Independent station

{{Short description|Television stations that are not affiliated with a television network}}

{{refimprove|date=August 2020}}

{{Use American English|date=May 2023}}

{{Use mdy dates|date=October 2021}}

An independent station is a broadcast station, usually a television station, not affiliated with a larger broadcast network. As such, it only broadcasts syndicated programs it has purchased; brokered programming, for which a third party pays the station for airtime; and local programs that it produces itself.

In North American and Japanese television, independent stations with general entertainment formats emerged as a distinct class of station because their lack of network affiliation led to unique strategies in program content, scheduling, and promotion, as well as different economics compared to major network affiliates. The Big Three networks in the United States — ABC, CBS, and NBC — traditionally provided a substantial number of program hours per day to their affiliates, whereas later network startups—Fox, UPN, and The WB (the latter two were succeeded by The CW and, to a lesser extent, MyNetworkTV)—provided substantially fewer shows to their affiliates. Through the early 1990s, Fox affiliates were often considered independents.

Programming

The term independent station most often is used to refer to stations with general entertainment formats. Historically, these stations specialized in children's programming, syndicated reruns or first-run shows, and sports coverage.

Some independent stations, mostly those once having been affiliated with a major network, produce substantial amounts of news and public affairs programming. The model for these stations was WSVN in Miami, an NBC affiliate that switched to Fox in January 1989 and dramatically expanded its news output. Further affiliation changes and news expansions from the 1990s onward have produced a number of additional stations, such as KTVK in Phoenix (an ABC affiliate until 1995); WJXT in Jacksonville, Florida (a CBS affiliate until 2002); and WHDH in Boston (an NBC affiliate until 2017), as well as stations such as WGN-TV in Chicago and KUSI-TV in San Diego that never held a major network affiliation.

However, in a broader sense, there are independent stations that focus on a specific genre of television programming. For instance, religious independent stations buy and schedule, or produce locally, evangelism and study programs, and ethnic independent stations purchase or produce programs in specific languages or catering to specific communities.

Overview

=Early history=

During the 1950s and 1960s, independent stations filled their broadcast hours with movies, sports, cartoons, filmed travelogues, and some locally produced television programs, including in some instances newscasts and children's programs. Independents that were on the air during this period would sign-on at times later than that of stations affiliated with a television network, some not doing so until the early or mid-afternoon hours. Another source of programming became available to independent stations by the mid-1960s: reruns of network programs which, after completing their initial runs, were sold into syndication.

As cable television franchises began to be incorporated around the United States during the 1960s and 1970s, independent stations from large and mid-sized markets were imported by these systems via wire or microwave relay to smaller media markets, which often only had stations that were affiliated with the Big Three television networks (ABC, NBC and CBS); these independents became the first "superstations," which were distributed on a statewide or regional basis. In December 1976, Ted Turner decided to uplink his struggling Atlanta, Georgia station WTCG to satellite for national distribution. Soon, other companies decided to copy Turner's idea and applied for satellite uplinks to distribute other stations; WGN-TV in Chicago, KTVU in Oakland-San Francisco, and WPIX and WOR-TV in New York City would begin to be distributed nationally during the late 1970s and early 1980s (in the case of KTVU, it would revert to being a regional superstation by the early part of the latter decade).

By the start of the 1970s, independent stations typically aired children's programming in the morning and afternoon hours, and movies and other adult-oriented shows (some stations aired paid religious programs) during the midday hours. They counterprogrammed local network-affiliated stations' news programs with syndicated reruns – usually sitcoms and hour-long dramas – in the early evening, and movies during prime time and late night hours. In some areas, independent stations carried network programs that were not aired by a local affiliate.

In larger markets such as New York City, Chicago and Los Angeles, independent stations benefited from a ruling by the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) that barred network-affiliated stations within the top 50 television markets from airing network-originated programs in the hour preceding prime time. This legislation, known as the Prime Time Access Rule, was in effect from 1971 to 1995, and as a result independents faced less competition for syndicated reruns. Some stations in larger markets (such as WGN-TV in Chicago; KTLA, KCOP-TV and KHJ-TV in Los Angeles; KWGN-TV in Denver; and (W)WOR-TV, WPIX and WNEW-TV in New York City) ventured into local news broadcasts, usually airing at 10:00 p.m. in the Eastern and Pacific time zones, and 9:00 p.m. in the Central and Mountain time zones. Network stations aired their late newscasts an hour later.

From the late 1970s through the mid-1980s, independent stations in several U.S. cities, particularly those that had yet to receive a cable franchise, carried a form of a network affiliation through subscription television networks (such as ON TV, Spectrum and SelecTV); these services – which were formatted very similarly to their pay cable counterparts – ran sports, uncut and commercial-free movies (both mainstream and pornographic, broadcasts of the latter often created legal issues that were eventually largely cleared up due to an FCC regulation that legally allowed the broadcast of programs featuring content that would otherwise be deemed indecent when broadcast "in the clear" if the encrypted signal was not visible or audible to nonsubscribers), and on some services, television specials. Independents usually ran the services during the evening and overnight hours in lieu of running movies and other programs acquired off the syndication market by the station, although a few eventually began to carry these services for most of the broadcast day. The services required the use of decoder boxes to access the service's programming (some of which were fairly easy to unencrypt due to the transmission methods stations used to scramble the signal during the service's broadcast hours); some required the payment of an additional one-time fee to receive events and adult films. As cities added cable franchises, thus allowing people to subscribe to conventional premium television networks like HBO and Showtime, nearly all of the over-the-air subscription services had shuttered operations by the end of the 1980s.

Until the late 1970s, independent stations were usually limited to the larger American television markets, due to several factors. Most smaller markets did not have a large enough population to support four commercial stations. Even in markets that were large enough to support a fourth station, the only available license was on a UHF channel allocation. During the analog television era, the reception quality of UHF stations was not nearly as good as stations on the VHF band, especially in areas with rugged terrain (the reverse is true in the present day with the transmission of digital signals) or in markets that cover large geographic areas. Since independent stations had to buy an additional 16 hours of programming per day – a burden not faced by network-affiliated stations – these factors made prospective owners skittish about signing on a television station as an independent. By the 1970s, however, cable television had gained enough penetration to make independent stations viable in smaller markets. This was especially true in markets that were either located in rugged terrain or covered large areas; in these regions, cable (and later satellite) are all but essential for acceptable television. Nearly 300 independent stations existed in the United States by the mid-1980s, in markets of varying sizes,{{cite journal|last=Kanner|first=Bernice|date=June 17, 1985|title=Thinking About a Fourth Network|journal=New York Magazine|location=New York|pages=19–23|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=ab0BAAAAMBAJ&q=%22metromedia%22%2B%22fourth+network%22&pg=PA19|access-date=October 4, 2009}} up from fewer than 100 in 1980. They could buy new shows without cash using barter syndication.{{cite news | url=http://www.nytimes.com/1986/11/02/arts/new-star-trek-plan-reflects-symbiosis-of-tv-and-movies.html?pagewanted=all | title=New 'Star Trek' Plan Reflects Symbiosis of TV and Movies |work=The New York Times| date=November 2, 1986 | access-date=February 11, 2015 | last=Harmetz |first=Aljean | page=31}} Many stations belonged to the Association of Independent Television Stations (INTV), a group similar to the National Association of Broadcasters, and which lobbied the FCC on behalf of independents.

