WAFB
WAFB, virtual channel 9 (VHF digital channel 9), is a CBS-affiliated television station licensed to Baton Rouge, Louisiana, United States.[1] It serves as the network's flagship outlet in the Baton Rouge designated market area (DMA), ranked as the 95th largest broadcast market in the country as of the 2024–2025 Nielsen rankings, providing comprehensive coverage of local news, weather, sports, and community events across south Louisiana.[2][3] Owned by Gray Media, the station operates from studios on Government Street in downtown Baton Rouge and maintains transmitter facilities in the city.[4][5] WAFB signed on the air on April 19, 1953, marking it as the first television station in Baton Rouge and the second in the state of Louisiana.[6][2] Originally broadcasting an analog signal on UHF channel 28, it shifted to VHF channel 9 in 1960 to improve coverage and accessibility.[7] From its inception, WAFB has been a cornerstone of local media, evolving into a leading news organization that airs 25 hours of news programming each week, including the only live weekend noon newscast in the market and rebroadcasts of all local newscasts.[2] The station's commitment to investigative journalism has earned it multiple awards from the Associated Press and the Louisiana Association of Broadcasters, including being named Television Station of the Year in 2025, with reports that have directly influenced state legislation.[2][8] Additionally, WAFB supports the community by donating significant annual public service air time to local non-profits, such as Our Lady of the Lake Children’s Hospital and the Salvation Army.[2] As of 2023, it celebrated its 70th anniversary, continuing to deliver vital information to viewers amid its role in one of the nation's key regional markets.[6]History
Founding and early operations
WAFB signed on the air on April 19, 1953, as the first television station in Baton Rouge, Louisiana, broadcasting on UHF channel 28 from studios on Government Street.[2] The station was established by Modern Broadcasting of Baton Rouge, a group led by Louis S. Prejean and associates, as a counterpart to the existing local radio outlets WAFB-AM and WAFB-FM, which had launched in 1948.[9] From its debut, WAFB held a primary affiliation with CBS, supplemented by secondary ties to NBC, DuMont, and ABC, allowing it to air a mix of network programming tailored to the growing local market.[10] Early operations focused on developing local content to foster community engagement and differentiate from distant network signals, with an emphasis on news, weather, and family-oriented shows. A key example was the introduction of the children's program Buckskin Bill’s Storyland on August 15, 1955, hosted by performer Buckskin Bill Black, who donned frontier attire to entertain young viewers with stories, puppets, and educational segments.[11] This show quickly became a staple, running for over three decades and exemplifying WAFB's commitment to homegrown programming during its formative years. In August 1960, WAFB transitioned from UHF channel 28 to VHF channel 9, a move facilitated by the reassignment of channel 9 from WDAM-TV in Hattiesburg, Mississippi, to enhance signal propagation and broaden coverage across central Louisiana.[12] The first decade brought challenges, particularly the inherent limitations of UHF transmission, which offered shorter range and poorer reception compared to VHF, hindering viewership in outlying areas and complicating competition as additional stations entered the market.[13] Despite these obstacles, the station's strong CBS affiliation from the outset played a pivotal role in cultivating a dedicated local audience.Ownership transitions
WAFB was acquired by the Royal Street Corporation of New Orleans in 1956 from its original owners, Louis S. Prejean and associates, marking an early shift toward regional media consolidation.[14] This ownership change facilitated operational expansions during the station's formative years. In 1964, Royal Street sold WAFB to the locally based Guaranty Corporation for $3 million, returning management to Baton Rouge interests and emphasizing community-oriented broadcasting under Guaranty Broadcasting, a subsidiary.[15] Guaranty Corporation maintained ownership until 1988, when it sold WAFB to AFLAC (then American Family Corporation) as part of a strategic divestiture, introducing the station to a national insurance and media conglomerate.[16] This transition provided AFLAC with a foothold in broadcasting while allowing WAFB to benefit from broader corporate resources, though it remained focused on local operations. In 1997, AFLAC divested its entire broadcasting division, including WAFB, to Raycom Media as part of a $485 million deal for seven stations, integrating WAFB into Raycom's growing portfolio of regional affiliates.