METROMEDIA
'Metromedia' (also often 'MetroMedia') was a media company that owned radio and television stations in the United States from 1956 to 1986.
| Contents |
| Overview |
| Former Metromedia stations |
| Television stations |
| Radio stations |
| TV series produced and/or distributed by MPC |
| External links |
Overview
The company arose from the ashes of the DuMont Television Network, the world's first licensed commercial television network. By 1955, DuMont realized it could not compete against CBS, NBC and a revived ABC, and decided to shut down network operations. Soon after DuMont formally shut down network operations in 1956, it spun-off its two remaining owned and operated stations, WABD in New York City and WTTG in Washington, D.C., to shareholders as the 'DuMont Broadcasting Corporation.' In 1957, DuMont Broadcasting changed its name to the 'Metropolitan Broadcasting Corporation' to distance itself from the failure associated with DuMont. The company's headquarters were co-located with WABD in the former DuMont Tele-Centre (which was later renamed the Metromedia Telecenter) in New York.
In 1958, DuMont's namesake, Dr. Allen B. DuMont, sold his shares in Metropolitan Broadcasting to Washington-based investor John Kluge, who installed himself as the company's chairman with a 75-percent controlling interest. Kluge then merged his two New York radio stations, WNEW-AM-FM, into the company, and changed WABD's calls to WNEW-TV to match its new radio sisters. Kluge's first acquisitions included WHK-AM-FM in Cleveland (in 1958), KOVR in Stockton, California and WTVH-TV (now WHOI) in Peoria, Illinois (both in 1959), and WIP-AM-FM in Philadelphia and WTVP television (now WAND) in Decatur, Illinois (both in 1960). In 1961, Kluge changed the company's name to 'Metromedia'.
Also in 1961, Metromedia purchased KMBC-AM-FM-TV in Kansas City, Missouri (keeping the television station and selling the radio outlets), and in 1963 the company bought KTTV in Los Angeles from the ''Los Angeles Times''. Later in the 1960s Metromedia expanded its Los Angeles holdings by purchasing KLAC-AM-FM and by opening a television production center, known as Metromedia Square, which served as the studio facility for numerous network programs. Metromedia also owned a TV production and distribution company called 'Metromedia Producers Corporation' (MPC), established in 1968 from Wolper Productions. MPC produced and syndicated various programs and TV movies, most notably the game show ''Truth or Consequences'' and the 1972-86 version of ''The Merv Griffin Show''.
Metromedia spent the 1970s and the first half of the 1980s increasing its television and radio station portfolio, and continued to expand its syndication business. Metromedia also entered the realm of live entertainment by purchasing the Harlem Globetrotters and the Ice Capades. They entered the record business in 1969 when they launched the 'Metromedia Records' label, whose biggest-selling artist was Bobby Sherman; but the label went out of business by 1974. In 1982 Metromedia made its biggest broadcasting purchase when it acquired WCVB-TV in Boston for $220 million, which at the time was the largest amount ever spent on a single television station property. Two years later, John Kluge bought out Metromedia's shareholders and took the company private.
In 1986, Kluge sold Metromedia's television stations, and Metromedia Producers Corp., to the News Corporation and 20th Century Fox Film Corporation -- both owned by Rupert Murdoch -- for $3.5 billion. With the exception of WCVB-TV (which was subsequently sold to the Hearst Corporation), all of the former Metromedia stations formed the nucleus of the Fox Broadcasting Company, while MPC was folded into 20th Century Fox Television. On this basis, television historian Clarke Ingram claims that Fox is a direct descendant, if not a revival, of DuMont. Indeed, the former WNEW-TV, now Fox flagship WNYW, is still headquartered in the former Metromedia Telecenter, now known as the Fox Television Center. Kluge sold the Harlem Globetrotters and the Ice Capades that same year, and spun-off the radio stations into a separate company (which ironically took on the Metropolitan Broadcasting name) before they were sold to various other owners by the early 1990s.
The Metromedia name has lived on in other projects by Kluge, though the ventures have been largely unrelated to television. When Kluge bought into Major League Soccer in 1995, the club he operated was named ''MetroStars'' (now Red Bull New York) after his company.
There was no connection between John Kluge's Metromedia, and a similarly-named company, Metromedia CMR Broadcasting, which acquired CFCF AM 600 (The World's First Radio Station, founded in 1919 by radio pioneer Guglielmo Marconi), and which was under the control of local Montreal broadcast executives Pierre Arcand and Pierre Beland before they sold their radio holdings to Toronto-based Corus Entertainment.
