• Get involved.
    We want your input!
    Apply for Membership and join the conversations about everything related to broadcasting.

    After we receive your registration, a moderator will review it. After your registration is approved, you will be permitted to post.
    If you use a disposable or false email address, your registration will be rejected.

    After your membership is approved, please take a minute to tell us a little bit about yourself.
    https://www.radiodiscussions.com/forums/introduce-yourself.1088/

    Thanks in advance and have fun!
    RadioDiscussions Administrators

In the Los Angeles Market needs to start searching for a brand-new The CW West Coast Flagship Station

Here are the options for the brand-new The CW West Coast Flagship Station in the Los Angeles Market because KTLA-TV is about to become all Local News all Local Time and they might start airing Sports events like Los Angeles Dodgers Baseball and Los Angeles Clippers Basketball

Here are the options to become as The CW West Coast Flagship Station in the Los Angeles Market

1. Meruelo Broadcasting KWHY-TV 22.1
2. Meruelo Broadcasting KBEH-TV 63.1
3. Weigel Broadcasting KVME-TV 20.1 and KSFV-CD 27.1

These are my suggestions any questions or comments regarding moving The CW West Coast Flagship Station in the Los Angeles Market to continue watching our favorite shows and Syndication shows?
Maybe they can cut a deal with Kaiser Aluminum to get back in the TV business by buying KVEA-TV channel 52 and restoring the KBSC call letters to that station. It could carry the CW in prime time and "Kimba The White Lion" reruns in the afternoon.

Yeah, that would be absolutely crazy. But it makes about as much sense as what you propose...
 
Yes which still airs today. In the early days of Fox News Network, Fox did air a primetime News series called Fox Files in 1998.

They tried their hand at news before there was a news network also in 1993 with Front Page and also in the late 80's and early 90's after the primetime shows the network had a brief 30 second to a minute Fox News Breif as well even though Fox News didn't have their own cable network yet.
Fox also had a newsmagizine show called "The Reporters" back around 1988.
 
Last edited:
Why is there such a fascination with the CW. What is the appeal.
Agreed given that Paramount have 12.5% and WarnerDiscovery have 12.5% ownerships in the CW. Some of this is because both Paramount and WarnerDiscovery have to protect their TV apps like Paramount+ and HBO Max.
 
Why is there such a fascination with the CW. What is the appeal.
They occasionally have some fun scripted shows and a few other things. If nothing else, they do have quite a few hours a week of original shows and they contribute to the variety of new productions in that area. Also, without them there would be hundreds of vampires and superheroes out of work.
 
Why is there such a fascination with the CW. What is the appeal.

I'm sure The CW isn't going to get the record-breaking ratings high enough to even beat the Big 4 affiliates unless they outbid CBS, Fox, and NBC for NFL rights (which that's how Fox broke ground for several affiliation swaps back in 1995).
 
or just affiliate with a network for once, KUSI never had a chance in both 2008 and 2017. it should've been MNTV on 8.2 and CW on 51 instead of sharing
KUSI had a chance, first by going after Fox (and lost), then went with UPN (and eventually dropped them). Any further chances of KUSI going after a network is slim to none.
 
KUSI had a chance, first by going after Fox (and lost), then went with UPN (and eventually dropped them). Any further chances of KUSI going after a network is slim to none.
unless a major station group makes a takeover bid like Sinclair, Gray, Hearst, or even a smaller player, like Graham, Weigel, Morris, News-Press Gazette, or Bakahel. If Nexstar converts some Fox affiliates to CW, Fox might look at KUSI. A station group gets scale in leverage and size in carriage negotiations and syndication purchases. Does everyone as big as Sinclair or Gray attempted to buy Capitol Broadcasting, Griffin Communications, Sunbeam, Graham or even the non-subchannel stations of Weigel Broadcasting?
 
In a nutshell:

KTLA is not going to lose the CW. Not in the #2 DMA they're not.

KUSI will remain an independent San Diego station and McKinnon will still own it.
 