In the 1980s, television syndicators began offering original, first-run series such as Solid Gold, Lifestyles of the Rich and Famous, Star Search, Independent Network News and Star Trek: The Next Generation (as well as canceled network series revived for first-run syndication such as Fame, Too Close for Comfort, Charles in Charge, It's a Living and Baywatch), and made-for-television movies and miniseries like Sadat. This trend primarily benefited independent stations. Independents scheduled these first-run programs during prime time and on weekends.

In the United States, many independent stations were commonly owned. Companies that operated three or more independents included:

=Decline=

In 1986 several independent outlets, led by the Metromedia stations, formed the Fox Broadcasting Company,{{cite news|title=Murdoch acquired six Metromedia TV stations|url=https://www.latimes.com/archives/la-xpm-1986-03-07-fi-16464-story.html|work=Los Angeles Times|date=March 7, 1986|access-date=May 9, 2014}}{{cite news|title=Fox Broadcasting Co. reaches affiliate agreements with 79 TV stations to exclusively broadcast offered programming|url=|work=PR Newswire |date=August 4, 1986}} the first major venture at a fourth U.S. broadcast television network since the DuMont Television Network shut down in August 1956 (which resulted in some of its affiliates, including those owned by Metromedia, becoming independents). Fox made efforts, slowly at first, to have its affiliates emulate a network programming style as much as possible; but in turn, Fox only carried a late-night talk show at its launch in October 1986, and beginning in April 1987, offered one night of prime time programming a week (on Sundays). The network only programmed two hours of prime time programming each night (and, beginning in the 1990s, some children's programming through Fox Kids), but gradually expanded its prime time lineup to all seven nights until January 1993. Fox's owned-and-operated stations left INTV in March 1992.{{Cite news|first=Joe|last=Flint|title=Fox O&O's out of INTV|work=Broadcasting|date=March 9, 1992|pages=5–6|url=https://worldradiohistory.com/Archive-BC/BC-1992/BC-1992-03-09.pdf}}

The lack of programming in other dayparts forced most Fox affiliates to maintain the same programming model as independent stations during non-prime time slots, and during its early years, on nights without prime time programming from the network. Fox coerced most of its affiliates to air prime time newscasts (there were some holdouts as late as 2013, while many others opted to run outsourced local newscasts from a competing network affiliate) as well as news programming in other dayparts common with other major network affiliates. When a complicated six-station affiliation switch in South Florida saw WSVN in Miami switch from NBC to Fox in 1989, the station adopted a news-intensive format unlike any independent station or Fox affiliate prior, a scheduling choice initially ridiculed in local media but which quickly attracted industry attention and saw ratings success. This model was copied by stations owned by New World Communications and SF Broadcasting that switched to Fox in the mid-1990s, and to other news-producing Fox and minor network affiliates, and independent stations, by the 2000s.

In September 1993, many independents began carrying the Prime Time Entertainment Network (PTEN), an ad-hoc programming service that emulated a network model, which featured drama series and made-for-TV movies intended for first-run syndication. In January 1995, many remaining independents, including those that carried PTEN, joined upstart networks The WB{{Cite news|url=https://www.newspapers.com/article/the-buffalo-news-time-warner-tv-network/132150247/|date=November 2, 1993|page=D12|first=Lynn|last=Elber|agency=Associated Press|title=Time Warner TV network to cover 40% of nation|newspaper=The Buffalo News|via=Newspapers.com|access-date=September 21, 2023}} and the United Paramount Network (UPN). The WB, UPN and their affiliates used a very similar programming model to that initially used by Fox and its stations during their first four years of existence (although neither network would expand their prime time lineups to all seven nights); the launch of those networks resulted in PTEN's demise in 1997, as most stations that became affiliates of UPN and The WB (whose respective founding parents, Chris-Craft Industries and Time Warner, jointly owned PTEN) either dropped the service or moved its lineup out of prime time when those networks launched. Other stations banded together to become charter outlets of the Pax TV (now Ion Television) network in August 1998, although some of the stations that aligned with Pax had earlier affiliated with its predecessor, the Infomall TV Network (inTV), two years before.

The launches of these networks drastically reduced the number of independent stations in the United States; some mid-sized markets would not regain a general entertainment independent until the early 2000s, through sign-ons of unaffiliated stations and disaffiliations by existing stations from other commercial and noncommercial networks. In 2001, Univision Communications purchased several English language independents in larger markets (which mostly operated as Home Shopping Network affiliates until the late 1990s) from USA Broadcasting to form the nuclei of the upstart Spanish language network Telefutura (now UniMás), which launched in January 2002. Several stations affiliated with The WB and UPN became independent again when the respective parent companies of those networks (Time Warner and CBS Corporation) decided to shut them down to form The CW, which launched in September 2006 with a schedule dominated by shows held over from and an affiliate body primarily made up of stations previously aligned with its two predecessors.[https://www.nytimes.com/2006/01/24/business/media/24cnd-network.html?bl UPN and WB to Combine, Forming New TV Network], The New York Times, January 24, 2006. Some of the newly independent stations subsequently found a new network home through MyNetworkTV, itself created out of the prospect that the UPN affiliates of corporate sister Fox Television Stations would become independents due to The CW choosing to affiliate with CBS Television Stations and Tribune Broadcasting stations in overlapping markets.{{cite news|title=News Corp. to launch new mini-network for UPN stations|url=http://usatoday30.usatoday.com/life/television/news/2006-02-22-fox-my-network_x.htm|access-date=January 21, 2013|newspaper=USA Today|date=February 22, 2006}}

=Today=

{{unreferenced|date=August 2020|section}}

As a result of the various network launches that have occurred since the 1986 launch of Fox, true independent stations have become a rarity. The smallest stations, which in the past would have been forced to adopt a locally originated independent program schedule, now have other options – 24-hour-a-day networks that require no local or syndicated programming for the station to carry; some of these networks, such as AMG TV or America One, follow a full-service variety format, while others are devoted primarily to classic television (such as MeTV) and/or films, or carry mainly niche programming. Many stations that are affiliated with the larger post-1980s networks still behave much like independents, as they program far more hours a day than a station affiliated with one of the Big Three networks.

