Connecticut Public Television

"CPTV" redirects here; this article is not to be confused with Columbia Pictures Television or CBS Paramount Television.
Connecticut Public Television
Founded October 1, 1962
06-0758938[1]
Registration no. CRR00000000000173297[2]
Purpose Public Broadcasting for Connecticut
Location
  • 240 New Britain Avenue Hartford, CT (former)[3]
    1049 Asylum Ave. Hartford, CT
Key people
Jerry Franklin (CEO)[4]
Meg Sakellarides Mokoski (CFO)
Subsidiaries CPTV Learning Lab
Website www.cptv.org
The studio of CPTV and WNPR in Hartford, Connecticut

Connecticut Public Television (CPTV) is the PBS member network for the U.S. state of Connecticut. It is owned by Connecticut Public Broadcasting, who also owns the state's National Public Radio member, Connecticut Public Radio (WNPR). Together, the television and radio stations make up the Connecticut Public Broadcasting Network. CPBN is the state's only locally owned media organization producing TV, radio, print and Internet content for distribution to Connecticut's wide-ranging and diverse communities. The broadcasting company is led by Jerry Franklin, President of CPTV. The organizational structure of CPTV also includes a Board of Trustees.[5]

History

The network's first station, WEDH in Hartford, signed on in 1962, airing broadcasts in "black and white" at the Trinity College Library. It was the fourth educational television station in New England, following WGBH-TV in Boston, WENH-TV in Durham, New Hampshire (now part of New Hampshire Public Television), and WCBB in Augusta, Maine (now part of the Maine Public Broadcasting Network).[6] Originally a member of National Educational Television, it joined PBS in 1969. Originally known as Connecticut Educational Television, it became Connecticut Public Television in 1984.

CPTV remained based on rented space at Trinity College until selling its headquarters back to the school for $10 million in 2002.[7] In 2004, CPTV moved to a state-of-the-art facility on Asylum Avenue in the Asylum Hill neighborhood of Hartford. The infrastructure of CPTV was eventually upgraded through a partnership with Sony Systems Integration Center (SIC), which enabled the delivery of HD quality telecommunications to subscribers. [8] In the 1990s, a "volunteer of the week" program was offered.[9]

Awards

Since 1985, CPTV has received the following awards:[10]

CPTV

WNPR

Shows produced by CPTV

CPTV was the broadcast and web streaming home of UConn Women's Basketball from 1994-2012.[11] The game broadcasts were the highest rated locally produced program in the PBS system.

CPTV is a major producer of children's programming for the PBS system. Its best-known offering was Barney & Friends. The character was actually discovered in 1991 when the daughter of CPTV executive Larry Rifkin bought a Barney and the Backyard Gang home video and was mesmerized by it. CPTV continued to distribute the show until 2006; it is now distributed by WNET in New York. Other children's shows originated by CPTV are Thomas & Friends, Bob The Builder, Angelina Ballerina, and The Saddle Club.

Throughout the 1990s, M*A*S*H star Alan Alda hosted a science show called Scientific American Frontiers, based on the popular magazine Scientific American. That show was also produced by CPTV and aired nationwide.

Since 2002, CPTV has been working with HiT Entertainment, who has helped distribute some of CPTV's children's programs. Beginning in 2008, most of CPTV's kids programming (which are all of post 2002 production with HiT Entertainment) have been presented by WNET.

Other programs produced by or for CPTV include:[12]

  • Able Lives
  • All Things Connecticut
  • Behind the Wheel: Parents and Teens
  • Closing the Gap
  • The Cobblestone Corridor
  • Critical Call for Oral Health
  • Critical Condition: Focus on Connecticut
  • Eating CT
  • Facing the Mortgage Crisis
  • Landscapes Through Time with David Dunlop
  • My First Breath
  • Open Doors to Family Learning
  • Opening Doors Opening Minds
  • OTR: On The Record
  • Positively Connecticut
  • Power of Giving
  • Sprawl: Driven by Denial
  • Impact
  • The Warming of Connecticut
  • Today's Children
  • Work Learn Live
  • Connecticut on Alert
  • WNPR Health Forum
  • Young American Heroes
  • A Child A Family A Future: Foster Care and Adoption in Connecticut

Stations

The CPTV stations are:

