WTLV
WTLV, virtual channel 12 (VHF digital channel 13), is a television station licensed to Jacksonville, Florida, United States, affiliated with the NBC television network.[1] It is owned by TEGNA Inc. alongside Orange Park–licensed ABC affiliate WJXX (channel 25), with the stations maintaining a joint news operation branded as First Coast News.[1] Originally signing on in 1957 as WFGA-TV under the ownership of Florida-Georgia Television Company, Inc., WTLV pioneered color broadcasting as the first U.S. station designed specifically for it.[1] The station's facilities, shared with WJXX, are located in Jacksonville, serving the First Coast region with local news, weather, and programming.[1] TEGNA's operations emphasize community-focused journalism, though the company faces a pending $6.2 billion acquisition by Nexstar Media Group, announced in August 2025 and expected to close in 2026 pending regulatory approval.[2] WTLV has no major controversies documented in public records, maintaining a focus on regional coverage without significant disruptions.[3]History
Construction and launch as WFGA-TV
Channel 12 in Jacksonville signed on the air as WFGA-TV on September 1, 1957, under the ownership of the Florida-Georgia Television Company, Inc., with the call letters denoting "We're Florida and GeorgiA."[1] The station was licensed to serve the Jacksonville market, providing coverage to northeastern Florida and southeastern Georgia.[4] Construction of WFGA-TV's facilities commenced in early 1957, positioning it as the first television station in the United States engineered from inception for color broadcasting.[4] Studios were established on Adams Street near the Gator Bowl in downtown Jacksonville, facilitating local production capabilities. The station affiliated primarily with NBC, while secondarily carrying ABC programming to supplement its schedule.[5] From launch, WFGA-TV emphasized color transmission for both live local content and film, predating widespread network adoption of the format.[1] Early operations included innovative live remote coverage, such as the station's pioneering "live camera" broadcasts of space launches from Cape Canaveral beginning in 1958, which served as a pool feed for national networks.[4] Local programming featured shows like the John Tillotson program, incorporating community elements such as performances by high school students.[4]Ex parte influence scandal and channel 12 assignment
In 1952, the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) received competing applications for a construction permit to operate on VHF channel 12, assigned to Jacksonville, Florida, including submissions from Florida-Georgia Television Company, Inc., Jacksonville Broadcasting Corporation (later Community First Corporation), and New Horizons Telecasting Company.[6] Following comparative hearings evaluating factors such as applicant qualifications, program proposals, and local integration, the FCC granted the permit to Florida-Georgia Television Company on August 31, 1956, later issuing the license on September 20, 1957, and a renewal on February 12, 1958.[7][8] The proceeding drew scrutiny amid broader 1950s FCC controversies over ex parte communications, where applicants or representatives contacted commissioners off the record to discuss case merits, violating procedural fairness rules.[8] In September 1963, the FCC disqualified Jacksonville Broadcasting for engaging in such improper representations to decision-makers, citing statements intended to sway the outcome without record disclosure.[6] Florida-Georgia, however, was cleared of similar allegations, with the Commission determining no disqualifying conduct tainted its application.[6] Competitors challenged the grant through administrative appeals and federal court reviews, including remands by the U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit directing the FCC to reassess evidence of procedural irregularities.[8] Despite these, the FCC reaffirmed the award to Florida-Georgia in subsequent decisions, readopting prior findings nunc pro tunc to validate the license amid ongoing litigation.[8] Courts upheld this resolution, emphasizing deference to agency expertise in licensing absent clear abuse.[6] The controversy persisted through multiple rehearings but did not halt construction or operations, as the FCC declined revocation without evidence directly corrupting the specific grant.[6] This outcome reinforced FCC precedents on handling ex parte claims in broadcast allocations, prioritizing continuity where applicant misconduct was isolated to losers rather than systemic favoritism toward the winner.[8]Affiliation changes in the 1980s
On March 31, 1980, WTLV swapped its network affiliation with WJKS (channel 17), shifting from NBC to ABC while WJKS took NBC; this move reflected ABC's dominance as the top-rated U.S. broadcast network at the time, contrasting with NBC's position as the lowest-rated of the three major networks amid programming struggles.[9][10] The switch aligned WTLV with ABC's stronger prime-time lineup, including hits like Happy Days and Laverne & Shirley, potentially aiming to bolster local viewership against CBS affiliate WJXT's established strength in the Jacksonville market.[11] Post-switch, WTLV's access to ABC's rising national audience share—peaking at around 30% in key demographics during the late 1970s—temporarily improved its competitive standing, though specific local Nielsen ratings data from the period indicate viewer migration patterns favored the incoming ABC slate over lingering NBC loyalty.[12] The 1980 decision was influenced by NBC's national ratings nadir, exacerbated by factors such as aging shows and internal network turmoil, which diminished affiliate compensation and programming appeal; in Jacksonville, this compounded competitive pressures from WJXT's higher-rated news and entertainment offerings.[12] Harte-Hanks ownership prioritized the affiliation swap to capture ABC's momentum, but by the mid-1980s, ABC's edge waned as NBC rebuilt under programming executive Brandon Tartikoff with successes like The Cosby Show and Cheers, restoring NBC's prime-time leadership.[11] In 1988, Gannett acquired WTLV from Harte-Hanks for an undisclosed sum, finalizing the deal in February; within weeks, on February 17, Gannett announced the station's return to NBC effective April 3, reversing the 1980 swap and displacing WJKS as the network's outlet.[11][9] This reversion capitalized on NBC's resurgent national ratings—reclaiming the top spot by 1985–1986 with over 15% household share in key slots—and aligned with Gannett's broader portfolio strategy favoring NBC affiliations for their proven revenue potential through advertising and syndication synergies.[12] Local factors included WJKS's weaker performance as NBC affiliate, prompting viewer realignment back to channel 12, though the switch underscored ownership-driven pragmatism over long-term ABC ties amid shifting network compensation terms that favored NBC's recovery.[9]Duopoly formation with WJXX
In August 1999, the Federal Communications Commission revised its local television ownership rules to permit duopolies in markets with at least 18 independently owned television stations, allowing a single entity to own two stations in the same market under certain conditions.[13] This change facilitated Gannett Company's pursuit of WJXX, the ABC-affiliated channel 25 station owned by Allbritton Communications, to pair with its existing NBC affiliate WTLV (channel 12).[13] On November 16, 1999, Gannett announced an agreement to acquire and operate WJXX from Allbritton Jacksonville, Inc., pending regulatory approval; the stations would maintain separate network affiliations and programming during the interim.[14] The FCC approved the transaction on March 16, 2000, with Gannett assuming control of WJXX the following day, March 17.[15] This marked Jacksonville's inaugural duopoly under common ownership and operations, and the first involving two network-affiliated stations in the United States. Following the acquisition, Gannett integrated news operations between WTLV and WJXX, consolidating production under the "First Coast News" brand at shared studios located at 1070 East Adams Street in downtown Jacksonville.[16] The merger enabled pooled resources for news gathering and production, yielding cost savings through centralized staffing and facilities while preserving distinct evening newscasts tailored to each station's audience; approximately 36 WJXX personnel, including 13 in news, transitioned to the combined operation.[15] Market effects included enhanced local coverage across NBC and ABC audiences, contributing to improved ratings competitiveness against incumbent leader WJXT without reducing on-air local content hours.[15]Ownership evolution under Gannett and TEGNA
In 1999, Gannett Co., Inc. acquired WJXX, the ABC affiliate in Jacksonville, forming a duopoly with its existing NBC affiliate WTLV while maintaining separate operations under the First Coast News banner.[15] This structure persisted through regulatory shifts, including the FCC's 2003 relaxation of local television ownership rules that permitted triopolies in larger markets but preserved duopoly allowances in markets like Jacksonville (DMA #41).[17] Gannett retained the pair amid broader industry consolidations, avoiding divestitures as national ownership caps—capped at 39% of U.S. households post-UHF discount—faced ongoing scrutiny but did not disrupt local holdings.[18] On June 29, 2015, Gannett completed a tax-free spinoff of its broadcasting and digital media assets into TEGNA Inc., transferring WTLV and WJXX intact to the new entity focused on local stations and OTT platforms.