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Winston Broadcasting Network Cleveland/Akron


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For the record, I would like to show the structure known as "Rex's Erection"

Rex's Erection | David Grant | Flickr

 

To the left is Grace Cathedral, and to the right is the WBNX studios/offices as well as the former Cathedral Buffet.  The round building is a senior apartment building that may have originally been developed by Rex Humbard as he was developing the site.

 

On the top is what's left of the State Road Plaza.  The section north of Portage Trail has already been demolished (the dirt pile), so this picture is probably circa 2009-2010.

 

The tower was started in the 1970s and topped out at 494 feet out of a planned 750.  It was to have a revolving restaurant at the top, and be very similar in appearance to the Calgary Tower.  Issues with the IRS and SEC put a halt to it and Rex Humbard moved on to other things.

 

As for WBNX, the original plan was for Rex Humbard to launch WCOT Channel 55 using the structure as a TV tower as well and renovate the current WBNX building for that purpose.  The UHF History page (no longer active) took issue with the fact that Rex Humbard sold the construction permit to Ernest Angley.  Supposedly, that never happened, and Channel 55 was up for grabs for a new applicant.  Years later, a group called Akron-Rhema Television, headed by Rev. Amer Shab was the founding owner of WBNX.  He started the station, and brokered it to Ernest Angley's Winston Broadcast Network (like the forerunner of an LMA) and eventually sold to him outright.

 

The tower stood there for years until it was sold at a sheriff's sale to Mike Krieger, an owner of a farmer's market/health foods store up the street. He made a killing selling tower space to cell phone companies as they began taking over.  So it stands today, even though it's never had anything to do with Ernest Angley, WBNX, or any antics thereof.

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I had no idea that WBNX had a different owner when it was launched.  I thought Winston Broadcasting owned it from day one.

 

I do remember reading an old article that WBNX was going to face some "must-carry" difficulty like what WOIO faced when it was launched more than six months before the double nickel went on-the-air.

 

Speaking of WOIO, a lot of people think that station and WBNX were what helped WCLQ ceased being an independent station (with four indies in Akron, three of those Cleveland-based, it was too much to support all of them in the market in 1985-86) and flipped to the Home Shopping Club/Network.

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Here's the timeline of WBNX, based on an article from Akron Beacon Journal...on June 30, 1985.

 

The OCR is here, but it's messy. (Sammi here, adding a proper clip.)

 

to sum it up...

 

- Rex Humbard was the original applicant for Channel 55, and wanted to launch WCOT-TV (Cathedral Of Tomorrow) from the "tower" on the property of his complex.  It was never finished, and WCOT never made it to air.

 

- In 1980, Rev. Amer Shab petitioned the FCC to launch a new channel on Channel 55.  He got a CP in 1984, and ran out of funds early in 1985.  That was when Ernest Angley stepped in.

 

- Ernest Angley purchased the TV studio and office complex on the Humbard site from Rex Humbard in 1984.  He later bought Grace Cathedral (the Cathedral of Tomorrow) a decade later.  He had the TV resources and experience from producing his programming at the-then "Grace Cathedral" in Springfield Twp.

 

- Amer Shab hired a general manager, but Ernest Angley used Lou Spangler, the executive director of Ernest Angley Ministries as the General Sales Manager and had responsibility over programming.  Likely soon after, it seems that Shab's group was bought out and Ernest Angley took over the operation.

 

- The original call letters were to be WPSC, but they were changed to WBNX, later to be known as an acronym for Winston Broadcast Network and Christ (X).  Winston, being Ernest's middle name.

 

 

At the time, WBNX was part of an influx of new television stations in the Cleveland-Akron area, which included WOIO.  WOAC had signed on in 1982 from Canton, shortly after WJAN became WDLI, after being sold from PTL to the David LIvingstone Ministry Foundation, when Jim Bakker was forced to sell it.  Also, WCLQ was the re-incarnation of WKBF in 1981, opting for a mostly general-entertainment format with Preview  subscription tv at night.  It never thrived and by 1985, WOIO and WBNX were a serious threat, causing them to pick up HSN programming, first partially, then 24/7.  WOIO ended up signing with FOX at it's launch in 1987, and WBNX bought most of WCLQ's programming inventory to program the station, and could now fill the day with program-length infomercials to keep it profitable.  The programming boom of the 90's upgraded the station's profile allowing them to accept traditional advertising and lessen the dependence on per-inquiry ads and infomercials.

