WGN America is a loose competitor to CNN and Fox. They are attempting to compete but the result is dismal. Newsnation will never compete with the big boys. I will give them credit for trying but they will likely fail.
Maybe NewsNation will just be a national news content provider for the Nexstar owned stations like WPIX, KRON, KTLA and WGN.WGN America is a loose competitor to CNN and Fox. They are attempting to compete but the result is dismal. Newsnation will never compete with the big boys. I will give them credit for trying but they will likely fail.
They weren’t competing well with the “big boys” with what they were doing previously.WGN America is a loose competitor to CNN and Fox. They are attempting to compete but the result is dismal. Newsnation will never compete with the big boys. I will give them credit for trying but they will likely fail.
Also WGN America was previously competing against TBS for "superstation" status back when having a "superstation" carried value to cable operators in the 1980's and 1990's. However given the recent rise of Netflix, Disney+, Hulu, Peacock, Amazon Studios, HBO Max and Paramount plus the Superstation means nothing at this point given that having a direct streaming feed is important in this decade.They weren’t competing well with the “big boys” with what they were doing previously.
And even when WGN was a superstation, it had a hard time getting onto cable systems in areas far from the Midwest. I remember it sharing a channel on the Time Warner system in suburban Boston with the PBS affiliate in Providence, WSBE. It was only on after WSBE signed off, which was 10:30 or 11:00, depending on the day of the week. WGN never made it onto Dimension Cable (later Cox) here in central Connecticut at all during those years when it was simply a simulcast of OTA WGN's programming.Also WGN America was previously competing against TBS for "superstation" status back when having a "superstation" carried value to cable operators in the 1980's and 1990's. However given the recent rise of Netflix, Disney+, Hulu, Peacock, Amazon Studios, HBO Max and Paramount plus the Superstation means nothing at this point given that having a direct streaming feed is important in this decade.
And even when WGN was a superstation, it had a hard time getting onto cable systems in areas far from the Midwest. I remember it sharing a channel on the Time Warner system in suburban Boston with the PBS affiliate in Providence, WSBE. It was only on after WSBE signed off, which was 10:30 or 11:00, depending on the day of the week. WGN never made it onto Dimension Cable (later Cox) here in central Connecticut at all during those years when it was simply a simulcast of OTA WGN's programming.
Missing WDAF.Maybe NewsNation will just be a national news content provider for the Nexstar owned stations like WPIX, KRON, KTLA and WGN.
Note other Nexstar owned stations like KTXL Sacramento, KSWB San Diego, KGET Bakersfield and KLAS Las Vegas get their national news content from Fox, NBC and CBS respectively.
Amazingly, though, it is still in my cable package. Which includes only broadcast stations, what used to be called News 14, public access and home shopping.And even when WGN was a superstation, it had a hard time getting onto cable systems in areas far from the Midwest.
And WTNH Hartford is a Nexstar owned ABC affiliate.Missing WDAF.
Especially when half of the news is must-run Sinclair crap or 'what's trending now.' Which makes news watching useless in a small place like Yakima. What's it like for towns that lost their local TV news station to a simulcast of a bigger market? Are most people just getting news nowadays from Facebook? Radio? Newspaper (in some places)? Even the ranch hand who lives in Wyoming, 25 miles from the nearest town? I'm curious to know what it's like in rural America.Personally, I find broadcast news, radio and TV, repetitive, incomplete and essentially useless.
I have family in the Lebanon, NH/White River Jct, VT area. There is no local TV news. Significant news in the area -- usually dealing with Dartmouth College or Dartmouth-Hitchcock Medical Center, a large regional hospital -- makes the newscasts on network affiliates in Manchester, NH, or Burlington, VT, but those stations' primary coverage focus is their own metro areas, which for the Burlington market stations also includes Plattsburgh, NY.Especially when half of the news is must-run Sinclair crap or 'what's trending now.' Which makes news watching useless in a small place like Yakima. What's it like for towns that lost their local TV news station to a simulcast of a bigger market? Are most people just getting news nowadays from Facebook? Radio? Newspaper (in some places)? Even the ranch hand who lives in Wyoming, 25 miles from the nearest town? I'm curious to know what it's like in rural America.