Early years The
construction permit for what is now WDTN was awarded to the
Crosley Broadcasting Corporation of
Cincinnati on April 4, 1947. It was the first broadcast television license granted by the
Federal Communications Commission (FCC) to Dayton. However, due to several delays, the station did not actually go on the air until March 15, 1949, as WLWD, on channel 5, twenty days after
CBS affiliate
WHIO-TV began broadcasting. From the very first day, it has operated from a studio and office facility located in a former skating rink on Dixie Drive in Moraine. (The property has changed jurisdictions since the original airdate: first it was within the now-defunct Van Buren Township, which voted to incorporate as
Kettering in November 1952; in 1953, the western portion of Kettering, which included the property, voted to secede, forming Moraine Township, which in turn incorporated as Moraine in 1957.) WLWD was the second link of a group of inter-connected stations which made up the "WLW Television Network", and was named for Crosley's
flagship Cincinnati radio station
WLW; the "D" referred to Dayton. The other stations were
WLWT in Cincinnati and WLWC (now
WCMH-TV) in
Columbus, both also owned by Crosley. The three outlets shared common regional programming, most of which was produced in Cincinnati and sent by way of
microwave link to Dayton and Columbus (such as
The 50-50 Club with
Ruth Lyons, and later
Bob Braun;
The Paul Dixon Show; and
Midwestern Hayride). All three stations were also NBC affiliates, and had secondary relationships with the
DuMont Television Network; WLWD also carried
ABC programs. The first program shown on WLWD was NBC's
Texaco Star Theater, with
Milton Berle. To reflect their connection to each other, the WLW Television stations hyphenated their call signs on air; the Dayton outlet was known as WLW-D. The Crosley television group would later expand to include WLWA (now
WXIA-TV) in
Atlanta, WLWI (now
WTHR) in
Indianapolis, and
WOAI-TV in
San Antonio. The release of the FCC's
Sixth Report and Order in 1952 resulted in shifts of VHF channel assignments in the Midwest region. In Ohio, WLWD's channel 5 allocation was moved to Cincinnati and given to sister station WLWT, with the Dayton station reassigned to transmit over channel 2. WLWD's channel change took place on April 27, 1953. WHIO-TV, Dayton's only other station at the time, also shifted channels (from 13 to 7) as a result of the same ordinance. Along with the channel shift WLWD was also forced to operate with a shorter transmission tower, to reduce the overlap of its new channel 2 signal with the relocated signals of WLWT (which moved from channel 4 to channel 5) and WLWC (which shifted to channel 4 from channel 3). The analog channel 2 signal
traveled a very long distance under normal conditions. WLWD lost DuMont in 1955, a few months before the network shut down. It lost ABC in 1965 (though it cleared some ABC daytime programming until 1971 as a
secondary affiliate) when then-
independent WONE-TV (channel 22, now
WKEF) picked up ABC's
prime time programming. In 1968 the Crosley group took on the name of its parent company and became known as Avco Broadcasting, a subsidiary of the Aviation Corporation (later known as
Avco). After the FCC restricted the
common ownership of stations with overlapping signals in the late 1960s, it
grandfathered Avco's common ownership of WLWD, WLWT, WLWC and of WLW radio in Cincinnati. Even from its shorter tower, WLWD's city-grade signal reached as far as Cincinnati and as far north as the Columbus suburbs, while WLW radio's 50-
kilowatt signal covered nearly all of Ohio and overlapped with all three television stations. In 1975, Avco decided to exit broadcasting. As a result, WLWD lost its grandfathered protection, and had to be sold off separately from WLWT and WLWC. WLWD ended up being the last of Avco's television stations to be sold off, going to
Grinnell College in
Iowa for $13 million in June 1975; the acquisition made Grinnell College one of a few universities in the country to own a commercial television station. Almost by default, NBC was then left to go with WKEF. On
January 1, 1980, WDTN and WKEF swapped network affiliations. Five months after joining ABC, in May 1980, Grinnell College announced it would sell WDTN to the
broadcasting division of the
Hearst Corporation. The sale was finalized over a year later, in September 1981 for a price of over $47 million. In August 1997, Hearst's television group merged with Argyle Television Holdings II to form what was then known as Hearst-Argyle Television. Argyle had purchased WDTN's former sister station, WLWT, that January, as part of a trade deal between Argyle II and
Gannett Broadcasting which caused WLWT and its
Oklahoma City sister station,
KOCO-TV, to swap ownership with
WZZM in
Grand Rapids, Michigan, and
WGRZ-TV in
Buffalo, New York. For the same reason that forced the breakup of Avco's television group 20 years earlier, Hearst-Argyle could not keep both stations (common ownership of stations with overlapping city-grade signals would not be allowed until 2000). It opted to keep the larger WLWT and trade WDTN, together with
WNAC-TV in
Providence, Rhode Island, to
Sunrise Television for
WPTZ in
Plattsburgh, New York,
WNNE in
Hartford, Vermont, and
KSBW in
Salinas, California. The sale was finalized on July 2, 1998. In May 2002, Sunrise merged with
LIN TV; both television companies were owned by private equity firm
Hicks, Muse, Tate & Furst.