 

WDLI would become  full-TBN by the mid 80s, WOAC would drop out after a sale to Paxson in 1995 which replaced virtually all programming with informercials (and later at WAKC the following year).  The WB affiliating with WBNX in 1997 cemented their place in the market and to this day, is a repository of current syndicated programming since the other stations do not have the room or desire to air it.

Edited by tyrannical bastard
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On 5/10/2021 at 12:14 AM, tyrannical bastard said:

For the record, I would like to show the structure known as "Rex's Erection"

Rex's Erection | David Grant | Flickr

 

To the left is Grace Cathedral, and to the right is the WBNX studios/offices as well as the former Cathedral Buffet.  The round building is a senior apartment building that may have originally been developed by Rex Humbard as he was developing the site.

 

On the top is what's left of the State Road Plaza.  The section north of Portage Trail has already been demolished (the dirt pile), so this picture is probably circa 2009-2010.

 

The tower was started in the 1970s and topped out at 494 feet out of a planned 750.  It was to have a revolving restaurant at the top, and be very similar in appearance to the Calgary Tower.  Issues with the IRS and SEC put a halt to it and Rex Humbard moved on to other things.

 

As for WBNX, the original plan was for Rex Humbard to launch WCOT Channel 55 using the structure as a TV tower as well and renovate the current WBNX building for that purpose.  The UHF History page (no longer active) took issue with the fact that Rex Humbard sold the construction permit to Ernest Angley.  Supposedly, that never happened, and Channel 55 was up for grabs for a new applicant.  Years later, a group called Akron-Rhema Television, headed by Rev. Amer Shab was the founding owner of WBNX.  He started the station, and brokered it to Ernest Angley's Winston Broadcast Network (like the forerunner of an LMA) and eventually sold to him outright.

 

The tower stood there for years until it was sold at a sheriff's sale to Mike Krieger, an owner of a farmer's market/health foods store up the street. He made a killing selling tower space to cell phone companies as they began taking over.  So it stands today, even though it's never had anything to do with Ernest Angley, WBNX, or any antics thereof.

That erection has lasted much, much, much longer than 36 hours. Someone may seriously need to consult their medical professional posthaste, because something may be very wrong.

Edited by Big Rollo Smokes
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4 hours ago, Big Rollo Smokes said:

That erection has lasted much, much, much longer than 36 hours. Someone may seriously need to consult their medical professional posthaste, because something may be very wrong.

A perfect metaphor for all of the Ernest Angley scandal in the past decade or so, yet Ernest Angley never even owned it!

On a clear day, that tower can be seen for miles....even from the Ohio Turnpike crossing over the Cuyahoga Valley.

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  • 2 weeks later...

Ernest Angley ministries posted a tribute to Rev. Angley on their YouTube channel.

 

Some highlights of the young Rev. Angley when he was at his prime...

 

A man who not only smoked, but smoked reefer...

https://youtu.be/tKqilT6VHXs?t=1041

 

Ernest going on a healin' spree in India....

https://youtu.be/tKqilT6VHXs?t=7441

 

 

Much of the footage predates his time at WBNX, but pretty much paints the picture of the Rev. Angley most of the world knew (and Robin Williams parodied)  before his ministry became embroiled in scandal and stories of local legend.  While his ministry wasn't as crooked as some of the televangelists that have invaded the dial, it pulls from the same playbook, and has the comedic value that turns their actions into fodder.  It sort of has that Peter Popoff vibe to it, you know it's too good to be true.

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This was already posted in the 2020-21 Syndication News thread, but here is the first WBNX Fall Lineup following Angley's death:

 

https://wbnx.com/fall-schedule-2021

 

It looks like 55 is staying put and operating under "status quo" for the time being.

On 5/27/2021 at 9:51 PM, tyrannical bastard said:

Ernest Angley ministries posted a tribute to Rev. Angley on their YouTube channel.

 

Some highlights of the young Rev. Angley when he was at his prime...

 

A man who not only smoked, but smoked reefer...

https://youtu.be/tKqilT6VHXs?t=1041

 

Ernest going on a healin' spree in India....

https://youtu.be/tKqilT6VHXs?t=7441

 

 

Much of the footage predates his time at WBNX, but pretty much paints the picture of the Rev. Angley most of the world knew (and Robin Williams parodied)  before his ministry became embroiled in scandal and stories of local legend.  While his ministry wasn't as crooked as some of the televangelists that have invaded the dial, it pulls from the same playbook, and has the comedic value that turns their actions into fodder.  It sort of has that Peter Popoff vibe to it, you know it's too good to be true.

 

Didn't Phil Collins also poke fun at Angley in one of the Genesis videos?

