WNBC
WNBC (channel 4) is the flagship owned-and-operated television station of the NBC network, licensed to New York, New York, and serving the New York tri-state metropolitan area.[1] Owned by NBCUniversal's NBC Owned Television Stations division, a subsidiary of Comcast Corporation, the station has provided local news, weather, sports, and entertainment programming to over 7 million households since its inception in the early days of commercial television.[1][2] WNBC operates as a duopoly with Linden, New Jersey–licensed Telemundo station WNJU (channel 47), sharing studios at 30 Rockefeller Plaza in Midtown Manhattan and a transmitter atop the Empire State Building.[3] The station's roots extend to experimental television broadcasts by the Radio Corporation of America (RCA) beginning in 1928 as W2XBS, with regular programming commencing on July 1, 1941, as WNBT on VHF channel 1—the third commercial TV station in the United States.[4][5] Pioneering efforts included early mechanical television tests using a Felix the Cat figurine as a test pattern and the first broadcast of a live television play in November 1936, starring Eddie Albert and Grace Brandt.[6] WNBC transitioned to channel 4 in 1946 following FCC reallocation and adopted its current call sign in 1954, solidifying its role as NBC's primary outlet in the nation's largest media market.[5] Notable for its contributions to broadcast innovation, WNBC has maintained a strong local news presence under the "NBC 4 New York" brand, including the launch of the 24/7 digital subchannel NBC New York Nonstop in 2021, focusing on continuous news coverage.[7][1] While the station has earned recognition for journalistic excellence, including multiple regional Emmy Awards for news programming, it operates within the broader context of NBCUniversal's network, where coverage priorities reflect corporate and network affiliations rather than independent empirical scrutiny.[1]History
Experimental operations and early innovations
NBC's experimental television operations, precursors to WNBC, originated in 1928 with RCA's station W2XBS at the Van Cortlandt Park research facility in New York, conducting initial transmissions using mechanical scanning technology.[8] Early tests featured a papier-mâché Felix the Cat figurine mounted on a revolving phonograph turntable, providing a high-contrast, heat-resistant image broadcast continuously to calibrate equipment and refine signal stability.[9] By 1930, operations relocated to the Empire State Building, where experimental broadcasts continued, with the Felix image airing for several hours daily to support ongoing technological adjustments by RCA engineers.[10] These efforts demonstrated the feasibility of consistent image transmission over distance, though limited to a small number of receivers among technical staff and affiliates. A major innovation arrived on July 7, 1936, with NBC's first all-electronic television broadcast from Studio 3H at 30 Rockefeller Plaza, featuring a 30-minute variety program of speeches, dances, monologues, and film clips delivered to 225 RCA licensees and NBC affiliates via 9-inch sets with 343-line resolution, green-phosphor displays, and a single iconoscope camera.[11] This event signified the shift from mechanical Nipkow disk systems to fully electronic methods, leveraging Vladimir Zworykin's iconoscope tube for superior image quality and paving the way for practical broadcasting infrastructure. Subsequent experiments included a November 6, 1936, demonstration to 200 invited guests and press, showcasing live acts and films on 12-inch receivers, which highlighted advancements in studio production and reception reliability.[8] These operations established key precedents in electronic scanning, camera technology, and live content adaptation, despite constraints like low resolution and limited audience access.Launch as first commercial station
On July 1, 1941, the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) lifted its ban on television advertising and authorized commercial operations, enabling NBC's experimental station W2XBS in New York City to transition to full commercial broadcasting under the new call letters WNBT.[12][6] This marked WNBT as the first U.S. station to operate commercially, signing on at 1:00 p.m. Eastern Time with an announcement confirming its new status: "This is now WNBT, the first commercial television station on the air."[12][13] The inaugural commercial aired at 2:30 p.m. that afternoon—a static 10-second Bulova Watch Company advertisement featuring a watch face and the tagline "Bulova—Watch of the Nation"—displayed before a live baseball game between the Brooklyn Dodgers and Philadelphia Phillies at Ebbets Field.[14][15] This ad, which cost Bulova $9 (equivalent to about $190 in 2023 dollars), represented the initial paid sponsorship in American television history, though earlier experimental broadcasts had included non-monetized product placements.[14][6] Initial commercial programming on WNBT consisted of limited daily broadcasts, typically four to five hours in the evening on Channel 1 (later reallocated), featuring newsreels, variety shows, and sports events aimed at a small audience equipped with about 7,000 television sets in the New York area.[13][12] Despite wartime restrictions curtailing expansion—such as a freeze on new station licenses from 1942 to 1945—WNBT's launch established the commercial model that propelled television's postwar growth, with NBC leveraging its radio infrastructure for content like President Franklin D. Roosevelt's speeches and early dramatic productions.[6][12]Mid-20th century expansion and rebranding
