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WHSV-TV
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WHSV-TV (channel 3) is a television station in Harrisonburg, Virginia, United States, affiliated with ABC. It is owned by Gray Media alongside two low-power stations: Class A dual Fox/CBS affiliate WSVF-CD (channel 43) and dual NBC/CW+ affiliate WSVW-LD (channel 30). The three stations share studios on North Main Street (US 11) in downtown Harrisonburg, and operate a newsroom in Fishersville, serving Staunton, Waynesboro, and Augusta County. WHSV-TV's transmitter is located at Elliott Knob west of Staunton.

Key Information

WHSV-TV operates four fill-in digital translators: on UHF channel 24 on Signal Knob near Strasburg, serving the Winchester−Front Royal area (in the Washington, D.C., television market); on channel 25 licensed to Broadway and covering Woodstock and Mt. Jackson; on channel 28 licensed to Luray and covering Page County; and on channel 34 licensed to Massanutten and covering Harrisonburg. Its signal is also relayed in Moorefield, West Virginia, on low-power translator W33EJ-D,[3] which is owned by Valley TV Cooperative, Inc.

As of December 1, 2019, WHSV is used to provide full-market over-the-air coverage of WSVW-LD (simulcast over WHSV-DT2) and WSVF-CD2 (simulcast over WHSV-DT5); however, only the WSVW-LD simulcast is aired in high definition.

History

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Early years

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Channel 3 signed on in October 1953, as WSVA-TV (for "We Serve Virginia Agriculture"). It was owned by Harrisonburg businessman Frederick L. Allman and his Shenandoah Valley Broadcasting Corporation along with WSVA radio (AM 550 and FM 100.7, now WQPO). The station was a primary NBC affiliate, with secondary CBS and ABC affiliations. The station also carried DuMont programs.[4] It was the only commercial station between Richmond and Roanoke until WVIR-TV signed on from Charlottesville in 1973. Although it was owned by one of Virginia's leading broadcasters, WSVA-TV operated on a shoestring budget. Station engineers switched to and from the signals of the three network affiliates in Washington, D.C. because it was unable to afford direct network feeds. The station did not air any locally produced programs (except for local newscasts) until 1956, when it built a studio along U.S. Route 33 in unincorporated Rockingham County. That year, Allman sold the WSVA stations to Transcontinent Television of Buffalo, New York, with NBC executive Hamilton Shea as a minority partner. Allman earned a handsome return on his original investment in WSVA radio in 1935.[5] In 1959, the Washington Evening Star, owner of WMAL AM-FM-TV in Washington, acquired Transcontinent's controlling interest, as well as 1% of Shea's stake.[6] The CBS affiliation was dropped in 1963.

WSVA-TV logo, circa 1970.

In 1965, the Star sold the WSVA stations to James Gilmore Jr., a Michigan businessman; the sale was necessary because WMAL-TV's new tall tower would have caused a large grade B overlap with WSVA-TV.[7] Under Gilmore's ownership, the station became a primary ABC affiliate in 1968. This was a very unusual move since, then as now, it was the only station in its market; ABC was not nearly on par with CBS and NBC in the ratings at the time (and would not be until the 1970s). It picked up NBC's morning program Today from 1968 until ABC debuted Good Morning America in 1975, but only aired the second hour of Today since the station did not sign on until 8 a.m. (a practice that continued well into the 1970s). Despite wealthier ownership, it was still unable to get a network feed. Occasionally, channel 3 accidentally aired WMAL-TV's commercials when engineers forgot to switch from WMAL-TV's signal during local breaks.

In 1975, channel 3 dropped the remaining NBC programs from its schedule. Gilmore sold WSVA-TV to Charlottesville-based Worrell Newspapers, publisher of The Daily Progress of Charlottesville, in 1976. Later that year, the station assumed its current WHSV-TV callsign.[8] Under Worrell, the station was finally able to acquire a direct network feed. WHSV launched a translator on UHF channel 64 in Charlottesville in 1979. WHSV marked Worrell's entry into broadcasting;[8] the company would subsequently add WIFR-TV in Rockford, Illinois, and WBNB-TV in the U.S. Virgin Islands to its group before selling the three stations to Benedek Broadcasting in 1986.[9]

Since 1990s

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In 1994, Fox approached WHSV regarding a secondary affiliation to provide over-the-air access to the network's new NFL coverage, including most games of the regional Washington Redskins (now the Washington Commanders). WHSV signed a two-year contract and did not renew it after the 1995–96 season due to unsatisfactory ratings.[10] This did not pose as much of a problem as it seemed on paper, as WTTG in Washington was (and still is) available on cable in the area. Construction of a new broadcast facility in downtown Harrisonburg began in 1998, with WHSV relocating there in the spring of 1999.

