oldjohnny said:
CW said:
pbf1 said:
Intereting to note that WDAY AM & FM in Fargo aren't even owned by the same people anymore! (Haven't been for close to a decade, in fact)
It happens....KPRC AM and TV (I think there was an FM once in the past) are owned by different owners for about 2 decades now....(The AM has changed hands many times and is now owned by CC....the TV I think only from the Hobby family to Post-Newsweek)..The AM is the controlling callsign....ith their blessing, use of the -FM or -TV on another station is not a problem. I take it the AM and FM are formatted differently.....(true, Fargo's situation is a rare one!)
How about KOVE? One station in Wyoming and the other in the Houston area (Galveston TX).
You guys are making this too hard...the rules are pretty simple:
(1) Call signs must be unique to a service (AM, FM, LPFM, LPTV, TV). In a local market, any station in a local cluster can share the calls of any other station in its cluster provided it is a different service. To differentiate, all but one of the stations must have a suffix (-FM, -LP, -CA, -TV, -LD, -DT); AM stations never have a -AM suffix.
So, in D/FW, if CBS wanted to, it could make one if its FMs KRLD-FM and one of its TV stations KRLD-TV. Or it could make KTVT become KTVT-TV and change 1080 from KRLD to KTVT. Today, in Lubbock, you have the KJTV calls on four stations: KJTV 950, KJTV-TV 34, KJTV-CA 32 (CA = "low power TV class A), KJTV-LD 33 (LD = "low power TV digital). The owners of the KJTV* outlets also own KXTQ-FM 93.7, KXTQ-CA 46, and CP KXTQ-LP 34 there.
Because of this rule, it allows for call changes that would not be allowed otherwise over the last 20 years: KHOO 99.9 Waco to WACO-FM (because at the time it was co-owned with then WACO 1460 Waco); KMOL 4 San Antonio to WOAI-TV (co-owned with WOAI 1200); KWSJ-FM 98.7 Wichita to KFH-FM (co-owned with KFH in that market); KQMB 102.7 Salt Lake City to KSL-FM (co-owned with KSL 860); WTKL 105.3 New Orleans to WWL-FM (co-owned with WWL 870); etc.
(2) If a call sign is in use already, a station anywhere can change to that call sign if they get permission from the current holder of the call sign. The restriction again is that it must be unique to the service. So, WBZL 39 Miami became WSFL-TV after its owner, Tribune, got the OK from Beasley, the owners of WSFL-FM 106.5 New Bern NC, which has had those calls for 2 decades. Similarly in 1994, KCIK 14 El Paso became KFOX-TV when it got permission from KFOX, an AM in the LA area.