The station's first
broadcast was on December 15, 1956; an airing of the
1947 movie Miracle on 34th Street. From its
inception, the station was an NBC affiliate until 1962,
when it began a 23-year affiliation to ABC.
During the 1960s, future North Carolina Senator Jesse
Helms was a regular editorial commentator on WRAL's news
broadcasts.
In 1979, the station became the state's first to begin
using a helicopter for newsgathering (Sky 5).
In 1985, Capital Cities Communications merged with the
ABC network, making WTVD-TV an ABC owned and operated
station. As a result, the CBS affiliation moved to
WRAL-TV.
A severe ice storm in December 1989 caused the station's
2,000-foot tower to collapse, forcing WRAL off the air.
By cooperation with Fayetteville station WKFT-TV Channel
40 (which at the time was under severe financial
problems), it was back on the air in 3 hours. WKFT ran
the entire WRAL schedule during this time. The station's
new, stronger tower was launched on October 25, 1990, at
which point WKFT reverted to airing its own programming.

In 1996, WRAL-TV was granted the first experimental
high-definition television license in the United States
by the Federal Communications Commission. In 2000,
WRAL-HD aired the world's first all-HDTV newscast on
October 13. In January 2001, WRAL converted all of its
local news broadcasts to high-definition. Today, WRAL-TV
airs the entire CBS program schedule, as it has since
the late 1990s. Announced on February 1, 2006, WRAL is
now going to simulcast all programming (CBS, News, and
Syndicated) on wral.com. (If you do not live in the
Raleigh-Durham DMA, you cannot see this. It is free of
charge, but you must subscribe to view it.) (Source:
Wikipedia)
Other links:
The History of WRAL on wral.com | Capitol Broadcasting Company | CBC Profile on WRAL-TV
A Potpourri of Wrestling related WRAL references on the Web:
Well as I was commenting on oldrebel's blog pertaining to Jesse Helms, Uncle Paul came to mind and I mentioned that Jesse, along with Uncle Paul and of course wrestling, were staples of the history of WRAL. I remember them all quite well: as a child I spent a lot of time with my grandparents in the summer . . . LINK
Having lived my entire 43 years
in the Raleigh area, these are
my fondest memories of "Retro
Raleigh"...
- Cross Family Christmas
decorations on New Bern Ave. -
Mechanical Santa window display
at King's dept. store on
Wilmington St. - Colorful
Christmas lights at the old
Cameron Village & visiting Santa
in his glass house in-front of
Penny's - Pine State eggnog -
Downtown Christmas decorations &
the evening Christmas parade -
Marching w/ Uncle Paul & meeting
Crawford the Lion -
Mid-Atlantic Wrestling Tues.
nights at Dorton Arena - Wed.
night wrestling tapings at WRAL
studios w/ Bob Caudle (aired on
Sat. nights at 11:30)
- Mr. Peanut waving in-front
of candy store on Wilmington St.
- Best Products on Western Blvd.
- WRAL's "Chiller Theater" &
"Spook Spectacular" - "Scream in
the Dark" - Cardinal Theater at
North Hills - Center Drive-in -
Warner Bros. Store at Crabtree -
Magic Corner on Hillsborough -
Record Bar - WKIX - R.B.s
Chicken & Pine Drug Store on S.
Saunders
LINK
He (Tommy Bland) and his father also came to see “Mid Atlantic Championship Wrestling” which was taped in Studio A at the time. LINK

From 1959-1979, Phlegar was the producer / director behind successful programs such as The Uncle Paul Show and Mid-Atlantic Championship Wrestling for WRAL-TV 5. LINK
Doctor Steve from
Tennessee wrote: I worked at WRAL-TV in the '70s and
we taped Wide World of Wrestling and Mid-Atlantic
Championship Wrestling there every Wednesday.
The Crocketts had contracted to have Brute Bernard come
and do a show with us, and I was full of trepidation,
having watched him as a kid decimate his enemies, never
uttering a word other than a guttural growl. I knew this
guy would just be scary and probably a lot of trouble.
So there I was at the bottom of the dressing room
stairs, waiting for Brute Bernard to come down to the
studio; I was nervous, not knowing what to expect, when
he emerged from the dressing room door. And what a
sight! He had on a silk smoking jacket, thick reading
glasses, and was reading the Wall Street Journal. He
greeted me with a "hi, son, nice to meet you" and
entered the studio. He was the nicest wrestler I ever
met (and I met a lot of them). That night, of course, he
was the same old Brute that I remembered as a kid but I
had a completely different opinion of him, having seen
his "other" side.
LINK
* * * * *
WRAL Nov.1959 TV Ad (All Star Championship Wrestling Blog)
* * * * *
MMA on CBS
By Jeff Gravley WRAL.com - June 2, 2008
LINK
On January 31, 1959 professional wrestling made its
debut on WRAL-TV. From the early 60's through the 70's
the matches were filmed in a studio here at the station
and shown on Saturday night at 11:30.
The Nature Boy--Blackjack Mulligan--Wahoo McDaniel.
Those were the names that were synonymous with pro
wrestling and those were the guys who would come to the
station for their Wednesday night filmings.
Former news anchor Charlie Gaddy joked that he would be
reading the news about a house fire in one studio while
the wrestlers were applying headlocks and dropping a
back suplex in the other studio.
WRAL weatherman Bob Caudle hosted Mid-Atlantic
Championship Wrestling with help from WRAL sportscasters
Ray Reeve and Nick Pond.
I give you this little history lesson as a backdrop to
CBS's decision to show Mixed Martial Arts in prime time
this past Saturday...... (read
the entire article)
* * * * *
MID-ATLANTIC GATEWAY
STUDIO WRESTLING INDEX | ALMANAC INDEX | GATEWAY HOME PAGE
Copyright
©
Mid-Atlantic
Gateway. Article originally
published in 2005. Updated in 2010, 2012.































I was on Uncle Paul's show and he also accompanied me on piano on other TV shows. A great guy! Back then Joe Murnick ran nearly all of the wrestling and the Rock N' Roll shows that came to town. LINK