WHSV-TV logo, used from 1996 to 1999.

Benedek went bankrupt in 2002, and most of its stations, including WHSV, were bought by Gray Television.[11] A 5 p.m. weekday newscast was also added that same year. At that time, a new set was constructed in the station's Augusta County newsroom in Staunton. The streetside set featured a window overlooking downtown Staunton along West Frederick Street. The 5 p.m. weekday newscast became WHSV's first newscast to originate from the Augusta County Newsroom. In October 2003, WHSV began originating its 5 p.m. newscast from both Harrisonburg and Staunton. WHSV's 6 p.m. weekday newscast also originated from both Staunton and Harrisonburg for a brief period in the spring of 2004. During that time, WHSV's 6 p.m. weekday newscast featured three anchors. The three-anchor, dual-city format was abandoned after a few months.

WHSV logo, used from 1999 to 2006.

In August 2004, WHSV management began providing managerial, sales and human resources support to Gray Television's upstart CBS affiliate WCAV in Charlottesville. Several members of WHSV's news and production staff transferred to WCAV following its launch. That same year, WHSV's Charlottesville translator was broken off as a separate station serving as the market's ABC affiliate, WVAW-LP on channel 16.

To this day, WHSV remains the only full-power commercial station in the Shenandoah Valley. This is due to the area's small population, as well as the fact that virtually all of the market is located in the United States National Radio Quiet Zone. Low-power sister stations WSVF-CD and WSVW-LD now provide complete major-network service to the market. However, cable television providers still supplement the area with stations from Washington, Richmond or Charlottesville, depending on the location.

Subchannel history

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WHSV-DT3

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WHSV-DT3 is the Ion Television-affiliated third digital subchannel of WHSV-TV, broadcasting in 16:9 widescreen standard definition on channel 3.3.

On March 5, 2007, WHSV launched "TV3 Winchester", an ABC affiliate for Winchester, Virginia. The station was a joint project between WHSV and Shenandoah University. Along with Winchester, the station served Frederick, Clarke, Warren and Shenandoah counties in Virginia. Although TV3 Winchester transmitted an over-the-air signal on WHSV-DT3, it could only be seen on cable in its primary coverage area. TV3 Winchester ceased operations on December 5, 2013; WHSV-DT3 remained vacant until October 2018 when a standard definition feed of Ion Television was eventually added to that subchannel.

WHSV-DT4

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WHSV-DT4 is the dual MyNetworkTV/MeTV-affiliated fourth digital subchannel of WHSV-TV, broadcasting in 16:9 widescreen standard definition on channel 3.4. Outside MyNetworkTV programming, there is no syndicated fare since MeTV takes up all of the remaining broadcasting time.

A new transmitter tower was built behind WHSV's Harrisonburg studios to accommodate the additional satellite receivers needed for both channels. The station began broadcasting on the date of MyNetworkTV's launch, September 5, 2006. The CW affiliation for the market went to Charlottesville-based NBC affiliate WVIR-TV which broadcasts the network on a third digital subchannel through The CW Plus programming service. On September 24, 2012, WHSV-DT4 added a secondary affiliation with the Weigel-owned classic television network MeTV, with the network's programming replacing syndicated programs previously seen outside of MyNetworkTV's prime time schedule.[12]

Newscasts

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WHSV-DT4 does not carry any live newscasts produced by WHSV that are exclusive to the subchannel. Rather, it airs repeats of newscasts seen on the main channel including the two-hour weekday morning show (at 7) and the nightly 6 o'clock broadcast (at 7). The subchannel also simulcasts the weeknight half-hour prime time newscast at 10 from Fox affiliate WSVF-CD. Even if this program is delayed or preempted on the Fox station, it still airs in the regular time slot on WHSV-DT4. In addition, this subchannel may occasionally air WHSV's 11 p.m. newscast normally seen on the main channel on Saturday evenings in the event there are delays or a preemption due to ABC sports programming. The 10 o'clock program maintains a dedicated news anchor and reporter separate from newscasts on WHSV.

Local programming

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In addition to its local newscasts and ABC network programs, WHSV produces other locally produced programs: The Endzone is a 40-minute sports highlight program covering high school football games across the Shenandoah Valley that airs Fridays at 11:25 p.m. during the high school football season. Sports X-tra is an online sports discussion show produced by WHSV's sports department, covering sports news from the previous week.