[17] Under Raycom, WAFB saw enhanced news resources, including participation in a national investigative unit launched in 2017 to support in-depth reporting across Raycom stations.[18] The station's final major ownership shift occurred on January 2, 2019, when Gray Television completed its $3.65 billion merger with Raycom Media, acquiring WAFB and emphasizing retention of local focus amid national scale.[19] This merger enabled digital investments, such as expanded online platforms and streaming capabilities, to modernize WAFB's delivery while preserving its community role. Under Gray Television, WAFB has achieved operational stability, leveraging the parent company's resources for sustained local service.Key programming and broadcast milestones
WAFB introduced 24-hour broadcasting on September 12, 1990, extending its schedule beyond traditional sign-off times by incorporating infomercials, program repeats, and overnight content to serve viewers around the clock.[20] A notable evolution in local children's programming occurred with the long-running Buckskin Bill’s Storyland, which aired weekday mornings from August 15, 1955, until 1988 and became one of the longest-running children's shows in U.S. television history, fostering generations of viewers through educational stories, puppets, and community engagement in Baton Rouge.[21] In 1988, the program transitioned to Buckskin and Friends, an hour-long Saturday morning format that ran for approximately one year until 1989, maintaining the beloved host Bill Black's focus on storytelling while adapting to changing audience preferences and scheduling demands.[21] This evolution left a lasting cultural legacy, with archived episodes preserved in local institutions and specials commemorating Black's influence on regional media and education, including his service on the East Baton Rouge Parish School Board.[11] In a significant technological advancement, WAFB launched high-definition broadcasts in 2008 as the first station in Baton Rouge to do so, upgrading its news and programming production with equipment like JVC GY-HD250U cameras as part of Raycom Media's network-wide transition to enhance visual quality and viewer experience.[22] To meet growing demand for early-morning information, WAFB expanded its news schedule by adding a 4:30 a.m. newscast titled 9News This Morning: Early Edition on September 12, 2011, providing an additional half-hour of local coverage Monday through Friday.[23] Further growth came with the debut of 9News at 9 a.m. on June 26, 2023, a one-hour weekday program offering mid-morning updates on news, weather, and community topics.[24] WAFB overtook competitor WBRZ in local news ratings in 1994, a shift that solidified its position and supported ongoing expansions, culminating in 25 hours of weekly news programming by 2025 across its main channel and sister station.[2]Facilities and operations
Studios and production
WAFB's primary studios have been located at 844 Government Street in downtown Baton Rouge since the station's launch on April 19, 1953, when it became the first television station in the capital city.[25][2] Over the decades, the facility has undergone several expansions to accommodate growing news and production needs, including a major remodel in 2015 that updated the main studio set while preserving the original building's structure from its early years.[26] As part of Gray Media's ownership, WAFB shares its studios and production resources with sister station WBXH-CD (channel 46), enabling efficient multi-platform content creation for both broadcast and digital outlets.[27] The production facilities have evolved to support modern workflows, with post-2019 upgrades following Gray's acquisition of Raycom Media emphasizing integrated digital tools for news gathering and distribution across TV, online, and mobile platforms.[28] WAFB's studios play a key role in covering local events through live remote broadcasts from community sites, such as annual Independence Day celebrations in downtown Baton Rouge.[29] Gray Media's investments in facility enhancements have supported this operational scale, where approximately 100 staff members focus on multi-platform production as of 2025.[28]Transmitter and signal coverage
