in 2008.
In 1955, while in college and serving as a puppeteer on a WRC-TV program,
Jim Henson was asked to create a puppet show for the station. The series he created, ''
Sam and Friends'', was the first series to feature
the Muppets, and launched the
Jim Henson Company.
The second presidential debate between candidates
John F. Kennedy and
Richard M. Nixon
Richard Milhous Nixon (January 9, 1913April 22, 1994) was the 37th president of the United States, serving from 1969 to 1974. A member of the Republican Party, he previously served as a representative and senator from California and was t ...
was broadcast from the station's studios on October 7, 1960.
David Brinkley's Washington segment of the ''
Huntley-Brinkley Report'' originated at WRC-TV between 1956 and 1970, as did Washington reports or commentaries by Brinkley or
John Chancellor on ''
NBC Nightly News'' in the 1970s.
The earliest
color videotape in existence is a recording of the dedication of WRC-TV's Washington studios on May 22, 1958. President
Dwight D. Eisenhower spoke at the event, introduced by NBC President
Robert W. Sarnoff
Robert W. Sarnoff (July 2, 1918 – February 23, 1997) was an American businessman best known as the chief executive officer and chairman of the board of Radio Corporation of America (RCA) after assuming those positions on the retirement of his ...
. Before Eisenhower spoke, Sarnoff pushed a button, which converted the previously black and white signal into color. It was also the first time a U.S. president had been videotaped in color.
At the time of its sign-on, channel 4 was one of two wholly network-owned stations in Washington, the other being
DuMont's WTTG. DuMont was shut down in 1956, and for the next 30 years, WRC-TV was Washington's only network
owned-and-operated station
In the broadcasting industry, an owned-and-operated station (frequently abbreviated as an O&O) usually refers to a television or radio station owned by the network with which it is associated. This distinguishes such a station from an affiliate ...
.
From the opening of its Nebraska Avenue facility in 1958 through 2020, WRC-TV housed
NBC News' Washington bureau, out of which the network's long-running political affairs program ''
Meet the Press'' was based. In January 2021, NBC News moved the bureau near Capitol Hill.
Telemundo affiliation
In September 2017, NBC announced they were to launch a new
Telemundo owned-and-operated station based out of WRC-TV.
ZGS Communications, owner of Washington's existing Telemundo affiliate
WZDC-CD (channel 25), sold the station's channel allocation in the
Federal Communications Commission (FCC)'s 2017–18
incentive auction
The 2016 United States wireless spectrum auction, officially known as Auction 1001, allocated approximately 100 MHz of the United States Ultra High Frequency (UHF) spectrum formerly allocated to UHF television in the 600 MHz band. The spe ...
, accepting a $66 million payout to turn off its signal and continue operations by sharing the channel of another station. A Telemundo spokesperson stated that the sale of WZDC's spectrum "gave us the ability to take back the Telemundo affiliation for this market," without elaborating what that meant.
NBC later purchased WZDC-CD with the intention of moving its over-the-air signal to that of WRC-TV through a channel-sharing agreement.
NBC took control of WZDC-CD on January 1, 2018, and added a temporary relay to WRC-TV's digital subchannel 4.3.
The channel-sharing agreement took effect on March 7, 2018. Under the agreement, WZDC shares WRC-TV's physical signal as a subchannel would and is managed with its own
virtual channel number and license. WZDC's virtual channel changed from 25.1 to 44.1 to avoid a conflict with
WDVM-TV, which also occupies virtual channel 25.1.
Programming
As of September 2022,
syndicated
Syndication may refer to:
* Broadcast syndication, where individual stations buy programs outside the network system
* Print syndication, where individual newspapers or magazines license news articles, columns, or comic strips
* Web syndication, ...
programs broadcast by WRC-TV include ''
Access Hollywood'' and ''
The Kelly Clarkson Show'' (both are produced by sister station KNBC).