The station also produces the Sunday morning religious program Light for Today, which broadcasts from People's Baptist Church in Harrisonburg, and broadcasts the music and variety show Virginia Dreams Centerstage. WHSV also sponsored an annual singing competition called "Voice of the Valley", an idea that was originated by former WHSV personality Jenelle Smith. Finalists are unveiled during the station's noon newscasts the week of the Rockingham County Fair with an hour-long live finale that is broadcast from the fair.

News operation

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The station's weekday morning newscast, WHSV News Daybreak, has received recognition as one of the highest-rated local morning news programs in the United States.[13] WHSV utilizes Facebook and Twitter accounts to relay local news stories through social media.[14][15]

In the early 1990s, the station began producing a midday newscast at noon on weekdays. WHSV-TV purchased its first microwave live truck in 2004. Prior to that, the station relied on rented equipment for remote broadcasts. Since 2004, WHSV-TV has purchased additional microwave equipment for use by its news department.

2006 was a year of significant change at WHSV-TV. First on February 27, 2006, WHSV's weekday morning newscast expanded from a 90-minute program to a two-hour program with the addition of a half-hour at 5 a.m.; this coincided with the debut of new weather technology purchased from Weather Services International. The station's Harrisonburg and Augusta County news bureaus underwent a dramatic overhaul in April 2006, with the addition of new sets and studio camera equipment. WHSV newscasts were broadcast from a temporary studio in the Harrisonburg newsroom during the two-week construction period with the new sets debuting on April 24, 2006 (portions of WHSV's previous set, built in 1999, were donated to nearby Turner Ashby High School). News director Van Hackett, who joined the station in December 2003, retired in August 2006 and was succeeded by former WHSV reporter Ed Reams, who left a job at WDSU in New Orleans to return to the Shenandoah Valley. On July 21, 2006, popular weather anchor Jay Webb left after six years with the station, accepting a job with WDBJ in Roanoke, Virginia. Webb enjoyed a week-long send-off from his on-air colleagues before his final WHSV broadcast on July 21.

On October 30, 2006, WHSV-TV dropped The Andy Griffith Show from its longtime 5:30 p.m. timeslot in favor of a half-hour newscast anchored by longtime reporter Melanie Lofton. This coincided with the debut of a new logo for the station, the retitling of the station's newscasts as WHSV News 3 and updated graphics for its newscasts. While the logo itself was new, elements of the previous graphics package were retained. On November 27, 2006, WHSV dropped Gari Communications' "Making a Difference" in favor of 615 Music's "News One" as the theme music for its newscasts, which remained until 2015, when it was replaced by Stephen Arnold Music's "This is the Place".[16]

On April 7, 2008, the station's 5 and 5:30 p.m. newscasts began featuring a three-anchor lineup consisting of Melanie Lofton, Bob Corso and meteorologist Tracy Turner. This new format came along with a new arrangement of the newscast.

On December 5, 2013, TV3 Winchester ceased its news operation.[17]

Notable former on-air staff

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Technical information

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Subchannels

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The station's digital signal is multiplexed:

Subchannels of WHSV-TV[18]
Channel Res. Aspect Short name Programming
3.1 720p 16:9 ABC-HD ABC
3.2 1080i NBC-HD NBC (WSVW-LD)
3.3 480i ION-SD Ion Television
3.4 MeTV-SD MyNetworkTV & MeTV
3.5 CBS-SD CBS (WSVF-CD2) in SD
3.6 Outlaw Outlaw
  Simulcast of subchannels of another station

Translators

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During the late summer and early fall of 2006, WHSV underwent major technical upgrades to make way for the station's new digital subchannels. A new transmitter tower was built behind the station's Harrisonburg studios to accommodate the additional satellite receivers needed for WHSV's Fox and MyNetworkTV-affiliated subchannels. WHSV's main analog transmitter was replaced during the week of August 31, 2006. Broadcasts were only available to viewers with cable while the transmitter was being replaced.

On January 16, 2008, WHSV reached a carriage agreement with DirecTV to add WHSV, and its Fox and MyNetworkTV-affiliated digital subchannels to the satellite providers' local channel lineup.

WHSV originally planned on turning off its analog transmitter of February 17, 2009, the original deadline of the federally mandated digital conversion. The station restored the signal the following Friday however, because several translator stations in communities such as Bergton that are owned by local cooperatives and county governments were unable to convert their transmitters to reconvert the digital signal into analog form,[19] along with viewers who could receive Channel 3 signal well on analog, but not at all digitally. WHSV's broadcasts became digital-only, effective June 12, 2009.

