Here is a station id montage for the
NBC affiliate in
Baton Rouge, LA,
WVLA-TV. All copyrights acknowledged. The earliest ids are from
1979. For the most part,
WRBT/
WVLA has always used the
NBC logo of the period in its own logo. During the
1980s into the mid
1990s, local businessman and musician
Cyril Vetter owned the station, and, for the most part, it used localized versions of NBC promos and slogans. 0:09 shows ids from
1983/early
1984, the
Be There campaign. 0:33 begins the “33
Let’s All Be There” era from 1984-1985, and 1:01 starts the second version of “33 Let’s all be there” from 1985-1986 (used until NBC modified its peacock logo). In
1986, WRBT used the slogan “
Come Home to 33” (1:50), and it also became
Baton Rouge’s first
TV station to adopt stereo broadcasting. In
November 1987, after upgrading its signal to 5 million watts, the station changed its call
sign to WVLA (Vetter
Louisiana) and modified its logo to a
Circular 33 logo (33 a
New Vision)—see 4:05.
The new vision logo was used until
1988 when WVLA resumed using localized versions of NBC graphics; Come Home to the
Best Only on 33 is shown at 4:35 and was used from 1988 until early
1990. By late
1989, WVLA eliminated most of its newscasts, aside from its morning news program and a handful of primetime newsbreaks and an information hotline. In 1990, along with the slogan “WVLA the
Place to Be,” it also used the mantra “entertainment television,” (see 6:55). This was the last slogan set with
the circular 33 logo. In late
1992, the station adopted a parallelogram logo used with “The stars are back on 33” slogan (starts at 12:25). Notable was a rather scary/dark looking station id with a WVLA flag flying in a dark background (see 12:36). During this era, WVLA, perhaps taking from the
WAFB playbook, used some of its staffers, like
Larry Davis and
Monique Bienville and later
Jeanne Burns (who boomeranged back to the station in
2012), to plug various programs the station aired as station ids as well as various community events around Baton Rouge sponsored by the station. Another tactic used a promo alongside manipulations of the
NBC peacock (see 23:52 for an example). This logo motif was used until Vetter sold the station to Sheldon
Galloway/
White Knight Broadcasting in
1996. Starting at this
point, WVLA rebranded as NBC 33 (starting at 27:12). The logo got a slight upgrade in
1998 (see 32:23). In
2000, the logo was upgraded again with many promos and ids featuring
Pamela Henkel Matassa and
Leo Honeycutt, who hosted the morning program (see 34:35). In
2001, WVLA adopted a rectangular logo of red, white, and blue similar to that of
WRCB in
Chattanooga (36:55).
Around the summer of 2001, the station went back to using its call letters WVLA instead of NBC 33 and used the services of
Eric Gordon for announcing. By
2002, the station called itself
TV 33, and by 2004, went back to NBC 33 again. Most ids from this era did not feature staffers; in fact, the morning news program was cancelled in early 2004, leaving WVLA sans any newscasts for 3 years. In early
2007, WVLA relaunched a fully staffed news department with primetime news likely due to the population boom post
Hurricane Katrina (although rumors indicate NBC was considering other stations for its Baton Rouge affiliate if WVLA continued to operate without newscasts). The logo got a facelift with this, see 41:40 for the start—ids used “LA
Groove,” which was the news theme of the era—a handful of promos also used “iNews” by
First Com, as well, especially around 2009/
2010. After two years, the local newscast was outsourced to
KETK, but, this was short lived as WVLA began producing local news again in 2010 with the BP
Gulf Oil Spill; some slight upgrades, including the slogan “We
Tell Your
Stories Everyday,” and a new news theme “
The Rock,” are featured (see 44:10). This presentation remained the same until after
Nexstar began operating the station in
2015. In late 2015, the news set was upgraded, branding was changed to Local 33, and news theme “
Evolution” replaced “The Rock.” 52:47 features modern ids from WVLA. WVLA had a digital subchannel until 2015. After airing
NBC Weather Plus, it took on This TV (see 46:32 from 2008-2012).
In September 2012, it lost This TV to
WBTR/
KBTR-CA, which only airs the network’s programming sporadically. From September 2012-January 2015, WVLA aired a local weather radar and rebroadcasts of its newscasts on 33.2,
AKA Always On (see 51:02). In
January 2015, Nexstar shut down the subchannel with no replacement programming.
- published: 31 Dec 2015
- views: 641