WAFB's transmitter is located on River Road in Baton Rouge, Louisiana, at coordinates 30°21′59″N 91°12′47″W.[1] This site positions the facility approximately 6 miles south of Louisiana State University's Tiger Stadium, facilitating efficient signal distribution across the region.[30] The station operates with an effective radiated power (ERP) of 5.57 kW and a height above average terrain (HAAT) of 511 meters (1,676 feet), enabling robust VHF broadcasting on channel 9.[1][31] These parameters support a primary coverage contour extending 63.6 miles from the transmitter, encompassing the Baton Rouge metropolitan area and reaching into parts of central Louisiana, including parishes such as East Baton Rouge, West Baton Rouge, Iberville, and Ascension.[1] The signal covers approximately 12,702 square miles and serves an estimated population of 1,747,419 viewers.[1] WAFB does not utilize repeater or translator signals to extend its reach, relying instead on its primary tower for over-the-air distribution.[1] The transmitter's elevated position and directional antenna pattern, featuring a 0.5° electrical beam tilt, adapt to the relatively flat topography of the Mississippi River floodplain, minimizing signal attenuation from local obstacles like levees and wetlands.[1] As of 2025, WAFB remains in full compliance with Federal Communications Commission (FCC) requirements for market penetration in the Baton Rouge designated market area (DMA), operating under its current license with no reported coverage deficiencies. The station's setup ensures adequate grade B signal strength across the DMA, supporting public access to its CBS affiliation and local content.Programming
Network affiliations
WAFB signed on as the CBS affiliate for Baton Rouge on April 19, 1953, becoming the first television station in the capital city and the second in Louisiana. Initially, the station operated with secondary affiliations to NBC (1953–1955), the DuMont Television Network (1953–1955), and ABC (1953–1971), allowing it to air programming from multiple networks during its formative years when local coverage was limited.[2] From 1955, when WBRZ signed on, ABC was shared as a secondary affiliation between WAFB and WBRZ until 1971, when WRBT became the primary ABC affiliate. This allowed WAFB to focus more exclusively on CBS content and solidify its position as the market's dominant CBS outlet. The station prioritized CBS network feeds while integrating syndicated programming, including classic shows like reruns of popular series during off-peak hours to fill local schedule gaps.[32] In recent years, WAFB has expanded its offerings with the addition of a subchannel for the Gulf Coast Sports & Entertainment Network (GCSEN), which launched in September 2024 to broadcast New Orleans Pelicans NBA games and other regional sports content free over the air. For the 2024–25 season, GCSEN aired 75 of the team's 82 regular-season games; in the 2025–26 season, it airs 80 of 82 games. In September 2025, GCSEN expanded to DIRECTV platforms, broadcasting Pelicans games in 14 markets. The station's core CBS affiliation remains secure, with Gray Media renewing its agreement with CBS for 52 markets, including WAFB, effective through 2025 and extending into subsequent years as part of a multi-year deal.[33][34][35][36]Local programming
WAFB's local programming has historically emphasized children's education and community engagement, beginning with the long-running "Storyland," hosted by Bill Black as "Buckskin Bill." The program debuted on August 15, 1955, and continued until 1988, featuring storytelling, puppetry, crafts, and moral lessons designed to entertain while teaching young viewers about history, safety, and civic responsibility.[11] Black's portrayal of a frontier character incorporated educational segments on topics like environmental conservation and anti-smoking messages, reflecting the station's early commitment to public service through youth-oriented content.[37] In contemporary programming, WAFB produces community affairs shows that foster local connections, such as "The LaTangela Show," a weekly series since 2019 that delivers in-depth interviews with Baton Rouge artists, entrepreneurs, and leaders to highlight personal stories and cultural contributions.[38] Complementing this, "The Clay Young Show" airs Fridays at 7 p.m. on WBXH and Saturdays at 3 p.m. on WAFB, focusing on lifestyle topics, guest discussions with local figures, and community spotlights like education initiatives and business innovations.[39] Morning lifestyle segments within WAFB's broadcast day provide practical advice on wellness, cooking, and home improvement, tailored to viewer interests in the Capital Region.[40] The station's holiday specials and event coverage capture Baton Rouge's unique cultural fabric, including annual productions around Christmas traditions like the Hollydays Market, a Junior League fundraiser featuring local vendors and festive performances, and coverage of community parades emphasizing Louisiana's blend of Southern and Creole heritage.