Locally produced programs Current WGN-TV currently produces the following programs, some of which were previously rebroadcast on CLTV: • (
Onward, Chicago) is a bi-weekly public affairs program, airing alternate Saturdays at 6:30 a.m. It debuted on February 19, 2000, and was originally hosted by Eddie Arruza. As of December 2025, it is hosted by
Lourdes Duarte and focuses on Chicago's Hispanic community and culture. •
People to People is a bi-weekly public affairs program airing Saturdays at 6:30 a.m. alternating with ; it debuted in 1973, with local civil rights leader Edwin C. "Bill" Berry as its original host. As of December 2025, its current host is Micah Materre. The program focuses on community events and topical discussions for the African-American community. •
Daytime Chicago is a morning lifestyle program airing weekdays at 10 a.m.; it premiered on September 13, 2021. Hosted by Tonya Francisco and Amy Rutledge, it features segments focusing on subjects such as fashion, cooking, travel, and the arts. •
Spotlight Chicago is an afternoon lifestyle program airing weekdays at 1 p.m. that premiered on September 11, 2023. Hosted by Ji Suk Yi and Sarah Jindra, it features local events, people, attractions and organizations. •
WGN-TV Political Report, which airs Sundays at 9 a.m. and premiered on January 12, 2020, is a weekly
political talk show in which hosts Paul Lisnek and Tahman Bradley, and discusses Chicago-area and national political issues. •
BackStory with Larry Potash is a half-hour historical series that premiered on October 18, 2018. Hosted by Larry Potash and airing Sundays at 11 p.m., the program looks at history, culture, religion, and science. In addition, Channel 9 broadcasts several local events including the
Chicago Thanksgiving Parade (which has aired since 2007, under an agreement with the Chicago Festival Association by which the WGN national feed—which continues to carry the parade despite WGN America's December 2014 programming separation from WGN-TV—was given national simulcast rights), the Chicago St. Patrick's Day Parade (which aired from 1949 to 2002), the
Chicago Auto Show (from 1952 to 1992 and again since 1999), and the Philadelphia-based
Mummers Parade (by arrangement with sister station WPHL-TV). Local events that WGN-TV aired in previous years have included the
Bud Billiken Parade (from 1978 to 2011, with WCIU-TV obtaining primary rights to the broadcast beginning in 2012, before shifting exclusively to WLS-TV—which had been a partial rightsholder for the parade since 1984—in 2014).
Former Former WGN-TV shows include: •
The Bozo Show, a long-running children's program that aired under various titles and formats. It was WGN-TV's most successful local program in terms of both ratings and cultural impact, and became the best-known iteration of the
Bozo franchise partly as a result of the exposure it received after WGN became a national superstation in 1978. At the peak of its popularity, ticket reservations for the show's studio audience surpassed a ten-year backlog. In response to
Chicago Public Schools rule changes that disallowed students from going home for lunch, the program was moved to weekday mornings and switched to a pre-taped format in August 1980. To accommodate the launch of the
WGN Morning News,
Bozo was moved to Sunday mornings in September 1994, remaining there until it was discontinued in 2001. For the final four years of its run,
The Bozo Super Sunday Show incorporated segments compliant with FCC
educational programming requirements. • (
Chatting), a Spanish-language talk show that aired from 1964 to 1999; it focused on Chicago's Hispanic and Latino communities. The program originally aired on Saturday mornings until 1992, when it was moved to Sundays. It was hosted by Peter Nuno for its entire 35-year run. •
Creature Features, a local version of a horror-film franchise which aired Saturday nights from September 19, 1970, until May 19, 1976; the show featured classic horror and science fiction films released between the 1930s and the 1950s. The films were presented by a disembodied voice known only as "The Creature" (Carl Greyson and Marty McNeeley). After the WGN version ended, the title, unpluralized, was used by WFLD for its weekend horror movie presentations until 1979. •
Family Classics, a showcase of family-oriented feature films that ran from September 14, 1962, to December 25, 2000, and was co-created by Frazier Thomas and
Fred Silverman. Thomas also selected and
bowdlerized the feature films;
Roy Leonard took over hosting duties following Thomas's death in April 1985 and remained in that role until
Family Classics ended its initial run.