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2 hours ago, CLETVFan said:

Didn't Phil Collins also poke fun at Angley in one of the Genesis videos?

Sure did!  

https://youtu.be/2-rfCnW5VlE

 

 

Here's the Robin Williams bit from one of his albums.   

https://youtu.be/EXC6LclzQsE

 

The character even appeared in several episodes of Mork & Mindy.

 

 

 

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  • 7 months later...

Looking at the schedule,  they still air The Ernest Angley Hour and a double run of Our Grace Family (produced by Grace Cathedral) at 10am/pm weekdays, as well as on Sundays at 11am/pm, with an additional airing of Our Grace Family preceding Angley's show at 10:30am/pm,  The rest appears to be BUZZR content.

 

And the only traces of in-house religious programming on the main WBNX channel is a 2:30am/8:30am airing of the same two shows above on Sundays.

 

WBNX, with its dearth of programming that no one else wants in Cleveland, is what's likely keeping the church solvent, and if the distributors are desperate enough, they're probably offering WBNX a steal on program rates, and if they're REALLY desperate, could they be paying them just to clear programs in the market?

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  • 3 weeks later...
On 1/4/2022 at 9:06 PM, tyrannical bastard said:

Looking at the schedule,  they still air The Ernest Angley Hour and a double run of Our Grace Family (produced by Grace Cathedral) at 10am/pm weekdays, as well as on Sundays at 11am/pm, with an additional airing of Our Grace Family preceding Angley's show at 10:30am/pm,  The rest appears to be BUZZR content.

 

And the only traces of in-house religious programming on the main WBNX channel is a 2:30am/8:30am airing of the same two shows above on Sundays.

 

WBNX, with its dearth of programming that no one else wants in Cleveland, is what's likely keeping the church solvent, and if the distributors are desperate enough, they're probably offering WBNX a steal on program rates, and if they're REALLY desperate, could they be paying them just to clear programs in the market?

Weigel doesn’t need to buy the station if they’re able to get H&I, Movies! and Decades cleared. And they’d be the only one capable of buying the station if they wanted.

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  • 1 month later...
On 5/12/2021 at 7:59 PM, tyrannical bastard said:

Here's the timeline of WBNX, based on an article from Akron Beacon Journal...on June 30, 1985.

 

The OCR is here, but it's messy. (Sammi here, adding a proper clip.)

 

to sum it up...

 

- Rex Humbard was the original applicant for Channel 55, and wanted to launch WCOT-TV (Cathedral Of Tomorrow) from the "tower" on the property of his complex.  It was never finished, and WCOT never made it to air.

 

- In 1980, Rev. Amer Shab petitioned the FCC to launch a new channel on Channel 55.  He got a CP in 1984, and ran out of funds early in 1985.  That was when Ernest Angley stepped in.

 

- Ernest Angley purchased the TV studio and office complex on the Humbard site from Rex Humbard in 1984.  He later bought Grace Cathedral (the Cathedral of Tomorrow) a decade later.  He had the TV resources and experience from producing his programming at the-then "Grace Cathedral" in Springfield Twp.

 

- Amer Shab hired a general manager, but Ernest Angley used Lou Spangler, the executive director of Ernest Angley Ministries as the General Sales Manager and had responsibility over programming.  Likely soon after, it seems that Shab's group was bought out and Ernest Angley took over the operation.

 

- The original call letters were to be WPSC, but they were changed to WBNX, later to be known as an acronym for Winston Broadcast Network and Christ (X).  Winston, being Ernest's middle name.

 

 

At the time, WBNX was part of an influx of new television stations in the Cleveland-Akron area, which included WOIO.  WOAC had signed on in 1982 from Canton, shortly after WJAN became WDLI, after being sold from PTL to the David LIvingstone Ministry Foundation, when Jim Bakker was forced to sell it.  Also, WCLQ was the re-incarnation of WKBF in 1981, opting for a mostly general-entertainment format with Preview  subscription tv at night.  It never thrived and by 1985, WOIO and WBNX were a serious threat, causing them to pick up HSN programming, first partially, then 24/7.  WOIO ended up signing with FOX at it's launch in 1987, and WBNX bought most of WCLQ's programming inventory to program the station, and could now fill the day with program-length infomercials to keep it profitable.  The programming boom of the 90's upgraded the station's profile allowing them to accept traditional advertising and lessen the dependence on per-inquiry ads and infomercials.

 

WDLI would become  full-TBN by the mid 80s, WOAC would drop out after a sale to Paxson in 1995 which replaced virtually all programming with informercials (and later at WAKC the following year).  The WB affiliating with WBNX in 1997 cemented their place in the market and to this day, is a repository of current syndicated programming since the other stations do not have the room or desire to air it.

