Media in Pittsburgh
Pittsburgh is home to the first commercial radio station in the United States, KDKA 1020AM; the first community-sponsored television station in the United States, WQED 13; the first "networked" television station and the first station in the country to broadcast 24 hours a day, 7 days a week, KDKA 2; and the first newspaper published west of the Allegheny Mountains, the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette. It is one of the few mid-sized metropolitan areas in the U.S. with two major daily papers (the other being Tampa-St. Petersburg); both the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette and the Pittsburgh Tribune-Review have histories of breaking in-depth investigative news stories on a national scale. The alternative papers in the region include the Pittsburgh City Paper; the The Jewish Chronicle of Pittsburgh; The New People, published weekly by the Thomas Merton Center for Peace and Social Justice; the New Pittsburgh Courier, one of the larger ethnic publications in the region; and Zajedničar, the only Croatian-language newspaper currently published in the United States. The Pitt News, a financially independent student-written and -managed newspaper of the University of Pittsburgh, is closing in on its 100th year of publication. The University of Pittsburgh School of Law also hosts JURIST, the world's only university-based legal news service.
Outdoor advertising in the area is handled by Lamar Outdoor, who controls a majority of large posters and billboards and bus shelters (including Downtown Pittsburgh) and shopping centers in the area.
Contents
Newspapers
- Major newspapers:
- Alternative newspapers:
- Speciality newspapers:
- The Bulletin
- The Front Weekly
- The Jewish Chronicle of Pittsburgh
- Pittsburgh Catholic
- Pittsburgh Courier (African-American community)
- Pop City (youth/business)
- Zajedničar
- Academic newspapers:
- Online newspapers:
Magazines and journals
- Academic:
Television
The Pittsburgh TV market is currently ranked as the 23rd largest in the United States by Nielsen.[2] It has recently gained distinction as one of the most competitive.[3] (In the listing below the table, network O&O's are denoted in bold.) The market is served by:
Channel | Call Sign | Network | Since | Digital subchannel | Digital Subchannel | Owner |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
2 | KDKA | CBS | 1949 (Jan. 11) |
CBS | ||
4 | WTAE | ABC | 1958 (Sept. 14) |
This TV | -- | Hearst |
11 | WPXI | NBC | 1957 (Sept. 1) |
Me-TV | -- | Cox Media |
13 | WQED | PBS | 1954 (Apr. 1) |
Create | Neighborhood | |
16 | WEPA-CD | Cozi TV | 1989 (Feb. 28) |
Movies! | OTA Broadcasting | |
19 | WPCW | The CW | 1953 (Oct. 15) |
CBS | ||
22 | WPNT | MyTV | 1978 (Sept. 26) |
Sinclair | ||
29 | WIIC | 1989 (Aug. 29) |
Abacus Television | |||
35 | WBYD-CA | JTV | 1990 (Jul. 25) |
Perez Broadcasting | ||
38 | WINP | ION | 1953 (Aug. 31) |
Qubo | IonLife | Ion Media |
50 | WPCB | Cornerstone | 1979 (Apr. 15) |
Cornerstone | ||
53 | WPGH | Fox | 1953 (July 14) |
ZUUSCountry | Sinclair | |
PCNC | 1994 (Jan. 1) |
Cox Media | ||||
Root | FoxSports | 1986 (Apr. 13) |
DirectTV | |||
PanthersTV | Pitt | 2010 (Sep. 21) |
|
|
Radio
Pittsburgh radio has long been dominated by KDKA 1020 AM. However, as of early 2006 the station is no longer No. 1 in the ratings. KQV 1410 AM, now an all-news outlet, was Pittsburgh's dominant Top 40 station throughout the 1960s. On the FM dial, album-rock WDVE (102.5 DVE), modern rock WXDX (105.9 The X), adult contemporary WBZZ (Star 100.7), pop and hip-hop WKST-FM (96.1 KissFM) and Pittsburgh Sports Talk on (93.7 The Fan) KDKA-FM FM talk radio is available in the Pittsburgh market at WPGB (104.7 FM NewsTalk). Pittsburgh is also home to three public radio stations: WESA, the local NPR station; WQED-FM, a listener-supported commercial-free classical music station; and WYEP 91.3FM, the nation's third-largest independent "adult album alternative" (AAA) station, which hosts the locally produced environmental radio show The Allegheny Front and also carries some NPR programming. The Radio Information Service, broadcasting on a subcarrier of WESA provides special programming for the blind and print impaired. Additionally, Pittsburgh hosts the non-commercial radio stations WRCT (affiliated with Carnegie Mellon University) and WPTS (affiliated with the University of Pittsburgh).
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DMA
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In 2010, Nielsen will continue to rank Pittsburgh as the 23rd largest television Designated Market Area (DMA) in the country, with 1,154,950 households. That is a drop from Nielsen's 2009 estimate of 1,156,460. Despite the decline in households, Pittsburgh still has 22,090 more households than the next closest television DMA which is Charlotte, NC.[4] [5]
In 2004 Pittsburgh was the 24th largest DMA in the U.S. as ranked by population, with a population of 2,881,200.[6] Pittsburgh's DMA covers a land area of Lua error in Module:Convert at line 1851: attempt to index local 'en_value' (a nil value). in three states.
Other definitions of the "Pittsburgh region" extend into Ohio border counties with some sources including several Ohio counties and as far south & west as the Kentucky border and north into the extreme southwest of New York State.
The Pittsburgh DMA includes the following counties:
Pennsylvania counties:
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West Virginia counties:
Maryland counties:
References
- ↑ http://deltafoundation.us/equal-magazine/
- ↑ http://www.nielsen.com/content/dam/corporate/us/en/public%20factsheets/tv/nielsen-2012-local-DMA-TV-penetration.pdf
- ↑ Pittsburgh TV News Is A Tight 3-Way Race. TVNewsCheck.com. Retrieved on 2013-07-23.
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