Spectrum reallocation, move to Staunton

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As part of the 2016–17 spectrum reallocation auction, channels 38 through 51 were removed from television broadcasting. WHSV's channel 49 primary digital signal moved to channel 20 and relocated from its longtime site at Big Mountain near New Market to Elliott Knob overlooking Staunton, where it operated a fill-in translator.[20] The National Radio Astronomy Observatory (NRAO) objected to WHSV's continued operation from Big Mountain unless the effective radiated power in its direction was reduced to 0.2 watts, which Gray claimed would have resulted in an unusable signal in Harrisonburg.[21]

Gray proposed a series of engineering changes and new translators to make up for lost coverage in the northern part of the Shenandoah Valley. The existing translator on channel 42 from Signal Knob near Front Royal, which was entirely directed toward Winchester, moved to channel 24 and became less directional in order to also cover the valley.[22] Gray converted the existing main transmitter site on Big Mountain to a translator on channel 28, allowing it to comply with the NRAO's objection by reorienting its signal to transmit to the east, toward Page County. It has also applied for two other new translators: one directly across the valley from Big Mountain, on channel 15 from North Mountain in Broadway, and another on channel 34 from Massanutten Peak overlooking Harrisonburg, which has been built and signed on.[23]

Gray applied for a waiver to begin operations from Elliott Knob by August 31, 2018, nearly two years before its original March 2020 deadline.[24] Although the waiver was not yet approved, WHSV-TV announced the switch-over date as September 10 at midnight. When this date passed without approval, Gray reapplied to move WHSV's transition date to December 2018.[25] The switch-over was completed on December 7.[26]

Notes

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References

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Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
WHSV-TV is an ABC-affiliated licensed to , , serving the region including Staunton, Waynesboro, and surrounding areas. Owned by Gray Television alongside low-power stations WSVW-LD (NBC and ) and WSVF-CD ( and ), it provides local news, weather, sports, and syndicated programming to over 996,000 potential viewers within its coverage area. The station broadcasts a high-definition digital signal on UHF channel from a transmitter atop Elliot Knob, maintaining 3.1 for its primary ABC programming, with additional subchannels offering (3.2), (3.3), (3.4), as "CBS the V" (3.5), and (3.6). WHSV-TV's main studios are situated at 50 North in Harrisonburg, with a secondary in Fishersville to enhance coverage across the market; it also operates translator stations in locations such as , Luray, Massanutten, and Broadway to extend its reach. Founded in October 1953 as WSVA-TV by the Broadcasting Corporation, WHSV-TV has been a cornerstone of local media in the region for more than 70 years, originally launching with affiliations to , , and the . It transitioned to a primary ABC affiliation in 1968 and adopted its current call letters in 1976 to better reflect its service to Harrisonburg and the . Following ownership changes, including its acquisition by Gray Television in 2002 from the bankrupt Benedek Broadcasting, the station expanded its digital offerings, notably adding a local affiliation and in December 2019 under the "NBC 3 in the Valley" branding. Today, WHSV-TV emphasizes comprehensive local through programs like WHSV News 3, focusing on events, emergency alerts, and investigative reporting.

History

Launch and early affiliations

WHSV-TV, originally known as WSVA-TV, signed on the air for the first time on October 19, 1953, bringing the its inaugural television service on VHF channel 3. The station was founded by Harrisonburg businessman Frederick L. Allman through his Broadcasting Corporation, which also operated the affiliated WSVA radio station. The call letters WSVA stood for "We Serve Virginia Agriculture," reflecting the region's rural and the station's early emphasis on farm-related content. Initial studios were established along west of Harrisonburg, co-located with the radio operations to facilitate shared resources and local production. From its launch, WSVA-TV operated as the market's sole , serving a rural audience across the from to Lexington. The transmitter was a 5-kw unit mounted on a 300-foot stainless steel tower atop 3,000-foot Big Mountain near Endless Caverns, achieving an antenna height of 2,131 feet above average terrain—the highest in at the time—and enabling coverage over a broad agricultural area. Programming initially focused on local shows, such as reports and market updates tailored to Valley farmers, alongside relays of network content. The station held primary affiliation with , supplemented by secondary ties to , ABC, and the , allowing it to air a mix of popular series like NBC's Today and local features emphasizing community and rural life. In 1968, under ownership by the Gilmore Broadcasting Corporation, WSVA-TV shifted to a primary ABC affiliation, dropping as its lead partner while retaining some secondary programming until 1975. This change was atypical for a monopoly station in a small market like Harrisonburg (then ranked around 150th nationally), where ABC's weaker national ratings compared to or might have seemed risky; however, ABC offered competitive compensation packages to affiliates in underserved rural areas to expand its footprint amid limited competition from distant big-city signals. The move aligned with Gilmore's strategy to bolster ABC's presence in the Southeast and better serve local viewers with ABC's growing slate of daytime and primetime hits, marking a pivotal evolution in the station's early network strategy up to the 1960s.