Following World War II, WNBC (then operating as WNBT) experienced significant expansion in its broadcasting capabilities and programming schedule as television adoption surged nationwide. The Federal Communications Commission lifted its construction freeze on new TV stations in 1945, enabling NBC to enhance its New York flagship's technical infrastructure, including conversions of radio studios at 30 Rockefeller Plaza—such as Studio 8G and 8H—into dedicated television production spaces starting in the late 1940s.[16] This allowed for increased live local programming, with daily broadcast hours expanding from limited pre-war experimental slots to fuller schedules by the early 1950s, incorporating network feeds, variety shows, and early news bulletins.[6] In the 1950s, expansion focused on technological advancements, particularly color television, driven by parent company RCA's innovations. WNBC participated in NBC's pioneering color broadcasts, including the first coast-to-coast color transmission of the Tournament of Roses Parade on January 1, 1954, originating from compatible color studios at Rockefeller Center.[17] By mid-decade, the station aired regular color programming, such as segments of the Colgate Comedy Hour from November 1953 onward, reflecting NBC's investment in color-compatible equipment and facilities to position itself ahead of competitors like CBS.[18] Audience reach grew accordingly, with New York-area TV set ownership rising from fewer than 10,000 in 1946 to over 1 million households by 1955, bolstering WNBC's role as the network's eastern hub. Rebranding efforts in this period centered on call sign changes aligned with corporate identity. On October 18, 1954, WNBT adopted WRCA-TV to honor RCA's ownership of NBC, a shift mirrored across several NBC outlets to emphasize the parent's technological legacy.[19] This lasted until May 22, 1960, when the station reverted to WNBC-TV, restoring a direct tie to the NBC brand amid evolving corporate strategies and to simplify affiliations post-RCA divestitures.[13] These changes coincided with visual identity updates, including the introduction of NBC's color peacock logo in 1956 to promote compatible color viewing.[20]Late 20th century transitions
During the 1970s, WNBC pioneered extended local news formats to compete in New York's competitive market, debuting NewsCenter 4 as the city's first two-hour evening newscast, which emphasized comprehensive coverage and on-air talent like Chuck Scarborough.[13] This format, launched amid rising viewership demands for in-depth reporting, marked a shift from shorter bulletins to magazine-style programming that integrated features and interviews, boosting the station's visibility as NBC's flagship.[13] In 1979, WNBC further innovated with Live at Five, a weekday afternoon program blending hard news, lifestyle segments, and celebrity interviews, designed to capture early evening audiences and differentiate from rivals' traditional structures.[21] By 1980, facing lagging ratings, WNBC restructured its news division under new leadership, rebranding NewsCenter 4 to News 4 New York in October to emphasize local relevance and streamline production for faster-paced delivery.[21] This transition included updated graphics, music packages inspired by contemporary hits, and a focus on investigative reporting, helping the station regain ground against ABC's Eyewitness News and CBS affiliates.[22] The changes reflected broader industry trends toward viewer-centric, action-oriented journalism amid cable TV's emergence, with WNBC maintaining its NBC network synergy for national feeds.[21] A pivotal corporate shift occurred in December 1985 when General Electric agreed to acquire RCA—NBC's parent—for $6.28 billion, finalized in 1986, placing WNBC under GE's industrial conglomerate umbrella rather than RCA's entertainment-focused model.[23] While GE emphasized operational efficiencies and cross-pollination with its electronics divisions, WNBC experienced minimal on-air disruption, retaining its O&O status and news infrastructure, though the acquisition enabled investments in technical upgrades like enhanced studios at 30 Rockefeller Plaza.[23] Into the 1990s, the station solidified its news dominance with consistent branding, dropping the "-TV" suffix from its callsign in 1992 after divesting the unrelated AM radio WNBC to comply with FCC rules, signaling a streamlined identity amid analog broadcasting's maturity.[24]21st century developments and digital shift
