WVEA-TV


WVEA-TV, virtual channel 50, is a Univision-owned television station licensed to Tampa, Florida, United States and also serving the nearby city of St. Petersburg. The station is owned by the Univision Local Media subsidiary of Univision Communications; Entravision Communications, which owns Venice-licensed UniMás affiliate WFTT-TV, operates WVEA under a local marketing agreement. The two stations share studios on Hillsborough Avenue in Tampa ; WVEA's transmitter is located on an antenna farm in Riverview, Florida.

History

The station first signed on the air on May 3, 1991 as WBSV-TV on channel 62; locally owned by DeSoto Broadcasting, it originally operated as an English-language independent station serving the Sarasota area, and competed with the area's ABC affiliate WWSB and the other stations in the Tampa Bay and nearby Fort Myers markets. As WBSV, the station ran a variety of syndicated and local programming, along with infomercials and home shopping programs; early on, the station also produced a local newscast. However, the station was unprofitable, eventually relying more on home shopping and infomercials to keep the station afloat.
In 2000, the station was acquired by Entravision Communications, with the intent of moving its transmitter from Venice to Riverview and move Univision programming to the station from Entravision's existing low-power affiliate, WVEA-LP. WBSV's history ended in early 2001, when the station ceased broadcasting for a few weeks to perform the move and establish WVEA's new studio facilities. In March 2001, the station returned to the air with its current programming and call letters.
On December 4, 2017, as part of a channel swap made by Entravision Communications, WVEA and its sister station, WFTT swapped channel numbers with WVEA moving to digital channel 47 and virtual channel 50.

Intellectual property

The WVEA call letters and programming originated on low-power station W50AC. That station operated as Tampa Bay's first Spanish-language television station, operating as an affiliate of the Spanish International Network, when it signed on the air in 1982. In 1988, to make way for new Home Shopping Network flagship station WBHS, the station relocated to UHF channel 61 and changed its callsign to W61BL; in 1994, the station changed its call letters to WVEA-LP. After Entravision bought channel 62, in March 2001, the entire WVEA intellectual unit moved from the low-power station on channel 61 to the full-power station on channel 62. WVEA-LP itself remains in operation on channel 46, carrying programming from HSN2. In 2017, WVEA-TV's PSIP was reassigned as channel 50, effectively returning Univision programming to a channel it vacated 29 years earlier.

Digital television

Digital channels

The station's digital signal is multiplexed:
ChannelVideoAspectPSIP Short NameProgramming
50.11080iWVEA-DTMain WVEA-TV programming / Univision
50.2480iBounceBounce TV
50.3480igetTVGetTV
50.4480iMysteryCourt TV Mystery

Until 2013, WVEA-TV carried the Spanish-language music video network ZUUS Latino on its third digital subchannel.

Analog-to-digital conversion

WVEA-TV shut down its analog signal, over UHF channel 62, on June 12, 2009, as part of the federally mandated transition from analog to digital television. The station's digital signal remained on its pre-transition UHF channel 25, using PSIP to display WVEA-TV's virtual channel as 62 on digital television receivers, which was among the high band UHF channels that were removed from broadcasting use as a result of the transition.

News operation

WVEA-TV presently broadcasts five hours of locally produced newscasts each week ; the station does not broadcast any news programming on Saturdays and Sundays. The station's news department shares resources with Orlando sister station WVEN-TV. WVEA simulcast WVEN's news programming until 2013, when WVEA began producing its own newscasts under the title Noticias Tampa Bay. On November 2, 2015, production of WVEA's newscasts was transferred back to WVEN; under this arrangement, WVEA's early evening newscast is produced live to tape an hour before WVEN's live newscast. In 2011 it produced 5 minute news blocks on Facebook which ended when the news department relaunched. WVEN continues to produce sports and weather segments inserted into WVEA's newscasts.