Ownership transitions and expansions

In 1976, Gilmore Broadcasting Corporation sold the station, then known as WSVA-TV, to Worrell Newspapers Inc. for $3.25 million (including a $100,000 covenant not to compete), marking Worrell's entry into broadcasting. Following the acquisition, the station changed its call letters to WHSV-TV later that year to better reflect its service to Harrisonburg and the . The acquisition included the Harrisonburg facility and aligned the station with Worrell's existing newspaper holdings, such as The Daily Progress in Charlottesville. Worrell owned the station for a before selling it, along with WIFR-TV in , and WBNB-TV in the , to Benedek Broadcasting in 1986. Under Benedek, which focused on mid-sized market ABC and affiliates, WHSV-TV underwent operational enhancements, including a temporary secondary affiliation with from 1994 to 1996 to carry the network's new broadcasts, such as Washington games, before the affiliation shifted to a new low-power station. During this period in the , the station expanded its news production capabilities to support growing local coverage demands. In the late 1990s, WHSV-TV relocated from its studios along west of Harrisonburg to a new broadcast facility in downtown Harrisonburg, completing the move in June 1999. This upgrade improved production infrastructure and accessibility for the audience. Benedek filed for bankruptcy in 2002, leading to the sale of its 21 stations, including WHSV-TV, to Gray Communications Systems (later Gray Television, now Gray Media) for $500 million in cash. The deal integrated WHSV-TV with Gray's portfolio, enabling shared resources and operational synergies with sister stations in nearby markets.

Ownership and affiliations

Current ownership and sister stations

WHSV-TV is owned by Gray Media, Inc. (formerly Gray Television), which acquired the station in 2002 as part of a $500 million purchase of 21 television stations from the bankrupt Benedek Broadcasting Corporation. Gray Media rebranded from Gray Television effective January 1, 2025. Gray has since expanded its holdings in the Harrisonburg market to include sister stations WSVF-CD, a Class A low-power dual Fox/CBS affiliate acquired via construction permit in 2012, and WSVW-LD, a low-power dual NBC/CW+ affiliate that launched in 2019. The three stations share studios located at 50 North Main Street in downtown Harrisonburg, along with a newsroom in Fishersville to better serve the Augusta County area, enabling operational synergies such as unified sales teams, shared engineering resources, and integrated news production. In December 2024, Gray Television renewed its ABC affiliation agreement for WHSV-TV and all 27 other ABC affiliates in its portfolio with The Walt Disney Company, extending the deal through December 31, 2028 and underscoring the company's broad network of local stations committed to combining national programming with community-focused content. Since December 1, 2019, WHSV-TV has provided over-the-air rebroadcasts of its sister stations' primary signals via its digital subchannels, with WSVW-LD's /CW+ programming on 3.2 and WSVF-CD's feed on 3.5, enhancing full-market coverage for viewers without cable.

Network affiliation

WHSV-TV signed on the air as WSVA-TV on October 19, 1953, operating as a primary affiliate of the Television Network while carrying secondary affiliations with ABC, , and the . The DuMont affiliation ended in 1956 with the network's dissolution, leaving WSVA-TV to continue as a multi-network station in the small market, where limited stations necessitated shared programming to serve viewers. The station dropped its secondary CBS affiliation in 1963 amid market dynamics that favored reliance on distant signals from larger markets, such as WUSA in , for full coverage in the region. By 1968, WSVA-TV transitioned to an exclusive primary affiliation with ABC, phasing out remaining programming as regional availability from Roanoke and Washington stations improved, allowing the outlet to focus on strengthening ABC's presence in the underserved . The 1990s national affiliation raids, driven by Fox's expansion through deals like the New World Communications swaps, impacted the Shenandoah Valley by prompting WHSV-TV (by then under its current calls) to carry programming on a secondary basis from 1994 to 1996, providing local access to the emerging network before dedicated Fox service arrived via subchannels and s. Under Gray Media ownership since its acquisition in 2002, WHSV-TV established a duopoly structure in 2019 by launching an affiliation on low-power WSVW-LD, complementing its primary ABC service. and affiliations were integrated through another , WSVF-CD, restoring local carriage of those networks to the market for the first time since the 1960s.