This is especially the case with MyNetworkTV, whose efforts to offer first-run programming were largely unsuccessful. By 2009, the network had abandoned its first-run programming efforts and became a "programming service", with its programming now focused upon off-network reruns of drama series.{{cite web |author=Michael Malone |date=February 9, 2009 |title=MyNetworkTV Shifts From Network to Programming Service |url=http://www.broadcastingcable.com/news/programming/mynetworktv-shifts-network-%E2%80%98programming-service/34117 |access-date=September 23, 2012 |periodical=Broadcasting & Cable}}{{cite web |author=Toni Fitzgerald |date=February 10, 2009 |title=MNTV: Broadcast model 'not working' |url=http://www.medialifemagazine.com/mntv-broadcast-model-not-working/ |access-date=September 23, 2012 |website=Media Life Magazine}} After this transition, many of MyNetworkTV's affiliates began to downplay their affiliation with the network and move the block to alternate timeslots (such as late-night); network owner Fox Television Stations rebranded most of its MyNetworkTV stations as offshoots of their parent Fox stations (such as "Fox 11 Plus" for KCOP-TV){{Cite web |date=16 January 2023 |title=Former L.A. MyNetworkTV station rebrands under 'Fox Plus' name |url=https://www.newscaststudio.com/2023/01/16/kcop-fox-11-plus/?og=1 |access-date=2023-01-16 |website=NewscastStudio |language=en-US}}

Current independents follow a very different program format from their predecessors. While sitcom reruns are still popular, expanded newscasts and other syndicated programs such as talk shows; courtroom shows; reruns of recent scripted comedy and drama series; and no-cost public domain programming are common. Another type of content being added to many independent station lineups in recent years has been brokered programming, including infomercials, home shopping and televangelist programs; the Federal Communications Commission did not allow infomercials to be broadcast on American television until 1984, but since then, it has proven to be a lucrative, if somewhat polarizing with viewers, way to fill airtime. During the 1990s when infomercials gained popularity, many stations began broadcasting 24 hours a day rather than signing off at night. By filling the overnight hours with infomercials, the station would be able to generate extra revenue where they had previously been off the air. Home shopping programs (mainly simulcasts of cable services that also have over-the-air distribution such as QVC and the Home Shopping Network) or syndicated programs fill overnight time periods on stations that do not run infomercials during that day part.

Since the FCC revised its media ownership rules to permit station duopolies in August 1999, independents that operate on a standalone basis have become quite rare in the United States and, in turn, independents that are senior partners in duopolies are fairly uncommon. With the proliferation of duopolies and local marketing agreements since that point, most independent stations are operated alongside a major network affiliate (more commonly, one of either ABC, NBC, CBS or Fox), which may share syndicated programming with and/or produce newscasts in non-competitive timeslots for its unaffiliated sister. This is because in most markets, independents tend to have lower viewership than that of a network affiliate, and usually fall within part of the FCC's duopoly criteria (which allows a company to own two stations in the same market if one is not among the four highest-rated at the time of an ownership transaction).

List of notable independent stations, past and present

  • Partial listing: bold text denotes an independent station.

= List of notable U.S. independent stations =

class="wikitable sortable"
Media market

! State

! Stations

!First air date

!Last air date

!Current network

rowspan="3"| Albany-Schenectady-Troyrowspan="3" | New YorkWXXA-TV 23

|July 30, 1982

|

|Fox

WUSV 45 (now WCWN)

|March 22, 1982

|

|The CW

WOCD 55 (now WYPX-TV)

|December 14, 1987

|

|Ion

AlbuquerqueSanta FeNew MexicoKSAF-TV/KNMZ-TV/KKTO-TV 2 (now KASA-TV)

|October 31, 1983

|

|Telemundo

rowspan="4"| Anchoragerowspan="4" | AlaskaKTBY 4

|December 2, 1983

|

|Fox

KCFT-CD 35

|July 17, 1984

|

|

KDMD 33

|October 1, 1989

|

|33.1 Ion
33.2 Telemundo

KYES-TV 5 (now KAUU)

|January 21, 1990

|

|5.1 CBS

5.4 MyNetworkTV

rowspan="7" | Atlantarowspan="7" | GeorgiaWQXI-TV 36 (now WATL)

|December 18, 1954 (original incarnation)

August 16, 1969 (2nd incarnation)

July 5, 1976 (current incarnation)

|May 31, 1955 (original incarnation)

April 1, 1971 (2nd incarnation)

|MyNetworkTV

WJRJ-TV/WTCG/WTBS 17 (now WPCH-TV)

|September 1, 1967

|

|The CW

WGNX 46 (now WANF)

|June 6, 1971

|

|CBS

WVEU/WUPA 69

|August 22, 1981

|

|

WSWS-TV 66 (now WGBP-TV)

|May 23, 1982

|

|Merit Street

WHOT 34 (now WUVG-DT)

|April 18, 1989

|

|Univision

WATC-DT 57

|April 14, 1996

|

|

rowspan="2" | Austinrowspan="2" | TexasKBVO 42 (now KEYE-TV)

|December 4, 1983

|

|CBS

K13VC 13

|November 30, 1989

|March 29, 2003

|

rowspan="3" | Baltimorerowspan="3" | MarylandWMAR-TV 2

|October 27, 1947

|

|ABC

WBFF 45

|April 11, 1971

|

|Fox

WNUV-TV 54

|July 1, 1982

|

|The CW

rowspan="2" | Baton Rougerowspan="2" | LouisianaKBTR-CD 36

|May 1, 1987

|

|

KZUP-CD 20

|November 26, 2002

|

|

BeaumontTexasKBMT-LD 64 (now KUIL-LD 12.5)

|2003

|

|MyNetworkTV

rowspan="3" | Birminghamrowspan="3" | AlabamaWTTO 21

|April 21, 1982

|

|The CW

WCAJ 68 (now WABM)

|January 31, 1986

|

|68.1 MyNetworkTV

68.2 ABC

WOTM-LD 19

|November 15, 1996

|

|

Bloomington-PeoriaIllinoisWBLN 43 (now WYZZ-TV)

|October 18, 1982

|

|Fox

BoiseIdahoKTRV-TV 12

|October 18, 1981

|

|Ion

rowspan="11" | Bostonrowspan="11" | MassachusettsWJZB-TV 14

|December 4, 1953

|May 1969

|

WSBK-TV 38

|October 12, 1964

|

|

WKBG-TV 56 (now WLVI)

|December 21, 1966

|

|The CW

WXNE-TV 25 (now WFXT)

|October 10, 1977

|

|Fox

WSMW-TV/WHLL 66 (now WUNI)

|February 12, 1985

|

|Univision

WQTV/WABU 68 (now WBPX-TV)

|January 2, 1979

|

|Ion

WSMW-TV/WHLL 27 (now WUTF-TV)

|January 1, 1970

|

|UniMás

WWDP 46

|December 6, 1986

|

|ShopHQ

WDPX-TV 58

|January 16, 1984

|

|Grit

WMFP 62

|October 16, 1987

|

|OnTV4U

WHDH 7

|May 22, 1982

|

|

rowspan="4" | Buffalorowspan="4" | New YorkWUTV 29

|December 21, 1970

|

|Fox

WNLO 23

|May 13, 1987

|

|The CW

WNYO-TV 49

|September 1, 1987

|

|MyNetworkTV

WBBZ-TV 67

|March 12, 1993

|

|MeTV/Independent

rowspan="5" | Charlotterowspan="5" | North CarolinaWCCB 18

|September 5, 1961 (2nd incarnation)

