I don't like saying this, but I assume most television stations in markets 100 and below will cease operations permanently by the 2030s. They are losing revenue, losing audiences, and with networks advocating for Disney+/Hulu/Peacock/Paramount+, the OTA TV station becomes as dead as the Pony Express, the VHS tape, and the 8-track. Many have consolidated by converting a full-power station into a multi-subchannel station (the DT1 being Dabl, or H&I, or something else), moving the Big 4 affiliate to a DT2 on another station.
WNBC NYC will be able to afford a full schedule of newscasts and local programming (+ a few NBC programs and live sports simulcasted on Peacock). But will KECI in Missoula? KRBC in Abilene? KALB in Alexandria?
I have cousins in their early 30s who watch EVERYTHING on streaming. They binge-watch Gordon Ramsey's shows on Pluto TV, for example. To them, what's a "KIMA"?
In addition, more and more children are watching cartoons and educational shows on apps and not linear cable TV or PBS. Why bother watching Nick, waiting for the umpteenth SpongeBob episode where Plankton fails to find the Secret Krabby Patty Formula, when a 7-year-old can punch it in on Netflix or whatever OTT service streams SpongeBob?
I now live in a generation where K-2 students are learning basic CODING in elementary school, and many 5th/6th graders know advanced Python code. This is a completely different generation of kids than those born in the '80s and '90s.
It will be interesting to see what happens to the home television in the next 5-10 years. Will my local 'stations' even exist by 8/31/2032?