View Full Version : WGN America Rebrands to NewsNation March 1, 2021


eng51squad51
01-25-2021, 04:17 PM
The WGN america once former WGN superstation is rebrand to Newsnation all news network

https://news.yahoo.com/wgn-america-change-name-newsnation-145143552.html


WGN Superstation used to show alot classic tv shows like Andy Griffith show Gomer pyle usmc , bozo

and others like Cubs baseball

before they rebrand to WGN america

1960'sTVfan
01-25-2021, 04:42 PM
As if there already aren't enough news channels, the last thing needed is another one and I have no plans to watch News Nation. WGN was a good local channel years ago for the Chicago area but those days are long over.

GentlemanJim
01-25-2021, 05:22 PM
From the article:

"Nexstar Chairman and Chief Executive Perry Sook told financial analysts in December that the company is happy with the content on “NewsNation” but acknowledged that viewers are having trouble finding it. Sook said the company’s research found that only 12% of viewers are aware of the program."

This has got to be either a joke, or a ruse right? How can anyone rise to the level of "chairman" without understanding the difference between "having trouble finding it" and "avoiding as a matter of preference"? :confused:

TVLegend
01-25-2021, 06:38 PM
Huh? This has got to be one of THE most worst news of 2020. WGN America is bad enough already with the In The Heat Of The Night, Blue Bloods, Married With Children, Last Man Standing, and New Station overload. Now a 24/7 rebrand New Station channel?

favoriteshow
01-25-2021, 06:40 PM
AMC lost movie library rights, and decided to focus on original scripted programming. It seemed to have worked out well for AMC. Given Nexstar's pockets are deep, I wonder why it didn't go that route, i.e. compete against AMC or maybe Hallmark, while keeping some sitcom and drama reruns in the daytime. A news focus is a major shift in another direction, but they have been in that direction when NewsNation started, so it's too late.

icecream
01-25-2021, 07:04 PM
Huh? This has got to be one of THE most worst news of 2020. WGN America is bad enough already with the In The Heat Of The Night, Blue Bloods, Married With Children, Last Man Standing, and New Station overload. Now a 24/7 rebrand New Station channel?I agree Married with Children and In the Heat of the Night are terrible shows, and Last Man Standing is nothing special. But Blue Bloods is fantastic, one of the best shows ever made and easily TV's best current drama. It would be nice if Blue Bloods had the nice long run Law and Order and NCIS have, I hope WGN getting even more into news crap and rebranding doesn't screw up its syndication deal. At least ION still has Blue Bloods Wednesdays.

TVLegend
01-25-2021, 07:14 PM
I agree Married with Children and In the Heat of the Night are terrible shows, and Last Man Standing is nothing special. But Blue Bloods is fantastic, one of the best shows ever made and easily TV's best current drama. It would be nice if Blue Bloods had the nice long run Law and Order and NCIS have, I hope WGN getting even more into news crap and rebranding doesn't screw up its syndication deal. At least ION still has Blue Bloods Wednesdays.
Well I just don’t care for it, I tried watching it several times, but I just don’t have any interest for it.

LUNCH
01-26-2021, 04:17 PM
I see they have become just another worthless so called TV station now.

MA
01-26-2021, 04:24 PM
Ridiculous. :rolleyes:

Crusinforabrusin2.5
01-27-2021, 09:35 PM
Since all their shows are getting tossed from the lineup, I wonder where shows like Married With Children or Last Man Standing will end up. My guess is that Last Man Standing switches to Freeform and Married With Children goes to Laff

eng51squad51
01-28-2021, 05:55 PM
Since all their shows are getting tossed from the lineup, I wonder where shows like Married With Children or Last Man Standing will end up. My guess is that Last Man Standing switches to Freeform and Married With Children goes to Laff

from that article they will still air reruns of sitcoms and drama shows on newsnation until they are replace by other news programing.

AntennaTV2020
01-28-2021, 11:48 PM
Another channel bites the dust.....

stevea
01-29-2021, 12:25 AM
I'm hoping Nexstar is happy enough with Antenna TV to leave it alone.

Now if they could just get some normal advertisers on there instead of all those junk ads begging for money.

GentlemanJim
01-30-2021, 02:44 PM
I wonder if there is an underlying motive? Such as perhaps the cost of program material being less for programs they generate in-house, vs having to pay "intellectual property" fees to rights holders?

The news itself happens for free, all they need is a room full of editors to weave it into a cohesive bundle, and a couple suits to stick in front of the camera. If they generate just 6 hours of new material per day, and cycle through it all 4 times per day...they got a network.

omg65
02-01-2021, 11:05 AM
Great. Another news channel. I watch almost zero "news" anymore with the exception of local weather emergencies. News nowadays is a lost cause and that includes local news. No matter where it comes from right or left, it's just a giant op-ed piece with an agenda and no actual facts anymore. What a disgrace.

stevea
02-01-2021, 11:38 AM
Great. Another news channel. I watch almost zero "news" anymore with the exception of local weather emergencies. News nowadays is a lost cause and that includes local news. No matter where it comes from right or left, it's just a giant op-ed piece with an agenda and no actual facts anymore. What a disgrace.