In October 2006, WNBC began transitioning its local news programming to high-definition format, upgrading studio equipment and planning to convert field cameras to 16:9 widescreen standard-definition within months to enhance viewer experience on HD sets.[25] This move aligned with broader industry adoption of digital video standards ahead of the full analog-to-digital switchover. WNBC ceased regular analog transmissions over VHF channel 4 on June 12, 2009, at 12:30 p.m., complying with the U.S. federally mandated digital television transition, while retaining an analog "nightlight" signal until June 26 to assist viewers in adapting to digital reception via converter boxes or new equipment.[26] The station maintained its virtual channel number 4 in the digital domain through PSIP mapping, ensuring continuity for audiences, and utilized its digital signal on UHF channel 28 (later transitioning to shared spectrum on channel 36 with WNJU by 2018) to enable high-definition main programming and subchannels.[27] Exploiting digital multicasting capabilities post-transition, WNBC launched the 24-hour local news subchannel New York Nonstop on 4.2 in early 2009, expanding non-prime-time coverage with rolling updates, weather, and lifestyle segments tailored to the New York market as part of NBCUniversal's strategy to repurpose station resources for continuous content delivery.[28] This digital expansion later evolved, with subchannel programming shifting to networks like Cozi TV and NBCLX by the 2010s, reflecting adaptations to viewer habits and revenue models in a fragmented media landscape dominated by streaming alternatives.[29]Ownership and affiliations
NBC ownership history
The National Broadcasting Company (NBC) was incorporated on September 9, 1926, by the Radio Corporation of America (RCA), initially in partnership with General Electric (GE) and Westinghouse Electric Corporation.[30] RCA assumed sole ownership of NBC on January 1, 1930, following the buyout of its partners amid antitrust pressures and the Great Depression's economic constraints.[30] Under RCA, NBC expanded from radio into experimental television operations, launching its first regular broadcasts in 1939 and establishing owned-and-operated stations like WNBC (originally W2XBS in 1928 and WNBT from 1941).[30] NBC's ownership shifted when GE announced its acquisition of RCA on December 11, 1985, for $6.28 billion in cash, a transaction completed on June 9, 1986, marking GE's entry into broadcasting and the largest non-oil merger at the time.[31][32] GE retained NBC as a core asset, investing in its television division while navigating regulatory scrutiny over media concentration. During this period, WNBC continued as NBC's flagship station in New York, benefiting from network synergies in programming and infrastructure.[30] On May 11, 2004, GE merged NBC with Vivendi Universal's entertainment division (including Universal Pictures and theme parks) to form NBC Universal, Inc., with GE holding an 80 percent stake and Vivendi retaining 20 percent.[33] This consolidation aimed to bolster content production and distribution amid rising cable and digital competition. Comcast Corporation acquired a 51 percent controlling interest from GE on January 28, 2011, for $6.5 billion plus assumed debt, restructuring the entity as NBCUniversal, LLC.[34] Comcast completed full ownership by purchasing GE's remaining 49 percent stake on February 12, 2013, for $16.7 billion, years ahead of the original agreement and integrating NBCUniversal into its cable and broadband ecosystem.[35] Throughout these transitions, WNBC has remained under direct NBC ownership as part of the NBC Owned Television Stations group.[36]Corporate integrations and synergies
As the flagship owned-and-operated (O&O) station of the NBC television network, WNBC benefits from extensive integration with NBCUniversal's infrastructure, including co-location of its studios and offices at 30 Rockefeller Plaza alongside NBC's corporate headquarters in Midtown Manhattan. This setup facilitates seamless access to shared production facilities, technical resources, and personnel from the broader NBCUniversal ecosystem, enhancing operational efficiency and content quality for local programming.[29][1] In June 2025, WNBC and its NBCUniversal co-owned sister station WNJU (Telemundo 47) relocated to a newly constructed shared newsroom within 30 Rockefeller Plaza, marking a significant consolidation of local news operations under NBCUniversal Local. The move, completed by late May 2025 for WNBC and early June for WNJU, promotes closer collaboration on content creation, resource allocation, and bilingual reporting, physically aligning both stations nearer to NBC network assets for streamlined workflows.[37][37] These corporate synergies extend to content pipelines and technology, where WNBC leverages NBC News for national correspondents and feeds during major events, and NBC Sports for enhanced local coverage of network-aired properties like NHL playoff games under past obligations. Additionally, as part of NBC Owned Television Stations, WNBC utilizes centralized master control systems outsourced for high reliability (99.996% on-air uptime), reducing costs while enabling digital extensions such as personalized NextGen TV experiences and streaming on Peacock.[38][39]Programming
