WAOW

WAOW is the ABC-affiliated television station for North Central Wisconsin's Northern Highland area licensed to Wausau. It broadcasts a high definition digital signal on VHF channel 9 from a transmitter on Rib Mountain. The station can also be seen on Charter channel 6 and in high definition on digital channel 609. Owned by Quincy Newspapers, WAOW has studios on Grand Avenue/US 51 in Wausau. Syndicated programing on the station includes: Entertainment Tonight, Ellen, The Dr. Oz Show, and Rachael Ray.

Digital programming
On WAOW-DT2/WYOW-DT2 is the area's CW affiliate. Known on-air as North Central Wisconsin CW, this can also be seen on Charter channel 8 (in Wausau) and channel 5 (in Eagle River). All programming is provided through The CW Plus. On WAOW-DT3/WYOW-DT3 is This TV which can be seen on Charter digital channel 966.

History
The station's studios.WAOW is Wausau's second television station having signed-on June 12, 1965 owned by the Shockley Communications Corporation. It served as a satellite station of Madison's WKOW as part of the Wisconsin Television Network which would later include WXOW in La Crosse and WQOW in Eau Claire. This station gradually increased its local programming and content finally severing the electronic umbilical cord with WKOW in the 1980s.

WAOW previously aired Fox's NFL package from 1994 until 1999 after the National Football Conference contract and rights for most Green Bay Packers games moved from CBS (locally WSAW-TV) due to the lack of a local Fox affiliate. When Wittenberg-licensed WFXS-DT came on-the-air in December 1999, it became the area's Fox affiliate.

WYOW's first broadcast to viewers in Northern Wisconsin and the Western Upper Peninsula of Michigan was on January 4, 1997 under the ownership of Northwoods Educational Television. Shockley operated the station through a local marketing agreement (LMA) until Shockley successfully purchased it outright in December 1998. WYOW airs WAOW's entire schedule beyond differing promos identifying the station under the "Northwoods 34" branding. On June 25, 2002, WAOW became the first commercial television station in the market to broadcast in high definition and was joined by WYOW on October 24. WAOW/WYOW converted fully to digital on February 17, 2009 without a nightlight period for WAOW while WYOW converted after a nightlight period. [1]

The two stations carried the Retro Television Network (RTV) on a third digital subchannel until March 2009. In the beginning of that month, it was replaced with This TV. [2] In February and March, WAOW aired WFXS's digital signal temporarily on DT3 while that station ironed out problems with activation of its digital transmitter. In early-September 2009, WFXS added RTV to its third digital subchannel. In mid-February 2009, Quincy announced the purchase of Crandon-based WBIJ, a FamilyNet affiliate, which was sold to Quincy by the widow of the station's founder.

Plans called for the conversion of the station to a second satellite of WAOW to serve the northeastern portion of the market near the Michigan border after completing the station's digital VHF channel 12 transmitter facilities. [3] Quincy has since renamed the station WMOW to conform with the call letters of WAOW and the remainder of Quincy's network of ABC affiliates throughout the state which all carry a "OW" suffix. Quincy put the WMOW on-the-air June 4, 2010. Despite being a WAOW satellite, it carries "North Central Wisconsin CW" on its primary channel and WAOW's ABC HD programming on a second subchannel. This TV is seen on WMOW-DT3. [4]

As of March 2011, WAOW's studio were undergoing major remodeling, including upgrading to HD.

Newscasts
News open.In 2000, WAOW and WFXS entered into a new share agreement. This resulted in a half-hour prime time newscast on weeknights known as Fox 55 News at 9. Like all CW Plus stations in the Central Time Zone, WAOW-DT2/WYOW-DT2 airs the nationally syndicated morning show The Daily Buzz on weekdays from 5 until 8. Unlike most ABC affiliates, WAOW does not air midday news during the week. All news anchors also serve as reporters.

Anchors StormTrak 9 Weather Team Sports Multimedia journalists
 * Melissa Langbehn - weeknights at 5 and 6
 * Bryon Graff - weeknights at 6 and 10 (also Newsline 9 Pack Attack host)
 * Pam Warnke - weeknights at 9 and 10 (also "Someone You Should Know" segment producer)
 * producer weeknights at 9
 * Alex Haight - weekday mornings
 * Cami Mountain - weekday mornings
 * Kristen Rietz - weekends
 * producer weekends
 * Dave Carlson - Northland Adventures host
 * Tony Schumacher (AMS Seal of Approval) - weeknights
 * Justin Loew - weekday mornings
 * Kristen Connolly - weekends
 * Jayson Geiser - Director seen weeknights at 6, 9, and 10
 * Sean Giggy - weekends and sports reporter
 * Dolores Glytas - "Pet Pause" segment producer
 * Tom Zurawski - Chief Photojournalist
 * Jack Rosenberg - photojournalist
 * Travis Jensen - photojournalist
 * Emily Neubauer - producer
 * Bonnie Shelton
 * Anna Carrera
 * Mike Haberl
 * Kevin Lu