Channel 47 in Lansing went on the air December 1, 1982, as WFSL-TV. Owned by real estate developers Joel Ferguson and Sol Steadman, the station was an independent station even though Lansing lacked a full-time ABC affiliate. ABC refused to affiliate with the new station to avoid encroaching on the service area of three nearby affiliates. Ferguson and Steadman sold WFSL-TV to The Journal Company in 1985; the new owners changed the call sign to WSYM-TV. In spite of the 1986 launch of Fox, WSYM-TV's continued courtship of ABC led it to avoid the new network. This changed when Ferguson started a second Lansing station, WLAJ, in 1990; it was designed to meet ABC's signal requirements and won that network's affiliation, leading WSYM-TV to become a Fox affiliate.
Under Journal, WSYM-TV began a 10 p.m. newscast in 1997 but turned over production of its newscasts to local NBC affiliate WILX-TV in 2004. The station eventually aired morning, early evening, and late evening newscasts produced by WILX. After Journal's stations merged into the E. W. Scripps Company in 2015, the station began producing its own local newscasts at the start of 2021.
History
WFSL-TV: Early years
The Lansing–Jackson television market was dominated by two major commercial VHF stations, WJIM-TV (now WLNS-TV) on channel 6 and WILX-TV (channel 10), since the latter station began in 1959. In the late 1970s, interest emerged in activating a third local station on a UHF channel: channel 36, then allocated to Lansing. Three applicants had already filed for the channel by 1979. Benko Broadcasting was owned by two brothers, one of whom was a judge in Sanilac County; Kare-Kim Broadcasting Corporation, whose primary stakeholder, Donald Haney, was a television personality in Detroit; and F&S Comm/News was primarily owned by former Lansing city councilman Joel Ferguson and business partner Sol Steadman. Three additional shareholders owned one percent apiece, which with Ferguson's stake made the company 51.5% Black-owned: businessman Greg Eaton and former Michigan State Spartans men's basketball players Greg Kelser and Earvin "Magic" Johnson.[2]
On August 4, 1980, the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) issued a ruling that complicated the picture for the channel 36 applicants. It changed the channel allocation from 36 to 47 as part of changes in five Michigan and Ohio cities, necessary to conform with a new Canadian table of allocations for UHF channels. This was not a trivial change for the Lansing applicants, as channel 47 was short-spaced with location restrictions. These restrictions, to channel 62 in Detroit, had led the FCC in 1967 to allot channel 36 instead of 47 at Lansing.[3] In restoring channel 47 to Lansing, the FCC gave the existing applicants from the channel 36 case the opportunity to keep the short-spaced channel or specify Lansing's other UHF channel, channel 53.[4] Benko and Kare-Kim opted for channel 53, and the FCC declared a comparative hearing for their applications in May 1981.[5] F&S Comm/News was the only applicant who selected channel 47 and was awarded a construction permit on December 10, 1981.[6]
By the time F&S Comm/News obtained the channel 47 construction permit, the company was already making its mark in local television, particularly around Michigan State Spartans athletics. It produced and syndicated the MSU football coaches' show featuring head coach Muddy Waters, and in September 1980, the firm won the bidding to produce Michigan State men's basketball telecasts, which it then syndicated to WILX-TV and other Michigan TV stations.[7] The station set up studios in the Capitol Commons office park, developed by Ferguson and Steadman, on the edge of downtown Lansing.[8] An estimated $6 million was spend on equipment, office space, and programming.[9]
Grade A signal contours for WSYM-TV, WLAJ, WJRT, WUHQ (now WOTV) and WXYZ-TV, c. 1998. WSYM-TV's analog signal (green) overlapped with ABC affiliates WJRT to the northeast, WUHQ to the west, and WXYZ-TV to the east, preventing WSYM from affiliating with ABC. WLAJ's analog signal (blue) was intentionally engineered to not interfere with these stations, and became Lansing's ABC affiliate.
