Subchannels (see article) | ||
Owner Rhode Island PBS Foundation First air date June 8, 1967; 49 years ago (1967-06-08) |
WSBE-TV is Rhode Island's only public television station. The license is owned by the Rhode Island PBS Foundation, a nonprofit organization.
Contents
History
The station began broadcasting on June 8, 1967 from the campus of Rhode Island College. In 1974, WSBE moved to the former WPRO-TV (now WPRI-TV) facilities at 24 Mason Street in Providence. In January 1991, WSBE moved to new studios on 50 Park Lane in Providence, near the Cranston city line. Its analog transmitter was located on Neutaconkanut Hill in Johnston, until the FCC-mandated digital conversion in 2009. The digital TV transmitter is now located in Rehoboth, Massachusetts. From 1973 to 2000, WSBE-TV's programming was relayed in Westerly on translator W62AB. This translator was turned off in 2000, largely because of the high penetration of cable in the state. On May 1, 2003, WSBE rebranded itself as Rhode Island PBS.
WSBE-TV's license was originally held by the Rhode Island State Board of Education (from which the call letters are derived). In 1981, what had become the Board of Regents for Education transferred the station to the Rhode Island Public Telecommunications Authority, a quasi-state agency. The Channel 36 Foundation was founded in 1987 as an independent fundraising arm of WSBE; it subsequently became the Rhode Island PBS Foundation following the station's 2003 rebranding. In June 2012, the Rhode Island Public Telecommunications Authority voted to begin the process of transitioning WSBE-TV from a state licensee to a community licensee, with the Rhode Island PBS Foundation assuming full control of the station. According to a release announcing the decision, the state budget extended funding to the station until the end of the fiscal year on June 30, 2013. The license transfer was completed on October 10, 2012.
Digital channels
The station's digital signal is multiplexed:
Analog-to-digital conversion
On January 16, 2009, the analog transmitter for WSBE suffered a 'catastrophic failure'. The old RCA transmitter developed a leak in the water cooling system. Due the scarcity of parts, time required to repair (two weeks minimum), cost, and the proximity to the original February 17 date for the analog shutdown, the station discontinued regular programming on its analog signal, over UHF channel 36, at that time. The station's digital signal remained on its pre-transition UHF channel 21 on February 18, 2009 , using PSIP to display the station's virtual channel as its former UHF analog channel 36.
Programming
WSBE airs most popular PBS series (Nature, Masterpiece, Antiques Roadshow), on typically no less than an eight-day delay from common carriage public television stations such as Boston's WGBH-TV. WSBE has differentiated its on air schedule by including independent local and national productions, and content from program distributors American Public Television, National Educational Telecommunications Association (NETA), Executive Program Services. "Destination viewing" (content that draws a loyal audience week after week) includes The Lawrence Welk Show, Doc Martin, opera specials, and a Tuesday night rotation of "Britcoms" from the BBC, including Are You Being Served?, Last of the Summer Wine, As Time Goes By, Vicar of Dibley, Keeping Up Appearances, and several others.
WSBE co-produces the nationally distributed Italian cooking show, Ciao Italia.
Local content produced by WSBE includes:
Recent series not currently in production: