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WNHT was a television station broadcasting on channel 21 in
Concord, New Hampshire Concord () is the capital city of the U.S. state of New Hampshire and the county seat, seat of Merrimack County, New Hampshire, Merrimack County. As of the 2020 United States census, 2020 census the population was 43,976, making it the third larg ...
, United States. Owned for most of its existence by The Flatley Company, the organization of real estate developer Thomas Flatley, it broadcast from 1984 to 1989, first as an
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, marke ...
and in its final year as a CBS affiliate with a full news department. The station's failure to attract New Hampshire news and CBS viewers, combined with a weakening advertising market, led to its closure on March 31, 1989; the station would not be reactivated until 1995 when it reemerged as WNBU, a satellite of Boston's WABU.


Construction and launch

In 1980, the
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received two applications to build a new television station in Concord. One was made by Leon Crosby, who owned KEMO-TV in
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and had filed for three other stations across the country; his lawyer, Lauren Colby, described the proposal as for a "relatively low-powered, relatively modest community-oriented operation". The other came from NH Channel 21 Limited Partnership, which consisted of five New Hampshire businessmen, four of them with no major broadcast holdings. However, it made up for that in political power: one of the five partners was Hugh Gregg, a former
governor of New Hampshire The governor of New Hampshire is the head of government of New Hampshire. The governor is elected during the biennial state general election in November of even-numbered years. New Hampshire is one of only two states, along with bordering ...
, who had been thinking about filing for a station for some time but was spurred into action by the Crosby application, wanting to see the new outlet owned by local interests. The FCC granted the NH Channel 21 application on April 15, 1981, after Crosby opted to pull out, and the company announced work would start on building the transmitter on Fort Mountain near Epsom. However, by 1983, the Gregg consortium had abandoned its plans and sold the construction permit to NHTV 21 Inc., owned by Bob and Frances Shaine and John S. Gikas. Frances Shaine published a magazine, ''New Hampshire Profiles'', and owned a manufacturing company in
Holyoke, Massachusetts Holyoke is a city in Hampden County, Massachusetts, United States, that lies between the western bank of the Connecticut River and the Mount Tom Range. As of the 2020 census, the city had a population of 38,238. Located north of Springfiel ...
. After opposition dissuaded the station from setting up shop in the city's South End, a site on Hall Street was identified and approved to construct a studio. However, delays in obtaining equipment prevented NHTV 21 from meeting its goal to be on the air in time for the New Hampshire presidential primary. Channel 21 began broadcasting on April 16, 1984; it was the fourth commercial television station established in New Hampshire. The station's sign-on came amidst a "television boom" in the state, long dominated by WMUR-TV in
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. In a short span, WNDS channel 50 in
Derry Derry, officially Londonderry (), is the second-largest city in Northern Ireland and the fifth-largest city on the island of Ireland. The name ''Derry'' is an anglicisation of the Old Irish name (modern Irish: ) meaning 'oak grove'. The ...
signed on while WNHT and WGOT channel 60 in Merrimack all received construction permits, generating concerns as to whether the state could support them all. An article in the '' Concord Monitor'' asked, "Is New Hampshire Large Enough For Three New Stations?" Even though there were relatively few stations in New Hampshire, any new station in the state would have to compete more broadly in the Boston television market for programs, viewers, and advertisers. Launch programs included a nightly 5:30 p.m. newscast, a daily talk show titled ''New Hampshire Today'', and a weekend public affairs program hosted by the editor of ''New Hampshire Profiles''.