Return to NBC In early 2004, NBC landed a new affiliation agreement with LIN TV; in response to this agreement, ABC signed an affiliation deal with
Sinclair Broadcasting Group, which renewed the network's affiliations with the group's existing ABC affiliates and caused WKEF and its sister stations in
Springfield/
Decatur, Illinois (
WICS and
WICD), to switch to that network. On August 30, 2004, in a reversal of the 1980 switch, WDTN returned to NBC after 24 years away to take advantage of the network's then-stronger programming. Ironically, several months after the affiliation shift, ABC's ratings overtook those of NBC and the network wouldn't rebound for nearly a decade; in 2014, NBC had regained the lead over ABC. On May 18, 2007, LIN TV announced that it was exploring strategic alternatives that could have resulted in the sale of the company. In early June, WDTN's website (along with those of several other LIN TV-owned stations not affiliated with
Fox such as
WNDY-TV,
WWHO,
WAND,
WWLP, and
WLFI-TV) underwent a redesign. The web addresses were then operated by the Local Media Network division of World Now for a little over a year until October 2008, when LIN TV relaunched most of its station websites through
Fox Interactive Media (later spun off as the independent company known today as EndPlay). Prior to the World Now contract, the web addresses were powered by Web Pros. On October 3, 2008, LIN TV pulled WDTN (and its other stations) from Time Warner Cable, due to a dispute over "retransmission fees". Time Warner replaced WDTN with a free preview of
HBO Family. On October 29, LIN TV and Time Warner Cable reached an agreement, restoring WDTN, as well as offering it in high definition on the cable system for the first time. On June 4, 2010, it was announced LIN TV would begin operating CW affiliate WBDT (then owned by
ACME Communications) through
shared service and
joint sales agreements. Three months later, LIN TV exercised an option to purchase that channel along with another LIN-operated ACME station, fellow CW affiliate
WCWF in
Green Bay, Wisconsin. LIN TV requested WBDT's license be assigned to a subsidiary of Vaughan Media (owner of CW affiliate
KNVA in
Austin, Texas, which was also operated by LIN TV). The company holds a 4.5% equity stake in Vaughan Media, but controls most of that company's voting stock, effectively making it a
shell corporation for LIN TV. WBDT was integrated into WDTN's facilities and the merger between the two stations occurred sometime around October 2010. WBDT originally had studios at Corporate Place in
Miamisburg, along Byers Road. On March 4, 2011, LIN TV's contract with
DISH Network expired, and all TV stations owned or operated by LIN, including WDTN and WBDT, were pulled from DISH. On March 13, LIN and DISH entered into a retransmission consent agreement, and all affected channels were restored. On March 21, 2014,
Media General announced that it would buy LIN. The FCC approved the merger on December 12, 2014, but a condition of the deal requires Media General to end the JSA between WBDT and WDTN due to tighter scrutiny such deals are getting by the FCC. Media General received a two-year waiver to end the JSA between WDTN and WBDT. The merger was completed on December 19, reuniting WDTN with WCMH-TV (the former WLWC). On January 27, 2016, it was announced that
Nexstar Broadcasting Group would buy Media General for $4.6 billion, and WDTN became part of "Nexstar Media Group". The deal was approved by the FCC on January 11, 2017, and it was completed on January 17. A
carriage dispute with
AT&T, lasting from 11:59 p.m. on July 3 to August 29, 2019, resulted in the removal of WDTN, along with more than 120 other Nexstar stations across 97 markets, from AT&T's
DirecTV,
DirecTV Now and
U-verse platforms. A carriage dispute with Dish Network, beginning at 7 p.m. on December 2, 2020, resulted in the removal of WDTN and sister station WBDT from the platform, along with 164 Nexstar stations in 115 markets. A carriage dispute with DirecTV from July 2 to September 17, 2023, resulted in the removal of WDTN, along with 158 other Nexstar stations, from DirecTV, U-verse and
DirecTV Stream. ==Programming==