Because of its ownership by the network, WRC-TV generally carries the entire NBC network schedule, though the station airs an alternate live feed of ''NBC Nightly News'' at 7 p.m. (rather than 6:30 p.m. as with most NBC stations in the
Eastern Time Zone), due to a longtime hour-long 6 p.m. newscast. The weekend edition of the network's newscast airs at its usual 6:30 p.m. time slot. Like network flagship WNBC, it airs ''Meet the Press'' an hour-and-a-half later than most NBC affiliates in the Eastern Time Zone due to a two-hour Sunday morning newscast.
WRC-TV previously housed ''
It's Academic'', which premiered in 1961 and is the longest-running
game show in television history according to the ''
Guinness Book of World Records
''Guinness World Records'', known from its inception in 1955 until 1999 as ''The Guinness Book of Records'' and in previous United States editions as ''The Guinness Book of World Records'', is a reference book published annually, listing world ...
'' (as of October 29, 2022, it is now aired on
PBS member station
WETA-TV). ''Sam and Friends'', Jim Henson's late-night precursor to ''
Sesame Street'' and ''
The Muppet Show'', got its start on WRC-TV on May 9, 1955. WRC-TV served as the production facilities for the original run of ''
The McLaughlin Group'' from its premiere in 1982 until May 2008, when the production facilities moved to
Tegna Inc.-owned
CBS affiliate and WRC-TV's rival
WUSA WUSA or wusa may refer to:
* Women's United Soccer Association (defunct), the world's first women's professional association football league, based in the United States
* ''WUSA'' (film), a 1970 drama film
* WUSA (TV), a television station (chann ...
and it remained until the original show's ending in 2016.
Sports programming
WRC-TV has been the over-the-air home of
Washington Commanders (formerly the Washington Redskins) preseason games since
2009
File:2009 Events Collage V2.png, From top left, clockwise: The vertical stabilizer of Air France Flight 447 is pulled out from the Atlantic Ocean; Barack Obama becomes the first African American to become President of the United States; 2009 Iran ...
. Before the Comcast–NBC Universal merger, games were only shown in
standard definition on WRC, with actual rights-holder CSN Mid-Atlantic (now
NBC Sports Washington) exclusively airing the high definition broadcast.
Until 2021, the station also aired
Washington Capitals games through
NBC's broadcast contract with the
NHL; this included the team's
Stanley Cup Finals
The Stanley Cup Finals in ice hockey (also known as the Stanley Cup Final among various media, french: Finale de la Coupe Stanley) is the National Hockey League's (NHL) championship series to determine the winner of the Stanley Cup, North America ...
victory in
2018
File:2018 Events Collage.png, From top left, clockwise: The 2018 Winter Olympics opening ceremony in PyeongChang, South Korea; Protests erupt following the Assassination of Jamal Khashoggi; March for Our Lives protests take place across the United ...
.
News operation
WRC-TV presently broadcasts 45 hours of locally produced newscasts each week (with 7 hours, 35 minutes each weekday; three hours on Saturdays and five hours on Sundays). By 2001, WRC's newscasts had all been rated number one in the market, with some of the success attributed to
Jim Vance
James Howard Vance III (January 10, 1942 – July 22, 2017) was an American television news presenter in Washington, D.C.
Early life
Born on January 10, 1942,Heil, Emily, "5 minutes with Jim Vance", ''The Washington Post'', January 11, 201 ...
and
Doreen Gentzler, who anchored together from 1989 until Vance's death in 2017. Vance had been with Channel 4 since 1969, and was promoted to anchor three years later.
[Schudel, Matt.]
Jim Vance, Washington’s longest-serving local news anchor, is dead at 75
". ''The Washington Post''. July 22, 2017. In the May 2010 sweeps, it placed first at 5:00 a.m., 6:00 a.m., 6:00 p.m. and 11:00 p.m. in total viewers, and first at 6:00 a.m., 6:00 p.m. and 11:00 p.m. in the 25–54 demo. It still leads most time slots today, although WTTG's morning news and WJLA's 11:00 pm news have given it much competition in the 25–54 demo.
In 1974, WRC-TV adopted the ''NewsCenter'' branding, following the three other NBC-owned stations at the time in New York, Los Angeles and Chicago in adopting the ''NewsCenter'' branding.