Channel 47 began broadcasting December 1, 1982, as WFSL-TV, an independent station with a schedule dominated by movies as well as the MSU basketball package.[10][11] The lack of network affiliation came as something of a surprise to local observers. One of the reasons channel 36 had initially attracted interest prior to 1980 was that there was no in-market ABC affiliate in Lansing, which was the largest market so unserved.[2] The ABC network was available over-the-air from Flint, Michigan's WJRT, which was the primary source of the ABC network in Lansing, and in other portions of the region by WUHQ from Battle Creek or WXYZ-TV from Detroit.[12] However, cable was often necessary to get a good ABC signal, particularly in Jackson.[13][14] Though channel 47 had been presumed to be the ABC affiliate prior to launch, and WFSL negotiated with the[8] WFSL had pursued the ABC affiliation when it launched, but ABC refused to grant it, principally due to coverage overlap with WJRT and WXYZ-TV—the latter of which ABC then owned.[10] When the construction permit for channel 47 was awarded, the FCC dismissed a protest by WUHQ-TV, which sought to establish translators in Jackson and Lansing.[15]
WFSL-TV's first months on air were lean. The station laid off a third of its 50-person staff before conditions improved. Tom Jones, WFSL-TV's general manager, blamed its struggles on jitters that local and regional advertisers had about independents after seeing WWMA-TV in Grand Rapids miss its planned starting date by nine months and reservations about committing a Christmas advertising budget to an unproven station that might not be on in time for the holidays and, in any event, had no ratings survey for four months to show a proven audience. This began to turn after basketball season, which served as a promotional vehicle for the new channel 47 and its programs.[16]
WSYM-TV: Journal ownership and Fox affiliation
On August 7, 1984, Ferguson and Steadman announced the sale of WFSL-TV to The Journal Company, a Milwaukee-based broadcaster that owned two other TV stations and The Milwaukee Journal newspaper, for $9 million.[17] The deal, finalized at the end of 1984, represented a tripling of an investment of about $3 million.[18] Journal overhauled the station's programming, emphasizing syndicated material over movies,[19] and changed the station's call sign to WSYM-TV—"We Said Yes to Michigan"—on March 11, 1985.[20] The new call sign referenced the slogan "Say Yes to Michigan",[21] which the state used for economic development and tourism between 1981 and 1997.[22][23]
Journal made a second attempt at courting ABC. The company already owned an ABC affiliate, KTNV-TV in Las Vegas.[17] The station held talks with ABC in 1985,[24] but ABC—again attempting to avoid upsetting its other affiliates—opted against affiliating.[25] Channel 47 passed up on the Fox network when it launched in 1986[26] and declined to join the Detroit Pistons television network, with general manager Dale Parker reasoning that half of local viewers already got Fox affiliate WKBD-TV in Detroit on cable and thus the Pistons. Only upon Parker's departure in late 1988 did WSYM-TV begin to air the Pistons.[27][28]
When I owned WSYM, we had a powerful signal. When I went to buy a station in Las Vegas, I realized I didn't need all that powerful stuff. Once the signal was out of the city, all there was was desert, anyway. So when I designed WLAJ, I cut the signal down to just the areas we are targeting. It will miss Battle Creek entirely.
