WGNO (channel 26) is a television station in New Orleans, Louisiana, United States, affiliated with ABC. It is owned by Nexstar Media Group alongside WNOL-TV (channel 38), an owned-and-operated station of The CW. The two stations share studios at The Galleria in Metairie; WGNO's transmitter is located in Chalmette, Louisiana.
Channel 26 went on the air October 14, 1967, as WWOM-TV, the first independent station in New Orleans. After being sold in bankruptcy in 1971, the station was renamed WGNO-TV in 1972. For most of its first 16 years on air, the station was known for airing old movies, programs turned down by the local network affiliates, and a series of low-budget local shows. This changed in 1983, when Tribune Broadcasting acquired WGNO-TV; Tribune brought stronger programming purchases, improved local programming, and the resources needed to contend in a market that gained a second major independent station. It was a charter affiliate of The WB in 1995.
The purchase of New Orleans's previous ABC affiliate, WVUE-DT, by a group linked to the Fox network led to an affiliation switch in New Orleans on January 1, 1996, in which ABC programming moved to WGNO. The station also began producing local newscasts, which found some viewers but generally were in fourth-place in the market. Tribune acquired WNOL-TV in 2000, but the stations' operations were not integrated in one facility until July 2005—a month before Hurricane Katrina evicted them from the New Orleans Centre.
In the wake of the hurricane, WGNO lacked permanent studios for two years; it produced local newscasts from a compound of trailers and with anchors reporting from outside for months, but there was little ratings movement. The station changed the format of its evening news programs in 2011 to News with a Twist, mixing news and entertainment features. This lasted until 2020, in the wake of the COVID-19 pandemic and Nexstar's purchase of Tribune.
Test patterns were broadcast for the first time on September 27, 1967, and WWOM-TV began programming on October 14, 1967. The first program aired was the 1927 film The Jazz Singer. The debut of an independent station in the market immediately provided flexibility and allowed shows not aired by the network affiliates to be seen in the market. Months after going on the air, WWOM-TV aired the 1968 Winter Olympics after ABC affiliate WVUE-DT was told it had to air them live. It experimented with all-night broadcasting, the first local station to do so, and it also featured the local program Nite People, a late night variety show that turned into the local equivalent of The Gong Show and gained a cult following; after its original run from 1968 to 1970, a revival special was aired in 1987.
Mark Lorando, television columnist for The Times-Picayune, described WWOM-TV/WGNO-TV from 1967 to 1983 as "an artfully bad independent station", while one of his predecessors, Benjamin Morrison, noted that its local programming "offered levels of amateurishness previously undreamed of". Local programming during this period included such shows as the music program Homegrown; monthly teen magazine Hey Kids, It's For You; Black Is..., a discussion show about issues in the local Black community; and the Groovy Guru, future WDSU weathercaster and former radio DJ Dan Milham hosting movies. In 1977–78, the station aired twelve road games of the Utah Jazz of the NBA; the schedule increased to 25 games in the 1978–79 season, the team's last in New Orleans before moving to Utah.
In 1978, WGNO-TV was purchased by Greater New Orleans Television, a subsidiary of General Media Corporation of Rockford, Illinois, for $4.9 million. (CCSI then invested in New Orleans radio station WBYU.) Under General Media, the station moved its transmitter to a new, purpose-built tower that offered greater height than the International Trade Mart building and provided for a power increase from 500,000 to 2.5 million watts. The station's programming continued to be a mix of local shows of secondary interest, older sitcoms and movies, and religious programs.
From 1982 to 1987, WGNO aired a series of public service announcements featuring a local mime known as Tom Foote; Foote was seen in area schools and in the French Quarter. For a time, the station produced an hour-long program called Tom Foote's Video Clubhouse.
Tribune brought to WGNO its considerable clout as a buyer of programming on the syndication market and its other resources as a company, which it would need to overcome the "shoestring" management style of General Media and face its new competition at WNOL-TV. Stronger programming and equipment were acquired. The company also used its muscle to consolidate WGNO operations within the International Trade Mart. With operations on the 20th, 24th, 28th, and 29th floors, its employees called themselves "elevator people", a moniker brought to an end in 1985 when Tribune consolidated operations on the 28th and 29th floors. As WNOL-TV's ratings swooned, WGNO established itself as the leading independent in the market; its early evening syndicated shows were beating WVUE in the ratings. It took until 1989 for WNOL-TV, bolstered by Fox prime-time programming, to tie WGNO again in total-day ratings, a situation that persisted into the early 1990s.
Local programming continued to play a role at channel 26. Real New Orleans, a weekly and later monthly program aired in late nights, debuted in 1990, and the station also had sports programs ( Saints Sideline, Hometown Sports Page, Friday Night Football) and a cooking program, Cookin' with Soul. In 1993, the station debuted a new local game show: N.O. It Alls, which was produced by Brandon Tartikoff. Tartikoff, the former head of programming at NBC, had relocated to New Orleans because his daughter was rehabilitating after a car accident. The program continued in production through November 1996 and aired on WGNO through the end of that year. From 1993 (when the team relocated to New Orleans from Denver) through 1995, WGNO served as the over-the-air broadcaster of the American Association's New Orleans Zephyrs (now a member of the Pacific Coast League), carrying a handful of games a year from the minor league baseball franchise.
