WUHF
Infobox_Broadcast
call_letters = WUHF
city =
station_
station_slogan = |The News Leader station_branding = Fox 31
analog = 31 (UHF)
digital = 28 (UHF)
other_chs =
affiliations = Fox
network =
founded =
airdate = January 1980
location = Rochester, New York
callsign_meaning = Ultra High Frequency
(reference to the station's broadcast frequency)
former_callsigns = none
former_channel_numbers =
owner = Sinclair Broadcast Group, Inc.
"(operated by Nexstar Broadcasting Group, Inc.)"
licensee = WUHF Licensee, LLC
sister_stations = WROC-TV
former_affiliations = Independent (1980-1985)NetSpan (1985-1986)
effective_radiated_power = 1200 kW (analog)
320 kW (digital)
HAAT = 152 m (analog)
161 m (digital)
class =
facility_id = 413
coordinates = coord|43|8|7.6|N|77|35|1.5|W|type:landmark_scale:2000 (analog)
coord|43|8|5.4|N|77|35|5.6|W|type:landmark_scale:2000 (digital)
homepage = [http://www.rochesterhomepage.net/ www.rochesterhomepage.net]
WUHF is a broadcast television station in Rochester, New York, affiliated with the Fox network. It broadcasts its analog signal on channel 31 and its digital signal on 28, and is seen on cable channel 7. Its transmitter is located on Pinnacle Hill in Brighton, New York. The station's license and other FCC assets are held by the Sinclair Broadcast Group, but the station is operated by Nexstar Broadcasting Group-owned CBS affiliate WROC-TV under a local sales agreement.
History
WUHF Channel 31 began operations in January 1980 as a general entertainment independent station running cartoons, sitcoms (classic and recent), movies, drama shows, and religious shows. In 1962,the original WUHF-TV in New York was sign-off in 1962. The station was owned by Malrite, and the general manager was Jerry Carr, former "The Weather Outside" Rochester TV personality. In 1983, former underground cartoonist Brian Bram produced and hosted "All Night Live," a program broadcast live from midnight to 7 AM Fridays and Saturdays. Bram's show was a showcase for regional bands including Personal Effects, Cousin Al and the Relatives, and The Degrads. In 1986 WUHF became a charter affiliate of Fox for Rochester and then known as Fox 31. Most of the religious shows were gone by then. In 1989 Act III Broadcasting would buy WUHF. In a group deal Abry would become the owner of WUHF in 1994. By 1996 WUHF was controlled by Sinclair and eventually sold to them. In the 90's the classic sitcoms, movies, and drama shows made way for talk shows, reality shows, and court shows. Cartoons were ended on weekdays at the end of 2001 when Fox ended its weekday kids block nationwide. In 2000 the station became known as Fox Rochester (although it adopted a "Fox 31" logo in 2003), and in 2006 WUHF added "The Tube" music video channel on digital channel 31.2. This continued until The Tube went out of business in 2007.
Sinclair and Fox recently finalized a six-year affiliation contract extension for Sinclair's 19 Fox affiliates, including WUHF. WUHF's affiliation contract now expires in March 2012 [http://www.sbgi.net/news_releases/2006/release_200652_160.pdf] .
Cable Carriage
In 1994, several cable systems in Canada started carrying WUHF via the Cancom communications satellite in out-of-market areas where FOX was not otherwise available, although it had been carried by the cable systems in Belleville, Ontario and other communities on the north shore of Lake Ontario since the 1980s. Until recently, it was also carried in the 1000 Islands Region of the North Country in the town of Hammond (via Citizens Cable TV), and in the provinces of Manitoba, Nova Scotia, and Newfoundland.
WUHF has been carried on satellite systems since 2001, and it is currently the only Rochester-based TV station seen in Canada on Star Choice.
WUHF's digital signal (Channel 28) signed onto the air in 2004 under a Special Temporary Authority.
Newscast
WUHF had produced its own 10pm local newscast since 1997. In 2003, WUHF converted its newscast to Sinclair's News Central format, which consisted of national and international news segments, weather and sports reports produced at News Central's headquarters in Hunt Valley, Maryland. The local news operation at WUHF was significantly sized down as a result.
In August 2005, the Sinclair Broadcast Group entered into a Local Service Agreement with Nexstar Broadcasting, the owners of Rochester's CBS affiliate WROC-TV Channel 8. Sinclair agreed to be the subordinate entity allowing Nexstar to control programming for WUHF. The News Central format was abandoned, and news broadcasts on WUHF ceased on September 1, 2005. Two anchors, a producer and a photographer were added to WROC's news staff. The remainder of WUHF's news operation was laid off in this move. The 10pm newscast returned to air on November 1 under the title "First at 10" and currently features WROC's on-air staff.
External links
* [http://www.rnyn.com/wuhf.htm RNYN - WUHF Television]
* [http://www.rochesterhomepage.net/ WUHF-TV Fox 31's Website]
* [http://www.nexstar.tv/stations/wuhf.asp Nexstar Broadcasting Group: WUHF Station Profile]
*TVQ|WUHF
*BIA|WUHF|TV|TV
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