Station City of license Channels
(TV / DT)
First air date Fourth letter
meaning
ERP
HAAT
Transmitter Coordinates Facility ID Public license
information
WEDH Hartford 24 (PSIP)
45 (UHF)
October 1, 1962 Hartford 490 kW 505 m 41°42′13″N 72°49′57″W / 41.70361°N 72.83250°W / 41.70361; -72.83250 (WEDH) 13602 Profile
CDBS
WEDW Bridgeport 49 (PSIP)
49 (UHF)
December 17, 1967 Western Connecticut 170 kW 222 m 41°16′44″N 73°11′8″W / 41.27889°N 73.18556°W / 41.27889; -73.18556 (WEDW) 13594 Profile
CDBS
WEDN Norwich 53 (PSIP)
9 (VHF)
March 5, 1967 Norwich 4.2 kW 192 m 41°31′14″N 72°10′3″W / 41.52056°N 72.16750°W / 41.52056; -72.16750 (WEDN) 13607 Profile
CDBS
WEDY New Haven 65 (PSIP)
41 (UHF)
December 1, 1974 Yale University 60 kW 94 m 41°19′42″N 72°54′25″W / 41.32833°N 72.90694°W / 41.32833; -72.90694 (WEDY) 13595 Profile
CDBS

The network previously operated a translator in Waterbury, W12BH (channel 12), which directly repeated WEDY. That station was taken off the air to allow WTXX to begin digital television operations.

CPTV is available on all cable systems in the state. On satellite, WEDH is available in nearly all of the state on the Hartford/New Haven DirecTV and Dish Network feeds, while WEDW is available on the New York City local feeds. This gives CPTV a potential audience of 21 million people in three states.

Digital television

Digital channels

The digital signals of CPTV's stations are multiplexed:

Channel Video Aspect PSIP Short Name Programming[13][14][15][16]
24.1 1080i 16:9 WEDH-1 Main CPTV programming / PBS
24.2 480i 4:3 WEDH-2 CPTV 4U
24.3 WEDH-3 CPTV Sports
49.1 1080i 16:9 WEDW-1 Main CPTV programming / PBS
49.2 480i 4:3 WEDW-2 CPTV 4U
49.3 WEDW-3 CPTV Sports
53.1 1080i 16:9 WEDN-1 Main CPTV programming / PBS
53.2 480i 4:3 WEDN-2 CPTV 4U
53.3 WEDN-3 CPTV Sports
65.1 480i 4:3 WEDY-1 CPTV Sports
65.2 WEDY-2 CPTV 4U
65.3 1080i 16:9 WEDY-3 Main CPTV programming / PBS

Analog-to-digital conversion

During 2009, in the lead-up to the analog-to-digital television transition that would ultimately occur on June 12, CPTV shut down the analog transmitters of its stations on a staggered basis. Listed below are the dates each analog transmitter ceased operations as well as their post-transition channel allocations:[17]

On March 16, 2011, the FCC granted WEDY its petition to move from VHF channel 6 to UHF channel 41 because of viewer reception issues and interference from both WPVI-TV in Philadelphia and WRGB in Schenectady, New York (both also operate on channel 6) after those two stations implemented recent power increases.[19]

CPBN Learning Lab

The CPBN Learning Lab's goal is to create 21st century journalists and train instructors to pass that gift forward. Donations from The Wounded Warrior Project, The Newman’s Own Foundation, Wal-Mart Foundation, SBM Charitable Foundation, Farmington Bank Community Foundation, and others were noted as making this Learning Lab possible.[20][21] In July 2013, Richard Blumenthal and Chris Murphy also obtained an Assistance to Firefighters Grant in the amount of $141,420 as a contribution to the lab for a series of fire safety videos.[22] The KBE Building Corporation was selected to build Robert Roach of Friar Associates' design for CPTV's learning lab, which was completed in Spring of 2013.[23] Presently, the Hartford Public Schools Journalism & Media Academy (JMA) receives full-time access to the facility in order to enhance media skills.

Since 2007, CPBN Media Lab instructors and mentors have provided real world technical and journalism training for over 600 Connecticut students through seminars, workshops and courses.

The Media Lab has brought journalism and technical media skills training to middle school students through its Future Producers Academy, "Media is Magic" SAND Media Enrichment Program and West Middle Media Project and for high school students through its Media 101 and Young Entrepreneur courses in its Impact Academy.

