CBC has always believed in strong news and informational programming. WRAL-TV is one of the few stations in the country that still operates a full-time documentary team, and CBC stations have a long history of award-winning programs that help audiences understand key issues. Here is a sample of that programming:
Elections
Coverage of elections and the political process has always been one of the hallmarks of Capitol Broadcasting Company. CBC journalists have made political news a priority on the company’s radio and television stations plus the internet.
Femme Fare
“Femme Fare—WRAL-TV’s Magazine of the Air for the Modern Woman” was a pioneering weekday program on WRAL-TV from 1963 to 1977.
The program was hosted by WRAL Woman’s Director Bette Elliott and featured a wide range of news and features with women viewers in mind. Elliott was a veteran newspaper reporter and columnist who quickly found a following as host of the program.
Femme Fare was produced every weekday in the WRAL-TV studios. The show included regular features on cooking, sewing and flower arranging, but also delved into serious topics such as women’s health, business issues, the arts and culture.
Elliott used the traditional kitchen set for some segments, but branched out to host full fashion shows and other segments on location outside the studio. She would travel to New York City regularly to get an early look at the fashions of the day, producing reports that would give Triangle viewers insight on the coming trends.
The Femme Fare program earned several major honors; it claimed the TV-Radio Mirror Award for outstanding programming in 1969 and then again in 1971.
News Specials
When major events take place, CBC is there to provide special coverage that goes beyond the typical newscast. From inaugurations to statewide anniversaries and celebrations, CBC brought the story home to listeners and viewers.
Tobacco Radio Network
The Tobacco Radio Network (TRN) was a pioneering radio cooperative owned and operated by Capitol Broadcasting Company.
Begun in 1942, the network was originally a loose-knit organization of six local radio stations in Eastern North Carolina which were “hooked up” by phone lines to simultaneously broadcast programs of special interest, including agricultural features, sports events, and news of the state capital.
The six original network stations were all in Eastern North Carolina, the heart of flue-cured tobacco production in the United States, and that was the impetus of the “Tobacco Radio Network” name.
The network’s core mission was to educate farmers and keep them informed of the latest agricultural news, techniques and market standings. Under the leadership of CBC Farm Director Ray Wilkinson, the network grew to include 370 radio stations in six Southeastern states—Virginia, North Carolina, South Carolina, Georgia, Florida and Alabama.
TRN was Capitol’s first network venture, but others followed. In the late 1940s, CBC formed the Dixie FM Network to promote the new FM broadcasting format. Special programming such as sporting events was made available exclusively on FM to create interest in the new radio band.
The Dixie Network combined with the Tobacco Network stations formed the nucleus of yet another partnership – The Tobacco Sports Network, which carried North Carolina collegiate football and basketball games statewide. The Tobacco Sports Network was the first in the Southeastern United States to produce live sports coverage of major football and basketball games on a network basis.
WRAL Sports Director Ray Reeve was a mainstay on the Tobacco Sports Network, broadcasting play-by-play coverage of countless Atlantic Coast Conference games and helping to raise the profile of the league itself.
In 1959, the two networks were merged into the Tobacco Network and later that became the Capitol Agribusiness Network.
In 1996, all of Capitol Broadcasting’s radio networks were restructured and merged into the North Carolina News Network.