Family Classics was revived as an occasional series on December 8, 2017, with longtime entertainment reporter
Dean Richards as host. •
Garfield Goose and Friends, a children's program that aired on WGN-TV from September 1955 to October 1976. It is considered the longest-running puppet show on television, the series was hosted by Frazier Thomas as the "prime minister" to the titular clacking goose puppet (puppeteered by Roy Brown), who designated himself as "King of the United States". The WGN-TV run of the program featured a mix of puppet characters developed by Brown, before and after the show's move to Channel 9. The show also featured animated shorts and educational segments. •
Issues Unlimited, a Sunday morning public affairs program moderated by
Chicago Bulletin editor and columnist Hurley Green Sr. from 1971 to 1987; the program featured a panel of local media representatives interviewing local and national newsmakers. •
Ray Rayner and His Friends (originally
Breakfast with Bugs Bunny from 1962 to 1964), a long-running children's program hosted by
Ray Rayner from 1962 to 1980. The program featured animated shorts, arts-and-crafts segments, animal characters, science segments conducted with J. Bruce Mitchell of the
Museum of Science and Industry and a viewer mail segment in which Rayner appeared alongside a talking orange dog puppet,
Cuddly Dudley (voiced by Roy Brown). WGN-TV formerly served as the
Muscular Dystrophy Association (MDA)'s "
Love Network" station for Chicago, carrying the charity's
annual telethon on
Labor Day and the preceding Sunday night each September from 1973 to 2012. For most of its run on the station, except in 1994, due to that year's
Major League Baseball strike, WGN-TV would preempt portions of the telethon on Labor Day to carry Chicago Cubs or White Sox games held during the afternoon of the holiday. Through its national distribution, beginning with the 1979 event, donations to the WGN-produced local segments of the telethon were also pledged by viewers in other parts of the U.S. and Canada. The broadcast moved from syndication to ABC in September 2013 (as a two-hour special), airing thereafter by association on WLS-TV until the final telecast of the retitled
MDA Show of Strength in August 2014.
Studio facilities The station's Bradley Place studios produces a large number of its own programs, and has been used to produce nationally syndicated programs, including
Donahue,
U.S. Farm Report, and
At the Movies.
Lottery WGN-TV served as the originating station for the
Illinois Lottery beginning at the lottery's July 1974 inception. Live drawings were part of a half-hour Thursday-night broadcast hosted by Ray Rayner at the Bradley Place studios. WGN-TV shared the drawing rights with WSNS-TV from March to May 1975, and again from September 1975 until August 1977, when WGN gained exclusivity over the telecasts. With the introduction of the Daily Game (now Pick 3) in February 1980, drawings began airing at 6:57 p.m. nightly. After a three-year run on WFLD, which assumed drawing rights in January 1984, the Lottery moved the drawing telecasts back to WGN-TV in January 1987. In August 1992, the Lottery awarded the telecast rights to its drawings and game show to CBS-owned WBBM, who outbid WGN and WLS-TV, and saw the move as a way to help improve viewership for its third-place-ranked 10 p.m. newscast—effective December 28. In addition to the live drawing results, WGN also carried two lottery-produced, weekly game shows. From September 16, 1989, to December 19, 1992, and from January 8 to July 2, 1994, the station aired
$100,000 Fortune Hunt. It was originally hosted by
Jeff Coopwood with co-host Linda Kollmeyer, and subsequently with Mike Jackson as host. In the program, six contestants selected from a
scratch-off entry-ticket drawing choose panels from a numbered, 36-panel game board containing dollar amounts. The player with the highest prize amount after five rounds won $100,000, and their two chosen, at-home partners won $500 each. The remaining on-air contestants kept their existing winnings, and their partners received $100. Its successor,
Illinois Instant Riches (retitled ''Illinois' Luckiest'' in 1998), ran from July 9, 1994, to October 21, 2000, with
Mark Goodman and Kollmeyer as co-hosts. Produced in conjunction with
Mark Goodson Productions—later
Jonathan Goodson Productions In September 1996, WGN-TV began carrying The Big Game multi-state drawing each Tuesday and Friday; this was replaced by
Mega Millions in May 2002.