WSYM-TV was still an independent station when, in 1989, Joel Ferguson agreed to buy the channel 53 permit from Benko.[29] The reactivation of plans for channel 53 immediately started to unblock the ABC logjam. Neither ABC nor Fox had an affiliate in the Lansing market, and ABC was seen to be in the driver's seat with a choice of possible affiliates (WSYM or WLAJ).[30] The FCC granted final approval for the WLAJ sale in March 1990,[13] leaving ABC with the decision between WSYM and WLAJ as its local affiliate.[31] In a bid to court the network, Ferguson redesigned WLAJ's signal pattern to protect WJRT and WUHQ;[13] this was successful, and on May 23, 1990, ABC awarded the Lansing affiliation to WLAJ.[14] This eliminated the primary reason WSYM had held out on network affiliation.[32] In response, WSYM-TV joined Fox on September 16, 1990.[33] It continued to air the Pistons until 1993, when new general manager Judy Kenney dropped the team to give priority to Fox programming.[34]
First in-house news department
Over the course of the 1990s, Fox encouraged its stations to begin airing or producing local newscasts. Kenney had been sent to Lansing in 1993 under orders from Journal to develop a news department, but she reached the conclusion that the time was not right.[35] That changed in 1997, when WSYM-TV committed to airing a 10 p.m. newscast, originally envisioned as an hourlong report.[36]Fox 47 News debuted on September 8, 1997, with a half-hour newscast at 10 p.m. and an 11 p.m. edition added two weeks later.[37][35] The latter was gone by February 1998.[38]
The in-house news department never gained the traction that management desired. In 2000, the station experimented with an hourlong 10 p.m. newscast but soon reverted, only to return to a full hour at 10 in 2002. The next year, the station debuted a newscast at 5 p.m. and then moved it to 5:30 p.m. to counterprogram WLNS-TV and WILX-TV.[39]
Outsourcing of news to WILX-TV
Beginning August 30, 2004, the production of WSYM-TV's 5:30 and 10 p.m. newscasts was outsourced to WILX-TV, though the news on channel 47 retained a partially separate anchor team for news and weather and came from a different set.[40][41] WSYM's 23 newsroom employees lost their jobs, though 10 positions were created at WILX-TV to handle the enlarged operation.[42] These remained the only local newscasts on WSYM-TV until 2015, when a two-hour extension of WILX-TV's morning newscast began airing from 7 to 9 a.m.;[43] this replaced a television simulcast of Michigan's Big Show, a talk radio program hosted by Michael Patrick Shiels.[44] WILX-TV debuted its own 5:30 p.m. newscast in 2018.[45]
In 2014, WSYM began operating MyNetworkTV outlet WHTV through a local marketing agreement, replacing WLNS-TV as the service partner.[46] WHTV left the air in 2017, with much of its programming moving to a subchannel of WSYM.[47]
Scripps ownership and second in-house local news department
On April 1, 2015, the E. W. Scripps Company completed the simultaneous acquisition of Journal Communications, retaining the television properties while spinning off both firms' newspaper holdings.[48] Scripps announced on October 8, 2020, that WSYM would reinstate its news department on January 1, 2021, ending its news share agreement with WILX.[49] The new news department, structured around a neighborhood reporting model, had an initial staff of 15 reporters, editors, and producers.[50]
^"Public Notice". Lansing State Journal. Lansing, Michigan. June 1, 1981. p. C4. Retrieved October 22, 2024 – via Newspapers.com.
^Hughes, Mike (December 15, 1981). "FCC OKs new Lansing TV station". Lansing State Journal. Lansing, Michigan. pp. 1A, 3A. Retrieved October 22, 2024 – via Newspapers.com.
^Hughes, Mike (September 25, 1980). "WILX snatches MSU basketball games". Lansing State Journal. Lansing, Michigan. p. B-3. Retrieved October 28, 2024 – via Newspapers.com.
^ abHughes, Mike (July 11, 1982). "New TV station doubles staff... to two". Lansing State Journal. Lansing, Michigan. p. 3B. Retrieved October 28, 2024 – via Newspapers.com.
^Hughes, Mike (November 25, 1982). "TV station's set to launch giant gamble". Lansing State Journal. Lansing, Michigan. p. 1D. Retrieved October 28, 2024 – via Newspapers.com.
^ abHughes, Mike (November 18, 1982). "New TV era ready to open on local tubes". Lansing State Journal. Lansing, Michigan. p. 1D. Retrieved October 22, 2024 – via Newspapers.com.
^Hughes, Mike (December 2, 1982). "WFSL opens old movie blitz". Lansing State Journal. Lansing, Michigan. p. 2D. Retrieved October 22, 2024 – via Newspapers.com.
^"Area TV Fans Get Broad Network Range". Lansing State Journal. Lansing, Michigan. August 17, 1975. p. Welcome to Lansing 93. Retrieved October 22, 2024 – via Newspapers.com.