Former Metromedia stations
Television stations
| 'DMA#' | 'City of License/Market' | 'Station' | 'Years Owned' | 'Current Affiliation/Owner' |
| 1. | New York City | 'WABD/WNEW-TV 5' (now WNYW) | 1956-86 | 'Fox' owned-and-operated (O&O) |
| 2. | Los Angeles | 'KTTV 11' | 1963-86 | 'Fox' owned-and-operated (O&O) |
| 3. | Chicago | 'WFLD-TV 32' | 1983-86 | 'Fox' owned-and-operated (O&O) |
| 5. | Dallas - Fort Worth | 'KRLD-TV 33' (now KDAF) | 1983-86 | 'CW' affiliate owned by Tribune Company |
| 6. | San Francisco - Oakland - San Jose | 'KNEW-TV 32' (now KMTP) | 1968-70 | non-commercial 'independent' owned by Minority Television Project |
| 7. | Boston | 'WCVB-TV 5' | 1982-86 | 'ABC' affiliate owned by Hearst-Argyle Television |
| 9. | Washington, D.C. | 'WTTG 5' | 1956-86 | 'Fox' owned-and-operated (O&O) |
| 10. | Houston | 'KRIV-TV 26' | 1978-86 | 'Fox' owned-and-operated (O&O) |
| 15. | Minneapolis - St. Paul | 'WTCN-TV 11' (now KARE) | 1972-83 | 'NBC' affiliate owned by Gannett Company |
| 20. | Stockton - Sacramento, CA | 'KOVR 13' | 1959-64 | 'CBS' owned-and-operated (O&O) |
| 31. | Kansas City, Missouri | 'KMBC-TV 9' | 1961-82 | 'ABC' affiliate owned by Hearst-Argyle Television |
| 33. | Newport, KY - Cincinnati | 'WXIX-TV 19' | 1972-83 | 'Fox' affiliate owned by Raycom Media |
| 84. | Decatur - Springfield - Champaign - Urbana, IL | 'WTVP 17' (now WAND) | 1960-65 | 'NBC' affiliate owned by Block Communications (operated by LIN Television) |
| 117. | Peoria - Bloomington, IL | 'WTVH-TV 19' (now WHOI) | 1959-65 | 'ABC' affiliate owned by Barrington Broadcasting |
Radio stations
| 'DMA#' | 'Market' | 'Station' | 'Current owner' |
| 1. | New York City | 'WNEW-FM-102.7' (now WWFS) | CBS Radio |
| 'WNEW-1130' (now WBBR) | Bloomberg Radio | ||
| 2. | Los Angeles | 'KMET-94.7' (now KTWV) | CBS Radio |
| 'KLAC-570' | Clear Channel Communications | ||
| 3. | Chicago | 'WMET-95.5' (now WNUA) | Clear Channel Communications |
| 4. | San Francisco-Oakland-San Jose | 'KSAN-FM-94.9' (now KYLD) | Clear Channel Communications |
| 'KNEW-910' | Clear Channel Communications | ||
| 5. | Dallas - Fort Worth | 'KAFM-92.5' (now KZPS) | Clear Channel Communications |
| 'KRLD-1080' | CBS Radio | ||
| 7. | Philadelphia | 'WMMR-93.3' | Greater Media |
| 'WIP-610' | CBS Radio | ||
| 8. | Washington, D.C. | 'WASH-97.1' | Clear Channel Communications |
| 10. | Detroit | 'WOMC-104.3'[1] | CBS Radio |
| 14. | Seattle | 'KJR-950' | Clear Channel Communications |
| 19. | Tampa-St. Petersburg | 'WWBA-FM-107.3' (now WXGL) | Cox Enterprises |
| 'WWBA-680' (now WGES) | ZGS Communications | ||
| 21. | Baltimore | 'WCBM-FM-106.5' (now WWMX) | CBS Radio |
| 'WCBM-680' | WCBM Maryland Inc. | ||
| 22. | Denver-Boulder | 'KHOW-630' | Clear Channel Communications |
| 26. | Cleveland | 'WMMS-100.7' | Clear Channel Communications |
| 'WHK-1420' | Salem Communications |
TV series produced and/or distributed by MPC
★ ''Allen Ludden's Gallery''
★ ''Charlie's Angels''
★
★ ''The Cross-Wits''
★ ''Dusty's Trail''
★ ''Dynasty'' (distributor, 1985-87)
★ ''Family''
★
★ ''Firehouse''
★ ''Groovie Goolies and Friends''
★ ''Hart to Hart''
★
★ ''Hit Man''
★ ''The Howdy Doody Show'' (1976 revival series)
★ ''Jeopardy!'' (original version - distributor, 1974)
★ ''Mayberry RFD'' (distributor; now distributed by Warner Bros. Television)
★ ''The Merv Griffin Show'' (distributor, 1972-84)
★ ''My Favorite Martian'' (distributor; now distributed by Warner Bros. Television)
★ ''National Geographic Specials'' (1964-71)
★ ''Primus''
★ ''Queen for a Day'' (1969-1970)
★ ''Small Wonder'' (production company)
★ ''Soul Train'' (now syndicated by Tribune Entertainment)
★ ''Starsky and Hutch''
★
★ ''Star Search'' (production company, 1983-86)
★ ''Strike Force''
★ ''S.W.A.T.''
★
★ ''That Girl'' (distributor; now distributed by CBS Paramount Television)
★ ''Thicke of the Night'' (distributor; now distributed by Warner Bros. Television)
★ ''T.J. Hooker''
★
★ ''Too Close for Comfort''
★ ''Truth or Consequences'' (distributor, 1966-78)
★ ''The Undersea World of Jacques Cousteau''
★ ''Untamed World''
★ ''Vauldeville''
★ ''Vega$''
★ ''Winchell-Mahoney Time''
★ ''Wonderama''
★ -- ''MPC was the international distributor for these programs. Distribution was later transferred to 20th Century Fox Television, following Murdoch's acquisition of MPC. These programs ane now distributed worldwide by Sony Pictures Television. In the United States, Sony Pictures Television and its predecessor, Columbia Pictures Television, was always the distributor of syndicated repeats of these programs.''
External links
★ John Kluge at The Museum of Broadcast Communications
★
★
★ (''Note - although three separate companies are listed on the IMDb, it should be understood that Metromedia Producers Corporation, Metromedia Productions and Metromedia Television are all different names given for the same production company.'')
★ New York times 1986 announcement of MetroMedia liquidation
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