November 1, 1964 (current incarnation)

|May 16, 1963 (2nd incarnation)

|The CW

WRET-TV 36 (now WCNC-TV)

|July 9, 1967

|

|NBC

WHKY-TV 14 (now WWJS)

|February 14, 1968

|

|Sonlife

WJZY 46

|March 9, 1987

|

|Fox

WAXN-TV 64

|October 15, 1994

|

|

rowspan="8" | Chicagorowspan="8" | IllinoisWGN-TV 9

|April 5, 1948

|

|The CW

WCIU-TV 26

|February 6, 1964

|

|

WFLD 32

|January 4, 1966

|

|Fox

WSNS-TV 44

|April 5, 1970

|

|Telemundo

WGBO-TV 66 (now WGBO-DT)

|September 18, 1981

|

|Univision

WPWR-TV 60 (now WPWR-TV 50)

|April 4, 1982

|

|MyNetworkTV

WMEU-CD 48

|October 28, 1987

|

|

WJYS 62

|March 2, 1991

|

|

ChicoCaliforniaKCVU-TV 20

|May 14, 1986

|

|Fox

ChristianstedU.S. Virgin IslandsWCVI-TV 23

|May 16, 1997

|

|23.1 CBS

23.2 ABC

rowspan="2" | Cincinnatirowspan="2" | OhioWXIX-TV 19

|August 1, 1968

|

|Fox

WIII-TV/WSTR-TV 64

|January 29, 1980

|

|MyNetworkTV

rowspan="7" | Cleveland-Akronrowspan="7" | OhioWUAB 43

|September 15, 1968

|

|The CW

WBNX-TV 55

|December 1, 1985

|

|

WKBF-TV 61

|January 19, 1968

|April 25, 1975

|

WCLQ 61

|March 3, 1981

|

|Univision

WOIO 19

|May 19, 1985

|

|19.1 CBS

19.2 MeTV/MyNetworkTV

WMFD-TV 68

|January 10, 1986

|

|

WGGN-TV 52

|December 5, 1982

|

|

rowspan="3" |Colorado Springs-Pueblo

| rowspan="3" |Colorado

|KXRM 21

|January 22, 1985

|

|Fox

KXTU 57

|November 5, 1999

|

|The CW

KWHS 51

|1992

|

|CTN

ColumbusGeorgiaWXTX 54

|August 29, 1983

|

|Fox

rowspan="2" | Columbusrowspan="2" | OhioWTTE 28

|June 1, 1984

|

|TBD

WWAT 53 (now WWHO)

|August 31, 1987

|

|The CW

rowspan="3" | Concord-Manchesterrowspan="3" | New HampshireWXPO-TV/WNDS/WZMY-TV/WBIN-TV 50 (now WWJE-DT)

|September 5, 1983

|

|True Crime Network

WNHT 21

|April 16, 1984

|March 31, 1989

|

WNEU 60

|August 14, 1987

|

|Telemundo

Corpus ChristiTexasK47DF 47 (now K22JA-D)

|June 28, 1991

|

|19.1 Telemundo

19.2 Independent

rowspan="9" | Dallas-Fort Worthrowspan="9" | TexasKDFI 27

|January 26, 1981

|

|MyNetworkTV

KFWD 52

|September 1, 1988

|

|Shop LC

KLDT 55 (now KAZD)

|March 18, 1997

|

|55.1 Spectrum News 1

55.2 MeTV

KMEC-TV/KBFI-TV/KXTX-TV/KRLD-TV 33 (now KDAF)

|September 29, 1980

|

|The CW

KSTR-TV 49 (now KSTR-DT)

|April 17, 1984

|

|UniMás

KTVT 11

|September 11, 1955

|

|CBS

KTXA 21

|January 4, 1981

|

|

KMPX/KFAA-TV 29

|September 15, 1993

|

|

KDTV 39 (now KXTX-TV)

|February 5, 1968

|

|Telemundo

Davenport
-Rock Island
Iowa
-Illinois
KLJB 18

|July 28, 1985

|

|Fox

rowspan="4" |Dayton

| rowspan="4" |Ohio

|WSWO-TV 26

|July 14, 1968

|December 6, 1972

|

WKTR-TV/WOET-TV 16 (now WPTD)

|March 20, 1967

|

|PBS

WTJC/WDPX 26 (now WBDT)

|September 7, 1980

|

|The CW

WRGT-TV 45

|September 23, 1984

|

|Dabl

rowspan="5" | Denverrowspan="5" | ColoradoKWGN-TV 2

|July 18, 1952

|

|The CW

KCDO-TV 3

|December 18, 1963

|

|

KDVR 31

|August 10, 1983

|

|Fox

KTVD 20

|December 1, 1988

|

|MyNetworkTV

K34QB-D 45

|January 26, 2004

|March 28, 2025

|

rowspan="5" | Detroitrowspan="5" | MichiganWKBD-TV 50

|January 10, 1965

|

|The CW

WMYD 20

|September 15, 1968

|

|

WGPR-TV 62 (now WWJ-TV)

|September 29, 1975

|

|CBS

WADL 38

|May 20, 1989

|

|MyNetworkTV

WDIV 4

|March 4 1947

|

|NBC

Des MoinesIowaKCBR 17 (now KDSM-TV)

|March 7, 1983

|

|Fox

rowspan="3" | El Pasorowspan="3" | TexasKILT 13 (now KVIA-TV 7)

|September 1, 1956

|

|7.1 ABC

7.2 The CW

KCIK-TV 14 (now KFOX-TV)

|August 1, 1979

|

|Fox

KJLF-TV 65 (now KTFN)

|June 22, 1991

|

|UniMás

EvansvilleIndianaWTVW 7

|August 21, 1956

|

|The CW

rowspan="3" | Fargorowspan="3" | North DakotaKVRR 15

|February 14, 1983

|

|Fox

KNRR 12

|January 1, 1986

|

|Fox

KBRR 10

|September 1985

|

|Fox

rowspan="3" | Fresno-Visaliarowspan="3" | CaliforniaKAIL 53 (now KAIL 7)

|December 18, 1961

|

|TCT

KMPH-TV 26

|October 11, 1971

|

|Fox

KNXT 49 (now KIFR)

|November 2, 1986

|

|Classic Arts Showcase

Fort WayneIndianaWFFT 55

|December 21, 1977

|

|Fox

rowspan="2" | Grand Rapids-Kalamazoo-Battle Creekrowspan="2" | MichiganWLLA 64

|June 30, 1987

|

|Fox

WXMI 17

|March 18, 1982

|

| Fox

rowspan="4"| Green Bay-Appletonrowspan="4" | WisconsinKFIZ-TV 34

|August 1, 1968

|November 30, 1972

|Independent/NET/PBS

WXGZ-TV/WACY-TV 32

|March 7, 1984 (original incarnation)

