W2XCW One of the first experimental television stations in the world, WRGB traces its roots to an experimental station founded on January 13, 1928, and broadcast from the
General Electric facility in Schenectady under the call letters W2XCW. It was popularly known as "WGY Television" after its
sister radio station (though WMAK, the predecessor of modern station
WBEN in
Buffalo also had partial control of the station, which was relinquished shortly after the station signed on). W2XCW operated a very limited schedule, with 30 kW on 2.1–2.2 MHz (video) and 92 meters (approx. 3.258 MHz) (audio). It transmitted 24 vertical lines of resolution at a rate of 20 frames per second.
W2XAF The W2XCW callsign disappeared around 1932. By 1930, GE had begun audio transmission on shortwave; one of these transmitters, W2XAF, was pressed into service during off-hours for further television experiments, which continued through the 1930s. Toward the end of that decade, General Electric teamed up with other experimental broadcasters to adopt an all-electronic TV standard that was created by
RCA.
W2XB In 1938, General Electric announced plans to build and operate a standalone TV station, and applied for an
FCC license. It was granted the callsign W2XB, which took to the air in 1939. It moved into the VHF band using a 6 MHz-wide channel and improved resolution (gradually increasing from 343 to 441 to 525 lines). In 1940, it began sharing programs with W2XBS (forerunner of
WNBC) in
New York City, receiving the New York station directly off the air from a mountaintop and rebroadcasting the signal, becoming NBC's first television affiliate. Later, the New York connection was achieved via coaxial cable and eventually by satellite. The NBC affiliation would last for 42 years.
WRGB In 1942, W2XB opted to end experimental broadcasts and begin commercial programming. While the call sign WGY-TV was available, the company applied for and received the call sign WRGB, in honor of pioneering electric engineer
Walter Ransom Gail Baker. WRGB signed on for the first time as a commercial station on February 26, 1942; becoming the second outside of New York City (after WPTZ in
Philadelphia, now
KYW-TV) and the fourth overall in the United States. The station moved into a state-of-the-art studio on Washington Avenue in Schenectady. It was the first building in the nation specifically designed for television. In 1948, WRGB took on secondary affiliations with the three other networks in operation (CBS,
ABC, and
DuMont). At the time of the announcement, the station only broadcast for 28 hours a week. On January 4, 1954, it moved from channel 4 to channel 6 to alleviate interference from WNBC-TV (then known as WRCA-TV) and
Boston's
WBZ-TV, and increased its radiated power approximately fourfold to 93,000
watts. WRGB dropped its secondary affiliations when WCDA (channel 41, now
WTEN on channel 10) and WTRI (channel 35, now
WNYT on channel 13) took the ABC and CBS affiliations respectively. From 1939 till 1957, the station's studio were located on Washington Avenue in downtown Schenectady. In 1957, WRGB moved to its current studio on Balltown Road on the line between Niskayuna and Schenectady; the old studio is currently occupied by
Schenectady County Community College. The longest-running locally produced
children's television show, ''Freihofer's Breadtime Stories
was broadcast on the station starting November 21, 1949. WRGB produced two of the longest-running locally produced programs in television history: a quiz show called Answers Please
and a bowling program entitled TV Tournament Time''. After the cancellation of both by the late-1980s, WRGB's local programming has been variable and erratic, ranging from a local home shopping show to a weekly video countdown done with Top 40 stations
WFLY and (later)
WKKF. In 1979, General Electric almost filed to sell WRGB to Group Six Broadcasting during a proposed General Electric merger with
Cox Broadcasting, with Group Six being led by the station's general manager and vice president James J. Delmonico, which paid $24 million, but the deal apparently fell through due to a lack of FCC approval. On September 28, 1981, WRGB swapped affiliations with WAST (which would become what is now WNYT on the day of the switch) and became a CBS affiliate. WAST had only picked up the CBS affiliation four years earlier, but had remained stubbornly in third place behind WRGB and WTEN. Under the circumstances, when its affiliation contract with WAST ran out, CBS jumped at the chance to align with long-dominant WRGB. The switch made WRGB the third station in the Capital District to affiliate with CBS, with the newly rechristened WNYT taking over the NBC affiliation. The network had originally aired on WTRI, forerunner of WNYT, from 1954 to 1955, then moved to WCDA (now WTEN) from 1955 to 1977. In August 1983, 41 years of General Electric ownership ended when it sold WRGB to Universal Communications Corporation which was owned by
Forstmann Little and John D. Backe, a former CBS president and then president of Tomorrow Entertainment (GE would re-enter the TV business upon its purchase of RCA, then-parent company of NBC in late 1985, which WRGB was formerly affiliated with). WRGB was sold to
Freedom Communications in March 1986. In 1987, WRGB won the Broadcast Pioneers Golden Mike Award and shortly thereafter was awarded a Presidential Citation by
Ronald Reagan. In September 2003, WRGB-DT (UHF channel 39) became the first full-market digital signal to sign on in the
Albany region. Around December 2007, WRGB and WCWN became the first television stations in the Capital District that upgraded to high definition
time delay and rebroadcast capability, and high definition local broadcasts. This allows broadcasting of syndicated shows in high definition. WRGB changed its on-air name to "CBS 6" in October 2004.