Exactly!

What I do now with local "news" is mute it until the weather comes on.

Duster76
02-01-2021, 11:05 PM
Anyone who remembers the old movie "The Graduate" will remember the one word of advice to Ben "plastics", in the case of WGN it's "cord-cutting":

From Forbes:

"Cord-cutting will accelerate in 2021, sending cable-TV subscriptions into virtual free fall, with a whopping 27% of U.S. households saying they’ll cancel their pay-TV package by year’s end, a new survey by The Trade Desk TTD predicts.

That’s nearly double the 15% cancellation rate of 2020, and far above the single-digit rates of previous years, according to the second Future of TV survey of 2,100 U.S. consumers released today".

In the next three years many of the networks that have been around since cable's salad days will be disappearing, survival is going to depend on two things, a proprietary product and an audience large enough for the network to be attractive to cable providers. Two to three dozen will survive with the rest going the way of the old video stores.

I doubt WGN's format change will work, but it's cheaper than producing original scripted programming and they had to do something. There is an old saying in business its better to act a day too soon than a day too late.

James28
02-23-2021, 02:26 PM
Because this is going to spell the end of another general-entertainment cable station, my first thought was: "CatsRule is NOT going to like this." He had been cheering for this NewsNation venture to fail. Well, with this announced rebrand, so much for that. After the rebrand, the acquired-entertainment shows currently on WGN America will likely stick around until their syndication contracts expire.

If viewers have been desperate for a good alternative to the left-wing and right-wing crap seen on other cable-news networks, then NewsNation looks like the best possible option right now. If NewsNation ever went left-wing or right-wing, it will just be boring and will cause viewers to tune out; I'll be mad if it actually did go that route.

#StayNeutral
#RIPWGNAmerica

TV Shows Fan
02-26-2021, 01:20 AM
With the launch of the NewsNation channel next week they're still airing shows like JAG, In the Heat of the Night, Blue Bloods and Last Man Standing.

icecream
02-26-2021, 04:36 PM
It is strange the new schedule for Monday when WGN becomes Newscrap still isn't known yet. Only thing different is news related crap starting two hours earlier at 6PM. Before that is just default placeholder listings with generic descriptions, so those might not be accurate.

TV Shows Fan
02-27-2021, 01:51 PM
No, the shows have episode names listed. It's not a placeholder schedule.

icecream
02-27-2021, 02:39 PM
As of yesterday my guide and online listings still had placeholder listings, I see they have episode descriptions now. That might be a good sign Blue Bloods gets to stay at 3-6PM weekdays with Last Man Standing being the one taken off. Could Blue Bloods have actually outrated LMS on the weekday lineup?

Dude111
02-27-2021, 09:15 PM
Very sad but not surprising seeing everything is going to crap :(

TV Shows Fan
03-01-2021, 04:41 PM
Last Man Standing is still airing on the weekends.

MA
03-06-2021, 11:47 AM
Movies are also still being shown on the weekends.

TKMetal
03-09-2021, 07:49 PM
It'll be interesting to see what happens in the future, as Newsnation has proven to be a disaster. Ratings are bad and the news director, managing editor and vice president have all resigned after they found out a former Fox News executive and Trump staffer was working there secretly.

TMC
06-28-2025, 02:20 AM
Making Sense of WGN's Transformation into NewsNation (https://raritania.blogspot.com/2022/01/making-sense-of-wgns-transformation.html)

I recall being perplexed by WGN's decision to become a part-time news channel ("NewsNation"). After all, we had been hearing for years about how cable was just doing worse and worse, the glory days of hits like Game of Thrones and Breaking Bad and The Walking Dead receding into the past as the action moved to streaming. And we heard incessantly about how those who got their news from TV at all were old folk--the potential market a rather limited portion of the population whom one would guess were already spoken for with CNN and FOX and newcomers like Newsmax.

However, apparently impressed by how the horror show that was 2020 gave the cable news channels' viewership a boost (https://www.latimes.com/entertainment-arts/business/story/2021-04-28/nexstar-unbiased-newsnation-struggling-viewers-fox-news) the superstation decided to get in on the action. The results, of course, have not been impressive--the ratings, in fact, dismal (https://www.robertfeder.com/2021/12/24/looking-back-ditzy-year-chicago-media/). Still, considering details of the larger scene less publicized than that collapse in viewership of which we heard so much the essential decision seemed less profoundly counterintuitive. These were, respectively:

The Return to Niche Programming as a Strategy
The Increasingly High Valuation of Older Viewers


The Return to Niche Programming as a Strategy

I can remember how in the '80s and '90s the explosion in the number of channels, and the interest of the managements of many of them in producing and airing their own content, suggested an expanding space for niche programming--for instance, the possibility of a channel devoted exclusively to science fiction, which USA realized with the launch of the Sci-Fi Channel, which produced such cult fare as Farscape and Lexx (http://strangehorizons.com/non-fiction/articles/lexx-at-ten/).