June 1994 (current incarnation)

|February 14, 1992 (original incarnation)

|

WSCO/WPXG/WIWB 14 (now WCWF)

|February 22, 1984 (original incarnation)

April 30, 1997 (current incarnation)

|1987 (original incarnation)

|The CW

WLRE 26 (now WGBA-TV)

|December 31, 1980

|

|NBC

rowspan="5" | Greensboro-Winston-Salem-High Pointrowspan="5" | North CarolinaWGNN-TV/WJTM/WNRW-TV 45 (now WXLV-TV)

|September 22, 1979

|

|ABC

WGGT 48

|May 9, 1981

|

|MyNetworkTV

WRDG/WAAP 16

(now WGPX-TV)

|August 7, 1984

|

|Ion

WEJC 20 (now WCWG)

|October 30, 1985

|

|The CW

WLXI 61 (now WLXI 43)

|March 5, 1984

|

|TCT

rowspan="5" | Greenville-Spartanburg-Ashevillerowspan="5" | South Carolina
North Carolina
WAXA/WFBC-TV 40

(now WMYA-TV)

|December 11, 1953

|

|Dabl

WGGS-TV 16

|October 29, 1972

|

|

WHNS 21

|April 1, 1984

|

|Fox

WASV-TV 62 (now WYCW)

|October 31, 1984

|

|The CW

WNEG-TV 32 (now WGTA)

|September 9, 1984

|

|MeTV

rowspan="2" | Harrisburg-Lancaster-Yorkrowspan="2" | PennsylvaniaWPMT 43

|December 21, 1952

|

|Fox

WLYH 49

|April 28, 1979

|

|

rowspan="6" | Hartford-New Havenrowspan="6" | ConnecticutWHCT 18 (now WUVN)

|September 25, 1954

|

|Univision

WCCT-TV 20

|September 10, 1953

|

|The CW

WTIC-TV 3 (now WFSB)

|September 23, 1957

|

|CBS

WTIC-TV 61

|September 17, 1984

|

|Fox

WTWS 26 (now WHPX-TV)

|September 15, 1986

|

|Ion

WWAX-LD 27

|March 11, 2013

|

|

HiloHawaiiKOHA-TV/KHBC-TV 13

(now KSIX-TV)

|August 22, 1983

|

|13.1 NBC

13.2 Independent

13.3 CBS

rowspan="5" | Honolulurowspan="5" | HawaiiKIKU-TV/KHNL 13

|July 4, 1962

|

|13.1 NBC

13.2 Independent

13.3 Telemundo

KHAI-TV/KIKU 20

|December 30, 1983

|

|

KFVE 5/KFVE 9

(now KHII-TV)

|February 7, 1988

|

|MyNetworkTV

KWHE 14

|August 23, 1986

|

|

KUPU 50

|October 1, 2003

|

|

rowspan="7" | Houstonrowspan="7" | TexasKHTV 39 (now KIAH)

|January 6, 1967

|

|The CW

KRIV 26

|August 15, 1971

|

|Fox

KTXH 20

|November 7, 1982

|

|MyNetworkTV

KCVH-LP 30

(now KCVH-LD 6)

|November 2, 1988

|

|

KNWS-TV 51

(now KYAZ)

|November 3, 1993

|

|MeTV

KTBU 55

|July 15, 1998

|

|Quest

KUBE-TV 57

|May 18, 1988

|

|Shop LC

rowspan="5" | Indianapolisrowspan="5" | IndianaWURD/WHMB-TV 40

|February 22, 1971

|

|Univision

WTTV 4

|November 11, 1949

|

| rowspan="2" |4.1/29.1 CBS

4.2/29.2 Independent

WWKI-TV/WTTK 29

|May 1, 1988

|

WXIN 59

|February 1, 1984

|

|Fox

WMCC-TV 23

(now WNDY-TV)

|October 19, 1987

|

|MyNetworkTV

JacksonMississippiWDBD 40

|November 30, 1984

|

|Fox

rowspan="3" | Jacksonvillerowspan="3" | FloridaWJXT 4

|September 15, 1949

|

|

WXAO-TV/WNFT/WTEV-TV 47

(now WJAX-TV)

|August 1, 1980

|

|CBS

WAWS 30 (now WFOX-TV)

|February 15, 1981

|

|30.1 Fox

30.2 MyNetworkTV/MeTV

30.4 Telemundo

rowspan="4" | Kansas Cityrowspan="4" | MissouriKBMA-TV/KSHB-TV 41

|September 28, 1970

|

|NBC

KZKC 62 (now KSMO-TV)

|December 7, 1983

|

|MyNetworkTV

KMCI-TV 38

|February 1, 1988

|

|

KUJH-LP 31

|April 23, 1996

|June 9, 2014

|

rowspan="2" | Knoxvillerowspan="2" | TennesseeWKCH-TV/WTNZ-TV 43

|December 31, 1983

|

|Fox

WMAK/WKNX-TV 7

|July 31, 2004

|

|

LafayetteLouisianaKADN-TV 15

|March 1, 1980

|

|Fox

LansingMichiganWSYM-TV 47

|December 1, 1982

|

|47.1 Fox

47.4 MyNetworkTV

rowspan="5" | Las Vegasrowspan="5" | NevadaKVVU-TV 5

|September 10, 1967

|

|Fox

KHSV 21

|July 31, 1984

|

|MeTV

KFBT 33 (now KVCW)

|July 30, 1989

|

|33.1 The CW

33.2 MyNetworkTV

KTUD-CA 25

|February 12, 1999

|October 10, 2013

|

KMCC 34

|August 21, 2003

|

|

rowspan="3" | Louisvillerowspan="3" | KentuckyWDRB-TV 41

|February 21, 1971

|

|Fox

WGRB/WWWB/WBKI-TV 34

|July 27, 1983

|October 25, 2017

|The CW

WBNA 21

|April 2, 1986

|

|

rowspan="11" | Los Angelesrowspan="11" | CaliforniaKTLA 5

|January 22, 1947

|

|The CW

KFI-TV/KHJ-TV/KCAL-TV 9

|October 6, 1948

|

|

KLAC-TV 13 (now KCOP-TV)

|September 17, 1948

|

|MyNetworkTV

KTTV 11

|January 1, 1949

|

|Fox

KCET 28

|September 28, 1964

|

|PBS

KIIX/KPOL-TV/KWHY-TV 22

|March 29, 1965

|

|Scientology Network as KSCN-TV

KSCI 18

|June 30, 1977

|

|Shop LC

KDOC-TV 56

|October 1, 1982

|

|TCT

KBEH 63

|August 17, 1985

|

|Canal de la Fe

KMTW-TV/KBSC-TV 52 (now KVEA)

|June 29, 1966

|

|Telemundo

KXLA 44

|December 2000

|

|

rowspan="4" | Madisonrowspan="4" | WisconsinWISC-TV 3.2

(branded as "TVW")

