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WHIO-TV |
| WHIO-TV | |
|---|---|
| Dayton, Ohio | |
| Branding | WHIO-TV Channel 7 (general) NewsCenter 7 (newscasts) |
| Slogan | Coverage You Can Count On |
| Channels | Analog: 7 (VHF) |
| Affiliations | CBS 7 Weather Now (DT2) |
| Owner | Cox Enterprises, Inc. (Miami Valley Broadcasting Corporation) |
| First air date | February 23, 1949 |
| Call letters’ meaning | OHIO |
| Former channel number(s) | 13 (1949-1952) |
| Former affiliations | Secondary: DuMont (1949-1952) |
| Transmitter Power | 200 kW (analog) 1000 kW (digital) |
| Height | 348 m (analog) 290 m (digital) |
| Facility ID | 41458 |
| Transmitter Coordinates | |
| Website | www.whiotv.com |
WHIO-TV is a television station in Dayton, Ohio. It broadcasts on channel 7, and is an affiliate of CBS.
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WHIO was started on channel 13 on February 23, 1949 and moved to channel 7 in 1952. It is Dayton's first television station to start broadcasting, although WDTN was first to have its license granted. WHIO is the only station in Dayton to never change its affiliation. WHIO has been owned by Cox Enterprises since its inception. WHIO's transmitter is located on Germantown Street in western Dayton. WHIO began broadcasting all their newscasts in a 16:9 widescreen format on April 1, 2007, becoming the first Ohio station outside of Cleveland at the time to switch to the new format. Its news department NewsCenter 7 has been in first place in the Nielsen Ratings for many years and that trend continues to this day.citation needed The news team is lead by Jim Baldridge, Cheryl McHenry, James Brown & Letitia Perry in the evening and Natasha Williams & John Paul in the morning.
WHIO also has served as the default CBS affiliate for most of the Lima (Ohio) DMA (the station reaches most of the Lima DMA with a Grade B signal). This was especially before a low-powered CBS affiliate went on the air in Lima. WHIO also remains on Time Warner's Lima cable systems.
The station's digital channel is multiplexed:
WHIO-DT broadcasts on digital channel 41.
Digital channels
| Channel | Name | Programming |
|---|---|---|
| 7.1 | WHIO-DT | main WHIO-TV/CBS programming |
| 7.2 | The AccuWeather Channel | 7 Weather Now |
After the analog television shutdown scheduled for February 17, 2009 1, WHIO-TV will remain on channel 41 [2] using PSIP to display WHIO-TV's virtual channel as 7.
The logo for the station is their version of the "Circle 7" logo -- an orange 7 against a blue background, encompassed by a thin orange circle, and juxtaposed by "WHIO-TV" written in blue on a white background, underlined in red. Both the logo and the slogan ("Coverage you can count on") identify WHIO-TV as the sister station of other Cox stations; particularly WSB-TV in Atlanta, which has a similar logo and identical slogan. Its sister station in Seattle, KIRO-TV, also has a similar logo, but a different version of the "Circle 7".
Until early 2007, the "7" in the logo was "broken" -- it had a diagonal line running where the two lines in the "7" meet. This logo has been used by WHIO-TV since the early-1970s at the latest. In early 2007, at the latest, the logo underwent a slight revision, removing this "break" from the "7".
WHIO's team of meteorologists currently by the name of the Storm Center 7 weather team is led by Chief Meteorologist Jamie Simpson and also features Meteorologists Jeff Porter, Rich Wirdzek and Kimberly Thomson. WHIO bills their radar as 'New Live Doppler 7' powered by Baron Services.
WHIO was one of the first television stations in the United States to have its own weather radar.citation needed
WHIO did not switch to professional meteorologists until 1993 with the hiring of Heidi Sonen. WHIO then dropped the Accu-Weather service and hired other meteorologists to fill out the staff including former Weather Channel meteorologist Fred Barnhill. Air Force meteorologist Warren Madden was hired from the nearby Wright Patterson Air Force Base and he later went to The Weather Channel in December 1996.
After Sonen's retirement in 1997, the station hired more Penn State meteorology graduates for the role of Chief Meteorologist including Brian Orzel and Jamie Simpson.
In December 2004 they introduced StormCenter 7, which is a weather center that doubles as a set created by FX Group where weather reports can be done.
On June 29, 2007, WHIO debuted their new doppler weather radar, billed as New Live Doppler 7. The radar is available anytime on the stations website.
On December 15, 2006, WHIO-TV launched 7 Weather Now, programmed 24 hours a day and frequently updated forecasts. Live coverage of developing severe weather can be found on 7 Weather Now, as well as the latest watches and warnings. Weekday mornings from 7am to 8am, a third hour of News Center 7 Daybreak airs exclusively on the channel. 7 Weather Now can be found on digital channel 7.2, channel 23 on Time Warner cable, and on the digitial tier at channel 708. A live stream of 7 Weather Now can be accessed on the WHIO-TV website at http://www.whiotv.com.
WHIO began broadcast of all their newscasts in a widescreen format on April 1, 2007.
NEWSCENTER 7 ANCHORS:
NEWSCENTER 7 REPORTERS:
STORMCENTER 7 TEAM:
7 SPORTS ANCHORS:
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