| To
broaden perspectives and deepen the understanding of our viewers
WMVS-TV,
Channel 10, and WMVT-TV Channel 36, are not-for-profit, educational
and public television stations, established to serve, inform,
educate and improve the quality of life of the people in the eleven
counties of southeastern Wisconsin with exceptional quality television
programming.
About
Milwaukee Public Television…
As
a public service outreach venture for the Milwaukee Area Technical
College, WMVS/WMVT, Channels 10&36, serve 2.1 million potential
viewers with public and educational television programming. More
than 116 hours of programming each day, 365 days a year, are delivered
by the unique operation of three, co-located, full power broadcast
services. Nearly 1.9 million viewers watch 10&36 each week. The
Nielsen rating service currently ranks Milwaukee the 33rd largest
television market in the nation.
WMVS,
Channel 10, began broadcasting in October 1957 as the 28th educational
television station to go on the air in the nation with four hours
of programming, Monday through Friday. Today, Channel 10 mixes
quality occupational, cultural, minority, public affairs, entertainment,
recreation, Ready to Learn and life-long educational television
programming from PBS, regional PTV networks and independent producers.
Locally produced specials and series deal with topics of importance
to the diverse audience served.
WMVT,
Channel 36, began service in January 1963, and fulfills a more
formal educational mission with dayparts devoted to statewide
K-12 in-classroom instruction, MATC College of the Air associate
degree courses, and regularly scheduled news, sports and information
programs.
WMVS-DT,
Channel 8, inaugurated digital television service in the Milwaukee
area in April 2000 and currently carries pass-through High Definition
(HDTV) specials and four multicast Standard Definition (SDTV)
services from PBS.
WMVT-DT,
Channel 35, is scheduled to begin service in the spring of 2003.
The
stations have a rich history of technological and programming
firsts…
- 1954,
MATC establishes TV technician and telecasting training programs
- 1957,
the first live instructional broadcasts to the Milwaukee Public
Schools as part of Ford Foundation experiment
- 1960,
first adult telecourse, Inquiring Mind, produced for National
Educational Television (NET)
- 1961,
first live remote broadcast form Wisconsin State Fair
- 1963,
first live broadcast of Great Circus Parade (eventually coverage
offered nationwide)
- 1963,
live coverage of Milwaukee Public Schools Desegregation Hearings
- 1965,
the nation's first educational TV broadcast of a color program
using an experimental flying spot scanner
- 1967,
WMVS originated the first live interconnection with the Public
Broadcasting Laboratory (national network)
- 1969,
first Great TV Auction - raised $67,000
- 1969,
live broadcast of the opening of the Milwaukee Performing
Arts Center
- 1970,
Hatha Yoga with Kathleen Hitchcock premieres (becomes national
series)
- 1972,
MATC creates College of the Air (now Associates Degree in
Liberal Arts can be earned via TV)
- 1975,
first on-air membership campaign raised $23,000
- 1977,
first program underwriting announcement
- 1979,
first live Satellite Forum on the Nation's Economy broadcast
with Rep. Henry Reuss in Washington D.C.
- 1979,
first live telecast of a courtroom trial in Wisconsin, second
in nation - 'Amaro Murder Trial'
- 1980,
public/private transmission tower cooperative between WVTV-TV,
Channel 18 and Channels 10&36
- 1984,
Outdoor Wisconsin premiers (becomes national series)
- 1985,
first station in Wisconsin to broadcast stereo sound
- 1987,
National Emmy award recognition for participation in national
Descriptive Video Service experiment
- 1987,
Local Hispanic program Conciencia offers Spanish translation
on Second Audio Program (SAP)
- 1989,
The Great Circus Parade taped in experimental HDTV format
- 1990,
Tracks Ahead series premieres (becomes national series)
- 1992,
WMVT-TV used to conduct worlds first full-power digital broadcast
test with Zenith/ATT
- 1994,
installed digital satellite reception equipment
- 1994,
began cooperative effort with WTMJ-TV for local news breaks
and election coverage
- 1995,
inaugurated web site: http://mptv.org
- 1998,
ground was broken for 1,221-foot digital tower cooperative
with American Tower, Inc.
- 1998,
first experimental DTV transmission of John Glenn Space Shuttle
Lift-Off
- 1999,
Great Circus Parade produced as the first live HDTV broadcast
on PBS
- 2000,
WMVS-DT, Channel 8, first DTV to sign on the air in Milwaukee
In
1946, the Milwaukee Radio and Television Council formed to encourage
quality programming. In 1967, that group evolved into the Community
Broadcast Council and took on the added role of seeking financial
support for the stations. Today, the Channel 10/36 Friends, Inc.,
a not-for-profit fundraising organization, supplies more than
50% of the operating budget for the stations through generous
donations from individual members, corporate underwriters, and
auction donors. The licensee, the Milwaukee Area Technical College
(MATC), provides substantial support for station equipment and
operating expenses with additional funding from the Corporation
for Public Broadcasting (CPB) and the State of Wisconsin for services
provided to the Educational Communications Board (ECB).
The
stations' blend of national and locally produced programs provides
opportunities for personal, civic, and multicultural enrichment,
as well as increased understanding of the global economy, international
business and world affairs. Local production efforts continued
to be responsive to the community with the series Black Nouveau
and Adelante!. Program Advisory Panels (PAP) enlists stakeholder
input from the African American and Latino communities to further
enhance the content of these programs.
Ongoing
weekly series include: Outdoor Wisconsin, Interchange, I Remember
Milwaukee, and Great Lakes Gardener which are augmented with specials
that showcase area arts activities or deal with compelling issues
in the community. The fifth season of the nationally distributed
Tracks Ahead is being produced in High Definition and is scheduled
for release in the fourth quarter of 2001. Overall station performance
is discussed monthly by the Public Television Committee of the
MATC Board and in quarterly meetings with the Community Advisory
Board, a group of interested citizens from each county in the
stations coverage area.
More
than 60 MATC degree program students gain real-life TV industry
experience by utilizing 10&36 facilities, staff mentors, and local
production settings.
From
the 1950 proposal for an educational TV system for the Milwaukee
area championed by Dr. William Rasche, Director of Milwaukee Vocational
and Adult Schools, Milwaukee Mayor Frank Zeilder, and Milwaukee
Public School Superintendent Harold Vincent and supported by the
Milwaukee Public Museum, the UW-Milwaukee Extension service and
the Milwaukee Public Library, WMilwaukeeVocationalSchools and
WMilwaukeeVocationalTechnical have grown into recognized contributors
to the area's quality-of-life. On the eve of the digital age,
WMVS/WMVT has assembled services that include full service analog
television, full service HDTV and SDTV digital television, broadcast
data delivery, world-wide-web presence, 4 channels of ITFS, closed
captioning for the hearing impaired, descriptive video for the
visually challenged and publishing of Fine Tuning Magazine under
the umbrella title of Milwaukee Public Television (MPTV). |