Is there any other market than Montgomery where the towers for the major network affiliates are 30 to 40 miles away from the city in three directions.
Fine when the winds are calm, but one the wind sways the trees, pixelation rules the airwaves at the Cow mansion..
Yes, but it really depends on the market. For every one like Atlanta or Birmingham where the towers are tall and right in the center of the market, there's one like Montgomery where everyone is pretty far out of town.
In Montgomery, of course, that's partly the result of WAKA having moved in from Selma years ago to create a "market" that's huge geographically and impossible for any single station to completely cover. (That sort of happened to Birmingham too, once Anniston and Tuscaloosa were rolled into the market - except for ABC, which has transmitters in those cities, viewers need cable or satellite to watch their "local" Bham stations.)
There are some that are even worse. The "Santa Barbara" market stretches up 100 miles of rough California coast to San Luis Obispo. All the TV towers for Fort Myers are way at the north end of the market, and if you're in Naples you're nearly 50 miles from the sites.
Grand Rapids-Kalamazoo in Michigan is another bad example. The NBC and CBS stations are on tall towers between the two main cities, 20-plus miles out of town from each. Fox is closer to GR. There are two separate ABC stations, one way north of Grand Rapids and one way east of Kalamazoo.
You needed an outdoor antenna and a rotor to get them all in the analog era, and it's worse now.
So no, you're not alone with the situation there!