WUSA (TV): Difference between revisions
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==External Link== |
==External Link== |
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[http://www.wusatv9.com/ WUSA homepage] |
[http://www.wusatv9.com/ WUSA homepage] |
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{{Washington TV}} |
<center>{{Washington TV}}</center> |
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[[Category:CBS network affiliates]] |
[[Category:CBS network affiliates]] |
Revision as of 10:31, 29 December 2004
W*USA-TV is a television station affiliated with the CBS network, broadcasting on channel 9 in the Washington, DC metropolitan area. The station officially went on the air on 16 January, 1949, as WOIC-TV. Four days later, it broadcast the first televised American presidential inaugural address, given by President Harry S. Truman.
In June 1950, the Washington Post purchased WOIC-TV and changed the call sign to WTOP-TV; the Post also owned a radio station using the same call sign. In both instances, WTOP stood for "Top of the Dial"; channel 9 is the highest channel broadcasting on Washington's VHF dial, while WTOP radio broadcasts at the tops of both the AM and FM dials, 107.7 and 1500 respectively.
The Post exchanged WTOP-TV with Detroit's WDIV-TV, then owned by the Detroit News, in July 1978. WTOP-TV then became WDVM-TV, and the new call letters represented the initials of the area it served: D for the District of Columbia, V for Virginia, and M for Maryland. Eight years later, Gannett, publisher of USA Today, acquired WDVM-TV and changed the call sign to W*USA-TV, which it remains today. While the station's current call sign is commonly printed as WUSA, the asterisk or star between the W and U is officially recognized as part of the call sign.
W*USA-TV was the launchpad for several well-known news anchors. Walter Cronkite, Sam Donaldson and Warner Wolf are among W*USA-TV's most successful alumni.
W*USA's transmitter is located in the Tenleytown area of Washington, DC, and its digital television broadcasts are assigned to channel 34.