Founding The Financial News Network (FNN) was founded in 1981 by Glen Taylor, who served as chairman of the newly created five-member Board of Directors. Other board members included Karen Tyler, Head of Production; Rob Fisher, Vice President of Business Affairs; and Rodney Buchser, who had previously been the general manager of
KWHY-TV, an
independent station in
Los Angeles. The concept originated in the late 1960s when
Quotron, a quotation ticker vendor, supported
WCIU in Chicago and KWHY in Los Angeles with an initial limited 'ticker scroll'. In 1969, Registered Investment Advisor Eugene Inger joined KWHY-TV and expanded financial television in Los Angeles with reporting, analysis and broader coverage. Inger extended the service to the San Francisco area in 1970 on
KOFY, Channel 20. He also provided financial TV programming to
KDNL in
St. Louis and pioneered
WKID, Channel 51, serving South Florida. During this time, FNN began programming on Channel 18 in Los Angeles, competing with Inger and KWHY. In 1975,
Newark, New Jersey–based
WBTB-TV (channel 68), an independent station owned at the time by Blonder-Tongue Broadcasting, was dark and not broadcasting. Eugene Inger revived the station by investing in channel 68, which served the
New York City market. He served as General Manager and hosted a daily
Wall Street programming block on WBTB, titled
Stock Market Today during market hours and
Wall Street Perspective in the evening, beginning in the fall of 1975. Keith Houser, the station's assistant general manager, worked with vendors to facilitate the ticker tape crawl across the bottom of the screen, with a delay (mistakenly attributed as a two-hour delay in a
TV Guide reference), as was required at the time. The ticker ran across the
lower third of the screen, with stock prices on the top (white) band and index prices on the bottom (blue) band. After the first year of programming, the SEC permitted just a twenty-minute delay. The concept was well-established by WCIU in Chicago, KWHY in Los Angeles and Inger's day-long market coverage in
Miami/
Fort Lauderdale. Contrary to suggestions in
TV Guide, the "specialty programming" did not encounter regulatory hurdles. Over the years, FNN grew its affiliates, generally not overlapping with Inger's targeted markets. However, Inger eventually "affiliated" with FNN through an arrangement that allowed him to take some programming and data feed from FNN while retaining local coverage and interviews hosted on his stations. The Chicago and Los Angeles stations evolved independently. KWHY was the first television station on the West Coast to offer daily market news accompanied by a digital
stock ticker "crawl" at the bottom of the screen. It was followed by
WCIU in Chicago,
KEMO in San Francisco, and FNN on Los Angeles' Channel 18. This innovation allowed stock traders and investors to stay on top of market action without subscribing to an expensive stock quotation service. However, at that time, computers could not handle the full stock feed so the ticker could only display pre-selected stocks, making the system highly manual and cumbersome. (The first fully automated stock ticker to appear on television would not be developed until 1996, for the now-defunct
CNNfn.) Gene Inger's approach was simpler: he took a feed from
Reuters or
UPI (both of which occasionally provided data feeds) and used a split-screen to display a camera shooting the tapes, with studio programming on the top portion. Inger was independent and never had a personal or corporate role with FNN, aside from a limited mutual program affiliation later. However, he became one of the original Market Maven contributors to CNBC, which eventually absorbed all financial programming over time. Years later, competition arose from
Bloomberg Television (which became the direct successor of FNN) and
Fox Business Channel. Inger continued to appear as a guest on CNBC for years and remains active as of 2024, providing daily
market analysis reports online through his daily market reflections on X (formerly Twitter) @stockseer. With the earlier launch of
CNN by
Ted Turner paving the way (Inger provided the original stock market commentary to Ted Turner's
WTBS Channel 17 in Atlanta,
WRET-TV [later WPCQ, now WCNC] in Charlotte and Hubbard's Channel 44 in Tampa), and following a 1975
TV Guide article about Gene Inger's programming success in New York, Taylor and Buchser realized that newly available technology made it possible to combine KWHY/Inger-style live market reporting with on-screen quotes and the concept of national news via satellite. FNN's early history was not highly profitable and within a few years, Buchser severed his relationship with the fledgling network to launch a financial marketing services firm called FMS Direct. In its early years, FMS Direct produced
infomercials and
direct response television spots, which more often than not ran on FNN, the network Buchser had helped found.
Harvey "Scott" Ellsworth, the creator and on-air host of the popular radio program ''Scott's Place'', which aired on Los Angeles radio station
KFI from 1967 until 1974, was one of FNN's initial anchors.
