News operation
WLKY-TV presently broadcasts 41 hours of locally produced newscasts each week (with 6 1/2 hours each weekday, four hours on Saturdays and 5 1/2 hours on Sundays); in addition, the station produces the half-hour sports highlight and discussion program Sports Saturday, which airs Saturday nights at 11:35 p.m. WLKY runs an hour-long newscast in the noon timeslot on weekdays, a rarity for both a CBS affiliate and a Hearst-owned station. It is considered a rarity as a CBS affiliate in the fact that CBS' recommended time slot for its daytime shows in the Eastern Time Zone places the aforementioned The Young and the Restless at 12:30 p.m. and The Bold and the Beautiful at 1:30 p.m., thereby making the midday newscast last only a half-hour; some CBS affiliates do produce an hour-long midday newscast, but not without tape-delaying either one of CBS' soap operas. It is also considered a rarity for a Hearst-owned station because WLKY is one of only fifteen stations owned by Hearst (alongside NBC affiliates KCRA-TV in Sacramento, WXII-TV in Winston-Salem, WESH in Orlando, WVTM-TV in Birmingham, WDSU in New Orleans, WBBH-TV in Fort Myers and WGAL in Lancaster, Pennsylvania, and ABC affiliates WISN-TV in Milwaukee, KMBC-TV in Kansas City, KOAT-TV in Albuquerque, WMUR-TV in Manchester, New Hampshire, WMTW in Portland, Maine, WPBF in West Palm Beach and WTAE-TV in Pittsburgh) that carry a full midday newscast, whereas most Hearst stations either do not carry one at all or carry a half-hour midday newscast and fill the remainder of the hour with either syndicated or paid programming.
For most of its tenure as an ABC affiliate, WLKY was one of that network's weaker stations in terms of local viewership, usually ranking third in the Nielsen ratings. Occasionally, however, it overtook WAVE for second, behind long-dominant WHAS-TV. However, since the affiliation switch to CBS and rise of cable and satellite penetration in the Kentuckiana region, WLKY has been far more successful in the ratings. Even with the affiliate "downgrade" from VHF to UHF, CBS' network ratings in the Louisville market during the early to mid 1990s remained strong at a time when its viewership in many other markets stagnated or declined, with WLKY leading in the recent May 2011 sweeps from sign-on to sign-off, including newscasts.[10] The station has long since left its ratings-challenged past behind; for the better part of the last decade it has been one of the strongest CBS affiliates in the nation. Louisville has been one of the few Nielsen markets where all four major-network affiliates have relatively strong ratings and news operations. In the recent February 2013 sweeps period, WLKY and Fox affiliate WDRB (channel 41) began distancing themselves from WHAS and WAVE in total-day ratings, largely due to their higher-rated syndicated and local programming lead-ins to their newscasts.
In 2008, WLKY changed its branding from WLKY NewsChannel 32 to WLKY News. The station's news helicopter "NewsChopper 32" was also renamed as the "WLKY NewsChopper", and a new graphics package also made its debut. In February 2010, WLKY became the third station in the Louisville market to begin broadcasting its local newscasts in a widescreen format—and the second to air them in upconverted 16:9 standard definition rather than true high definition (as of August 1, 2019, WLKY is one of three remaining Hearst Television stations to actively air local newscasts in 16:9 widescreen SD, along with Albuquerque ABC affiliate KOAT and New Orleans NBC affiliate WDSU; Burlington's WPTZ, also a Hearst-owned NBC affiliate, had also broadcast local newscasts in 16:9 widescreen SD until it launched HD newscasts in late July 2019).
In February 2012, WLKY debuted a two-hour extension of its weekday morning newscast, airing from 7 to 9 a.m., on its MeTV affiliated second digital subchannel. It competes with the longer-established in-house morning newscast in that timeslot on WDRB.[11] On September 17 of that year, WLKY launched a half-hour 10 p.m. newscast on that same subchannel to compete with WDRB's hour-long prime time newscast (which debuted in 1990) and what was then a WHAS-TV-produced half-hour newscast on CW affiliate WBKI-TV (channel 34) in that slot (the WHAS-TV newscast on WBKI-TV officially ended its run on October 26, 2012; thereafter, syndicated programming replaced the 10 p.m. newscast).[12] WLKY also truncated its morning news program on the MeTV subchannel to one hour, 7–8 a.m., on that date.
- Michael Gargiulo – reporter (now morning anchor for WNBC in New York City)
- Mark Giangreco – sports anchor (former sports director for WLS-TV in Chicago)
- Dan Lewis – anchor (former evening anchor for KOMO-TV in Seattle)
- Tom Mintier – reporter (later at CNN; died in 2016)
- Diane Sawyer – reporter and weather anchor (1967–1970; former anchor of World News)
- Charlie Van Dyke – announcer (1986–1990; did voice-overs for rival WAVE)