|September 2000

|

|MyNetworkTV

WHPN-TV/WBUW/

WIFS 57

|June 30, 1999

|

|Ion

WMSN-TV 47

|June 8, 1986

|

|Fox

WZCK-LD 8

|June 9, 1992

|

|OnTV4U

rowspan="2" | Memphisrowspan="2" | TennesseeWPTY-TV 24

(now WATN-TV)

|September 10, 1978

|

|ABC

WMKW-TV/WLMT 30

|April 18, 1983

|

|The CW/MyNetworkTV

rowspan="5" | Miami-Fort Lauderdalerowspan="5" | FloridaWCIX 6

(now WFOR-TV 4)

|September 20, 1967

|

|CBS

WBFS-TV 33

|December 9, 1984

|

|The CW

WDZL/WBZL/WSFL-TV 39

|October 16, 1982

|

|

WYHS/WYHS-TV/

WAMI-TV 69

(now WAMI-DT)

|August 10, 1988

|

|UniMás

WSMS-TV/WKID 51

(now WSCV)

|December 6, 1968

|

|Telemundo

rowspan="5" | Milwaukeerowspan="5" | WisconsinWOKY-TV/WXIX 19/

WXIX/WUHF/WVTV 18

|October 3, 1953 (original incarnation)

July 20, 1959 (current incarnation)

|April 1, 1959 (original incarnation)

|18.1 The CW

24.1 MyNetworkTV

WCGV-TV 24

(now WVTV-DT2 24)

|March 24, 1980

|January 8, 2018

|MyNetworkTV

WDJT-TV 58

|November 10, 1988

|

|CBS

WJJA/WBME-TV/WMLW-TV 49

|January 27, 1990

|

|

W65BT 65/W41CI/

WMLW-CA 41

(now WBME-CD)

|1983

|

|MeTV

rowspan="8" | Minneapolis-St. Paulrowspan="8" | MinnesotaWTCN-TV/WUSA 11

(now KARE)

|September 1, 1953

|

|NBC

KEYD-TV/KMGM-TV/

KMSP-TV 9

(now KMSP-TV 9.9)

|January 9, 1955

|

|9.9 Fox

9.10 MyNetworkTV (SD simulcast)

KTMA/KLGT/KMWB 23

(now WUCW)

|September 22, 1982

|

|The CW

WFBT/KITN-TV 29

(now WFTC 9.2)

|October 11, 1982

|

|9.1 Fox (SD simulcast)

9.2 MyNetworkTV

KXLI 41 (now KPXM-TV)

|November 24, 1982

|

|Ion

KVBM/KSTC-TV 45

(now KSTC-TV 5.2)

|June 19, 1994

|

|

K34HO-D 34.2

|1998

|

|

K21GN-D 21

|

|

|

rowspan="3" | Mobile
-Pensacola
rowspan="3" | Alabama
Florida
WPMI 15

|March 12, 1982

|

|NBC

WJTC 44

|December 24, 1984

|

|

WFGX 35

|April 7, 1987

|

|MyNetworkTV

rowspan="2" | Nashvillerowspan="2" | TennesseeWMCV/WTLT/WZTV 17

|August 5, 1968

|

|17.1 Fox

17.2 The CW

WCAY-TV/WXMT 30

(now WUXP-TV)

|February 18, 1984

|

|MyNetworkTV

LafayetteLouisianaKMCT-TV 15

|March 1, 1980

|

|Fox

rowspan="4" | New Orleansrowspan="4" | LouisianaWWOM-TV/WGNO-TV 26

|October 14, 1967

|

|ABC

WNOL-TV 38

|March 25, 1984

|

|The CW

WLAE-TV 32

|July 8, 1984

|

|

KFOL-CD 30

|August 28, 1989

|

|

rowspan="10" | New York Cityrowspan="10" | New YorkWNYE-TV 25

|April 5, 1967

|

|

WABD/WNEW-TV 5

(now WNYW)

|May 2, 1944

|

|Fox

WOR-TV/WWOR-TV 9

|October 11, 1949

|

|MyNetworkTV

WPIX 11

|June 15, 1948

|

|The CW

WATV/WNTA-TV 13

(now WNET)

|May 15, 1948

|

|PBS

WLIG/WLNY-TV 55

|April 28, 1985

|

|

WNJU-TV 47

|May 16, 1965

|

|Telemundo

WTZA/WRNN-TV 48

|December 15, 1985

|

|Shop LC

WVVH-CD 18

|1988

|

|YTA TV/Outside TV

WMBC-TV 63

|April 26, 1993

|

|Merit Street

NorfolkNebraskaKNEN-LD 35

|2015

|

|

rowspan="4" | Norfolk-Portsmouth-Newport Newsrowspan="4" | VirginiaWYAH-TV/WGNT 27

|October 1, 1961

|

|

WTVZ 33

|September 24, 1979

|

|MyNetworkTV

WVBT 43

|March 22, 1993

|

|Fox

WSKY-TV 4

|October 19, 2001

|

|

rowspan="4" | Oklahoma Cityrowspan="4" | OklahomaKOKH-TV 25

|February 2, 1959

|

|Fox

KAUT-TV 43

|October 15, 1980

|

|The CW

KGMC/KOCB-TV 34

|August 28, 1979

|

|

KSBI 52

|October 3, 1988

|

|MyNetworkTV

rowspan="7" | Orlando-Daytona Beachrowspan="7" | FloridaWCEU/WDSC-TV 15

|February 8, 1988

|

|

WRES/WBCC/WEFS 68

|June 18, 1987

|

|

WESH 2

|June 11, 1956

|

|NBC

WSWB/WOFL 35

|March 31, 1974 (original incarnation)

October 15, 1979 (current incarnation)

|September 30, 1976 (original incarnation)

|Fox

WKCF 68 (now WKCF 18)

|December 8, 1988

|

|The CW

WRBW 65

|June 6, 1994

|

|MyNetworkTV

WRDQ 27

|April 23, 2000

|

|

rowspan="10" | Philadelphiarowspan="10" | PennsylvaniaWACP 4

|June 18, 2012

|

|TCT

WPHL-TV 17

|July 17, 1960

|

|17.1 The CW
17.2 Antenna TV/MyNetworkTV

WIBF/WTAF-TV 29 (now WTXF-TV)

|May 16, 1965

|

|Fox

WKBS-TV 48

|September 1, 1965

|August 30, 1983

|

WGTW-TV 48

|August 13, 1992

|

|TBN

WWSG-TV/WGBS-TV/WPSG 57

|June 15, 1981

|

|

WYBE 35 (now WPPT)

|June 10, 1990

|

|PBS

WFMZ-TV 67

|December 4, 1954

|April 15, 1955

|

WFMZ-TV 69

|November 25, 1976

|

|

WTVE 51

|May 4, 1980

|

|OnTV4U

rowspan="8" | Phoenixrowspan="8" | ArizonaKPHO-TV 5

|December 4, 1949

|

|CBS

KOOL-TV/KTSP-TV 10 (now KSAZ-TV)

