Wallingford Public Access Association
Wallingford Public Access TV Station | |
---|---|
Name | Wallingford Public Access Association Television |
Acronym | WPAA-TV |
Location | 28 So. Orchard St. Wallingford, Connecticut |
Website | https://wpaa.tv/ |
Wallingford Public Access Association, Inc. (WPAA-TV and Community Media Center) is a public community access TV station in Wallingford, Connecticut. The station is a nonprofit organization. Volunteer-run, it is funded in part by subscriber fees that are part of Wallingford cable TV subscriber bills, as well as traditional nonprofit[1] income sources such as grants, grassroots donations, and in-kind services and furnishings. WPAA-TV cablecasts to Wallingford on Comcast Channel 1070 and throughout Connecticut on Frontier Channel 6091. There is a 24 x 7 simulcast from the website wpaa.tv/watch enables viewing world-wide viewing. WPAA-TV can also be viewed on Roku.
WPAA-TV provides the community with media production tools, a modern TV Studio, and training to create local content for distribution as TV. Training includes TV Production (Lights, camera, action), information literacy and storytelling. The station itself does not create the content, its role is to support the creation of local content. However, selected arts & humanities and arts projects are produced. Several programs about Associated Press Founder and Wallingford native, Moses Yale Beach, are in production as the Moses Yale Beach, Revealed project.[2]
Connecticut utility regulators designated the station the Community Access Provider (CAP) for Wallingford.[3] Unlike other public access stations, WPAA distributes government and educational access television, including news from Connecticut congresspeople and content made by state and federal government sources.[4]
This Community TV station is located in a two-story 1924 cow barn renovated by volunteers at 28 South Orchard Street in downtown Wallingford. The old hayloft now called studioW is where their ‘Make TV’ program happens.[5] A mural by Ryan “ARCY” Christenson covers the full north side of the building[6] which is now owned by WPAA-TV.[7]
WPAA-TV is known for being where internet celebrity Michael Buckley got his start, producing the earliest version of his show What the Buck.[8] Another notable media celebrity is former station manager, now Emmy Award-winning editor of National Geographic Life Below Zero Eric Michael Shrader.[9][circular reference] While at WPAA-TV he worked on the film It Happened But Nobody Noticed about CT Punk Rock Scene 1970-80.
In addition to being a television studio, WPAA-TV is a media space with an art gallery, community rooms, video editing, and podcast suites available for community use.[10] The nonprofit also hosts local theater and filmmaking initiatives. Film initiatives include the award-winning fantasy episodic series The Sparrow Falling[11] and children's animated program like Space Bears The Movie and Space Bears,[12] producer Michael Schleif. Several interns from CT colleges are now in the news & entertainment industry.[13] The gallery permanent collection StreetshotZ, features photographs by local portrait photographer Charles Buzinsky.[14]
Proceeds from gallery events supports local food and housing insecure programs in the area. WPAA-TV welcomed visitors to bring nonperishable food when they visit the gallery. As part of a StreetshotZ Photobook give-a-way volunteers panhandle for donations. This project and promotion video was recognized as first place Community Impact winner by the national Alliance for Community Media in 2020.[15]
WPAA-TV is also noted for Alliance for Community Media Best in the USA small stations awards of 2019, 2020, 2021 and two consecutive years, best in New England 2013 and 2014, awarded by Alliance for Community Media North East.[16] Some of the station's producers including Georgian Lussier[17] have won some prestigious honors such as Rika Welsh Community Impact Award. The volunteer Executive Director, Susan Huizenga,[18] was recognized as a contributor to the community media movement in 2023 by ACM-NE with the Church Sherwood Leadership Award.
WPAA-TV's youth program, TeenTigerTV, also has standout accomplishments. Among them Ben Negron, was the 2022 Democracy Youth Challenge Social Media winner in Civic Life Project[19] When I Speak Freely. This video is featured in the inaugural WNET Youth Collective Film Festival[20]
References
[edit]- ^ "Give Greater".
- ^ "MYB, Revealed". wpaa.tv. Retrieved 20 May 2023.
- ^ "Community Access Provider".
- ^ "court decision". Retrieved May 27, 2020.
- ^ "Music Monthly at WPAA-TV". 5 March 2020. Retrieved April 25, 2020.
- ^ "'WPAA mural'".
- ^ "'WPAA Ownership'".
- ^ Klimkiewicz, Joann (21 October 2007). "This Buck Doesn't Stop: How Hyper-Chatty Wallingford Public-Access Host Became YouTube Sensation". The Hartford Courant. Archived from the original on 3 February 2008. Retrieved 2008-03-28.
- ^ "Eric Shrader". wikipedia. Retrieved 20 May 2023.
- ^ "WPAA-TV".
- ^ "Sparrow Falling". IMDb. Retrieved 20 May 2023.
- ^ "space bears the movie". space bears. Retrieved 20 May 2023.
- ^ "wpaa alumni/". wpaatv. Retrieved 20 May 2023.
- ^ "Buzinsky photos".
- ^ "WPAA awards".
- ^ "notable works".
- ^ "Georgian Lussier".
- ^ "wpaa tv director". LinkedIn. Retrieved 20 May 2023.
- ^ "civic life project". civic life. Retrieved 20 May 2023.
- ^ "civic life project video". wnet.org. Retrieved 20 May 2023.