Network and syndicated shows
WNBC, as the owned-and-operated station for the NBC network in New York City, carries the full national NBC programming schedule across daytime, primetime, late night, and special events. This includes the flagship morning program Today, which airs weekdays from approximately 7:00 a.m. to 11:00 a.m. ET, providing news, interviews, and lifestyle segments.[40] Daytime also features NBC News broadcasts and occasional reruns of series like Dateline NBC.[41] In primetime, WNBC airs NBC's fall 2025 lineup, commencing the week of September 22, 2025, with staples such as The Voice on Tuesdays at 8:00 p.m., the Chicago franchise (including Chicago Med, Chicago Fire, and Chicago P.D.) on Wednesdays starting at 8:00 p.m., and Law & Order series on Thursdays. New additions include Brilliant Minds following The Voice.[42] [43] Late-night programming consists of NBC Nightly News with Lester Holt at 6:30 p.m., followed by The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon and Late Night with Seth Meyers.[41] Sports coverage includes NFL games via NBC's package, such as Sunday Night Football.[44] Syndicated programming on WNBC is limited, primarily filling select slots outside core network hours, with historical and occasional inclusions like entertainment magazines Access Hollywood and Extra, as well as past court shows or talk formats in daytime or access periods.[45] Current schedules prioritize network feeds and local content over extensive syndication, reflecting NBC owned-and-operated stations' strategy to maximize affiliate synergies rather than third-party acquisitions.[46] Weekend syndication may include reruns or specials, but specific titles vary and are often supplemented by paid programming or network repeats like Dateline.[47]Local non-news content
WNBC's local non-news programming has emphasized lifestyle, entertainment, and informational content geared toward the New York audience, though original productions have been limited relative to news and network fare. These efforts have included daytime talk formats and digital extensions providing city-specific features on culture, consumer topics, and events.[48] The station's primary current original non-news show is New York Live, a daily lifestyle program airing weekdays at 11:30 a.m. ET. Debuting in 2009, it delivers segments on local food, fashion, beauty, celebrity interviews, and New York highlights, hosted by figures including Lauren Scala to engage viewers with upbeat, regionally focused content.[49][50] From March 2009 until approximately 2017, WNBC operated New York Nonstop on digital subchannel 4.4, a round-the-clock service dedicated to local lifestyle programming such as event coverage, health advice, and entertainment without news or sports. This channel extended WNBC's reach into non-traditional formats, targeting affluent urban demographics with hyper-local infotainment.[51] Historically, WNBC contributed to local entertainment development through variety and talk shows. In 1953, The Steve Allen Show originated as a station-produced late-night program featuring comedy sketches, music performances, and guest interviews, which influenced national late-night television before its network expansion.[29] Through NBCUniversal's LXTV division, the station has also incorporated syndicated lifestyle series like Open House NYC, focusing on real estate tours and home design trends relevant to the tri-state area.[52]Sports broadcasting
WNBC's predecessor station, experimental W2XBS, pioneered sports telecasting in the United States. On May 17, 1939, it aired the first televised U.S. sporting event, a college baseball game between Columbia University and Princeton University at Baker Field in New York City.[53] Later that year, on August 26, W2XBS broadcast the first Major League Baseball game, featuring the Brooklyn Dodgers versus the Cincinnati Reds at Ebbets Field, with approximately 500 viewers tuning in via rooftop antennas.[54] On October 22, 1939, the station transmitted the first National Football League game, the Philadelphia Eagles against the Brooklyn Dodgers, from Ebbets Field, marking an early milestone in professional football coverage.