Of course, later the managements of those channels became attentive to the possibility of wider, breakout hits (such as HBO's The Sopranos became), and in the '00s increasingly devoted themselves to pursuing such hits--in the case of the Sci-Fi Channel to such a degree that they no longer wanted to be Sci-Fi. Instead they became "Syfy" (whatever that was supposed to mean), while the channel that gave us Farscape and Lexx gave us blander, more general audience-oriented fare like Eureka and Warehouse 13, and packed its schedule with reality TV, and even WWE Wrestling. Eventually I stopped paying attention to it, and haven't looked back.

Since then the thinking has shifted again--it seems, because those big breakout hits have become more elusive, while the profusion of viewing options and the fragmentation of the audience has made trying to win a large viewership with a single show with a broad but limited appeal look less plausible than, again, producing something that any audience merely big enough to be profitable might like (with some hope of breaking out to capture a wider following). But what niches would be worth filling? As it happened, demographics and economics went a long way to answering that question.

The Increasingly High Valuation of Older Viewers

Younger people never stopped watching TV. Indeed, my guess would be that where visual media are concerned they actually watch more than ever. But they became much more prone to get that content from a streaming service via the Internet-connected device they take everywhere than watching a broadcast received via a conventional television made at a fixed time, with the content chopped to pieces by commercials and other such interruptions.

Thus by default TV in this sense meant the old (https://www.theatlantic.com/business/archive/2014/03/half-of-broadcast-tv-viewers-are-54-and-older-yikes/284256/)--and where not long ago the fondness of the elderly for Matlock or CBS was a joke, now this orientation makes for a ratings winner, the more consequential because of what has happened with the distribution of income. Simply put, young people have MUCH LESS MONEY (https://www.washingtonpost.com/business/2019/12/03/precariousness-modern-young-adulthood-one-chart/) than their elders did at the same stage in their lives, and they have adapted to that poverty (https://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=3860758) in ways that might well affect their habits even were times to get better for them--more prone to live at home, drive less, generally consume less. This makes the relatively affluent old a more natural target for advertisers yet again.

All of this has had predictable consequences for the content of the TV schedule, as with the increasing place of second-run content on cable. This is, partly, a matter of a declining readiness to fund the production of new content with the prospect of big hits more remote evident even on the channels least oriented to the older demographics (as with Disney). However, it is also a matter of the proliferation of channels devoted to classic TV, like H & I (Heroes & Icons), bringing back to the air shows that had virtually vanished--presumably in pursuit of older viewers who on landing on those shows will stop their flipping and watch them out of genuine pleasure at what they offer, more thoroughly nostalgic appreciation, or simply a feeling that bad old TV is more appealing than bad new TV.

All of this seems plausibly a factor in the case of WGN's transformation into NewsNation. Even before the change the backbone of its lineup was reruns of shows that skewed old--JAG (which was much joked about as an old person's show even when it was in its original run (https://raritania.blogspot.com/2022/01/why-jag-was-older-persons-show.html)), CBS' Blue Bloods, and Tim Allen's Last Man Standing. Moreover, the tenor of these shows can seem significant given what has been said of NewsNation's politics. While marketed as a channel in the center of the political spectrum, NewsNation's own employees soon enough charged it with a conservative bias--which may seem a betrayal of its promise (https://variety.com/2021/tv/news/newsnation-jennifer-lyon-nexstar-bias-1234926851/) (and its continued PR, certainly to go by the Dan Abrams commercials I've seen), but which would seem natural from a business standpoint. The aforementioned shows were distinctly conservative favorites (with the gleefully lib-trolling (https://www.foxnews.com/entertainment/last-man-standing-star-tim-allen-mocks-liberals-small-window-of-sense-of-humor) Last Man Standing, according to one poll, having a liberal viewership of zero percent, exactly, literally zero percent (https://www.insider.com/most-politically-divisive-tv-shows-2018-12#last-man-standing-fox-1))--suggesting this as the logical course for the channel from a commercial standpoint, especially after the channel's turn disappointed, and made trying to keep the audience their other shows have look like a safe strategy.

Of course, it remains to be seen where NewsNation will go from here. But the essential logic--the pursuit of niche audiences, and where broadcast television is concerned, the stress on pursuing older audiences--is likely to remain with the industry, perhaps so long as it continues to grind on in the new media market.