In 1975, the station adopted
MFSB's song "My Mood" as the closing theme music for the 6:00 p.m. newscast every Friday, which remains in use by the station today. Michael Randall commissioned the news theme for WRC-TV entitled "NewsCenter Theme", which was used by the station until 1986; also,
Charlie Rose
Charles Peete Rose Jr. (born January 5, 1942) is an American former television journalist and talk show host. From 1991 to 2017, he was the host and executive producer of the talk show '' Charlie Rose'' on PBS and Bloomberg LP.
Rose also co-an ...
was hired by WRC-TV after his short stint at
KXAS-TV in
Dallas and hosted the ''Charlie Rose Show'' from its premiere in 1980 until he left the station in 1984 for
CBS News
CBS News is the news division of the American television and radio service CBS. CBS News television programs include the ''CBS Evening News'', ''CBS Mornings'', news magazine programs '' CBS News Sunday Morning'', '' 60 Minutes'', and '' 48 H ...
. The station also hired
George Michael
George Michael (born Georgios Kyriacos Panayiotou; 25 June 1963 – 25 December 2016) was an English singer and songwriter. He is considered one of the most significant cultural icons of the MTV generation and is one of the best-selling musici ...
as sports anchor, eventually launching the nationally syndicated program ''
The George Michael Sports Machine
''The George Michael Sports Machine'' is a syndicated, sports-related American television program which was launched in 1984. The show aired weekends, usually on Sunday nights, and originated from WRC-TV in Washington, D.C., one of NBC's owned an ...
'', which originated from the studios of WRC-TV from its entire run from 1984 until 2007 (''The George Michael Sports Machine'' was distributed by the station's sister company
NBCUniversal Television Distribution).
In 1982, after 8 years of using the ''NewsCenter'' branding, the news branding was changed to ''Channel 4 News''. The station added a 5:00 p.m. newscast in 1984. On September 7, 1987, the station changed its news branding to ''News 4''. In 1989, the station used a new promotional campaign "We Work Well Together", produced by Music Oasis, which was also adopted as its news theme until 1992. In 1991, WRC-TV added a morning newscast under the title of ''News 4 Today''. From January 14 to October 25, 1991, the station also produced a 7:30 p.m. newscast for then-
independent station
An independent station is an independent radio or terrestrial television station which is independent in some way from broadcast networks. The definition of "independence" varies from country to country, reflecting governmental regulations, market ...
WFTY (now
CW affiliate
WDCW) entitled ''7:30 News Headlines''. The newscast suffered low ratings throughout its run.
In 1993, the station adopted the news music theme entitled "Working 4 You", which also serves as a current station slogan for News 4. In 1994, WRC-TV expanded a late weekday newscast from 4:30 p.m. to a full-hour at 4 p.m.
615 Music remixed the theme in 1997, this time under the title of "Working For You". The theme was also used by other NBC affiliates (including
WHO-TV in
Des Moines, Iowa,
KPLC in
Lake Charles, Louisiana,
WPSD-TV in
Paducah, Kentucky and
WEAU in
Eau Claire, Wisconsin). In 2002, WRC-TV adopted "The Tower" news theme commissioned by 615 Music from Chicago sister station WMAQ-TV with the notes of the "Working For You" theme as a musical trademark added only in the news opens. The "Working For You" theme continued to be used as a closing theme for all of its newscasts. Both "Working For You" and "The Tower V.1 with Working For You" were both in use by the station until 2008, when they switched to
Gari Media Group
Frank Daniel Garofalo (born April 1, 1944), known professionally as Frank Gari, is an American singer-songwriter and composer.
Early life
Gari was a popular singer and songwriter from the late 1950s and early 1960s. His best known songs as a ...
's "The NBC Collection" now with added notes of the "Working For You" theme.
On January 14, 2009, WRC-TV and WTTG entered into a
Local News Service (called LNS) agreement in which the two stations pool video and share news helicopter footage. The agreement is similar to ones already made between Fox and NBC owned-and-operated stations in Chicago (WMAQ-TV and
WFLD) and
Philadelphia (
WCAU and
WTXF). WUSA later joined that agreement. In 2012, News Director Camille Edwards announced the station would no longer participate in LNS, but the stations would continue to share the helicopter. In 2016, the station launched its own helicopter, Chopper4.