Powerball drawings were eventually added upon Illinois joining that multi-state lottery in January 2010. WGN America ceased carrying the drawings on December 12, 2014; the Lottery ceased televising its daily drawings and moved the results for the Pick 3, Pick 4, Lotto with Extra Shot, and Lucky Day Lotto (formerly Little Lotto until 2011) games exclusively to its website on October 1, 2015, and switched to a
random number generator structure.
Sports programming WGN-TV has had a long association with Chicago sports, having regularly televised games of most of the city's major professional sports franchises—particularly the Chicago Cubs, White Sox,
Bulls, and
Blackhawks—and several local and regional collegiate teams (including the
Illinois Fighting Illini, the
Northwestern Wildcats, the
DePaul Blue Demons, and the
Notre Dame Fighting Irish, as well as
Big Ten Conference universities). The Cubs and White Sox were the first teams to be carried on the station, when on April 23, 1948, WGN aired a
crosstown rivalry game the Sox won 4–1. The number of Cubs and White Sox games on WGN gradually decreased to about 70 per season for each team by 2008 as a result of the two
Major League Baseball clubs—as well as the
NBA's Bulls—moving some of their local-game telecasts to cable-originated
regional sports networks: Fox Sports Net Chicago (later
FSN Chicago) from 1999 until 2003 and then Comcast SportsNet Chicago (now
NBC Sports Chicago) from 2004. Beginning in 2015, WGN-TV began sharing the over-the-air rights to Cubs games with WLS-TV, resulting in WGN-TV reducing its coverage to 45 games per season as part of a four-year contract involving the two stations. WGN carried the White Sox until
1972, and for one season in
1981. The White Sox moved its local telecasts to WGN-TV after an eight-year absence in
1990. WGN-TV began carrying the Bulls' games in the team's inaugural season in
1966; after WFLD carried its games for four years, the Bulls returned to WGN-TV for the
1989–90 season, overlapping with the start of the team's NBA championship dynasty during
Michael Jordan's tenure with the team. WGN-TV carried Chicago Bears regular season football games as a
DuMont affiliate during the
1951 NFL season, after which the team moved its telecasts to ABC and, by association, ABC O&O WBKB-TV (now WLS-TV) under a limited contract. The Bears' first game on WGN in 55 years was broadcast on
October 1, 2012, when the station carried the team's
Monday Night Football (
MNF) game against the
Dallas Cowboys. Although WLS-TV has right of first refusal to
MNF due to its corporate parent
The Walt Disney Company's majority ownership of
ESPN, WLS decided not to carry the game so it could air that night's live broadcast of ABC's
Dancing with the Stars. From November 1978 until October 2014, WGN America frequently simulcast WGN Sports broadcasts—mostly Cubs, White Sox and Bulls games—nationwide, when permitted under the station's sports contracts. Until it ceased offering sporting events in September 2019, WGN-TV also distributed its White Sox and Bulls telecasts to television stations in Illinois, Indiana, and Iowa that are within their respective broadcast territories, including CW affiliate
WISH-TV in Indianapolis, and the subchannels of WGN sister stations
WHO-DT, in
Des Moines, and WQAD, in Davenport, Iowa. WGN-TV's Cubs and White Sox game broadcasts were also often carried on the
MLB Extra Innings feeds available to DirecTV subscribers. On January 2, 2019, the White Sox, Bulls, and Blackhawks agreed to an exclusive multi-year deal with NBC Sports Chicago that would take effect that year's third quarter. On February 13, the formation of the