|October 24, 1953

|

|Fox

KTVK 3

|February 28, 1955

|

|

KNXV-TV 15

|September 9, 1979

|

|ABC

KUSK/KAZT-TV 7

|September 5, 1982

|

|The CW

KUTP 45

|December 23, 1985

|

|MyNetworkTV

KPHE-LD 44

|July 13, 1995

|

|

KASW 61

|September 23, 1995

|

|

rowspan="4" | Pittsburghrowspan="4" | PennsylvaniaWPGH-TV 53

|July 14, 1953 (original incarnation)
February 1, 1969 (2nd incarnation)
January 14, 1974 (current incarnation)

|July 2, 1954 (original incarnation)
August 16, 1971 (2nd incarnation)

|Fox

WPTT-TV/WCWB/WPNT/WCMY/WPNT 22

|September 26, 1978

|The CW/MyNetworkTV

WEPA-CD 59

|1995

|October 25, 2017

|Cozi TV

WNPA/WPCW/WPKD-TV 19

|October 15, 1953

|

|

rowspan="4" | Portlandrowspan="4" | OregonKPTV 27

(now KPTV 12)

|September 20, 1952

|

|Fox

KUNP 16

|December 3, 2003

|

|

KPDX 49

|October 9, 1983

|

|MyNetworkTV

KUTF 32

(now KRCW-TV)

|May 8, 1989

|

|The CW

Providence-New BedfordRhode Island
Massachusetts
WNET/WSTG-TV/

WNAC-TV 64

|August 29, 1953 (original incarnation)

September 5, 1981 (current incarnation)

|August 6, 1956 (original incarnation)

|64.1 Fox

64.2 The CW

rowspan="8" | Raleigh-Durham-Fayettevillerowspan="8" | North CarolinaWFCT 62 (now WFPX-TV)

|March 1985

|

|Bounce TV

WLFL-TV 22

|December 18, 1981

|

|The CW

WRAY-TV 30

|August 7, 1995

|

|TCT

WRMY 47 (now WRPX-TV)

|July 8, 1992

|

|Ion

WKFT 40 (now WUVC-DT)

|June 1, 1981

|

|40.1 Univision

40.2 UniMás

WYED-TV 17 (now WNCN-TV)

|April 11, 1988

|

|CBS

WAUG-LD 8

|1988

|

|

WNGT-CD 34

|1988

|

|

rowspan="2" | Richmondrowspan="2" | VirginiaWRLH-TV 35

|February 20, 1982

|

|35.1 Fox

35.2 MyNetworkTV/TBD

WZXK/WAWB 65 (now WUPV)

|March 9, 1990

|

|The CW

RenoNevadaKNSN-TV 21

|October 11, 1981

|

|Independent/MyNetworkTV

Rochester
-Mason City
Minnesota
-Iowa
KXLT-TV

|August 21, 1987

|

|Fox

rowspan="2" | Rochesterrowspan="2" | New YorkWUHF 31

|January 27, 1980

|

|Fox

WBGT-CD 46

|February 2, 1998

|

|MyNetworkTV

rowspan="4" | Sacramento-Stocktonrowspan="4" | CaliforniaKTXL 40

|October 26, 1968

|

|Fox

KMUV/KRBK/KMAX 31

|October 5, 1974

|

|

KSCH 58 (now KQCA)

|April 13, 1986

|

|The CW/MyNetworkTV

KBFT

|2001

|

|

rowspan="3" | St. Louisrowspan="3" | MissouriKPLR-TV 11

|April 28, 1959

|

|The CW

KNLC 24

|September 12, 1982

|

|24.1 MeTV

24.2 Religious Independent

KDNL-TV 30

|June 8, 1969

|

|ABC

rowspan="5" | Salt Lake Cityrowspan="5" | UtahKSTU 13

|October 4, 1978

|

|Fox

KAZG/KPNZ 24

|December 6, 1998

|

|TCT

KXIV/KJZZ-TV 14

|February 14, 1989

|

|

KUEN 9

|December 1, 1986

|

|

KUPX-TV 16

|April 21, 1998

|

|16.1 Independent

16.4 Ion

rowspan="2" | San Antoniorowspan="2" | TexasKCOR-TV/KUAL-TV 41

(now KWEX-DT)

|June 10, 1955

|

|Univision

KABB 29

|December 16, 1987

|

|Fox

rowspan="4" | San Diegorowspan="4" | CaliforniaKCST-TV 39

(now KNSD)

|November 14, 1965

|

|NBC

XETV-TV/XETV-TDT 6

|April 29, 1953

|

|Canal 5

KUSI-TV 51

|September 13, 1982

|

|

KTTY 69

(now KSWB-TV)

|September 30, 1984

|

|Fox

rowspan="12" | San Francisco-Oakland-San Joserowspan="12" | CaliforniaKCSM-TV/KPJK 60

|October 12, 1964

|

|

KRON-TV 4

|November 15, 1949

|

|The CW/MyNetworkTV

KTVU 2

|March 3, 1958

|

|Fox

KBHK-TV/KBCW/

KPYX 44

|January 2, 1968

|

|

KGSC-TV/KICU-TV 36

|October 3, 1967

|

|MyNetworkTV

KEMO/KTZO/

KOFY/KBWB/

KOFY-TV 20

|April 1, 1968

|

|Grit

KFTY 50

(now KEMO-TV)

|April 1981

|

|Estrella TV

KQSL 8

|1990

|

|TLN

KNTV 11

|September 12, 1955

|

|NBC

KSTS 48

|May 31, 1981

|

|Telemundo

KTNC-TV 42

|June 19, 1983

|

|TCT

KTSF 26

|September 4, 1976

|

|

rowspan="15" | San Juanrowspan="15" | Puerto RicoWKAQ-TV 2

|March 28, 1954

|

|2.1 Telemundo

2.2 Independent

2.3 NBC

WAPA-TV 4

|May 1, 1954

|

|

WCCV-TV 54

|November 15, 1981

|

|

WDWL 36

|May 11, 1987

|

|Enlace

WIDP 46

|1997

|

|

WIPR-TV 6

|January 6, 1958

|

|

WSTE-DT 7

|February 2, 1958

|

|

WWXY-LD 38

|2001

|

|

WLII-DT 11

|May 23, 1960

|

|Univision

WORO-DT 13

|November 1, 1984

|

|

WJPX 24

|February 15, 1987

|

|America TeVe

WTCV 18

|October 1, 1962 (original incarnation)