In November 1993, Tribune committed to the new The WB Television Network, a new service to be launched by Warner Bros. Television in January 1995. Tribune would hold an ownership stake, and six of the company's seven independent stations, including WGNO, would join at launch.
As FCC approval of the SF Broadcasting purchase was delayed by more than a year because of a commission inquiry as to whether Fox was a foreign-owned company as a result of Rupert Murdoch's interest, ABC opted to strike first. On August 10, 1995, WGNO was finally announced as the new ABC affiliate in New Orleans beginning in 1996. That set up an affiliation switch on January 1, 1996. WGNO became the new ABC affiliate, while WB shows moved to WNOL-TV and Fox moved to WVUE. The switch, however, caused overall ratings to fall at channel 26.
WGNO and Atlanta's new CBS affiliate, WANF, were the only two Big Three affiliates the company owned at the time and outliers in Tribune's portfolio of Fox and WB affiliates; in 1998, Tribune began actively seeking trades for the two outlets in exchange for WB and Fox stations elsewhere. While such a trade was arranged for WGNX, Tribune took WGNO off the market after the legalization of duopolies in November 1999; this allowed it to acquire WNOL-TV outright and create the first such pairing in New Orleans. The stations were combined under WGNO's general manager; WNOL began to air prime time news breaks promoting channel 26's late newscasts. Despite being commonly owned, WNOL and WGNO did not operate from the same facility until July 2005, when channel 26 moved from the 28th and 29th floors of the World Trade Center (the former International Trade Mart) to the New Orleans Centre, where WNOL had been operating since 2000. The relocation and installation of new transmitters at Chalmette were an investment of nearly $10 million.
The Trade Center was only a temporary solution. In August 2007, Tribune officially moved to The Galleria in Metairie. Work also began on restoring digital broadcast facilities. WGNO had been assigned channel 15 for digital use and WNOL channel 40, but after Katrina, Tribune opted to rebuild WNOL on channel 15—broadcasting both stations—and convert WGNO to digital on channel 26 at the analog transition, sharing a site with WDSU.
During Hurricane Ida on August 29, 2021, The Galleria studio's ceiling was ripped by high winds at the control room forcing all staff, producers, and anchors to evacuate the studio, just minutes prior to a power outage being reported inside the studio.
ABC 26 News launched with a 10 p.m. newscast on March 18, 1996. The program was anchored by Andre Trevigne, pulling double duty with a radio show on WWL radio; Brad Giffen, formerly of Toronto; meteorologist Bruce Katz; and Daniels. It featured a high story count and fast pace and was aimed toward a younger audience than the existing newscasts in New Orleans. While another newscast was not immediately planned, news ratings struggled, in part because the shift from an independent to an ABC affiliate was also a shift from a more urban to a more suburban audience. With general manager Bill Ross believing that a second newscast was necessary for people to take the station seriously as a news source, a 5 p.m. edition debuted in September 1996; Trevigne moved to that newscast only, citing her radio duties, and eventually left in April 1997. WGNO slowly carved out more of an audience for its evening newscasts than initially anticipated, adding a 6 p.m. half-hour in 1998 on the strength of beating WDSU and WVUE; though it was in third or fourth in most timeslots still, it was second at 5 p.m., and its audience was younger than that of the news offerings on channels 4, 6, or 8. However, the Project for Excellence in Journalism gave the station's news output one of the lowest grades in the country and criticized it for covering too many car accidents.
While ratings had steadily increased in the late 1990s, they slipped badly in May 2002; the station posted year-over-year viewership declines of 20 percent or more for each of its three daily newscasts. Daniels moved from anchoring sports to news later that year, an experiment that accompanied an overhaul of the station's newscasts with new visual elements and weekly contributions from Virgets. The experiment ended when veteran New Orleans anchor Susan Roesgen became the 10 p.m. anchor in November 2003. Founding news director Paula Pendarvis departed in February 2004.
WGNO returned to the Trade Center on a temporary basis in April 2006 (remaining there until moving to The Galleria in August 2007), though much of the equipment that had been left at the Trade Center had been damaged from being shut off and stored in hot, humid spaces. During this time, WGNO began producing a half-hour prime time newscast at 9 p.m. for WNOL-TV on May 1, 2006; news had been planned for a number of years under Tribune management. The program lasted four years and was canceled on June 4, 2010, owing to low ratings and a desire to promote channel 38's sitcoms.
After twelve and a half years, as part of a push by Tribune, WGNO debuted a morning newscast on September 29, 2008: Good Morning New Orleans, a two-hour conversational news and lifestyle program. However, the station's ratings were still stuck in last place: new anchors were introduced to the morning and evening newscasts in 2009.
The News with a Twist format was abandoned in 2020 and consigned to occasional specials due to the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic. Daniels died in August 2024, having been the only sports director in the station's history.
+Subchannels of WGNO ! scope = "col" | Channel ! scope = "col" | Res. ! scope = "col" | Aspect ! scope = "col" | Short name ! scope = "col" | Programming |
The 54.2 and 54.3 subchannels of WUPL is broadcast on WGNO as part of the market's ATSC 3.0 (NextGen TV) deployment plan. WUPL began broadcasting in ATSC 3.0 on December 15, 2022.
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