Marquee Sports Network, a joint venture between the Cubs and
Sinclair Broadcast Group that launched in early 2020, was announced. Due to the four teams choosing to completely remove their local game telecasts off broadcast television in favor of exclusively airing them on regional sports networks, WGN-TV wound down its local sports coverage during early-to-mid 2019, beginning with the April 1 game between the
Blackhawks and
Winnipeg Jets. As the station's contracts with all four teams gradually expired, its final game telecasts involved the
Bulls' away game against
New York Knicks on April 9, and the
Cubs' away game against the
rival St. Louis Cardinals on September 27. WGN-TV's final sports telecast involving any of the station's four legacy professional teams was the second game of a White Sox–
Detroit Tigers doubleheader at
Guaranteed Rate Field on September 28, 2019. On February 19, 2020, however,
Chicago Fire FC announced a multi-year agreement with WGN-TV to broadcast its
Major League Soccer (MLS) games, beginning with its March 7 match against the
New England Revolution, returning regular sporting events to WGN-TV after seven months. Those games moved to
MLS Season Pass beginning in 2023, and without any NFL-style syndication rights, the
2022 season was the final season for Fire broadcasts on any television channel. The deal also marked the first time in the station's 74-year history there would not be any local sports programming on the station. Sports programming returned to WGN in 2023, when it began carrying The CW's weekend coverage of the controversial
LIV Golf league in lieu of then-affiliate WCIU, which declined to carry the tournament broadcasts due to existing weekend programming commitments. Later that year, WGN also acquired rights to the network's
Atlantic Coast Conference football and men's basketball game telecasts, which WCIU also chose not to cover. The CW's sports programming moved to WGN-TV full-time upon it becoming an owned-and-operated station in September 2024.
News operation WGN-TV presently broadcasts hours of locally produced newscasts each week; these consist of 16 hours each weekday, six hours on Saturdays, and hours on Sundays. It has the highest number of hours of newscast output of any television station in Chicago and Illinois, and the sixth-highest newscast output in the U.S. The station also produces two late-evening sports-news programs:
GN Sports is a half-hour highlights-and-interview program airing nightly at 10:30 p.m., and
Instant Replay is a Sunday-evening highlights program that comprises the final 20 minutes of the 9 p.m. newscast. Until regular sports telecasts on WGN-TV ended in September 2019, the station's midday, early- and late-evening newscasts were subject to delay or cancellation due to sports coverage overrunning into those time periods. From July 8, 2010, onward, CLTV had served as an alternative broadcaster of WGN-TV newscasts that were preempted by the latter's sports broadcasts. CLTV aired live, half-hour editions of
WGN News at Nine on nights when WGN-TV carried a sports event in the
West Coast that started at 9 p.m. local time. An additional half-hour live newscast followed the game telecast on WGN-TV, a newscast that had originally been titled
WGN News at Nine before the 2016 launch of its 10 p.m. newscast. The WGN-TV weather staff also provides local weather updates for WGN Radio under an agreement that began on October 13, 2008, at the conclusion of
The Weather Channel's ten-year contract with the radio station.