Private financing FNN received its early private financing from Biotech Capital Corporation, which later changed its name to Infotechnology, Inc. Biotech Capital was also one of the few publicly held "Business Development Companies" governed by the Business Development Company Act of 1980. In 1981, shortly before its initial public offering led by Paulson Investment Company, Taylor, then the chairman, resigned due to previous legal difficulties. Jeremy Wiesen, a professor of business accounting and entrepreneurship at the Stern School of Business, New York University, and a former Securities and Exchange Commission employee, became chairman. The network's primary audience consisted of small investors. FNN's principal studio was in Santa Monica, California, but the network later established operations in New York, on the ground floor of
Merrill Lynch's headquarters in
Manhattan, where passersby could view its broadcast operations. Merrill Lynch was one of FNN's initial private investors. In 1984, the company moved its editorial headquarters to New York and hired
Nightly Business Report executive producer Mark J. Estren to oversee the network's shift in direction towards the cable market.
Over-the-air affiliates Initially, the channel aired only during daytime hours on a mix of
broadcast stations and
cable television providers. Over-the-air affiliates included: •
KSCI, Los Angeles (now a
Shop LC affiliate) •
WATL, Atlanta (now a
MyNetworkTV affiliate) •
WPWR-TV, Chicago (now a MyNetworkTV affiliate) • KJTV (now
KCIT), Amarillo (now a
Fox affiliate) •
KNXV, Phoenix (now an
ABC affiliate) • WSWS, Columbus, Georgia (now
Hot 97 TV affiliate
WHOT-TV) • KTWS (now
KDFI), Dallas (now a MyNetworkTV affiliate) • WKID (now
WSCV), Miami/Ft. Lauderdale (now a
Telemundo O&O) • WWSG-TV, Philadelphia (now
CBS-owned
independent WPSG); replaced in late 1982 by WRBV-TV, Vineland, NJ (now
Univision-owned
WUVP) •
WCCO-TV, Minneapolis (now a
CBS owned-and-operated station) •
KSTS-TV 48 San Jose, CA (now a Telemundo O&O) • WWHT (now
WFUT), Newark, NJ (now an
UniMás affiliate) • WGGT (now
WMYV), Greensboro, NC (now a MyNetworkTV affiliate) • WRHT (now
WPXD), Detroit (now an
Ion Television affiliate) •
KDNL-TV, St. Louis (now an ABC affiliate) •
WGNO, New Orleans (now an ABC affiliate) • WBTI-TV (now
WSTR-TV), Cincinnati (now a MyNetworkTV affiliate) • WQTV (now
WBPX), Boston (now an Ion Television affiliate) •
KSTW, Seattle (now an independent station) •
WNUV-TV, Baltimore (now a
CW affiliate) • WCQR (now
WDCW), Washington, D.C. (now a CW affiliate) (WCQR received its feed from WNUV via microwave, with local insertion provided at WNUV) • WPTT-TV (now
WPNT), Pittsburgh (now a CW/MyNetworkTV affiliate) •
KAUT-TV, Oklahoma City (now a CW affiliate) • WSTG-TV (now
WNAC-TV), Providence (now a Fox affiliate) • KGCT-TV (now
KMYT-TV), Tulsa (now a MyNetworkTV affiliate) •
KIDY, San Angelo (now a Fox affiliate) • WDDD (now
WTCT), Marion, IL (now a
TCT affiliate) •
WRLH-TV, Richmond (now a Fox affiliate) •
WLJC-TV, Lexington (now a
Cozi TV affiliate) • KZAZ-TV (now
KMSB), Tucson (now a Fox affiliate) •
WZTV, Nashville (now a Fox affiliate) •
KSTU, Salt Lake City (now a Fox affiliate) •
WTTO, Birmingham (now a CW affiliate) • WTSG-TV (now
WFXL), Albany, GA (now a Fox affiliate) • WRIP, Chattanooga (now
WDSI-TV, a
True Crime Network affiliate) •
KUSI-TV, San Diego (now an independent station) •
WXXA-TV, Albany, NY (now a Fox affiliate) • KECH (now
KPXG-TV), Portland, OR (now an Ion Television affiliate) • WWMA-TV (now
WXMI), Grand Rapids, MI (now a Fox affiliate) • WBHW-TV (now
WRSP-TV), Springfield, IL (now a Fox affiliate) •
WTVE, Reading, PA • KEKR-TV (now
KSMO-TV), Kansas City, MO (now a MyNetworkTV affiliate)
SCORE In 1985, FNN severed ties with its broadcast stations and established a 24-hour
cable-exclusive feed, which was launched on May 1, 1985. At night, it offered the Cable Sports Network, a venture between the
Mizlou Television Network and Tom Ficara, which was subsequently replaced by
SCORE, a mini-network that aired sports events and news. Also airing in the overnight hours were
Venture, a series of long-form speeches by business leaders, and
TelShop, a shop-at-home service. In the late 1980s, Infotechnology Inc., the New York–based information technology and venture capital company{{cite web|url=http://downhold.org/lowry/bizplan88.html|title=UPI Announces Business Plan - 1988|last=Vesey|first=David|date=1988-03-30 ==Later history==