Speaking of cord-cutters, and before this thread goes too far down the path of fantasy football with TV transmitters, I will point out something that is an issue in Denver, though no doubt resolvable.
KUSA broadcasts on VHF on its legacy channel, as does KMGH. The VHF signals from Lookout Mountain can't be received reliably with an indoor antenna in areas that can be approximately described as east of Colorado Boulevard. This affects about 40% of the metropolitan area, including all of Aurora, Colorado's third-largest city. As a result, KUSA simulcasts the main 9.1 channel on 9.4, which is carried on KTVD's UHF baseband. This is because UHF performs much better on digital signals with typical indoor conditions than VHF. This is also why every KUSA legal ID includes a legal ID for KTVD.
I wonder if Nexstar would be the sole ABC for WOTV and sells WZZM without ABC in West Michigan. Or I could see Nexstar shell it out to Mission and maybe Gray buys WZZM only other one I can think of is Hearst which owned WZZM in the 90s and sold to TEGNA well they weren't TEGNA at the time in 98.
With analog television the UHF spectrum was used very inefficiently. The cellular industry has been eating away at it for over 40 years now. The exploding customer base of the cellular industry has forced change.I suppose the UHF spectrum was just too valuable, they've shaved it to the bone as it is.
With analog television the UHF spectrum was used very inefficiently. The cellular industry has been eating away at it for over 40 years now. The exploding customer base of the cellular industry has forced change.
I was growing up in Austin when the market got its first UHF TV station (KHFI/42) in 1965. It was somewhat amusing at the time to tune across the UHF band to find Channel 42 all by itself in an otherwise completely empty 420 MHz of spectrum. Nowadays big corporations are fighting over every last kilohertz of that range. How things have changed.
I agree, though recognizing that there was demand for spectrum to support mobile services, the willingness to pay for it, and the rather foolish ideology of turning a regulatory agency into a profit center. Quite frankly, among the powers that be, providing mobile spectrum these days is a higher priority than providing broadcast spectrum.When they made the transition to DTV, they should have just made all TV UHF (as they did in the UK even in analog days), and retained UHF channels up into the 40s range. One alternative would have been to reserve VHF for LPTV, which by its nature serves smaller areas. I suppose the UHF spectrum was just too valuable, they've shaved it to the bone as it is.
Missouri had several two-station markets in the 1960s because the third slot for a station in the market was on UHF. Columbia could have had a third VHF but, instead, the local CBS affiliate repurposed that third station as a repeater. (Long and twisted history on that one.) Finally, the UHF allocations went into use, first in Joplin, then Springfield, and bring up the rear, Columbia, in 1971. Channel 17 sat there all by its lonesome self. We got a Channel Master UHF converter so we could watch it. This also came in handy when we moved to St. Louis the next year, where independent channel 30 was the lone UHF occupant throughout the 1970s.I was growing up in Austin when the market got its first UHF TV station (KHFI/42) in 1965. It was somewhat amusing at the time to tune across the UHF band to find Channel 42 all by itself in an otherwise completely empty 420 MHz of spectrum. Nowadays big corporations are fighting over every last kilohertz of that range. How things have changed.
Ideally, I'd like to see KAZT keep the CW as should Nexstar opt to put it on its 12.2 subchannel, it'd mean we'd have a market where 3 main channels are all independent with KAZT alongside KTVK & KASW.In Phoenix/N Arizona Tegna owns KPNX. Nexstar leases/operates KAZT (CW7)..it is still owned by the Londen family. Does the Londen family keep KAZT or sell it?
Will we be seeing "12News on CW7?" I know for a while in the 90s KPNX ran a rerun newscast on KAZT-when it was still Indy AZ-TV.
Tegna (or Gannett) has never owned WTNH. Nexstar got it as part of its buyout of LIN TV.Wasn't WTNH in New Haven once a Tegna station.
WSYX is now the top dog in Columbus in most dayparts, with WCMH-TV solidly in second. WBNS-TV is another station that has fallen off since being swallowed by Tegna.In the Columbus, Ohio tv market, WCMH 4 is owned by Nexstar and WBNS 10 is owned by Tegna.
WCMH and WBNS have always been news rivals for many years with WBNS being in the number one spot for local newscasts.
I haven't seen the Neilsen ratings in years for Columbus local newscasts as it hasn't been reported in the Columbus newspaper.
It would be interesting to see the latest Neilsen ratings for local newscasts for WCMH, WSYX/WTTE, and WBNS.
Sinclair knows that they either have to merge with someone ASAP or risk being bought up by Gray or Scripps—or even Nexstar—in this economy of scale game.Sinclair muscling in on the potential merger?
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Sinclair offers to merge broadcast TV business with rival Tegna, source says
Any potential merger would be difficult to close because of Sinclair and Tegna's combined debt load, the person said, asking not to be identified as the discussions are private. At the end of the second quarter, Sinclair had roughly $4.11 billion in debt while Tegna had about $2.33 billion...ca.finance.yahoo.com
Byron overleveraged himself badly buying a few castoffs from the Gray-Quincy merger. Had his Tegna offer been legitimate there's a good chance he would have lost control of the whole company before too long.The acquisition price for TEGNA is significantly less than what Byron Allen offered. Allen offered $8.5 billion back in 2020. Nexstar is paying $6.2 billion. In constant 2025 dollars, that's a decline of 40% enterprise value.
The deal has been struck and will more than likely be approved within six months with zero divestments. Curious if Carr issues a statement in full support of it to get the ball rolling on congress/senate removing the cap outright.
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Nexstar Media Group, Inc. Enters into Definitive Agreement To Acquire TEGNA Inc. for $6.2 Billion in Accretive Transaction | Nexstar Media Group, Inc.
Enhances Nexstar’s Position as a Leading Local Media Company Preserves High-Quality Local Journalism and Diversity of Opinion Strengthens Ability towww.nexstar.tv