News department history in June 2018. WGN-TV has been well known in the Chicago area for its news programming which, through its former co-ownership with
Chicago Tribune, has played an important role since its launch. The WGN-TV news department has long been one of the most-respected local television news operations in the U.S. and has won several journalism awards, including
Emmy,
Associated Press,
United Press International, and
duPont-Columbia Awards. The station's pool of news anchors and reporters has including Jack Taylor (1954–1984), Carl Greyson (1955–1980), Marty McNeeley (1969–1986),
Robert Jordan (1973–1978 and 1980–2016), Muriel Clair (1978–present), Dan Roan (1984–2022), and Steve Sanders (1982–2020). WGN's news department shared operations and management with WGN Radio until 1983, when the news division was split into separate departments maintained by the respective properties. WGN-TV's news department began operations on April 5, 1948, with the launch of its first regular news program,
Chicagoland Newsreel, which was Chicago's first television newscast to consist entirely of filmed coverage. The 15-minute broadcast originally aired weeknights at 6:45 p.m., and a midday edition at 11:30 a.m. was added in September 1949. The program was anchored by news director Spencer Allen, who had been a reporter and news writer for WGN Radio since 1938. It had a large staff of photographers and technicians, many of whom had worked for the
Tribune. Allen also anchored a 15-minute midday news program,
Spencer Allen and the News, from 1951 to 1953. From 1948 to 1965, WGN-TV produced an additional 15-minute-long newscast at 6:30 p.m.; this was presented by
Austin Kiplinger, who was replaced in 1953 by Allen and then by
Lloyd Pettit in 1956. The anchor read the news summary and Frann Weigel was the weather anchor. The program was expanded to a half-hour in September 1955, when
Newsreel was discontinued in favor of an amended sports-news segment that was anchored by
Vince Lloyd. Under Allen's leadership, WGN-TV's newscasts evolved from a "police blotter/fire alarm-type of news operation" to incorporating more in-depth and investigative reports. WGN-TV was the first Chicago television station to televise a local appearance by a
U.S. President during
Harry S. Truman's 1948 visit to Chicago. The station also provided mobile coverage of Gen.
Douglas MacArthur's visit to the city in April 1951. It has also provided coverage of the Republican and Democratic presidential conventions each election cycle since 1952, and extensive pool coverage of
Pope John Paul II's Mass at
Grant Park in 1979. In September 1951, WGN-TV began carrying a 15-minute, late-night edition of
Chicagoland Newsreel that followed its late-evening movie presentations. By 1967, the program had evolved into
Night Beat, a 30-minute overnight newscast in which the main anchor, which included Greyson, McNeeley, Cliff Mercer, and
Jack Taylor, presented a summary of local and world news headlines, and a brief weather-forecast summary.
Night Beat was discontinued in 1983. In February 1955, the station installed a coaxial cable link from the city room of the
Chicago Tribune (originally done for the early newscast,
First Edition, which aired from 1954 to 1956) to allow
Tribune reporters and contributors to comment on developing stories being covered by the newspaper and the WGN news department. After WGN-TV became an independent station in August 1956, the evening newscast was moved to 7 p.m., becoming the market's first prime time newscast and was often canceled or postponed due to sports coverage. The evening newscast was moved to 10 p.m. in September 1959, originally under the title
10th Hour News, and later as
The Park-Ruddle News and
[Jack Taylor/John Drury and] NewsNine. In May 1960, the late newscast, which by that point was anchored by Jim Conway, became the first local-television news program in the U.S. to expand to a half-hour broadcast. Standard news updates, which were presented by on-staff anchors under the title
WGN Newsbreak, also ran during the late morning, early afternoon, and prime time hours in-between programs. In 1965, WGN-TV appointed the first dual-anchor team in Chicago television news; the team consisted of Gary Park, previously of
KCRA-TV in
Sacramento, and Jim Ruddle, who previously worked at
WTVT in
Tampa; they presented evening newscasts. On January 9, 1967, WGN-TV shifted the 10 p.m. edition of the newscast by 15 minutes and reduced it to that length in an attempt to improve viewership by placing the telephone quiz show
The Name Game in the timeslot, reducing competition with late newscasts on WLS-TV, WMAQ-TV, and WBBM-TV. This experiment ended in May 1967, when WGN-TV reverted the late newscast timeslot to 10 p.m. and expanded it to 25 minutes. In June 1967, Ruddle left to join NBC-owned WMAQ-TV, to be followed two years later by Park taking a prime time anchor role at
KTVU in
San Francisco. Also in 1965, WGN premiered its first morning news show ''Top 'o' the Morning
; Orion Samuelson—then a farm reporter for WGN Radio, who would eventually host the syndicated U.S. Farm Report
from 1975—and Harold Turner (later replaced by Max Armstrong) provided agricultural news and weather. The program was replaced in May 1984 by a traditional morning newscast, Chicago's First Report'', which was canceled due to low viewership that December.