[55] Following World War II and the station's commercialization as WNBT (later WNBC) in 1941, sports programming expanded alongside NBC's national efforts. WNBC carried NBC's coverage of the New York Jets' victory in Super Bowl III on January 12, 1969, against the Baltimore Colts, and the New York Giants' win in Super Bowl XLVI on February 5, 2012, over the New England Patriots. These broadcasts aligned with NBC's NFL package rights, which included Sunday Night Football from 2006 onward, airing select New York Giants and Jets games when nationally scheduled. In local programming, WNBC has focused on New York Giants preseason games under extended partnerships. For the 2025 season, the station aired two preseason contests, presented by Cadillac, including the first Spanish-language broadcast of a Giants-Jets matchup on WNBC's sister Telemundo 47.[56] Historically, such over-the-air preseason telecasts have been a staple, though national obligations like the Olympics occasionally shift them to other outlets.[57] WNBC also integrates NBC Sports Network content and occasional regional events, but local team regular-season games for Knicks, Rangers, or Mets are primarily handled by cable networks like MSG or team-specific channels, reflecting league broadcast restrictions since the 1980s.[58] Currently, WNBC's sports output emphasizes NBC's marquee events, including NBA games during periods of network rights (1990–2002), Notre Dame football, and Olympic coverage, with live streams available via NBC.com and the NBC app for New York viewers.[59] Pre-game analysis and highlights often tie into News 4 New York segments, prioritizing high-profile national contests over extensive local originals.[60]News operations
Historical development of news
WNBC's local news operations originated in the station's formative years as WNBT, with early television news efforts including simulcasts of NBC radio broadcasts by anchor Lowell Thomas starting on February 21, 1940, marking one of the initial forays into televised news in the United States.[61] Following the station's first commercial broadcast on July 1, 1941, local news content gradually expanded amid postwar television growth, evolving from brief updates to structured newscasts by the early 1950s that incorporated on-air reporters and film footage.[13][62] In March 1974, WNBC adopted the "NewsCenter 4" branding for its newscasts, mirroring NBC's national "NBC Nightly News" format under the "NewsCenter" umbrella and emphasizing expanded coverage with dedicated anchors like Chuck Scarborough joining the team.[63] This period saw increased investment in local reporting, including helicopter traffic coverage and investigative segments, positioning WNBC as a competitive force in New York's media market.[64] On September 1, 1980, the station rebranded to "News 4 New York," streamlining its identity and launching "Live at Five," an innovative early-evening program blending news, interviews, and features that aired as part of a two-hour block and influenced similar formats elsewhere.[13][63] Sue Simmons co-anchored evening broadcasts starting that October, contributing to decades of stability in the department.[63] Subsequent evolutions included high-definition upgrades on September 13, 2006, making WNBC the first New York station to broadcast local newscasts in HD, enhancing visual quality and production capabilities.[25] "Live at Five" concluded on September 10, 2007, replaced by a conventional 7 p.m. newscast to align with shifting viewer habits. In fall 2008, WNBC introduced NBC New York Nonstop, a digital 24-hour news channel extending coverage beyond traditional broadcasts.[65] These changes reflected broader adaptations to technological advances and competitive pressures in local television news.Current format and schedule
WNBC's news programming, under the News 4 New York banner, airs multiple local newscasts daily, emphasizing coverage of New York City-area events, weather, traffic, and investigative reporting. Weekday broadcasts include Today in New York from 4:00 a.m. to 7:00 a.m. ET, a morning show incorporating news updates, traffic reports, and weather forecasts alongside lifestyle segments.[40] A midday newscast airs from 12:00 p.m. to 1:00 p.m., followed by an extended afternoon block from 4:00 p.m. to 6:00 p.m. featuring hourly updates on local developments. Evening editions include News 4 New York at 6:00 p.m. and the flagship News 4 New York at 11:00 p.m., which runs approximately 35 minutes and focuses on in-depth stories, including contributions from the station's I-Team for investigations.[66] [40] Weekend schedules are more limited, with News 4 New York airing from 6:00 a.m. to 8:00 a.m. on both Saturday and Sunday, providing morning updates on regional news and conditions. Evening weekend newscasts consist of a 30-minute program at 6:00 p.m., prioritizing key stories without the extended afternoon coverage seen on weekdays.[40] [66] In addition to linear broadcasts, WNBC operates a 24/7 digital streaming channel, NBC 4 New York News, delivering continuous live news, weather, and traffic updates accessible without cable authentication.[67] The overall format adheres to standard local television news conventions, with anchor-driven delivery of breaking stories, live field reports, and graphical elements for data presentation, supplemented by syndicated national feeds like NBC Nightly News.[66]| Time Slot (ET) | Weekday Program | Weekend Program |