Digital broadcasting

Subchannel development

Following the full analog-to-digital transition on June 12, 2009, WHSV-TV expanded its digital signal to include multiple subchannels, enabling the carriage of additional programming services and repeaters to better serve the Shenandoah Valley region. In January 2007, WHSV-TV launched its DT3 subchannel as "TV3 Winchester," a dedicated ABC repeater and local news operation targeting viewers in Winchester, Virginia, in partnership with Shenandoah University. This subchannel provided localized ABC programming and original newscasts produced from a studio on the university campus, addressing signal reception challenges in the northern part of the market. TV3 Winchester operated until December 5, 2013, when Gray Television discontinued its local news and sales operations due to financial considerations, marking the end of standalone newscasts on WHSV-TV subchannels. The DT3 subchannel remained vacant until late 2018, when it began carrying Ion Television, coinciding with the station's involuntary move to RF channel 20 during the FCC spectrum repack. This change improved coverage while introducing Ion's general entertainment lineup to over-the-air viewers. Meanwhile, the DT4 subchannel, which debuted with programming in September 2006 to capitalize on the new network's national launch, later incorporated classic television content via starting in 2012, creating a hybrid service under the "My Valley" branding. Post-2019, following Gray Television's acquisition of affiliate in Charlottesville, the company integrated sister station feeds onto WHSV-TV subchannels for broader market reach: programming from WSVW-LD (a low-power partner) appeared on 3.2, while from WSVF-CD occupied 3.5, enhancing network availability without dedicated full-power transmitters. In January 2024, WHSV-TV added , a western-themed network, to subchannel 3.6.

Analog-to-digital transition

The (FCC) mandated that all full-power U.S. television stations transition from analog to by June 12, 2009, to recover for communications and advanced services. WHSV-TV adhered to this requirement, terminating its analog transmissions on VHF channel 3 on June 12, 2009, while maintaining its digital operations. Prior to the full transition, the station had operated a on UHF channel 49 under its licensed parameters, with an of 65 kW at a height of 639 meters above average terrain. During the lead-up to the deadline, WHSV-TV initially planned to end analog service on the original February 17, 2009, cutoff date but reversed course due to viewer readiness concerns in its market, resuming full analog simulcasting until the final date. The , which began operations years earlier as part of the phased rollout of services, primarily mirrored the station's analog ABC programming in standard definition, using (PSIP) to map its to 3.1 for continuity in viewers' channel lineups. This setup ensured that digital receivers displayed the station as channel 3, facilitating a smoother shift for audiences equipped with digital tuners or converter boxes. The transition had notable impacts across the market, where approximately 11,000 households relied on over-the-air signals as of late 2008. Rural areas, such as Bergton in Rockingham County, reported challenges receiving the new UHF due to obstructions and lower power levels compared to the prior VHF analog coverage, leading to temporary signal outages and the need for antenna adjustments or . WHSV-TV addressed some of these issues by exploring fill-in to extend digital reach, aligning with broader FCC efforts to mitigate post-transition disruptions in underserved regions.

Programming

Syndicated and local content

WHSV-TV features a mix of syndicated programming to fill its daytime and early fringe slots, including popular game shows such as Wheel of Fortune at 7:00 p.m. weekdays and Jeopardy! at 7:30 p.m., alongside talk shows like The View at 11:00 a.m. and The Drew Barrymore Show at 10:30 a.m.. These staples provide entertainment focused on puzzles, trivia, and celebrity discussions, complementing the station's ABC network lineup. Lifestyle and newsmagazine segments, such as Inside Edition, round out the syndicated offerings, drawing viewers with investigative features and human interest stories. The station produces several original local programs that emphasize community engagement and regional identity in the Shenandoah Valley. The Endzone, a 40-minute highlight show airing Fridays at 11:25 p.m. as of the 2025 high school football season, covers games from across the area, showcasing local athletic talent and school spirit. WHSV's programming philosophy prioritizes content reflecting the 's agricultural roots and , integrating stories on farming, local events, and traditions into its original fare. The station also hosts the annual Toy Convoy charity drive, reaching its 29th edition in 2025, which collects new toys and to support across the region during the holiday season. Launched with contributions like a $5,000 from Harrisonburg Auto Mall, the event underscores WHSV's commitment to community service.