John Drury joined WGN-TV in 1967, and worked for three years as anchor of its 10 p.m. news and occasionally of
Night Beat. After working for WLS-TV for nine years, Drury returned to WGN-TV in 1979, displacing Jack Taylor as 10 p.m.
NewsNine anchor. During his second stint at WGN-TV, Drury took on an expanded role doing assignments and investigative reporting, often producing the reports with investigative reporter Alex Burkholder. In 1982, Chicago mayor
Jane Byrne, accompanied by members of her public relations and cabinet staff, tried to persuade Drury to shelve a report on Byrne's use of public funds for city festivals designed to promote her administration in relation to her stint residing in the
Cabrini-Green housing project. Drury persisted with the report, which aided in Byrne's loss to
Harold Washington in the 1983 Democratic mayoral primary and helped earn Drury a Chicago Emmy Award for Individual Excellence—the first of four Emmys during his career. Another mainstay of WGN-TV was
Tom Skilling, who joined in August 1978 to succeed weather reporter
Harry Volkman (1967–1970 and 1974–mid-1978) as the station's main evening meteorologist. Skilling—who was rumored to have been the highest paid local-television meteorologist in the U.S.—became known for presenting his forecasts with detailed but easy-to-understand analysis and accuracy—most notably his predictions of the
Groundhog Day blizzard two weeks before it hit the Chicago area in late January and early February 2011. Skilling made routine use of computer models to illustrate forecasts. Skilling also occasionally hosted half-hour documentary specials explaining extreme weather phenomena and advancements in forecasting technology. Skilling earned several Chicago Emmy nominations and awards. He also presented a weekly feature on the 9 p.m. newscast,
Ask Tom Why, in which he answered viewer-submitted weather questions. Under Skilling, WGN-TV centralized its weather operations to include WGN-TV, WGN Radio, CLTV, and the
Tribune. In May 2007, the station became a broadcast partner in the
automated weather observation network
WeatherBug, the largest station member by market size. Skilling holds the record as the longest-serving television meteorologist at a single station in the Chicago market, having served as chief meteorologist at WGN-TV for 45 years until he retired from broadcasting on February 28, 2024. The late newscast was moved into prime time on March 10, 1980, becoming known as ''The Nine O'Clock News
and from May 1993 as WGN News at Nine
, as part of a uniform retitling of its newscasts under the WGN News'' moniker used since 1981. The shift to the 9 p.m. hour briefly made it the first hour-long prime time newscast in the Midwest and, for its first seven years, it was the Chicago market's only 9 p.m. local television newscast. Initially airing five nights a week, the revamped weeknight-only newscast was first anchored by Drury, Skilling, sports anchor Bill Frink, and commentator Len O'Connor. On June 9 of that year, the program switched to a hybrid local–national format that incorporated
Independent Network News (
INN)—a Tribune-syndicated nightly news program that was later retitled
INN: The Independent News in September 1984 and
USA Tonight in January 1987, originating from New York sister station WPIX. This replaced the locally produced segments that had occupied the 9:30 p.m. half-hour since the March format change. After briefly being confined to weeknights following the rescheduling, half-hour weekend editions of the 9 p.m. broadcast were added on October 4, 1980, anchored originally by Larry Roderick and Robert Jordan. By 1985, Drury—who returned to his previous role as main co-anchor at WLS-TV in late 1984—and Denise Cannon, who became the former's co-anchor in 1981 and departed at the end of 1984, were succeeded as principal anchors by Rick Rosenthal and