^ abcHughes, Mike (March 6, 1990). "Lansing's getting a new TV station". Lansing State Journal. Lansing, Michigan. pp. 1A, 2A. Retrieved October 22, 2024 – via Newspapers.com.
^Mallory, James E. (September 4, 1983). "Outlook brighter for new TV kid". Lansing State Journal. Lansing, Michigan. p. 1E. Retrieved October 28, 2024 – via Newspapers.com.
^ abHughes, Mike (August 7, 1984). "WFSL sold to firm in Milwaukee". Lansing State Journal. Lansing, Michigan. pp. 1A, 2A. Retrieved October 28, 2024 – via Newspapers.com.
^"WFSL change is near". Lansing State Journal. Lansing, Michigan. December 20, 1984. p. 1D. Retrieved October 22, 2024 – via Newspapers.com.
^Hughes, Mike (January 19, 1985). "WFSL makes drastic shift". Lansing State Journal. Lansing, Michigan. p. 8S. Retrieved October 28, 2024 – via Newspapers.com.
^"Good Afternoon..."Lansing State Journal (Advertisement). Lansing, Michigan. March 11, 1985. p. 4A. Retrieved October 22, 2024 – via Newspapers.com.
^"Changing times". Lansing State Journal. Lansing, Michigan. May 8, 1985. p. 4B. Retrieved October 28, 2024 – via Newspapers.com.
^"'Yes to Michigan' campaign to start". The Muskegon Chronicle. Muskegon, Michigan. Associated Press. December 2, 1981. p. 7B. Retrieved October 28, 2024 – via Newspapers.com.
^Barks Hoffman, Kathy (March 28, 1997). "Michigan adopts a new slogan". Battle Creek Enquirer. Battle Creek, Michigan. Associated Press. p. 2C. Retrieved October 28, 2024 – via Newspapers.com.
^"ABC affiliate ahead?". Lansing State Journal. Lansing, Michigan. April 4, 1985. p. 1D. Retrieved October 28, 2024 – via Newspapers.com.
^"People: ABC says no to Lansing". Lansing State Journal. Lansing, Michigan. November 13, 1985. p. 1C. Retrieved October 28, 2024 – via Newspapers.com.
^"Of Local Interest". Lansing State Journal. Lansing, Michigan. October 5, 1986. p. TVweek 3. Retrieved October 28, 2024 – via Newspapers.com.
^"Channel 47 shuffles schedule". Lansing State Journal. Lansing, Michigan. December 14, 1988. p. 2D. Retrieved October 28, 2024 – via Newspapers.com.
^Hughes, Mike (September 15, 1990). "Sly Fox slides into fall season". Lansing State Journal. Lansing, Michigan. pp. 1D, 6D. Retrieved October 28, 2024 – via Newspapers.com.
^Hughes, Mike (August 21, 1990). "Channel 47 catches Fox, 'Simpsons'". Lansing State Journal. Lansing, Michigan. pp. 1D, 5D. Retrieved October 28, 2024 – via Newspapers.com.
^ abHughes, Mike (September 8, 1997). "TV's new faces". Lansing State Journal. Lansing, Michigan. pp. 1D, 7D. Retrieved October 28, 2024 – via Newspapers.com.
^Hughes, Mike (February 27, 1997). "Two local news shows in works". Lansing State Journal. Lansing, Michigan. pp. 1B, 3B. Retrieved October 28, 2024 – via Newspapers.com.
^Hughes, Mike (April 4, 1998). "How do local TV stations stack up?". Lansing State Journal. Lansing, Michigan. p. 5D. Retrieved October 28, 2024 – via Newspapers.com.
^Hughes, Mike (October 1, 2018). "Local TV news expands to 90 minutes". Lansing State Journal. Lansing, Michigan. p. 4D. Retrieved October 28, 2024 – via Newspapers.com.
(*) – indicates station is in one of Michigan's primary TV markets (**) – indicates station is in an out-of-state TV market, but reaches a small portion of Michigan
(*) – indicates station is in one of Michigan's primary TV markets (**) – indicates station is in an out-of-state TV market, but reaches a small portion of Michigan