|---|---|---|
| 4:00–7:00 a.m. | Today in New York | N/A |
| 12:00–1:00 p.m. | News 4 New York at Noon | N/A |
| 4:00–6:00 p.m. | Extended News 4 New York updates | N/A |
| 6:00 p.m. | News 4 New York at 6 | News 4 New York at 6 (30 min) |
| 6:00–8:00 a.m. (weekends) | N/A | News 4 New York morning |
| 11:00 p.m. | News 4 New York at 11 | Varies (late replay or update) |
Key personnel and alumni
David Ushery anchors NBC 4 New York's weekday newscasts at 4 p.m., 6 p.m., and 11 p.m., a role he has held as a core member of the station's news team.[68] Natalie Pasquarella co-anchors those same weekday broadcasts, contributing to I-Team investigations across the Tri-State area.[69] Michael Gargiulo co-anchors Today in New York, the station's weekday morning program from 4:30 a.m. to 7 a.m.[70] In sports, Bruce Beck serves as the lead sports anchor, hosting the Sunday night program Sports Final and covering events for over 27 years.[71] Pat Battle co-anchors Weekend Today in New York on Saturdays from 6 a.m. to 7 a.m. and 9 a.m. to 10 a.m., while also reporting on general assignments.[72] Consumer reporter Lynda Baquero hosts the "Better Get Baquero" segment, resolving viewer complaints, and has won multiple Emmy Awards for her work.[73] Notable alumni include Chuck Scarborough, who anchored WNBC newscasts from April 1974 until his final broadcast on December 12, 2024, marking over 50 years of service primarily at the 6 p.m. and 11 p.m. slots.[74][75] Sue Simmons co-anchored the 11 p.m. newscast with Scarborough from 1980 until her contract expired on June 15, 2012, establishing her as a long-standing figure in New York television news.[76] Gabe Pressman worked as a senior correspondent at WNBC for decades until his death on June 23, 2017, known for street-level reporting on breaking news.[77] Other former anchors include Tom Snyder, who led newscasts from 1974 to 1977 before national roles.[78]Investigative and public affairs reporting
WNBC's investigative reporting is led by the News 4 I-Team, a unit dedicated to uncovering local corruption, public safety failures, and government mismanagement in the New York metropolitan area.[79] The team has produced stories on topics such as organized crime infiltration in sports betting, including a 2024 investigation into arrests of NBA personnel and alleged Gambino, Bonanno, and Genovese family members in a widespread gambling operation.[80] Other examples include examinations of municipal neglect, such as Irvington Township's failure to allocate $2 million in funds for lead abatement in low-income housing, and allegations of NYPD enforcement shakedowns at a Brooklyn bar in September 2024.[79] [81] The I-Team's work has earned multiple accolades, reflecting its impact on accountability journalism. In 2018, it received four New York Emmy Awards, including for "The Rape Table," an exposé on extreme hazing practices at Newark Liberty International Airport involving airline staff.[82] A 2022 feature on a poignant 9/11 photograph won a national Edward R. Murrow Award for large-market feature reporting.[83] Earlier efforts, such as the F.I.N.D. series in the 1970s, garnered a Peabody Award for leveraging station resources to address community concerns.[84] The station has also secured regional Murrow honors in 2019 and 2020 for overall excellence in broadcast reporting.[85] [86] In public affairs, WNBC has maintained Positively Black, a program launched in 1970 focusing on African-American culture, history, and community issues, initially hosted by activist Gustav "Gus" Robinson and later co-hosted by Carol Jenkins.[87] [88] The series has covered topics like the displacement of Black residents from San Juan Hill for Lincoln Center's construction, with episodes continuing into at least 2023.[89] This long-running effort represents one of the station's sustained commitments to issue-oriented programming amid broader critiques of limited public affairs investment by New York broadcasters in the late 1970s.[90]Facilities and technical information
Studios and production facilities