Internships are provided to undergraduate college students, often for college credit, and for recent graduates seeking to acquire technical and editorial skills, including researching, interviewing, shooting, editing, and posting.

Graduates of our college program have gone on to Journalism school in London, the masters of arts in Journalism program at Hofstra University, in online services at CPBN, as an animation and graphics producer at CPBN, as an account executive at WTNH-New Haven, and as working journalists as the editor of the Avon Patch and as a reporter for the Journal Inquirer. CPBN Media Lab graduates are also working at A&E Networks, Hasbro Studios, Nickelodeon, Sacred Heart University, the Rachael Ray Show, TracyLocke, Taft School, Mohegan Sun and CPBN Education.

The CPBN Media Lab has been a partner with the PBS NewsHour Student Reporting Labs from their inception in 2010, serving as the professional mentor for five Connecticut high schools, Hill Regional Career High School and the Metropolitan Business Academy in New Haven, Crosby High School in Waterbury, Terryville High School in Terryville and Bethel High School in Bethel.

Currently the media lab is serving as the professional mentors to the PBS NewsHour Student Reporting Lab it established at America's Choice at SAND school in Hartford, CT., where it is only one three in the nation to work with middle school students.

Projects produced by the Media lab include:

Awards & Recognition

CPTV Sports

An offshoot of CPTV, this channel provides 24/7 access to Connecticut sports.[24]

See also

References

  1. "How to Support WNPR". wnpr.org. Retrieved 1 November 2015.
  2. "CONNECTICUT PUBLIC BROADCASTING CORPORATION". fedvendor.com. Retrieved 1 November 2015.
  3. "A Science Odyssey: Resources: Map of Outreach Sites: Connecticut". pbs.org. Retrieved 1 November 2015.
  4. "Charity Navigator Rating - Connecticut Public Broadcasting". Charity Navigator. Retrieved 1 November 2015.
  5. "Board of Trustees". Connecticut Public Broadcasting. Retrieved 1 November 2015.
  6. Grandjean, Pat (April 2013). "CPTV Celebrates 50 Years: Present at the Creation". Connecticut Magazine.
  7. "Trinity College - Press Release". trincoll.edu. Retrieved 1 November 2015.
  8. http://broadcastengineering.com/infrastructure/broadcasting_upgrading_connecticut_public
  9. "Volunteer Of The Week". tribunedigital-thecourant. Retrieved 1 November 2015.
  10. "UCONNHUSKIES.COM  :: University of Connecticut Huskies Official Athletic Site". uconnhuskies.com. Retrieved 1 November 2015.
  11. Amarante, Joe (11 May 2012). "SNY steals, CPTV reels from UConn decision on Lady Huskies". New Haven Register. Retrieved 13 May 2012.
  12. http://www.cpbn.org/cptv-show-listing
  13. "RabbitEars.Info". rabbitears.info. Retrieved 22 November 2016.
  14. "RabbitEars.Info". rabbitears.info. Retrieved 22 November 2016.
  15. "RabbitEars.Info". rabbitears.info. Retrieved 22 November 2016.
  16. "RabbitEars.Info". rabbitears.info. Retrieved 22 November 2016.
  17. "DTV Tentative Channel Designations for the First and the Second Rounds" (PDF). Retrieved 2012-03-24.
  18. http://fjallfoss.fcc.gov/prod/cdbs/forms/prod/getattachment_exh.cgi?exhibit_id=619393
  19. http://www.fcc.gov/Daily_Releases/Daily_Business/2011/db0316/DA-11-501A1.pdf
  20. http://www.cpbn.org/pressrelease/cpbn%E2%80%99s-learning-lab-offers-free-program-teaching-war-veterans-valuable-digital-media-sk
  21. http://www.cpbn.org/files/Final-CPTV-Local-Content-and-Service-Report-2012.pdf
  22. "Blumenthal, Murphy, Larson Announce Federal Grant to CPTV to Produce Fire Safety Educational Videos". senate.gov. 8 July 2013. Retrieved 1 November 2015.
  23. http://www.cpbn.org/files/CPBN's%20Learning%20Lab%20on%20target%20for%20Fall%202013%20open_press%20release%20FINAL%20(2).doc
  24. http://www.cptvsports.org/node/371
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