Shared programming with sister stations

WHSV-TV extends its service to the Shenandoah Valley by sharing programming from co-owned low-power sister stations WSVF-CD (Fox/CBS affiliate) and WSVW-LD (NBC/CW+ affiliate) via dedicated digital subchannels, enabling wider over-the-air distribution from WHSV's primary transmitter on Elliott Knob without requiring independent full-power facilities for the sisters. This arrangement, implemented starting in December 2019, allows the low-power stations' content to reach more households in remote areas of the market, enhancing accessibility for network affiliates and local feeds under Gray Television's ownership. Subchannel 3.2 carries the and programming feeds directly from WSVW-LD, simulcasting the full network —including national primetime, daytime, and sports content—alongside offerings such as syndicated series and weekend movie blocks, all integrated under the " 3 in the Valley" and " 3 in the Valley" branding. On subchannel 3.5, the feed originates from WSVF-CD's secondary channel (43.2), providing the complete lineup in standard definition, while WSVF-CD's primary programming (43.1) is not fully but its flagship 10 p.m. newscast, "The Valley's at Ten," produced by WHSV's news team, airs simultaneously on WHSV-DT4 to align delivery across the duopoly. Further integration includes the network—a channel featuring classic Western films and series—broadcast on subchannel 3.6 as a shared digital service among the stations, filling non-network time slots with themed content distributed group-wide. Across all shared subchannels, the sister stations coordinate educational/informational (E/I) programming to collectively satisfy the FCC's three-hour weekly quota for children's educational content, often featuring the same syndicated E/I blocks like "" series. Emergency alerts are similarly synchronized via the integrated (EAS), ensuring unified activation of national, state, and local warnings from Gray Television's central operations.

News operations

Newscast schedule and format

WHSV-TV's news department produces the flagship program titled WHSV 3 News, which provides local coverage for the region through a mix of weekday, weekend, and evening broadcasts. The weekday morning newscast, WHSV News Daybreak, airs as a two-hour program from 5:00 a.m. to 7:00 a.m. and has been a staple since its expansion in 2006 to include an earlier start time for broader audience reach. Evening programming includes newscasts at 5:00 p.m., 6:00 p.m., and 11:00 p.m. The station previously aired a half-hour newscast at 5:30 p.m., launched on October 30, 2006, but it has since been discontinued. Overall, this contributes to multiple weekday newscasts, including a noon edition. Formats across newscasts emphasize stories, with dedicated segments utilizing for real-time Valley-wide tracking and mobile units for on-location reporting during breaking events. Investigative reporting is integrated into evening and weekend editions, focusing on regional issues like public safety and community impacts through collaborative efforts such as InvestigateTV. Weekend broadcasts follow a similar , featuring condensed morning and evening editions with extended updates and occasional special reports, maintaining a balance of hard news and viewer-relevant features without separate weekend-specific expansions. The morning program holds top-rated status in its demographic, outperforming competitors in household viewership and establishing WHSV 3 News as a leading source for early-day information in Harrisonburg and surrounding areas. The 10:00 p.m. newscast for airs on sister station WSVF-CD (channel 43.1) and is produced by WHSV staff. On DT2 (), branded as 29 News, newscasts air in afternoon and early evening slots, including at noon, 5:00 p.m., and 6:00 p.m., mirroring the flagship format for network-aligned audiences.

Notable on-air talent

Van Hackett served as news director and 6 p.m. co-anchor at WHSV-TV, retiring in August 2006 after a career spanning more than three decades in broadcast journalism. His leadership helped guide the station's news operations during a period of transition in local broadcasting. Jay Webb, a popular morning and noon meteorologist, departed WHSV on July 21, 2006, after six years providing weather coverage tailored to the Shenandoah Valley's unique climate challenges, including severe storms and seasonal shifts. He moved to sister station WDBJ in Roanoke, continuing his focus on regional meteorology before returning to WHSV in a management role. Among current on-air talent, Chief Meteorologist Urbanowicz has been a fixture since 2010, earning the National Weather Association seal of approval for her detailed forecasts emphasizing Valley-specific impacts like flooding risks along the and winter weather patterns in the . She anchors weather segments on evening newscasts, contributing to the station's reputation for reliable local environmental reporting. Other reporters, such as Daybreak Anchor/Producer Kayla Brown (promoted to anchor in July 2025), cover community stories from Harrisonburg to Staunton, highlighting issues like agricultural developments and in the . In recent years, several alumni have transitioned to broader roles or retired after long tenures. Longtime anchor Bob Corso retired in March 2021 after 33 years at WHSV, where he anchored evening newscasts and became a trusted voice for Valley viewers through coverage of local elections, disasters, and community events. His departure marked the end of an era for the station's news identity.

