CW network to replace UPN, WB
2 Utah affiliates unsure which station will stay on
CBS President Leslie Moonves announces the creation of the CW Television Network during a press conference Tuesday.
Bebeto Matthews, Associated Press
UPN and the WB have been canceled and a new, fifth broadcast network will be formed from the remains of the two.
After competing for almost exactly 11 years and racking up hundreds of millions of dollars in losses, the corporate owners of the two networks, CBS and Time-Warner, have announced they will cease operations for UPN and the WB in September and launch The CW as a new entity.
In Utah, the announcement raises an immediate question what will become of WB affiliate KUWB-Ch. 30 and UPN affiliate KPNZ-Ch. 24? Only one of them will get to be the local CW affiliate.
The CW will be a 50-50 joint venture of CBS (UPN's parent company) and Time-Warner (the WB's parent). UPN Entertainment president Dawn Ostroff will be in charge of programming, marketing, scheduling, publicity and research for the new network. John Maata, chief operating officer at the WB, will be COO of the new network and oversee business operations.
Current WB programmers, already thought to be in danger of losing their jobs because of the network's ratings woes, are out.
An argument could be made that combining the two could result in an attractive prime-time lineup, with such WB shows as the Utah-made "Everwood," "Gilmore Girls," "Smallville," "Supernatural," "Reba" and "Beauty and the Geek" and UPN shows like "Veronica Mars," "Everybody Hates Chris," "America's Next Top Model" and "WWE Smackdown."
"It will clearly be greater than the sum of its parts, delivering excellent demographics to advertisers, and building a strong new affiliate body," CBS president and CEO Leslie Moonves said in announcing the surprise pact.
The new network has already signed two huge affiliation agreements the 12 CBS-owned UPN stations and the 16 Tribune Broadcasting stations are on board with 10-year deals. (Tribune gave up its part-ownership in the WB in return for the affiliation agreement.) Those stations alone cover 48 percent of the country, and by next fall The CW's reach is "expected to exceed 95 percent of the country."
Fox, which spent $4.4 billion to buy the Chris-Craft station group in 1991, has been left out in the cold. Fox owns nine UPN affiliates, five in top 10 markets (New York, Los Angeles, Chicago, Washington and Houston) where either CBS or Tribune already owns a station.
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