[19] TEGNA emphasized operational continuity for the duopoly, investing in digital infrastructure amid cord-cutting pressures; by June 2025, it expanded local news streaming with over 100 additional hours of connected TV programming across its portfolio, including enhanced morning blocks to capture fragmented audiences.[20] Staff retention efforts included appointing Tim Thomas as president and general manager of WTLV and WJXX in April 2023, prioritizing market-specific leadership during industry layoffs elsewhere.[21] As of October 2025, the duopoly remains under TEGNA without divestitures, bucking national trends of station sales amid streaming erosion—evidenced by linear TV's share drop from 50%+ in 2020 to under 40% by 2024 per TVB data—while Jacksonville's local broadcast universe held steady at 0.67% of national households.[22] However, Nexstar Media Group announced a $6.2 billion acquisition of TEGNA on August 19, 2025, at $22 per share (a 31% premium), pending FCC approval amid debates over exceeding the 39% national cap and potential local overlaps.[23] Regulatory hurdles, including Democratic opposition in key states, have delayed closure into 2026 or beyond, preserving short-term stability.[24]News operation
First Coast News integration and expansion
In March 2000, Gannett completed its acquisition of WJXX from Allbritton Communications, enabling the integration of news operations with WTLV at the latter's studios on Emerson Street in Jacksonville.[15] The First Coast News brand launched on April 27, 2000, as a co-branded simulcast of local newscasts across both stations, marking the first such network-affiliated duopoly in the United States. This structure pooled reporting, production, and technical resources, facilitating expanded coverage without duplicating full staffs. Key expansions included the April 2009 launch of First Coast News Weather Plus on WJXX's second digital subchannel, providing continuous weather programming and forecasts via a dedicated team accessible 24 hours through Weather-Tel at (904) 356-8812.[16] In January 2010, the operation transitioned to high-definition newscasts, upgrading studio sets, cameras, and transmission for WTLV and WJXX.[25] By the mid-2010s, multi-platform delivery grew through the firstcoastnews.com website and early mobile apps, enabling on-demand video, alerts, and streaming alongside traditional broadcasts. The duopoly model supports economies of scale via a unified newsroom, concentrating efforts on local investigative journalism—such as the "On Your Side" series exposing consumer and government issues—and enhanced weather monitoring critical for Jacksonville's hurricane-prone coastal geography.[26] This shared framework reduces redundant costs while prioritizing region-specific reporting on storms, flooding, and rip currents, with radar and alerts integrated across platforms.[27]Ratings performance and market competition
Since the launch of the First Coast News unified operation in 2000, WTLV and WJXX have maintained a consistent second-place position in Jacksonville's evening newscasts, trailing the independent station WJXT but often competitive with the CBS-Fox duopoly's Action News Jax. In the November 2015 Nielsen ratings period, First Coast News captured a 32 percent audience share at 11 p.m., narrowly behind WJXT's 37 percent and ahead of Action News Jax's 31 percent, reflecting tight competition among the market's three major news producers. This positioning persisted into the 2010s, with surges during major regional events; for instance, hurricane coverage has historically boosted local viewership, as seen in elevated shares during storms like Irma in 2017, where First Coast News benefited from extended weather blocks drawing households seeking real-time updates over national programming.[28][29] The duopoly structure provides First Coast News with operational scale advantages, including shared production facilities and staffing that enable broader coverage of local issues like coastal erosion and port economics without the full costs borne by single-station rivals. However, WJXT's independent status allows for expansive news wheels—often 15+ hours daily—fostering viewer habits tied to in-depth, non-network-constrained reporting, which causal factors such as familiarity and immediacy explain over primetime entertainment draws. Action News Jax, another duopoly, intensified rivalry in the 2020s by emphasizing aggressive promotion and weather specialization, overtaking First Coast News in key demos by November 2023 and achieving a 42 percent market share in late 2024 sweeps, partly via hurricane-driven gains.[30][29] Amid broader linear TV declines from cord-cutting—U.S. pay-TV households fell by over 25 million since 2012—First Coast News has shown resilience through localized factual emphasis on verifiable events like infrastructure projects and flood risks, offsetting erosion in traditional viewership. Nielsen data from June 2023 indicated WTLV's 1.3 household rating at 11 p.m., sustaining second-tier viability in a market of roughly 660,000 TV homes, while digital extensions via apps and streaming simulcasts captured younger demos wary of cable bundles. As of 2024, this hybrid approach mitigated losses, with duopoly efficiencies supporting investments in mobile alerts and on-demand clips that prioritize empirical regional data over sensationalism.[31][30][28]Notable on-air personnel
