WQED Multimedia is an American nonprofit corporation based in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania that owns and operates three public broadcasting stations:
The TV station is a member of PBS, the radio station airs classical music, and WQEJ-FM simulcasts the WQED radio station. The company's headquarters and production facility is located on Fifth Avenue near the Carnegie Mellon University campus.
From 1970 to 2009, the company also owned and published Pittsburgh Magazine .
WQED signed on the air on April 1, 1954, as the first community-sponsored educational television station in the United States. [1]
WQED has partnered with local community organizations to improve arts, education, culture, community health, economics and local issues through civic journalism. WQED's mission is to create and share outstanding public media that educates, entertains and inspires. [2]
Fred Rogers of Mister Rogers' Neighborhood hosted his namesake show that was recorded at WQED's studio for over three decades on PBS, teaching lifelong lessons to children using storytelling and teaching them to use their imagination.
Rogers then returned to Pittsburgh in 1953 and started his work with WQED. He created "The Children's Corner" for WQED, which then led to the development of a 15-min version of Mister Rogers' Neighborhood for television in Canada, but soon returned to Pittsburgh. In 1968, the program debuted on National Educational Television and ran until 2001. It reached over 8 million households on over 300 PBS stations. Rogers' pioneering program was one of the first to encourage children's self-esteem, self-control, cooperation, ability to confront and deal with problems, appreciate diversity and other critical life values and behaviors.
Rogers retired in 2001 and died in 2003. Before his death, he was married to Joanna, with whom he had two sons, James and Joseph, and two grandsons. [3]
In 1959, WQEX (channel 16) was launched for the purpose of classroom instructional content. The network provided specialized educational television starting in 1963, through WQEX. It was the first time that a station used management training and vocational education in Pittsburgh. [ citation needed ]
In 1996, WQED tried to sell WQEX, but the Federal Communications Commission denied WQED's request. The network pleaded financial hardship, and eventually, the sale was authorized. After that, WQEX would later become WINP-TV.
WQED's transmitter is located in the Oakland neighborhood, near the campus of the University of Pittsburgh. In addition, the transmitter also supports WINP-TV, a broadcast translator of ABC affiliate WTAE-TV (on UHF channel 22), and some additional low-power stations.
On July 1, 2019, WQED changed its frequency to VHF digital channel 4. [4]
Fred McFeely Rogers, better known as Mister Rogers, was an American television host, author, producer, and Presbyterian minister. He was the creator, showrunner, and host of the preschool television series Mister Rogers' Neighborhood, which ran from 1968 to 2001.
Mister Rogers' Neighborhood is an American half-hour educational children's television series that ran from 1968 to 2001, and was created and hosted by Fred Rogers. The series Misterogers debuted in Canada on October 15, 1962, on CBC Television. In 1966, Rogers moved back to the United States creating Misterogers' Neighborhood, later called Mister Rogers' Neighborhood, on the regional Eastern Educational Television Network. The US national debut of the show occurred on February 19, 1968. It aired on NET and its successor, PBS, until August 31, 2001.
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WQED is a PBS member television station in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, United States. Owned by WQED Multimedia, it is sister to public radio station WQED-FM (89.3). The two outlets share studios on Fifth Avenue near the Carnegie Mellon University campus and transmitter facilities near the campus of the University of Pittsburgh, both in the city's Oakland section.
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