Providence Equity Partners owned a controlling stake in
Newport Television (formerly Clear Channel Communications' television division), the owner of local
Fox affiliate
WXXA (channel 23). As a result, the FCC granted conditional approval of Newport's acquisition of Clear Channel Television in late November 2007, provided that Providence Equity Partners would follow through with its planned divestiture of its 16 percent share of Freedom Communications to another company (as required when Providence Equity Partners purchased a minority stake in the
Spanish-language broadcaster
Univision earlier in 2007) as soon as the deal was finalized. Freedom filed for
Chapter 11 bankruptcy in September 2009, emerging in April 2010. At that point, Providence Equity Partners relinquished its stake in Freedom Communications, making its purchase of WXXA legitimate. Freedom announced on November 2, 2011, that it would bow out of television and sell its stations, including WRGB, to
Sinclair Broadcast Group. The group deal closed on April 2, 2012, after which Sinclair obtained a waiver allowing the company to keep both WRGB and WCWN. In 2016, WRGB adopted a logo similar to that of sister station
WSYX in
Columbus, Ohio, replacing the ABC logo with that of the CBS eye.
FM audio WRGB's former
analog TV signal used an FM audio
carrier which could be heard on
87.75 FM in areas where the video signal could be received (and somewhere it could not); the same was true of all analog
channel 6 television stations in North America. Many channel 6 stations would then promote this avenue for commuters to listen to their morning and early evening newscasts, or
severe weather and
breaking news coverage on their
car stereos, including WRGB. However, this analog FM carrier no longer existed for digital television stations after the June 12, 2009, conversion to digital, but remained in effect for analog
low-powered stations on channel 6 until they too transitioned on July 13, 2021, where now only a few stations are broadcasting an FM audio carrier signal on 87.75 alongside an
ATSC 3.0 carrier signal. When WRGB shifted its digital broadcasts to channel 6 with the full-power digital transition, Freedom proposed an unconventional approach to retain the analog audio broadcast, requesting to operate an analog
FM radio transmitter at the far right edge of its allocated spectrum, using
vertical polarization to retain compatibility with standard broadcast car stereos. This idea was once proposed by New York City's
WNYZ-LP in 2008. According to WRGB's site, "We hope that the FCC will allow us to continue to operate on 87.7. We are building a unique transmitter for 87.7 that can operate simultaneously with our DTV signal on channel 6. TV transmissions always use horizontal antennas. Our new 87.7 transmitter will be vertically polarized. The use of vertical polarization for 87.7 will allow reception of our audio in a car radio or any other FM radio with a whip type antenna." WRGB would be the only full-power station to propose such a solution, with only
WITI in
Milwaukee attempting to continue to carry its Channel 6 television audio in some form by contracting with
Clear Channel to lease an
HD Radio subchannel of radio station
WMIL-FM until the mid-2010s.
WPVI-TV in
Philadelphia, the nearest full-power channel 6, expressed an interest in the technology, but backed off due to overall rights issues for its programming and continuing issues regarding reception of their station throughout the market (which would have been complicated more by side-channel analog audio). Less than two months later, on August 24, the FCC ordered WRGB to turn off the 87.9 transmitter. All efforts to carry an analog FM audio signal were abandoned with the sale of WRGB to Sinclair (a company that is a major stakeholder in the
ATSC 3.0 standard), and its 2022 shift to UHF transmission made any renewal of the effort impossible as it no longer has access to the VHF channel 6 spectrum.
Power boost and proposed translators As noted above, on June 12, 2009, WRGB became a digital-only station. The station vacated its digital transition UHF channel 39 and moved its digital operations to their former analog channel assignment on VHF-low channel 6. After the digital transition, some viewers in the Capital District had receptions issues with the WRGB signal. So WRGB boosted their power twice: Once in July 2009 at the power level of 11.5 kW with an interference agreement with WPVI-TV in Philadelphia and
WEDY in
New Haven, Connecticut, and in late January 2010, the FCC granted an STA for WRGB to boost their power again at their current level of 30.2 kW. That application was granted on March 16, 2011. WRGB has also filed applications for three digital replacement translators to fill in some of the coverage-loss areas, which have all been granted construction permits. One will be in Schenectady on the station's pre-transition digital allotment on UHF channel 39, another one will be in
Kingston on UHF channel 24, and the purchase was finalized on December 6, giving the Capital Region market its first duopoly. Until the end of the JSA with WNYA, WRGB had control of three stations in the market. (In 2013, WNYA would also be acquired through a "failing station" waiver when
Hubbard Broadcasting, owner of rival NBC affiliate WNYT, bought WNYA.) During past airings of the annual
Jerry Lewis MDA Telethon, WNYA took on the responsibility of airing WRGB's local and network lineup. This role was later shifted to WCWN, which also aired
CBS' coverage of the
US Open Tennis Championship. This was no longer necessary starting with
Jerry Lewis' retirement as telethon host and
MDA chairman in 2011, as the telethon was significantly shortened to six hours on the night before
Labor Day that year. Starting in 2013, WTEN broadcast the telethon, shortened again to two hours and retitled the
MDA Show of Strength, as it moved to ABC from
syndication for the event's remaining two years, ending after the 2014 edition. ==News operation==