Jeannie Blaylock joined WTLV in 1985 as a reporter and has anchored evening newscasts while serving as the Healthwatch medical correspondent, contributing to community health initiatives through investigative reporting on local medical issues.[32] [33] She initiated Buddy Check 12 in 1992, a monthly breast self-exam reminder campaign that began with 200 participants and expanded to over 192,000 women by 1996, partnering with Baptist Health to promote early detection and credited with saving thousands of lives through documented success stories.[34] [35] The program earned a Peabody Award for its public health impact, emphasizing empirical outcomes over promotional claims.[36] Tim Deegan served as chief meteorologist from the early 1980s until his retirement on May 30, 2025, after 43 years, providing weather coverage that included hurricane tracking and daily forecasts integral to First Coast News' operations.[37] [38] His tenure overlapped with the station's duopoly expansion, maintaining viewer trust through consistent, data-driven predictions amid Florida's severe weather patterns. Lewis Turner succeeded Deegan as chief meteorologist in April 2025, bringing prior experience in regional forecasting to ensure operational continuity.[38] Katie Jeffries anchored morning newscasts from 2019 until her departure on May 15, 2025, following 13 years at First Coast News, where she advanced from reporter to traffic anchor and producer of segments like "Unresolved" on cold cases.[39] [40] These exits reflect broader industry trends of turnover among veteran staff, yet the station sustained its news delivery via internal promotions and hires, as evidenced by stable ratings during transitions.[39] Heather Crawford has led investigative reporting efforts, earning Suncoast Emmy Awards in 2024 for pieces on accountability and military topics, bolstering the station's reputation for substantive probes based on public records and viewer-submitted leads.[41] Viewer feedback, gathered through station metrics, has highlighted praise for such work's tangible outcomes, like policy changes from exposés, while occasional critiques note a focus on local governance over broader controversies, aligning with empirical engagement data rather than ideological balance claims.[41]Technical information
Subchannels and multicast programming
WTLV broadcasts a primary high-definition feed of NBC programming on its main digital subchannel, 12.1, transmitted in 1080i resolution with Dolby Digital 5.1 audio, serving as the station's core service for network news, primetime shows, and local insertions.[42] This subchannel maintains focus on NBC's national content while integrating First Coast News segments, ensuring compatibility with over-the-air antennas and carriage on local cable and satellite providers through must-carry agreements under FCC regulations.[42] Following the 2009 digital television transition, WTLV expanded its multicast capabilities to utilize available ATSC 1.0 bandwidth on physical channel 13, adding subchannels for syndicated niche programming to diversify viewer options and generate supplementary revenue via affiliation fees and targeted advertising.[42] These subchannels, typically in standard-definition 480i with stereo audio, target specific demographics such as classic TV enthusiasts, true crime audiences, shoppers, and sci-fi fans, without impacting the main channel's bandwidth allocation or quality.[42] As of October 2025, the station supports local ad insertion on eligible subchannels, enhancing monetization while providing free OTA access to cord-cutters within its coverage area.[42] Carriage on multichannel video programming distributors (MVPDs) varies by agreement, often requiring retransmission consent negotiations to include subchannels alongside the primary feed.| Virtual Channel | Affiliation/Network | Resolution/Audio | Content Focus |
|---|---|---|---|
| 12.1 | NBC | 1080i / DD 5.1 | Network programming, local news |
| 12.2 | Antenna TV | 480i / DD 2.0 | Classic sitcoms and dramas |
| 12.3 | True Crime Network | 480i / DD 2.0 | Crime documentaries and series (formerly Justice Network) |
| 12.4 | Quest (transitioning to ROAR) | 480i / DD 2.0 | Adventure and factual programming |
| 12.5 | Shop LC | 480i / DD 2.0 | Home shopping and lifestyle |
| 12.6 | HSN | 480i / DD 2.0 | Retail and product demonstrations |
| 12.7 | Comet | 480i / DD 2.0 | Science fiction and action |
| 12.8 | Charge! | 480i / DD 2.0 | Action movies and series |