WNBC's primary studios and production facilities are housed at 30 Rockefeller Plaza in Midtown Manhattan, New York City, a location that has served as the station's longtime base since the early days of NBC's television operations.[1] This 70-story Art Deco skyscraper, completed in 1933 as part of Rockefeller Center, contains multiple soundstages and control rooms used for local news production, including Studio 3B, where WNBC debuted a renovated set in November 2023 after splitting the space previously occupied by programs like NBC Nightly News and Dateline NBC.[7] In June 2025, WNBC consolidated its news operations into a shared newsroom with sister station WNJU (Telemundo 47) within the same building, facilitating resource sharing and proximity to NBCUniversal's network facilities while leveraging upgraded technical infrastructure for live broadcasts.[37] Historically, NBC's New York television studios originated at 30 Rockefeller Plaza in the 1930s, with early experimental broadcasts from converted radio studios in the RCA Building (now GE Building) using cathode-ray tube technology authorized for field tests in 1935.[29] By 1955, the facility included dedicated color production spaces, such as Studio 3K, formed by merging earlier radio and TV rooms, which became a key venue for WNBC after its relocation there on October 10, 2016, from adjacent Studio 3C to accommodate expanded news sets and control capabilities.[91] These studios support WNBC's daily output of local programming, including NBC 4 New York Nonstop, with production involving on-site editing suites, graphics bays, and master control operations integrated into the building's broadcast infrastructure.[1] Beyond the main site, WNBC utilizes mobile production units and remote facilities for field reporting and special events, though core studio-based production remains centralized at Rockefeller Center to align with NBCUniversal's operational hub, which spans over a dozen active studios for network and local use.[91]Broadcast transmission details
WNBC's primary over-the-air signal is transmitted from an antenna atop One World Trade Center in Lower Manhattan, New York City, at coordinates 40° 42' 46.80" N, 74° 00' 47.30" W.[92] This location, reoccupied by the station following the completion of the new tower in 2014 and full broadcast activation around 2018, replaced temporary facilities at the Empire State Building used after the September 11, 2001, attacks destroyed the original World Trade Center transmitters.[93] The station's digital signal operates on radiofrequency (RF) channel 35 in the ultra high frequency (UHF) band, occupying the frequency range of 596–602 MHz, with an effective radiated power (ERP) of 575 kW.[92] Its antenna height above average terrain (HAAT) measures 496 meters (1,627 feet), enabling extensive coverage across the New York metropolitan area and into portions of New Jersey, Connecticut, and Pennsylvania.[92] The setup utilizes a directional antenna pattern optimized for urban signal propagation, with the transmitter facility co-located alongside other New York stations to share infrastructure on the building's upper levels and spire.[94] Prior to the 2009 digital television transition, WNBC broadcast analog signals on VHF channel 4 from the original World Trade Center until 2001, after which operations shifted to interim low-power sites in Alpine, New Jersey, and other elevations before stabilizing digitally.[93] The current configuration supports high-definition main programming on virtual channel 4.1, with the elevated position and power levels ensuring reliable reception for approximately 21.7 million viewers within the 67.6-mile noise-limited contour.[94]Digital transition and subchannels
WNBC initiated digital broadcasting in the early 2000s, with high-definition NBC network programming transmitted since 2001 and local news converting to 1080i HD on September 13, 2006.[25] The station's full transition from analog occurred on June 12, 2009, when it ceased regular programming on VHF channel 4 at 12:30 p.m. EDT, in compliance with the FCC-mandated DTV switchover; a temporary analog nightlight service informed viewers of the change until June 26.[95] The digital signal, initially on UHF channel 28 with virtual channel 4 via PSIP, relocated to shared UHF channel 35 following the 2017–2020 spectrum repack, operating at effective radiated power of up to 200 kW from the Empire State Building.[96] Early digital operations included multiple subchannels for weather, local programming, and standard-definition content alongside the HD main channel. Following the November 2008 discontinuation of the NBC Weather Plus national service, WNBC repurposed subchannel 4.2 for New York Nonstop, a 24-hour local channel blending news updates, lifestyle features, traffic, and weather, launching March 9, 2009, and simulcast on cable systems reaching over 5 million viewers.[28] New York Nonstop emphasized rolling coverage without full newscasts, drawing from WNBC's resources but prioritizing lighter fare amid cost-cutting at NBCUniversal.[97] It was discontinued on December 20, 2012, replaced by Cozi TV, a national multicast network of classic family-oriented series from NBCUniversal's library, as part of a broader strategy to monetize subchannels with syndicated content across NBC owned-and-operated stations.[98] WNBC's current ATSC 1.0 multiplex, shared with Telemundo sister station WNJU on physical channel 35, comprises:- 4.1: NBC main feed in 1080i with Dolby Digital 5.1 audio
- 4.2: Cozi TV in 480i with stereo audio
- 4.3: NBC True Crime in 480i
- 4.4: Oxygen in 480i