 

What caused WCLQ to not step against WOIO and WBNX, especially considering 55 was more of an Akron station and wouldn't 61 have more of a head start than 19.  If 61 remained as an independent through late 1986, maybe if they picked up Fox instead of 19, it could given that station a longer lifeline.

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4 hours ago, CLETVFan said:

 

What caused WCLQ to not step against WOIO and WBNX, especially considering 55 was more of an Akron station and wouldn't 61 have more of a head start than 19.  If 61 remained as an independent through late 1986, maybe if they picked up Fox instead of 19, it could given that station a longer lifeline.

The introduction of WOIO was more of a threat than WBNX, since they were more of a Cleveland-centric station than WBNX.   Also, they were very aggressive with their programming, eventually becoming the charter FOX affiliate over WUAB, which had a lot of out-of-market viewers at the time thanks to their Cleveland Indians telecasts.  WOIO snagged the Cavs from WUAB and kept them until 1994 when they were moved back to WUAB under the Malrite LMA.

 

WCLQ never really thrived in their second coming of Channel 61, especially post "Preview" and subsequent owners wanted to put HSN programming on, so that became their fate as WQHS.

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The new logo is all over the station promos.  Wise move to bring back the "TV55" identity.

14 hours ago, tyrannical bastard said:

Looks like WBNX has a new logo, returning the "55" that's been missing since the early 2000's.

May be an image of textimage.png.a2eec80dea964ede88cf0ebde1b18fbf.png

 

 

Much Better, together!

 

 

The last time they identified as "TV55" was in 1997 before they became an affiliate of The WB.

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  • 1 month later...
  • 2 weeks later...
  • 6 months later...

A few WBNX updates.....

 

Decades (and WBNX 55.6 itself) are no more.  The subchannel has been moved to the now-Weigel owned WOCV-CD (which was the remnant of the old WAOH/W35AX "CAT" network) on their primary feed.  WBNX still has Movies!  H&I and Start TV.

 

VUit is also streaming the main WBNX feed on it's service.  It appears to only be available to viewers in the Cleveland DMA (much like Syncbak used to do with local newscasts on mobile devices)  It's the first time I've seen geofencing on their app for a particular station/channel.

Edited by tyrannical bastard
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  • 1 year later...

Remember when WBNX was an up and coming WB affiliate that had the Ninety and Nine Club on twice a day?

 

Here's a clip of the intro circa 1998 featuring a much more jovial (and mockable) Rev. Angley. 

I was testing a new flying erase head S-VHS VCR at the time, and I figured it would be useful some day....

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4MeBfVdGcb4

 

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  • 3 months later...

Writing on the wall for EAM, I suppose; they're realizing the overhead for a web presence is much less than that of a television station, and I assume the proceeds will only help the ministry.

 

Gotta be a bit shocked they went to Nexstar when VCY America and TCT still in an acquiring mood; they could've easily $1-and-debt'ed the operation out to another godcaster, but they found a good commercial offer.

 

And it also gives Nexstar a chance to see if moving around channel numbers to use WJW's 8 on UHF works, and just have everything hosted off the 55 transmitter, sacrificing VHF 8 to 3.0 lighthouse duty.

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I'd be curious to see if there are ANY physical assets other than the transmitter itself that may be transferred from Winston to Nexstar.

 

The way I see it, when the sale closes, the old WBNX in Cuyahoga Falls closes down and the new WBNX launches from 5800 Dick Goddard Way in Cleveland and the WJW staffers are given another station to run.  So all of the physical assets and archives of WBNX remain in the hands of Winston and are used solely for ministry purposes (basically what's left of Ernest Angley's Grace Cathedral).

 

Even with the studio rule abolished, they don't even need a presence in Akron (or Cuyahoga Falls) anymore.  Although, they may have a sales person or two out of WJW's bureau at the University of Akron (do they still even have that?)

 

Maybe one day, the Angley complex in Cuyahoga Falls will get sold and they can do something useful with the land.  It would be a great compliment to Portage Crossing, the successor to the derelict State Road Plaza that closed a decade ago.  Even the majority of the WBNX/Angley complex was once a Shoppers' Fair discount store before Rex Humbard tried to build his empire there, complete with his concrete "erection" that still stands tall to this day....

Edited by tyrannical bastard
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I was surprised that WBNX didn't get sold to another godster surprised they were general entertainment channel truth be told and not run as a faith base channel like most godster's are.

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