Pat Harvey. Since the reformatting as a prime time newscast, WGN-TV has been the ratings leader in the 9 p.m. timeslot, and typically holds a larger audience than the 10 p.m. newscast on WBBM-TV. The 9 p.m. newscast's dominance was such that from 1984 until 1989, when it was unseated by KTVU in San Francisco, it had the largest viewership of any prime time local newscast in the United States. Competition for ''The Nine O'Clock News'' arrived on November 16, 1987, when Fox O&O WFLD debuted an hour-long 9 p.m. broadcast. Although WFLD aggressively marketed its newscast towards younger audiences as having a fresher style than WGN-TV's more traditional news format, WGN-TV has remained Chicago's top-rated 9 p.m. newscast to the present day, even with the WFLD newscast having the Fox prime time lineup as its lead-in. For this reason, WFLD moved its newscast back to its original 7 p.m. timeslot in September 1988, only to return it to 9 p.m. the following year to accommodate the planned expansion of Fox's prime time lineup. A sports highlight and interview program,
Instant Replay, which was hosted by sports director Dan Roan until his retirement in May 2022, began accompanying the newscast's Sunday edition in August 1987. WGN-TV re-expanded its prime time newscast to one hour on June 4, 1990, after Tribune discontinued production of
USA Tonight under a contract between Tribune and
Turner Broadcasting in which Tribune stations were granted access to
CNN Newsource content and began feeding video footage to the
CNN video wire service. WGN began programming long-form news outside its established 9 p.m. slot on September 19, 1983, when it debuted
Midday Newscope, which grew out of the three-minute-long local news segments that had aired during the
INN Midday Edition since January 1983. Originally anchored by Rick Rosenthal, who was replaced in 1984 by Steve Sanders, the newscast—a local version of
Telepictures and
Gannett Broadcasting's short-lived syndicated format,
Newscope—included local news headlines, weather forecasts, and in-depth consumer, financial, entertainment, and lifestyle features. The program was reformatted into a more traditional newscast and retitled ''Chicago's Midday News
on September 17, 1984, and was expanded to an hour in September 1985. The midday newscast was concurrently rebranded from WGN News at Noon
to WGN Midday News
with the expansion and eventually expanded to 90 minutes, moving to an 11:30 a.m. start, on September 15, 2008. WGN Midday News'' was expanded to two hours, moving to 11 a.m., on October 5, 2009. On September 19, 1988, WGN became the first Chicago television station to
closed caption its newscasts for the hearing impaired. On January 25, 1992, the station debuted hour-long 8 a.m. newscasts on Saturdays and Sundays. To accommodate the launch of ''Chicago's Weekend Morning News
, and the concurring moves of and People to People
to Sundays, WGN-TV dropped the long-running religious programs What's Nu
, Heritage of Faith
, and Mass for Shut-ins'' from its Sunday morning lineup; the Council of Religious Leaders of Metropolitan Chicago and other religious groups criticized this move on grounds that the programs catered to diverse religious audiences in fulfillment of the station's public-service obligations. The Sunday edition was discontinued after the September 4, 1994, broadcast; the Saturday edition followed suit on December 19, 1998; news director Steve Ramsey cited the need to provide more resources for weekday morning newscasts. Weekend morning newscasts returned on October 2, 2010, with the debut of hour-long editions at 6 a.m. that shifted to a two-hour block at 7 a.m. on September 10, 2016, following WGN-TV's disaffiliation from The CW, and expanded to a third hour on Saturdays until 10 a.m. on January 11, 2020.