Flatley ownership

Less than four months after channel 21 began broadcasting, NHTV 21 sold the station to Thomas Flatley, a real estate developer, for $5 million. This sale was precipitated by disagreements between the Shaines and Gikas. The transaction closed in December of that year; one of Flatley's first actions was to trim WNHT's news staff from seven to four employees and fire the general manager. A month later, the station axed its local news service altogether pending the hiring of a new general manager. By 1986, this had been restored in a reduced form: channel 21 aired five 90-second news breaks each evening and a six-minute program inserted into a half-hour of
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, all produced by a three-person team. Channel 21 programs included the Financial News Network (which had been dropped by Boston's WQTV), local news and public affairs programs, and other syndicated shows. The station's studios hosted the drawings for Tri-State Megabucks, the first game offered by the
Tri-State Lottery Tri-State Lottery is the terminal-generated game series offered by the Maine, New Hampshire, and/or Vermont lotteries. It was the first multi-jurisdictional lottery. Its first multi-state game (''Tri-State Megabucks'') came in September 1985. The c ...
—formed by Maine, New Hampshire, and Vermont—when it began in 1985. In 1986, Flatley was awarded a permit to build a second television station, channel 68 in
Syracuse, New York Syracuse ( ) is a city in and the county seat of Onondaga County, New York, United States. It is the fifth-most populous city in the state of New York following New York City, Buffalo, Yonkers, and Rochester. At the 2020 census, the city' ...
, and channel 21 strengthened its sports portfolio the next year when it became the first-ever TV home of New Hampshire Wildcats athletic events.


CBS affiliation

Flatley, however, also sought to raise WNHT's statewide profile, which led to a transformation in programming philosophy and orientation. In late 1987, the station applied for an affiliation with CBS. It commissioned a study that found that, in the Concord area, CBS was a poor third-place finisher and that an affiliation with channel 21 would make $2 million a year in profit for the network and increase its audience. CBS gave channel 21 the green light in January, after six months and nearly $50,000 spent on lobbying the network, and on February 2, 1988, WNHT became a CBS affiliate, the second New Hampshire-based network affiliate in the region alongside WMUR-TV. Further, the station invested $2 million to build out a full-sized news department to deliver nightly newscasts beginning May 31. Flatley and general manager Ron Pulera sensed that there was room in the growing state for a second network-affiliated station; further, Flatley believed that southern New Hampshire could become its own market within several years. Of the more than 2 million households in the Boston
area of dominant influence A media market, broadcast market, media region, designated market area (DMA), television market area, or simply market is a region where the population can receive the same (or similar) television and radio station offerings, and may also incl ...
in 1988, 311,100 came from the six included counties in southern New Hampshire; on its own, this would have been the 80th-ranked ADI, ahead of
Chattanooga, Tennessee Chattanooga ( ) is a city in and the county seat of Hamilton County, Tennessee, United States. Located along the Tennessee River bordering Georgia, it also extends into Marion County on its western end. With a population of 181,099 in 2020 ...
. The switch from independent station to CBS boosted ad revenue, though ratings in some time slots plummeted: the new local newscasts fared far worse than ''
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'' had at 6 pm. The station failed to draw viewers who had been used to tuning to
WNEV-TV WHDH (channel 7) is an independent television station in Boston, Massachusetts, United States. It is owned by Sunbeam Television alongside Cambridge-licensed CW affiliate WLVI (channel 56). WHDH and WLVI share studios at Bulfinch Place (nea ...
for CBS programming. Further exacerbating the young affiliate's woes, market conditions had begun to change during 1988. Total market advertising revenue started to decline, and there was increasing nervousness about the state of the regional and national economy. These changes came atop other structural factors, such as the need for the New Hampshire TV stations to compete with Boston outlets—which had stepped up their competition for New Hampshire advertisers—and their lack of statewide cable penetration. In Keene, WNHT started a signature-collecting campaign and enlisted letters of support from Governor John Sununu and representative Judd Gregg (son of station founder Hugh) to try and convince Paragon Cable to offer the station to the local system's 10,000 subscribers, but the system refused to bump the CBS affiliate in Hartford, Connecticut, to make room or to pay the out-of-market copyright fees that would be required to add channel 21. WNHT's weekly circulation of 134,000 New Hampshire homes was just over half that of WNDS (255,000) and far behind WMUR-TV (seen in 491,000 Granite State homes). Its 6 p.m. local newscast had 2,000 viewers; WMUR-TV had 51,000. By late February 1989, the slow advertising market had caught up with channel 21: it cut back some local newscasts, axed its Sunday morning public affairs show, and laid off 15 staffers.