[41] WAFB also produces public service announcements promoting regional priorities such as hurricane preparedness, health awareness, and youth safety, often featuring local personalities to resonate with audiences.[42] For local talent showcases, the station supports events like Mid City's Got Talent, producing segments that spotlight emerging performers in music, dance, and comedy from the Baton Rouge area.[43] By 2025, WAFB has expanded its local programming to digital platforms, enabling on-demand viewing of community shows, lifestyle segments, and event recaps through its mobile app and website, which stream content alongside interactive features for user engagement.[44][45] This shift allows archived episodes of legacy programs like "Storyland" to reach new generations via the station's digital archives.[46]Sports broadcasting
WAFB has long emphasized coverage of local and regional sports, particularly college and high school athletics in the Baton Rouge area, with a strong focus on the Louisiana State University (LSU) Tigers across football, baseball, basketball, and gymnastics. The station provides extensive game broadcasts, highlights, and analysis for LSU events, alongside coverage of Southern University Jaguars teams in football, baseball, and basketball, as well as Baton Rouge-area high school competitions through dedicated segments like Sportsline Friday Nite, which airs weekly recaps and scores.[47][48] In addition to its core local programming, WAFB offers weekly sports segments such as Game Time and Weekend Kickoff for in-depth discussions and previews, complemented by special game-day programming that includes pre- and post-game shows to enhance viewer engagement during key matchups. The station's sports department also produces content like Jacques Talk, featuring interviews with coaches and analysts on LSU and regional teams.[49][48] A significant expansion in professional sports coverage came in September 2024, when WAFB, through its parent company Gray Media, partnered with the New Orleans Pelicans to launch the Gulf Coast Sports & Entertainment Network (GCSEN) on subchannel 9.3, airing New Orleans Pelicans NBA games and other regional sports content free over-the-air. For the 2024–25 season, GCSEN aired 75 of the team's 82 regular-season games; in the 2025–26 season, it airs 80 of 82 games. In September 2025, GCSEN expanded to DIRECTV platforms, broadcasting Pelicans games in 14 markets. This partnership with GCSEN has broadened WAFB's reach, including agreements with entities like the Louisiana High School Athletic Association (LHSAA) to broadcast additional high school football games, further integrating local youth sports into the network's lineup.[33][34][35][50][51] Historically, WAFB's sports broadcasting ties directly to its CBS affiliation since its primary focus in the 1950s, enabling the station to simulcast major events like Super Bowls when CBS holds broadcast rights, such as Super Bowl LVIII in 2024, which prompted adjustments to local Sunday programming for the national telecast. This network linkage has allowed WAFB to deliver high-profile NFL content to Baton Rouge viewers alongside its regional focus.[52]News and public affairs
News department overview
The WAFB news department operates as a robust operation within the Baton Rouge market, producing approximately 25 hours of local news programming each week. This includes multiple daily newscasts airing from 4:30 a.m. to 10 p.m. on weekdays, with extended morning shows, midday updates, and evening broadcasts, alongside weekend editions at key times such as 8 a.m., 6 p.m., and 10 p.m.[2][53] The department is structured around dedicated anchor teams, field reporters, and production staff, all overseen by News Director Robb Hays, who has led the team since 2009. Evening anchors like Greg Meriwether and Elizabeth Vowell handle primary newscasts, supported by a roster of reporters covering beats from crime to community affairs, and producers managing content flow. This organization enables comprehensive coverage of local, state, and regional stories, with a focus on timely reporting for the Capital Region audience.[54][55] WAFB has maintained market dominance in local news ratings since the mid-1990s, consistently leading competitor WBRZ in key demographics, including adults 25-54, as evidenced by sweeps victories and high household shares. The station's news output reaches viewers across multiple platforms, including traditional over-the-air broadcasts, the wafb.com website for on-demand video and articles, a dedicated mobile app for live streaming and alerts, and active social media channels on platforms like Facebook and X (formerly Twitter). This multi-platform approach amplifies accessibility and engagement in the Baton Rouge designated market area.[56][57][58] The department's journalistic excellence is recognized through awards, including multiple Suncoast Regional Emmy Awards in 2024 for categories such as news excellence and program coverage of local events like community initiatives and breaking stories. Recent milestones, such as the launch of extended digital newscasts like 9News Now, have further solidified its position as Louisiana's leading news source.[59][60][61]Weather and investigative reporting