Last edited:
In a nutshell:

KTLA is not going to lose the CW.

KUSI will remain an independent San Diego station and McKinnon will still own it.
Even in this streaming infusec enviroment, I doubt all 5 SDTV station get a network or MNTV moving to KUSI's primetime lineup. Of course not every family owned broadcaster gives up their long standings business. We seen KFMB sold to Tegna in 2017 from family owned Midwest TV and a year later a college admissions scandal in 2019 nearly defamed them from the tv industry, that same year Tegna bought another family owned broadcaster Dispatch Media Group adding Indianapolis and Columbus Ohio. Gray TV had some experience buying family owned broadcasters with Quincy Media being the most recent in 2021. If the streaming thunderstorms hit the hometown of California so far, the internet might be the end of independent or family-owned ownership.
 
I read an article a couple days ago that The CW is planning on expanding on sports programming and possibly down the line even create news programs from sister network Newsnation.

They might be able to start a Sunday Morning newsmagazine on The CW but's doubtful they'll be able to compete in the evening news arena as those affiliates who have one would rather stay local rather than go to the network at 6:30/5:30
 
They might be able to start a Sunday Morning newsmagazine on The CW but's doubtful they'll be able to compete in the evening news arena as those affiliates who have one would rather stay local rather than go to the network at 6:30/5:30
Same as Fox as well but a late night show might fill the 11pm-midnight slot.
 
For now stations like KBCW, KMAX, WKBD, WPCW and WPSG will keep their CW affiliation. But the next time they run into conflicts over sports broadcasting rights contracts because in their case they go against whatever CBS Sports agreed with then I can see stations like KBCW, KMAX, WKBD, WPCW, WPSG having to rename themselves as an extension of the main CBS O&O and KCAL-TV, WLNY-TV are the models these Paramount owned CW affiliates would have to consider in the event they lose their CW affiliation.

And with all the uncertainty the lawsuits involving Fox News, on ehas to wonder how long it'll be before entities like MLB, NASCAR & the NFL start to revisit their relationship with Fox & start approaching The CW about the rights packages Fox currently has with them once those come up for renewal
 
Even in this streaming infusec enviroment, I doubt all 5 SDTV station get a network or MNTV moving to KUSI's primetime lineup. Of course not every family owned broadcaster gives up their long standings business. We seen KFMB sold to Tegna in 2017 from family owned Midwest TV and a year later a college admissions scandal in 2019 nearly defamed them from the tv industry, that same year Tegna bought another family owned broadcaster Dispatch Media Group adding Indianapolis and Columbus Ohio. Gray TV had some experience buying family owned broadcasters with Quincy Media being the most recent in 2021. If the streaming thunderstorms hit the hometown of California so far, the internet might be the end of independent or family-owned ownership.
And if McKinnon wanted to take The CW affiliation for KUSI, doesn't anyone think they would've done so once The CW left the old XETV instead of letting it go to KFMB 8.2 ??
 
They occasionally have some fun scripted shows and a few other things. If nothing else, they do have quite a few hours a week of original shows and they contribute to the variety of new productions in that area. Also, without them there would be hundreds of vampires and superheroes out of work.
Above all else, it’s content for stations that would otherwise have next to nothing else to run in primetime, especially with the decline of syndicated programming in the industry. Very few stations are capable of running local news in primetime unless you are in a large market and have the resources (KCAL, WHDH, WJXT, KRON and KTVK are the most prominent of examples).

I don’t see what good it would do for KTLA, which now effectively operates as the CW’s West Coast flagship, to drop the network and competing against KCAL in the arena of primetime local news, which KCAL has thrived in since day one in 1990.
 
They occasionally have some fun scripted shows and a few other things. If nothing else, they do have quite a few hours a week of original shows and they contribute to the variety of new productions in that area. Also, without them there would be hundreds of vampires and superheroes out of work.
And Buffy wouldn't have any vampires to slay :LOL:😂
 
Status
This thread has been closed due to inactivity. You can create a new thread to discuss this topic.


Back
Top Bottom