Demise and sale

The softening market, however, could not be responded to by merely cutting back on newscasts. On March 31, 1989, Flatley announced that WNHT would go off the air, with some of its staff and equipment being absorbed by WNDS, at the time up for auction without much interest from buyers; general manager Ron Pulera declared that the ratings "have now painfully shown us that there is no market for this type of station". On the final night of telecasting, the station did not air its local newscasts, instead airing episodes of '' Three's Company'' and an announcement advising viewers of the impending closure, and signed off at midnight, in the middle of ''
The Pat Sajak Show ''The Pat Sajak Show'' was an American late-night television talk show that aired on CBS from January 9, 1989, to April 13, 1990. Cast The show was hosted by Pat Sajak, best known as host of the game show '' Wheel of Fortune''. To do the talk ...
''. Flatley would compare the emotions he felt when announcing the station's closure to staffers to euthanizing his dog. It would turn out that WNDS would hire fewer WNHT staffers than Flatley claimed it would, though Flatley gave his customer list to the Derry station and would receive a portion of revenue generated from those advertising accounts. The closure of WNHT, which had already lost $3 million in 1988 and was set to do the same in 1989, took the CBS network by surprise and revealed a series of miscalculations by Flatley as to the size of the advertising market. It was just the second time in the previous decade that a CBS affiliate had closed. After the station shut down, it was revealed that WNHT received no compensation from CBS to air its programming, unusual for the time, in part because Concord already received signals from two other CBS affiliates. The closure also left 55 people out of work; some of the news staff, including former main anchor Steve Schiff, sued Flatley and accused him of overpromising on the stability of the station and his willingness to honor what he called a three- to five-year commitment to news at WNHT. The station's newscast beat out WMUR for best in the state in that year's New Hampshire Broadcasters Association awards, held a month after it closed. The channel 21 license remained active despite the station's shutdown. In 1990, Flatley exited television by selling the Syracuse TV station for $7 million to Charles A. McFadden of
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. The company then reached a deal to sell WNHT to Stephen M. Mindich, who owned the weekly ''
Boston Phoenix ''The Phoenix'' (stylized as ''The Phœnix'') was the name of several alternative weekly periodicals published in the United States of America by Phoenix Media/Communications Group of Boston, Massachusetts, including the ''Portland Phoenix'' an ...
'' newspaper. That deal, though, hinged on the ability of Mindich's Rogue Television Corporation to close a deal to buy Boston-area WHRC-TV channel 46, which he was to rename WPHX; the stations were to be affiliates of the planned Star Television Network, airing classic TV shows. The Mindich deal won FCC approval but fell apart in negotiations, and in 1992, Flatley sold channel 60 to New England Television, Inc., a company headed by Wilson Hickham; the station would likely have aired religious programming. The sale did not include the transmitter site, which Flatley retained. Ultimately, Hickham did not rebuild channel 21 himself and found a buyer from Boston who was interested. In late 1993,
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Communications, a for-profit division of the university, had started WABU channel 68 in Boston, a general-entertainment commercial independent. A month after starting up that station, the company purchased WNHT from Hickham with plans to use it as a satellite station of WABU and gain signal parity with its competitors. Use of the channel 21 facility by BU was delayed by complaints from WNDS and WGOT, who did not want to compete with a market-wide station for programming. In late June 1995, the BU purchase of WNHT was approved by the FCC; channel 21, renamed WNBU, returned that fall as a full-time repeater of the Boston outlet with no studio presence.


See also

*
WBPX-TV WBPX-TV (channel 68) is a television station in Boston, Massachusetts, United States, airing programming from the Ion Television network. It is owned by the Ion Media subsidiary of the E. W. Scripps Company, which also owns Woburn-licensed ...


References

{{DEFAULTSORT:Wnht (Tv) 1984 establishments in New Hampshire 1989 disestablishments in New Hampshire WNHT NHT Defunct television stations in the United States Television channels and stations disestablished in 1989 Television channels and stations established in 1984 Television stations in Massachusetts NHT