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Alabama Public Television




The network produces its own News and Public Affairs programming and broadcasts content produced by the state's universities for online education and course credit as well. All nine stations are affiliates of PBS .


HISTORY

The network's first station, with the transmitter atop Mount Cheaha, began broadcasting in January 1955 as WTIQ (now WCIQ) for Talladega , though the city of license was Munford . When flagship WBIQ in Birmingham came online in April, Alabama Educational Television became the first operational educational TV network in the United States. It made its first broadcast as a network shortly after WBIQ signed on. Twenty-five other states have started public television networks, all based on Alabama's model.

WAIQ in Andalusia (now WDIQ in Dozier) went on the air in August 1956, bringing APT to south Alabama for the first time before being reassigned to Montgomery in December 1962. WAIQ was the first APT station to broadcast a digital signal as Channel 14 in 2003 , but it was later changed to Channel 27 on account of Montgomery station WSFA . Mobile television station WALA donated its former transmitter in Spanish Fort to APT in 1964, allowing WEIQ to bring the network to Mobile and Baldwin counties in November. WEIQ's power was increased during the 1980s .

In 1976 , the FCC revoked AETC's licenses for not airing programs pertaining to the Vietnam War or the African-American community, but the licenses were reinstated shortly thereafter. APT management feared that airing these types of programs would have put the network's future in jeopardy, due to potential losses of appropriations from offended or outraged public officials. Therefore, APT followed orders by state officials not to air certain programming during the 1960s and 1970s . Although APT still faces threats of Censorship due to Alabama's conservative predilections, it has maintained a more independent stance from state government in the past 30 years. In fact, it airs a weeknight news program, "For the Record", that takes an oftentimes hard-hitting approach to covering state government. The program has been airing since the early 1980s now.

In August 2004, APT began Datacasting on its digital broadcast signals to distribute digital multimedia content to ten elementary and secondary schools in a pilot program.


STATIONS

Alabama Public Television has 9 affiliates. Each Callsign ends with the letters "IQ" meaning " Intelligence Quotient ". The current number of affiliates have been in operation since 1971.

The channel given is both the actual Analog TV ( NTSC ) channel and the Virtual Digital TV ( ATSC ) channel, with the ''actual'' DTV channel in parentheses. On all stations, HDTV is on subchannel 1, and SDTV is on subchannel 2. The year the station commenced Broadcasting is in parentheses.

The network's offices and Network Operations Center are located in Birmingham, but APT also operates a studio in Montgomery for pledge drives and the weeknight broadcasts of the newscast and public-affairs interview program "For the Record". The AETC also operates a public radio station, WLRH-FM 89.3 FM in Huntsville, Alabama.


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