July 29, 1984 (current incarnation)

|1972 (original incarnation)

|Mega TV

WVQS-LD 20

|1990

|

|CTNi

WRFB 5

|1997

|

|ABC

WUJA 58

|July 25, 1983

|

|

rowspan="2" | Scranton-Wilkes-Barrerowspan="2" | PennsylvaniaWSWB/WOLF-TV 38

(now WSWB)

|June 3, 1981

|

|The CW

WERF/WWLF-TV 56

(now WOLF-TV)

|June 6, 1985

|

|Fox

rowspan="5" | Seattle-Tacomarowspan="5" | WashingtonKTNT-TV/KSTW 11

|March 1, 1953

|

|

KMO-TV/KTVW/KCPQ 13

|August 2, 1953

|

|Fox

KVOS-TV 12

|June 3, 1953

|

|Univision

KONG 16

|July 8, 1997

|

|

KTZZ-TV/KTWB-TV/

KMYQ/KZJO 22

|June 22, 1985

|

|MyNetworkTV

rowspan="2" | Shreveportrowspan="2" | LouisianaKMSS-TV 33

|April 11, 1985

|

|Fox

KWLB/KSHV-TV 45

|April 15, 1994

|

|MyNetworkTV

Sioux FallsSouth DakotaKCPO-LD 26

|March 12, 1999

|

|

South BendIndianaWHME-TV 46

|August 3, 1974

|

|Univision

rowspan="2" | Spokanerowspan="2" | WashingtonKAYU-TV 28

|October 31, 1982

|

|28.1 Fox

28.2 Antenna TV/ MyNetworkTV/CW Sports

KNEE-LD 10

|July 1, 2006

|February 9, 2023

|

rowspan="2" | Springfield-Decatur-Champaignrowspan="2" | IllinoisWBHW/WRSP-TV 55

|June 1, 1979

|

|Fox

WFHL 23 (now WBUI)

|May 14, 1984

|

|The CW

SpringfieldMissouriKOZL-TV 27

|September 22, 1968

|

|MyNetworkTV

SyracuseNew YorkWSNR-TV/WNYS-TV 43

|October 26, 1989

|January 14, 2020

|

rowspan="5" | Tampa-St. Petersburgrowspan="5" | FloridaWTOG 44

|November 4, 1968

|

|

WTTA 38

|June 21, 1991

|

|The CW/MyNetworkTV

WMOR-TV 32

|January 11, 1984

|

|

WFTS-TV 28

|December 14, 1981

|

|ABC

WPDS-LD 14

|1990

|

|

ToledoOhioWUPW 36

|September 22, 1985

|

|Fox

rowspan="4" | Tucsonrowspan="4" | ArizonaKZAZ/KMSB-TV 11

|February 1, 1967

|

|Fox

KDTU/KTTU 18

|December 31, 1984

|

|The CW

KPOL 40 (now KHRR)

|January 5, 1985

|

|Telemundo

KWBA-TV 58

|December 31, 1988

|

|

rowspan="4" | Tulsarowspan="4" | OklahomaKOKI-TV 23

|October 26, 1980

|

|Fox

KGCT-TV/KTFO 41

(now KMYT-TV)

|March 18, 1981

|

|MyNetworkTV

KRSU-TV 35

|1987

|

|

KTCT/KWHB 47

|June 3, 1985

|

|CTN

rowspan="5" |Washington

| rowspan="5" |D.C.

|WTTG 5

|December 10, 1946

|

|Fox

WDCA-TV 20

|April 20, 1966

|

|MyNetworkTV

WFTY 50 (now WDCW)

|November 1, 1981

|

|The CW

WJAL 68

|August 1, 1984

|

|ShopHQ

WHAG-TV/WDVM-TV 25

|January 3, 1970

|

|

Waterloo-Cedar RapidsIowaKWWF 22

|December 1, 2002

|August 2, 2013

|Untamed Sports TV

rowspan="5" | West Palm Beachrowspan="5" | FloridaWTVX

|April 5, 1966

|

|The CW

WFLX

|October 1, 1982

|

|Fox

WTCN-CD

|October 1988

|

|MyNetworkTV

WBEC-TV

|1999

|

|

WHDT

|June 1, 2001

|

|

Wichita-HutchinsonKansasKCTU-LD 5

|October 16, 1992

|

|Buzzr

WilmingtonNorth CarolinaWILM-LD 10

|April 3, 1989

|

|

= List of notable Canadian independent stations =

While independent stations were not as common in Canada, there were several notable examples of such:

class="wikitable sortable"
Media market

! Province

! Station(s)

!First air date

| HamiltonOntarioCHCH-DT

|June 7, 1954

| LethbridgeAlbertaCJIL-DT

|January 14, 1996

rowspan="2"| Montrealrowspan="2" | QuebecCFHD-DT

|December 11, 2013

CFTU-DT

|August 20, 1986

| St. John'sNewfoundland and LabradorCJON-DT

|September 6, 1955

| VancouverBritish ColumbiaCHNU-DT

|September 15, 2001

| VictoriaBritish ColumbiaCHEK-DT

|December 1, 1956

| WinnipegManitobaCIIT-DT

|February 6, 2006

Since the mid-1990s, most independent television stations in Canada have merged into television systems (such as CTV Two) by adopting common branding and/or programming, or have become fully owned-and-operated stations of networks with which they had previously had more informal programming arrangements as with CIHF, CICT and CITV, which are all now Global stations. However, this trend was partially reversed in 2009 with the demise of Canwest's E! system, which resulted in three of its stations, with CHCH in Hamilton, CJNT in Montreal and CHEK in Victoria, with CHCH-DT becoming independent; CJNT-DT becoming subsequently affiliated with City in 2012 (later becoming a full-time O&O in 2013) and CHEK-DT becoming independent as well (Although having a secondary affiliation with Yes TV).

CHCH and CHEK are the only television stations in Canada currently operating as independent stations in the American sense of the term. However, since the fall of 2010, these two stations (previously along with CJNT) have resumed sharing some common American programming.

CJON in St. John's, Newfoundland and Labrador, while officially unaffiliated with a network, in practice airs a mix of programming sublicensed from two of Canada's main commercial networks, CTV (which it was formally affiliated with until 2002, with only CTV's news programming being carried on the station since then) and Global, rather than purchasing broadcast rights independently.

CFTU and CFHD in Montreal also operate as independents. However, each of these stations has a specific programming focus: educational programming in the case of the former, and multicultural programming in that of the latter.

Three independent religious stations also exist in Canada: CHNU in the Fraser Valley Regional District, CIIT in Winnipeg, and CJIL in Lethbridge. CIIT and CHNU formerly served as part of the two-station Joytv religious television system from 2005 until the system's dissolution in 2013.

Apart from these, some additional independent stations exist in Canada as community-oriented specialty stations. These stations, such as CFTV-DT in Leamington, Ontario and CHCO-TV in St. Andrews, New Brunswick, transmit at low power.

Independent television in Japan

File:Chiba Television, headoffice.jpg is one of the members of the Japanese Association of Independent Television Stations.]]

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In Japan, independent television stations are generally those not affiliated with one of the national networks based in Tokyo, which supply the vast majority of their affiliates' programs. Independent stations in Japan primarily serve heavily urbanized areas and frequently band together in the purchasing of programs and sale of advertising.

See also

References