WAFB's First Alert Weather Team provides comprehensive meteorology services, featuring interactive radar maps and real-time updates for severe weather events across southeast Louisiana.[62] The team utilizes advanced Doppler radar technology, drawing from regional systems in New Orleans, Lake Charles, and Fort Polk to monitor storms effectively, with a station-specific radar upgrade implemented in 2022 to enhance local coverage.[63] This setup supports 24/7 storm tracking, including high-resolution 250-meter radar accessible via mobile app for precise storm detection, such as hail, strong winds, and rotation.[64] Specialized segments focus on hurricane tracking through the dedicated Hurricane Center, critical for the Gulf Coast region prone to tropical systems, and severe weather alerts integrated into broadcasts and digital platforms.[65] Following Hurricane Katrina in 2005, WAFB enhanced its forecasting capabilities, contributing to broader advancements in storm prediction tools that have improved accuracy over the subsequent two decades.[66] Aerial perspectives from Sky9 cameras complement ground-based monitoring, aiding in detailed storm coverage without dedicated mobile weather units explicitly noted in operations.[62] The station's I-TEAM investigative unit delves into local issues, particularly corruption within Louisiana government and law enforcement, producing in-depth reports that have prompted indictments and accountability measures.[67] Led by Chief Investigative Reporter Chris Nakamoto, the unit has exposed injustices in the Baton Rouge Police Department (BRPD), including leaked documents detailing alleged corruption among officers and leadership, as well as harassment targeting internal investigators in 2024 and 2025.[68][69] These efforts, such as revelations contradicting BRPD Chief responses to probes, have influenced ongoing federal and local scrutiny, contributing to personnel changes and procedural reforms.[70] I-TEAM reporting also addresses environmental concerns, including chemical exposure and pollution incidents in Louisiana parishes. For instance, investigations into the 2025 Smitty's Supply explosion in Roseland highlighted oil residues and health risks, prompting EPA intervention and public updates on cleanup.[71] Additional exposés covered red dust (bauxite) health impacts in Ascension Parish and concerns over testing scopes post-industrial accidents, underscoring persistent environmental hazards in the region.[72] In the 2020s, such work on local government mismanagement, including bid-rigging and financial irregularities leading to indictments, has driven policy discussions and enforcement actions.[73] These segments integrate into WAFB's general newscasts for broader public awareness.Notable on-air personnel
WAFB has been home to several influential on-air personalities over its history, many of whom shaped local broadcasting in Baton Rouge. One of the station's most enduring figures was William P. "Buckskin Bill" Black, who hosted the children's program Buckskin Bill and His Adventures from 1955 to 1990, entertaining generations with cowboy-themed storytelling and educational content during his 35-year tenure.[37] Black, originally from Oklahoma, began at WAFB as a cameraman before creating the beloved character, which became a staple of local children's programming.[74] Donna Britt served as a prominent evening news anchor at WAFB from 1977 until her retirement in 2018, co-anchoring the top-rated 6 p.m. newscast and becoming a trusted voice for the community during her 41-year career.[75] A Mississippi native who attended LSU in the 1970s, Britt started in local radio before transitioning to television, where she earned recognition for her professionalism and community involvement.[76] As one of the station's early female anchors in the late 1970s, she contributed to greater gender diversity on air, paving the way for women in Baton Rouge journalism.[77] As of 2025, WAFB's lead evening news team includes Greg Meriwether, who anchors the 5, 6, and 10 p.m. newscasts while serving as managing editor, drawing on nearly 25 years of experience at the station since joining from Kentucky in 2000.