WGN Morning News became the first WGN-TV newscast to be denied clearance on the national feed in September 1996, due to self-imposed exclusivity restrictions concerning paid segments and rate charges the station's sales department would have to pay if the segments aired nationally. Simulcasts of the
WGN Morning News temporarily returned to WGN America on February 3, 2014, when it began airing the 4 a.m. hour. In July 1996, WGN-TV began using a
Eurocopter AS350 B2 helicopter for news gathering; the aircraft was known as "Skycam 9", and was used for breaking news events and traffic reporting. In October 1999, freelance reporter Jane Boal made headlines when she was hit from behind by a car; Boal suffered cartilage and ligament injuries to both of her legs after being pinned between the car involved in the accident and a WGN live truck, but was able to resume work in early November. In 2000, WGN-TV constructed a new newsroom covering two floors on the eastern portion of its studio facility, increasing the building's size to approximately . The original newsroom was renovated for use by the station's weather department. In April 2008, WGN-TV persuaded veteran WMAQ-TV and WFLD anchor
Mark Suppelsa—who turned down a contract with the latter station due to a proposed salary cut—to take over as lead anchor of the 9 p.m. newscast, replacing Steve Sanders. Suppelsa co-anchored the weeknight newscasts until his retirement from broadcasting in December 2017, and was replaced two months later by Joe Donlon, who served a similar role at
KGW in
Portland, Oregon. On July 19, 2008, beginning with that night's edition of the 9 p.m. newscast, WGN-TV became the third television station in Chicago to broadcast local newscasts in
high definition. Video from remote and field equipment was initially broadcast in
480p standard definition following the transition; HD cameras began to be used for field reports in July 2010, making WGN-TV the first station in the city to broadcast all locally originated news content in HD. Starting under the direction of news director Greg Caputo, WGN-TV expanded its news programming and launched an early-evening newscast on September 15, 2008,
WGN Evening News, which began as a half-hour weeknight broadcast at 5:30 p.m. The weekday editions of the newscast were later expanded to a second hour starting at 4 p.m. on September 8, 2014, and then to three hours on April 4, 2017. In 2009, WGN-TV began streaming its weekday midday and 5 p.m. newscasts live on its website. On February 22, 2010, WGN-TV became the first television station in Chicago to allow
iPhone users to watch live streams of its newscasts; the 6-to-9 a.m. block of the
WGN Morning News, the midday, and 5 p.m. newscasts were initially available for streaming to iPhone users. On October 5, 2015, the station restored a 10 p.m. newscast—originally airing Monday through Friday—after a 35-year absence; weekend editions of the 10 p.m. broadcast were added on January 11, 2020. Weekend editions of
GN Sports were added on August 14, 2021, with the Sunday broadcast replacing the cuisine-and-tourism program ''Chicago's Best'', which had aired on WGN-TV from January 2011 until August 8, 2021.
Notable on-air staff ;Current staff •
Jackie Bange – weekend evening anchor •
Lourdes Duarte – weekday afternoon anchor •
Tim Joyce – weekend morning meteorologist •
Dan Ponce – weekday morning anchor ;Former staff •
Fran Allison •
Mike Barz •
Brigid Bazlen •
Bob Bell •
Steve Bell •
Lou Boudreau •
Thom Brennaman •
Jack Brickhouse •
Marshall Brodien •
Lorn Brown •
Roy Brown •
Cheryl Burton •
Chip Caray •
Harry Caray •
Susan Carlson •
Bob Collins •
Bob Costas •
Joey D'Auria •
Merri Dee •
Phil Donahue •
Mike Douglas •
John Drury •
Jim Durham •
Judie Garcia •
Milo Hamilton •
Pat Harvey •
Frances Horwich •
Bill Jackson •
Bob Jordan •
Johnny "Red" Kerr •
Rich King •
Wayne Larrivee •
Roy Leonard •
Paul M. Lisnek •
Vince Lloyd •
Ned Locke •
Nancy Loo •
Jim Lounsbury •
Joe McConnell •
Elaine Mulqueen •
Allison Payne •
Lloyd Pettit •
Jimmy Piersall •
Dean Richards •
Ron Rivera •
Randy Salerno •
Don Sandburg •
John Schubeck •
Tom Skilling •
Wendell Smith •
Mark Suppelsa •
Chuck Swirsky •
Jack Taylor •
Roseanne Tellez •
Frazier Thomas •
Bob Trendler •
Robert Urich •
Harry Volkman •
Jenniffer Weigel •
Jim Williams •
Bill Weir ==Technical information==