- WXPO-TV
Infobox_Broadcast
call_letters = WXPO-TV
station_
station_slogan =
station_branding =
analog = 50 (UHF)
digital = N/A
affiliations = Defunct, deleted
founded =1969
location =Manchester, New Hampshire /Lowell, Massachusetts
callsign_meaning =
owner =Merrimack Valley Communications
former_callsigns =
former_affiliations = Independent (1969-70)
effective_radiated_power =
homepage =WXPO-TV was a short-lived television station that was licensed to
Manchester, New Hampshire ; but mainly targeted theBoston market. Owned byMerrimack Valley Communications , the station aired on channel 50.History
WXPO-TV signed on early in October 1969, from two studios. Its offices and master production facilities were located on Dutton Street in downtown
Lowell, Massachusetts ; however, its transmitter and "main" studio was on Governor Dinsmore Road inWindham, New Hampshire to comply withFCC regulations requiring that a station's transmitter be located within 15 miles of the city of license. The original vision was to airbusiness news during the daytime, and a general entertainment format -- including sports -- late in the afternoon and in the evening.Its "Treehouse 50" program in the afternoons gained a cult following with Boston-area college students, as it had
slapstick comedy and theWarner Brothers cartoons that had been released to television stations at that time. In addition, channel 50 was the first station to have news updates every hour, long before the 24-hour news sources of the early 1990s, was the first New England television station (beating WKBG, nowWLVI ) to air a ten o'clock newscast (however, it had nonewsfilm to use), and attempted to do live remotes with some mixed success. In addition, WXPO was infamous for aNew Year's Eve show that by 1:00 a.m. had started to become particularly strange.However, the station's coverage in many parts of
Greater Boston was spotty at best. The station's transmitter was located less than 1,000 feet from WLLH-AM 1400, making high-quality production impossible during the day due to RF interference with the cameras. Advertisers were scared off when the "Lowell Sun " blacklisted anyone who advertised on the station. Bills went unpaid for several months.By early 1970, the vast majority (90%) of the staff was removed from the payroll, although many continued with the station, believing it could pull through. Unfortunately for them, the spring of that year saw the Lowell studio closing its doors. Finally, in June the power company pulled the plug at the Windham studios during a "Maverick" rerun, taking WXPO off the air.
On
July 17 ,1973 , channel 50 returned to the air with a test transmission, with plans to return the station to the air later that year, possibly as New Hampshire'sCBS affiliate. Unfortunately, those plans were never realized, and the WXPO-TV license was deleted in 1975.External links
* [http://www.geocities.com/Athens/Olympus/3514/wxpo.html WXPO-TV 50 at UHF Morgue]
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