The St Joseph DMA should just be split up, with the Southern half going the Kansas City DMA, the Northern half going into the Omaha or Lincoln DMA
nomadcowatbk said:The St Joseph DMA should just be split up, with the Southern half going the Kansas City DMA, the Northern half going into the Omaha or Lincoln DMA
KeithE4 said:nomadcowatbk said:The St Joseph DMA should just be split up, with the Southern half going the Kansas City DMA, the Northern half going into the Omaha or Lincoln DMA
They probably don't do this because St. Joseph has one standalone major network affiliate, despite getting the other networks from KC. Same goes for Zanesville OH (Columbus), Lafayette IN (Indianapolis), and maybe a few others.
KeithE4 said:nomadcowatbk said:The St Joseph DMA should just be split up, with the Southern half going the Kansas City DMA, the Northern half going into the Omaha or Lincoln DMA
They probably don't do this because St. Joseph has one standalone major network affiliate, despite getting the other networks from KC. Same goes for Zanesville OH (Columbus), Lafayette IN (Indianapolis), and maybe a few others.
unclehonkey said:KeithE4 said:nomadcowatbk said:The St Joseph DMA should just be split up, with the Southern half going the Kansas City DMA, the Northern half going into the Omaha or Lincoln DMA
They probably don't do this because St. Joseph has one standalone major network affiliate, despite getting the other networks from KC. Same goes for Zanesville OH (Columbus), Lafayette IN (Indianapolis), and maybe a few others.
St Joe has Fox and CW too...last summer they added a LP station (KNPN) which is Fox on -1, CW on -3 and Telemundo on -4 (-2 is a news/weather thingy)
tested said:If you want some good ideas about how this could be done, look at the way rabbitears.info organizes markets.
Charles1 said:What about combining Dothan, AL and Panama City, FL? Dothan has an OTA CBS, ABC and Fox affiliate, while Panama City has a full-power NBC, ABC and Fox affiliate, and just added a LP CBS affiliate.
nomadcowatbk said:unclehonkey said:St Joe has Fox and CW too...last summer they added a LP station (KNPN) which is Fox on -1, CW on -3 and Telemundo on -4 (-2 is a news/weather thingy)
CW isn't a major network, its a narrowcasting netlet
EJ204 said:@polido...
Do those Fort Walton stations get carried on the cable systems of Mobile-Pensacola? If they do, they and the My Network station probably want to stay with the larger Mobile-Pensacola market.
I understand that in the Fort Walton-Destin area, cable systems carry both Mobile-Pensacola stations and Panama City stations. I guess all those cities on the Gulf Coast between Tampa and New Orleans have odd market groupings. No city, Mobile, Pensacola, Biloxi, Panama City, Tallahassee, etc. is large enough to be a market on its own and have all the major networks. So they all have groupings where markets cross state lines and have to include network affiliates from other cities that really have nothing to do with the home market.
bpatrick said:EJ204 said:@polido...
Do those Fort Walton stations get carried on the cable systems of Mobile-Pensacola? If they do, they and the My Network station probably want to stay with the larger Mobile-Pensacola market.
I understand that in the Fort Walton-Destin area, cable systems carry both Mobile-Pensacola stations and Panama City stations. I guess all those cities on the Gulf Coast between Tampa and New Orleans have odd market groupings. No city, Mobile, Pensacola, Biloxi, Panama City, Tallahassee, etc. is large enough to be a market on its own and have all the major networks. So they all have groupings where markets cross state lines and have to include network affiliates from other cities that really have nothing to do with the home market.
A number of you have complained about the size of the South Georgia edition of TV Guide; this is precisely the reason. That
edition was intended for Columbus, Macon, Albany, and Tallahassee, but contained spillover from Atlanta, Jacksonville, Savannah...and Dothan and Panama City. And the latter markets were included in the Gulf Coast edition as well, along with
Mobile/Pensacola and spillover from Biloxi and Tallahassee (New Orleans and Laurel/Hattiesburg were included in earlier years).
Then there was another relatively large one: South Mississippi, aimed at Meridian, Laurel/Hattiesburg, and Biloxi, but also carried Mobile/Pensacola, New Orleans, and spillover from Jackson.
With the way these Gulf-area markets were jammed together, it's no wonder TV Guide was a nightmare to read there.
Raymie said:There was an actual DMA merger: it occurred in the 1990s and involved two Alabama markets being added to Birmingham.
That occurred in the fall of 1998, a consequence of the affiliation switches of 1994 removing the last distinct major network affiliates from both Tuscaloosa and Anniston-Gadsden. Each of those markets already relied on Birmingham affiliates for all except CBS (except Fox in Tuscaloosa). Birmingham soared 12 market spots (51 to 39) and the total number of DMAs shrank from 212 to 210. At the same time, Birmingham became a metered market.