First tenure with ABC The station first signed on the air on April 3, 1973, as WIIL-TV. Originally assigned to broadcast on UHF channel 66, the station eventually gained permission to broadcast on the stronger channel 38 in order to get wider signal coverage at less cost. It originally operated as an ABC affiliate. Previously, ABC had been relegated to off-hours clearances on
CBS affiliate
WTHI-TV (channel 10) and WTWO. The station was founded by Alpha Broadcasting, which heavily invested in the new operation. However, the local
market situation immediately sent the station into the red. Like many ABC affiliates that signed on during this time in medium-to-small markets, WIIL was hampered by ABC's marginal ratings; the network would not be on par with CBS and NBC in terms of affiliates and ratings until later in the decade. Additionally, viewers had strongly entrenched viewing habits with longer-established
VHF stations WTWO and WTHI – although WTWO was less than a decade old. It didn't help matters that most of the southern half of the market was able to receive ABC programming from
WTVW in
Evansville. Indiana's mostly flat terrain allowed WTVW's signal to penetrate further than would have been the case in hilly or mountainous terrain. At one point in 1974, WIIL-TV nearly ceased operations; however, it managed to survive. At the end of 1976, Alpha sold the station to
Charlotte, North Carolina–based broadcaster
Cy Bahakel; the station changed its call letters to WBAK-TV (taken from Bahakel's last name) on March 29, 1977.
Faith to Live By, a short daily devotional program that previously aired on WTWO, began airing each weekday morning immediately after WBAK signed on the air for the day. Despite stronger ownership, WBAK barely registered as a blip in the
ratings in the market. Channel 38's situation grew even more dire when
Indianapolis' longtime NBC affiliate,
WRTV, switched to ABC in June 1979. WRTV's former analog signal, due to its position on VHF channel 6, covered most of the Indiana side of the market, including most of Terre Haute itself. Like WTVW, WRTV's signal penetrated further into Terre Haute than would have been the case in more rugged terrain. When
cable television franchises arrived in the Terre Haute market in the late 1970s, most cable systems piped in either WRTV, WTVW or
WAND out of
Decatur, Illinois in addition to WBAK.
As a Fox affiliate The station switched its affiliation to Fox on January 31, 1995, and changed its branding to "Fox 38", citing low ratings from the then-glut of (stronger-rated) ABC affiliates from outlying markets, along with its newly acquired
NFL rights. The network switch gave the market its first-ever Fox affiliate. The network had previously only been available in the market on area cable providers via either the now-defunct
Foxnet cable feed (on the Illinois side) or Indianapolis affiliate
WXIN (on the Indiana side). With only three commercial stations, Terre Haute did not have enough television stations to support full-time affiliations from four networks, and now featuring football, Fox did not want to relegate its programming to secondary clearances on the three existing outlets. This issue aided in the side effect of leaving the Terre Haute area without an over-the-air ABC affiliate, leaving viewers with only fringe access from stations in Indianapolis, Evansville and Decatur. These outlying ABC affiliates also went through changes: in December 1995, WTVW also switched to Fox, leaving many viewers in the southern half of the market without ABC programming. While WTVW's signal decently covered the southern half of the market, new Evansville ABC affiliate
WEHT suffered from a weaker signal on the UHF band. In 2005, WAND switched to NBC, with the ABC affiliation moving to
Champaign's
WICD, which replaced WAND on cable systems in the Illinois part of the Terre Haute market. Over-the-air viewers actually benefited from this particular switch. WAND's tower is located near the geographic center of Illinois, and most viewers living within the western part of the Terre Haute market in Illinois could only get a clear signal through cable. In contrast, WICD's tower is located near the Illinois–Indiana border and provides a stronger signal. Channel 38 and present-day sister station WTVW were two of three original ABC affiliates in Indiana to have switched to Fox, the other being
WSJV in
South Bend (which switched to Fox in October 1995; the network has since moved to the second subchannel of
WSBT-TV). On the surface, the switch to Fox could have hamstrung WBAK, as it had to purchase an additional 16 hours of programming per day. Fox had only expanded its prime time schedule to seven nights a week two years earlier, but did not produce any daytime programming (outside of the network's children's block
Fox Kids, which already aired Monday through Saturdays before the expansion of prime time programming). However, the switch, and the rise of
Fox Sports, rejuvenated the station. Within a few years, WBAK became one of the strongest small-market Fox affiliates in the United States.
Bahakel Communications sold WBAK to
Mission Broadcasting in 2003, which then entered into a
joint sales agreement with
Nexstar Broadcasting Group. The station integrated its operations with WTWO at that station's facility near Farmersburg. The station's call letters were changed to WFXW (for Fox Wabash Valley) on June 1, 2005. On April 16, 2008, a transmission line failure at WFXW's analog transmitter facility that occurred approximately ten minutes into Fox's telecast of
American Idols results show left the station off the air for weeks; the station's analog signal remained dark until May 9. However, its digital signal was fed to area cable system
headends and to
Dish Network to restore service. The
American Idol performance and result shows during the week of April 21 aired on sister station WTWO.
Return to ABC On June 28, 2011, Nexstar signed a long-term deal with ABC to renew the affiliations of the company's existing affiliate in nine other markets; the deal also included an affiliation agreement with WFXW, which would disaffiliate from Fox and rejoin ABC beginning September 1, in a reversal of its 1995 affiliation switch. Nexstar also announced that channel 38 would change its call letters to WAWV-TV (standing for "ABC for the Wabash Valley") at that time. The move came after sister stations WTVW in Evansville,
WFFT-TV in
Fort Wayne and KSFX-TV (now
KOZL-TV) in
Springfield, Missouri, were stripped of their Fox affiliations following a dispute involving Nexstar and the network over a planned payment increase of its affiliates'
retransmission consent fees to Fox. On August 25, 2011,
LIN Media signed an agreement with Fox to move its programming to WTHI's second digital subchannel, which would also add sister programming service
MyNetworkTV as a secondary affiliation. This made Terre Haute one of the only U.S. television markets where all three historical commercial broadcast networks (ABC, CBS and NBC) maintained primary affiliations, the Fox and MyNetworkTV affiliations were relegated to a digital subchannel, and
The CW lacked an over-the-air affiliate. The last Fox program to air on WFXW was an episode of
Buried Treasure on August 31, 2011, which ended at 10 p.m.
Eastern Time (9 p.m.
Central on the Illinois side of the market). All Fox programming moved to WTHI-DT2 starting at 5 a.m. the following day. The rebranded station also adopted the brand "WAWV ABC", removing all references to its channel 38 allocation, along with a new logo. Nexstar announced that it would acquire Media General, owners of rival WTHI-TV on January 27, 2016. Despite WTHI's higher ratings, on March 4, 2016, Nexstar and Mission declared their intentions to keep WTWO/WAWV and sell WTHI to another company; four months later; on June 13, 2016, it announced that WTHI and four other stations would be acquired by Heartland Media, through its USA Television MidAmerica Holdings
joint venture with MSouth Equity Partners, for $115 million, to comply with
Federal Communications Commission (FCC) ownership caps. ==News operation==