Technical specifications

Subchannel lineup

WHSV-TV utilizes the ATSC digital television standard to programming across six subchannels on its 3, with PSIP mapping these to physical RF channels 20, 24, 34, 28, and 25 for enhanced regional coverage in the . All subchannels broadcast in widescreen (16:9), with distinctions between high-definition (HD) feeds on the primary affiliates and standard-definition (SD) on secondary networks. The (FCC) licenses WHSV-TV for digital multicasting under its full-power facility ID 4688, allowing simultaneous carriage of affiliated and syndicated content without bandwidth constraints beyond the allocated 6 MHz channel. The current subchannel lineup as of November 2025 is detailed below:
Virtual ChannelProgrammingResolutionAffiliation Notes
3.1ABCPrimary ABC affiliate (HD)
3.2 of WSVW-LD (HD)
3.3National syndication (SD)
3.4 / Dual affiliation, MyNetworkTV evenings (SD)
3.5480p of WSVF-CD2 ("CBS the V") (SD)
3.6Western-themed network (SD)
This configuration supports diverse viewing options, with HD subchannels 3.1 and 3.2 providing enhanced picture quality for network primetime and , while SD subchannels 3.3 through 3.6 optimize bandwidth for additional programming variety.

Transmitter relocation and spectrum changes

As part of the Federal Communications Commission's 2016–2017 broadcast incentive auction, WHSV-TV was reassigned from UHF channel 49 to UHF channel 20 in the subsequent , which removed channels 38–51 from television use to free for . The station did not relinquish its spectrum but was required to transition under the repack process, with its original phase 8 completion deadline set for March 13, 2020. To facilitate the channel change and improve coverage, licensee Gray Television Licensee, LLC, relocated the main transmitter from Big Mountain in , to Elliott Knob west of Staunton in Augusta County. The FCC granted a construction permit under 4688 for the new UHF channel 20 facilities at the Elliott Knob site, authorizing an (ERP) of 271 kW and a (HAAT) of 666.1 meters (2,185 feet). This represented an upgrade from the prior Big Mountain setup, which had operated at lower power levels on channel 49. Gray obtained a to commence operations ahead of schedule, activating the new transmitter at Elliott Knob on August 28, 2018, well in advance of the phase deadline. During the transition period, WHSV-TV broadcast at reduced power using temporary facilities while awaiting full construction permits and equipment installation, including a backup generator at the new site. Full licensed operations on channel 20 were achieved by early 2019, ensuring compliance with ATSC 1.0 standards. The relocation and power increase substantially enhanced signal propagation across the , providing stronger over-the-air reception in rural areas previously on the fringe of coverage.

Broadcast translators and coverage

WHSV-TV's primary over-the-air signal originates from a transmitter atop Elliott Knob in , providing coverage across the central , including Harrisonburg, Staunton, and Waynesboro, with an estimated reach of 778,917 people over 2,181 square miles. This setup uses a high (ERP) of 271 kW horizontally and 81.3 kW vertically on UHF channel 20, ensuring robust signal propagation in the mountainous terrain of western . To address signal gaps caused by geography and the 2017 FCC spectrum repack, which relocated the main channel from 49 to 20 and temporarily disrupted some areas, WHSV-TV employs digital replacement translators (DRTs). These low-power facilities rebroadcast the station's programming to extend coverage into underserved rural pockets, particularly in northern and eastern parts of the market. Each DRT operates at 15 kW horizontally (with varying vertical power), targeting specific communities while maintaining the virtual channel 3 affiliation with ABC. The translators include:
Translator LocationPhysical ChannelCoverage Area (sq. mi.)Estimated PopulationPrimary Service Area
Signal Knob (near Strasburg, VA)246,183996,276Winchester–Front Royal; northern
Great North Mountain (near Broadway, VA)253,775396,045Western Augusta and Rockingham counties
Short Horse Mountain (near Luray, VA)286,610661,084Page County; eastern
Massanutten Peak (near Stanley, VA)347,007620,035Shenandoah and Page counties; restored post-repack signal
Beyond these, WHSV-TV's signal is further extended into via the low-power translator W33EJ-D on UHF channel 33, licensed to Valley TV Cooperative, Inc., in Moorefield. This facility, with a modest 0.1 kW , covers approximately 86.6 square miles and an estimated 46,212 residents in Hardy County, relaying the full ABC lineup to rural viewers near the border. Overall, these collectively enhance WHSV-TV's , mitigating terrain-related blackouts and serving a combined population exceeding 2.7 million in the broader market.

References

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