The
American Broadcasting Company (
ABC) is an
American television network. Created in 1943 from the former
NBC Blue radio network, ABC is owned by
The Walt Disney Company and is part of
Disney-ABC Television Group. It first broadcast on television in 1948. Corporate headquarters are in the
Upper West Side of
Manhattan in
New York City,
["Frequently Asked Questions." American Broadcasting Company. Retrieved on August 28, 2009.] while programming offices are in
Burbank, California adjacent to the
Walt Disney Studios and the
Walt Disney Company corporate
The formal name of the operation is
American Broadcasting Companies, Inc., and that name appears on copyright notices for its in-house network productions and on all official documents of the company, including paychecks and contracts. A separate entity named
ABC Inc., formerly Capital Cities/ABC Inc., is that firm's direct parent company, and that company is owned in turn by Disney. The network is sometimes referred to as the
Alphabet Network, due to the letters "ABC" being the first three letters of the Latin alphabet, in order.
History
Creating ABC
From the organization of the first true radio networks in the late 1920s, broadcasting in the United States was dominated by two companies,
CBS and
RCA's
NBC. Before NBC's 1926 formation, RCA had acquired
AT&T's
New York station
WEAF (later WNBC, now CBS-owned
WFAN). With WEAF came a loosely organized system feeding programming to other stations in the northeastern U.S. RCA, before the acquisition of the WEAF group in mid-1926, had previously owned a second such group, with WJZ in New York as the lead station (purchased by RCA in 1923 from
Westinghouse) . These were the foundations of RCA's two distinct programming services, the NBC "Red" and NBC "Blue" networks. Legend has it that the color designations originated from the color of the push-pins early engineers used to designate affiliates of WEAF (red pins) and WJZ (blue pins).