On April 8, 2010, the station began test broadcasts of its news programming in high definition during local news updates seen during ''
Today''; regular newscasts continued to be broadcast in standard definition. WRC-TV started broadcasting its newscasts from a temporary set on February 8, 2010, while "upgrades" were being made on its main set and the station made final adjustments for its switch to high definition. On April 22, 2010, WRC became the fourth (and final)
English-language
English is a West Germanic language of the Indo-European language family, with its earliest forms spoken by the inhabitants of early medieval England. It is named after the Angles, one of the ancient Germanic peoples that migrated to the is ...
television station in the Washington, D.C.
market to begin broadcasting its local newscasts in high definition. It is the only station in the Washington market that shoots most of its remote field video in
16:9 widescreen; other stations still shoot live field video in
4:3 and then either
pillarbox
The pillarbox effect occurs in widescreen video displays when black bars (mattes or masking) are placed on the sides of the image. It becomes necessary when film or video that was not originally designed for widescreen is shown on a widescreen ...
or stretch this content to widescreen—though WRC's field video is shot in standard definition.
On September 15, 2014, the station's newscasts shifted to a full 16:9 widescreen presentation, therefore becoming the third English-language television station in the Washington, D.C. market to do so, following Tegna-owned CBS affiliate WUSA (January 2013) and Fox-owned WTTG (August 2013). In conjunction with this, the newscast title was changed to a variation of the station's NBC 4 logo and also, its longtime newscast theme music was heavily updated. Also, the station's "Look F" graphics package from NBC ArtWorks, which was introduced 2 years earlier (May 2012), was reformatted for the 16:9 presentation.
On June 29, 2016, the station officially began using the "Look N" graphics package that was first adopted by sister station WNBC (which began using the package on June 11), becoming the sixth NBC-owned station to use this package, following
WVIT (June 13),
WTVJ (also on June 13), KXAS-TV (June 20) and WMAQ-TV (testing on June 21; full usage beginning June 28).
On July 31, 2017, WRC-TV became the first station in Washington, D.C. to expand its morning newscasts to 4:00 a.m. In May 2018, after 10 years of using "The NBC Collection with Working for You" news theme, the station brought back 615 Music's "The Tower" news theme, this time without the famous "Working for You" musical trademark; the news theme was previously used with the "Working for You" signature only in the news opens from 2002 until 2008; the theme has also been used by sister station WVIT since 2016.
On October 19, 2021, WRC-TV became the last station in the group to introduce their "Look S" graphics, beginning with the 4:00 p.m. ET newscast.
Notable current on-air staff
*
Leon Harris – anchor
*
Eun Yang – anchor
Notable former on-air staff
*
Miguel Almaguer
Miguel Almaguer (born March 11, 1977) is an American journalist. He is a correspondent for NBC News, reporting for all divisions of the network and based at its Los Angeles bureau.
Early life and education
Almaguer was born in Oakland, Califor ...
– reporter (2006–2009); now with
NBC News
*
Jess Atkinson – sports anchor (1990–1996); now back at his Alma mater, the
University of Maryland
*
Shannon Bream – anchor (2004–2007); now with
Fox News Channel
The Fox News Channel, abbreviated FNC, commonly known as Fox News, and stylized in all caps, is an American multinational conservative cable news television channel based in New York City. It is owned by Fox News Media, which itself is owne ...
*
Nick Charles – sports anchor/reporter (1976–1979); died of cancer on June 25, 2011
*
Katie Couric – reporter (1987–1989); later co-anchor of NBC's ''
Today'', anchor of ''
CBS Evening News'', host of
syndicated talk show, global news correspondent with
Yahoo News and
ABC News
*
Lindsay Czarniak – sports anchor/reporter (2005–2011); was most recently with
ESPN until October 2017, now with
Joe Gibbs Racing and
Fox Sports
*
Steve Doocy
''yes'Steve is a masculine given name, usually a short form (hypocorism) of Steven or Stephen
Notable people with the name include:
steve jops
* Steve Abbott (disambiguation), several people
* Steve Adams (disambiguation), several people
* Steve ...
– features reporter (1983–1989); now with