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Are their any independent local stations anymore?

A long time ago, my dream was to be program director for an independent station. In the 80s, many of them would show their movies uncut and uncensored. I thought by the year 2000, they'd have even more freedom of content but instead it got far more repressed. KTXL in Sacramento started editing movies after numerous complaints, and it was never the same after that- of course the Fox network soon started also and completely killed what that station used to be. If I ran a station now I'd still try to be daring and show things that were hard to find elsewhere. REALLY glad I didn't end up working in TV though, I likely would have found some way out of it by now if I had.
The s-word started showing up after the V-chip rating was introduced and I even remember seeing women's rear ends.

I'm not sure what changed but I think it was the Janet Jackson incident.

And I am grateful.
 


Consider another one Sony Pictures syndicate their tv and movie content via Amazon Prime. It’s another nail why independent TV Stations that did things the old way is gone. Syndication still exists but it’s more directed to Fast channels and various TV apps this time around.
 
A long time ago, my dream was to be program director for an independent station. In the 80s, many of them would show their movies uncut and uncensored. I thought by the year 2000, they'd have even more freedom of content but instead it got far more repressed. KTXL in Sacramento started editing movies after numerous complaints, and it was never the same after that- of course the Fox network soon started also and completely killed what that station used to be. If I ran a station now I'd still try to be daring and show things that were hard to find elsewhere. REALLY glad I didn't end up working in TV though, I likely would have found some way out of it by now if I had.
Yeah, I once had a similar dream to own, manage, and program an independent station. But it became increasingly apparent in the last twenty years that particular dream was dying because those stations were fading out of existence fast. Some version still existed in 2005, but by 2015 that window was completely gone.

Still, it's sad when a dream dies.
 
I have a ton of KTXL content on VHS (from eBay and estate sale lots), including a dozen or so Night Comfort broadcasts. KTXL was a pinnacle of independent television in the 1980s (and I will count the first few years of Fox as they were only 2-3 nights a week). Very few technical issues on that station. You will never find the artistry of television magic nowadays. Everything is central-casted, automated, and sloppy.
A few Fridays ago KIMA Yakima went from Kelly Clarkson's show, cut to a CBS feed of Lucky Dog for 2-3 minutes (probably being fed for Saturday broadcast), went right into a commercial mid-sentence, cut the commercial off, went back to Kelly for 5-10 minutes, then the same thing happened another 2-3 times over the course of an hour. This crap would NEVER fly back in the '80s when real, living, breathing humans ran local master control.
 
I have a ton of KTXL content on VHS (from eBay and estate sale lots), including a dozen or so Night Comfort broadcasts. KTXL was a pinnacle of independent television in the 1980s (and I will count the first few years of Fox as they were only 2-3 nights a week). Very few technical issues on that station. You will never find the artistry of television magic nowadays. Everything is central-casted, automated, and sloppy.
Alas.

You should upload your finds to Youtube, by the way. And if they have somehow escaped your notice, there are already two Youtube accounts, here and here, offering enormous amounts of Sacramento-area television memorabilia, including countless items related to KTXL.
 
Here is the other reason why local independent TV Stations are rare today. They have to compete against FAST streaming channels from Samsung, Roku, PlutoTV, Tubi, Zeam, Xumo for viewers. its where we are now.

 

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I have a ton of KTXL content on VHS (from eBay and estate sale lots), including a dozen or so Night Comfort broadcasts. KTXL was a pinnacle of independent television in the 1980s (and I will count the first few years of Fox as they were only 2-3 nights a week). Very few technical issues on that station. You will never find the artistry of television magic nowadays. Everything is central-casted, automated, and sloppy.


Here’s a rare clip of KTXL when Pete Wilson and Gary Radnich were in Sacramento in the early 1980’s. It’s one of the rare ones given that they were starting to get their names established on TV. But then again it gets overshadowed by how big and legendary they became when they went to KRON 4 News in San Francisco in the 1990’s and up to the time NBC affiliation moved from KRON to KNTV.
 
Frankly, the local independent TV stations were dead even before FAST came along -- but FAST is one more factor that ensures that they're not coming back.
True and when cable TV was at its peak in the 1990’s and early 2000’s had to be another one why local independent TV stations started to decline. It was the era when stations signed affiliation deals with UPN and WB at that time.
 
True and when cable TV was at its peak in the 1990’s and early 2000’s had to be another one why local independent TV stations started to decline. It was the era when stations signed affiliation deals with UPN and WB at that time.
Local independents flourished in the 1970s and 1980s when a station would be imported to cable systems in markets that didn't have their own independent outlets. WXIX Cincinnati was wildly popular in Ohio and Kentucky during that time, carried on basically every cable system north of Interstate 64, and even made it as far east as Huntington and Charleston WV. Columbus didn't get its own independent station until the mid-1980s (WTTE), and WVAH Charleston went on the air at about the same time (though WVAH was hobbled by first being on UHF channel 23 in rough terrain, then on VHF channel 11 as a drop-in that had to be bobtailed to protect WJHL and WIIC/WPXI). The death knell came for independents as providers of unique programming with the advent of Fox, and later UPN and WB. The proliferation of cable networks also played a part, providing a diversity of programming that no local independent could. Ironically, WVAH has found a kind of second life with Sinclair's placing Catchy Comedy on them, transferring Fox to WCHS 8.2. The programming lineup is not unlike that of a sitcom-heavy independent. A far cry better than Roar or Dabl.
 


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