[78] Elizabeth Vowell anchors alongside Meriwether at 6 and 10 p.m., recognized nationally for her reporting on investigative stories and community issues during her tenure at WAFB.[79] On the morning side, Matt Williams anchors 9News This Morning and Early Edition, bringing over a decade of local experience after relocating from Tulsa in 2013.[80] Among former news staff, sports personalities have notably advanced to national roles. Tim Brando worked as WAFB's sports director from 1981 to 1986, covering LSU athletics and high school sports before launching a career at ESPN, CBS, and Fox Sports, where he has broadcast college football and basketball for decades.[81] Steve Schneider, another longtime sports director, spent over 40 years at WAFB until his retirement in 2023, earning acclaim for his coverage of local teams.[82] WAFB has honored its on-air talent through tributes and recognitions, including the station's Hall of Fame, established to celebrate contributors like Black and Britt, who were among the nine inductees in 2024 for their lasting impact on broadcasting and the community.[83] Following Britt's death from ALS in January 2021 at age 62, the station renamed its main broadcast studio the Donna Britt Broadcast Studio in 2023, reflecting her legacy as a journalist and ALS advocate.[84] Black passed away in 2018 at age 88, prompting widespread community remembrances of his pioneering children's programming.[74]Technical specifications
Broadcast signal details
WAFB operates on virtual channel 9.1, broadcasting its primary CBS-affiliated signal on VHF physical channel 9 with a frequency range of 186–192 MHz.[1] The station employs ATSC 1.0 digital modulation, delivering high-definition content at 1080i resolution for the main CBS feed, which supports interlaced scanning at 30 frames per second to optimize bandwidth efficiency within the 6 MHz channel allocation.[1] WAFB's effective radiated power (ERP) is 5.57 kW horizontally and vertically, transmitted via a non-directional RCA TW-15A9P antenna mounted at a height of 1,676 feet above average terrain (HAAT), configured to provide balanced signal propagation suitable for both urban areas in Baton Rouge and rural regions across central Louisiana.[1] This setup contributes to a coverage area encompassing a primary contour of approximately 64 miles in radius from the transmitter site in Baton Rouge.[1] The station's FCC license, under Facility ID 589, was initially granted for digital operations in 2009 following the DTV transition, with the current construction permit and license reflecting operations on channel 9 since completion of the post-repack reconfiguration. As part of the 2017 incentive auction spectrum reallocation, WAFB was reassigned from its pre-auction digital channel 46 to VHF channel 9 to consolidate broadcast spectrum, with full implementation by 2020 under FCC Repack Phase 7.[85][86] Signal quality for HD content includes a typical video bit rate of around 10 Mbps for the 1080i stream, encoded in MPEG-2 or H.264 with Dolby Digital 5.1 audio at 384 kbps, ensuring robust reception within the ATSC 1.0 transport stream of up to 19.39 Mbps total capacity as of 2025.[87][1]Subchannels and multicast
WAFB utilizes digital multicast technology to broadcast multiple subchannels simultaneously on its VHF digital channel 9, allowing viewers access to diverse programming through over-the-air antennas or participating cable and satellite providers. The station allocates bandwidth dynamically across its subchannels, typically supporting standard-definition streams on secondary channels while prioritizing high-definition for the primary CBS feed. This setup enables efficient use of spectrum while expanding content options for the Baton Rouge market.[1] As of November 2025, WAFB's subchannel lineup includes the following:| Virtual Channel | Affiliation/Programming | Resolution | Audio Format | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 9.1 | CBS | 1080i | 5.1 surround | Primary channel featuring local and national CBS content. |
| 9.2 | Bounce TV | 480i | 2.0 stereo | Entertainment network targeting African American audiences with movies and series. |
| 9.3 | Gulf Coast Sports & Entertainment Network (GCSEN) | 480i | 2.0 stereo | Local sports programming, including New Orleans Pelicans games. |
| 9.4 | MyNetworkTV (simulcast of WBXH-CD 39.1) | 480i | 2.0 stereo | Shared operation with sister station WBXH-CD, offering syndicated shows and movies. |
| 9.5 | Dabl | 480i | 2.0 stereo | Lifestyle and entertainment network with cooking, home improvement, and drama series. |
| 9.6 | Ion Plus | 480i | 2.0 stereo | Off-network programming including dramas and movies. |
| 9.7 | Oxygen | 480i | 2.0 stereo | True crime and drama series focused on women. |