WTVA is being acquired by Gray Media in a $171 million deal where Allen Media Group is selling ten of its television stations to the broadcast giant.
The purchase of Northeast Mississippi’s top-rated television station enhances Gray’s portfolio of television stations in the state and across the South, many of which have a strong commitment to journalism. The acquisition gives the company a television station in every Mississippi TV media market except Greenwood-Greenville. Gray also owns TV stations in Birmingham, Memphis, Nashville and Huntsville. In addition, it recently created broadcast TV sports networks in the Nashville and New Orleans regions.
The purchase of WTVA, which still needs federal approval, will end the five years of ownership by comedian and entrepreneur Byron Allen. That five years included job cuts and plans by his company earlier this year to replace the station’s local weather department with coverage from The Weather Channel. The plan was scrapped after a week of harsh public criticism.
Some local public school districts have already started classes for the new year, but most will begin by week’s end:
July 21 Corinth
July 21-22 Starkville-Oktibbeha
July 24 Columbus Lowndes County West Point
July 28 Noxubee County
July 30 Alcorn County North Tippah
July 31 Aberdeen Baldwyn Booneville Lafayette County Marshall County Okolona Pontotoc County
August 1 Amory Benton County Choctaw County Coffeeville Itawamba County Kosciusko Lee County Louisville Monroe County Nettleton New Albany Pontotoc City South Tippah Tishomingo County Tupelo Union County Water Valley Webster County
August 4 Attala County Oxford
August 5 Calhoun County Chickasaw County Prentiss County
Aerial view of damage in Gulfport, Mississippi, from Hurricane Katrina taken September 6, 2005. Department of Homeland Security. Federal Emergency Management Agency. Office of External Affairs. Public Affairs Division.
Sportswriter Sally Jenkins referenced her reporting in Mississippi on Hurricane Katrina in the announcement to her colleagues she is leaving The Washington Post to become a staff writer for The Atlantic:
Only the people who live their work in a newsroom will understand this: one of the best tastes I ever had was in a Mississippi motel parking lot at 1 a.m. sharing shots of Maker’s Mark, neat, with Washington Post photographers out of a makeshift bar in the back of a rented SUV. We’d spent the day covering the damage Hurricane Katrina had wrought with a 22-foot wall of water and 160 mph winds, and our dinner was whiskey and fried pickles, and it was good.
Earlier in the day after we saw a grand piano in a treetop, we’d interviewed the Gulfport mayor, who’d resorted to looting because his town was so cut off. He’d told his police chief to hotwire a truck. The police chief shot back, “I wasn’t cut out to be a crook; that’s why I went into law enforcement.”
“Well, can we get someone from the jail to do it?” the mayor asked.
Best quote I ever got.
Me, Jonathan Newton, and Michel Du Cille shared a two double-beds Hampton Inn room where the door wouldn’t lock because the hurricane had ruined the motel’s electronics, and we saw each other in our pajamas and brushed our teeth together.
Hundreds of us across the newsroom have had experiences like these with each other. Every two years in Sports, eight or ten of us would ship off together to the Olympics in some fine international city we rarely saw the lights of, because we were trapped in press pens in stadium tunnels, so closely packed that as my colleague Barry Svrluga says, “It’s like working inside someone’s mouth.” When deadline was finally over at 3 a.m., we’d entertain ourselves with a liquored-up singing game Liz Clarke named, “Stupid Guy Anthems.”
So, it’s with a spear in my heart that I separate from you, my adored friends and colleagues.
The Washington Post has given me most of what I have in this life, both materially and in pride of purpose. I came to work here at a very unfinished 24 years old, and this place made me. Taught me, chiseled me, formed whatever is good and integral in the work. In 30 years, l’ve not had a single unhappy moment in its newsroom; rather, l’ve been outrageously spoiled by its editors and publishers, starting with Don Graham, Ben Bradlee, Len Downie, Liz Spayd and George Solomon right through William Lewis, Matt Murray, Liz Seymour, Jason Murray, and Matt Rennie.
For a lot of that time, I was a woman working in a man’s business. A word about that. I’ve had an army of brothers here. I went into every assignment utterly confident that anyone who tried to hassle me, or mess with any of us, would be dealing with a united group of teammates ready to step forward and put that person into a wall. That’s been an incredible luxury, and I owe every one of them thanks for that, from Michael Wilbon to Jerry Brewer, Adam Kilgore, Barry Svrluga, Dave Sheinin, Rick Maese, right down to young Sam Fortier.
That said, can you imagine how gratifying it is to look up and see seated in our sports section the blazingly talented Candace Buckner at one desk, Ava Wallace at another, Chelsea Janes at another, Emily Giambalvo at another, and Bailey Johnson at another? Now that’s a job effing well done by this newsroom, and it gives me peace and completion.
All of which is to say I’m not leaving out of unhappiness. I’m leaving for an opportunity – the only other job I ever coveted in this world, at The Atlantic Monthly. I have a weakness for literary pursuits, and it got me.
I will so miss the sweat, the adventure, and the unruly carping and bitching that hides our bone-deep devotion to craft, and to this place.
I see the glimmer of a new Washinton Post – one that moves. It has to be right-sized, and young trees planted, but when the clocks all start chiming at the same time, it will be glorious. I believe that and you should too.
Found a TV Guide from the week of September 18-24 in 1982, which included an ad for the news on WTVA. As you can see, the station was celebrating its 25th anniversary. (We’re now in the 68th year.) As for what appeared on the air on Wednesday, September 22, 1982:
5:30 am NBC News 6:00 am Mornin’ 7:00 am Today 9:00 am Donahue 10:00 am Texas 11:00 am Doctors 11:30 am Search for Tomorrow 12:00 pm Noon 12:30 pm Days of our Lives 1:30 pm Another World 2:30 pm Fantasy 3:30 pm Tom and Jerry 4:00 pm What’s Happening 4:30 pm Little House on the Prairie 5:30 pm NBC Nightly News 6:00 pm Nine Alive News at 6 6:30 pm Family Feud 7:00 pm Real People 8:30 pm Family Ties 9:00 pm Quincy 10:00 pm Nine Alive News at 10 10:30 pm Tonight 11:30 pm Late Night with David Letterman 12:30 am NBC News Overnight 1:30 am Nine Alive News at 10 repeat
The first episode of Family Ties aired on this night. It was also the season premiere for Real People, which is the show Byron Allen hosted before he became the owner of WTVA four decades later.
I shared with Simon Owens, who covers the media industry, the significant change we’re seeing when it comes to weather coverage in our corner of the world. First came Matt Laubhan’s departure from WTVA earlier this month after more than a decade as chief meteorologist to start an all-digital weather service. Now comes word that James Spann is doing the same thing. However, he says he will remain with ABC 33/40 in Birmingham as its chief meteorologist when his service launches August 11.
Of course, changes in the media landscape are nothing new. I grew up in a world where Top 40 music formats transitioned from AM to FM radio. There was no such thing as cable television for me until I moved from suburban New Orleans to Amory in the 1980s. And the internet, smartphones and social media were not available at the start of my broadcast journalism career. Some of the content for my newscasts came from phone calls, faxes and the AP wire on a printer where I reused ribbon to save money.
And here we are with change again as more and more people try to find a way to make a living doing news in a digital world rather than through legacy media. The retired me is relieved that I’m getting to sit this one out, but my younger self would look forward to the challenge that’s ahead. Regardless of which path is taken, godspeed to those who are on the journey.