R
Rick Rose 2.0
Guest
Maybe only one commercial station but with .2 and .3 they have cbs, fox, abc and my network covered
sthompson98 said:Victoria needs to placed in the Corpus Christi market despite the fact it does have a full power ABC and FOX station.
It could be a sub-market like Bryan is to Waco or Hagerstown is to Washington D.C.
I've always thought Carlsbad - Roswell - Hobbs should be it's own market separate from Albuquerque and Midland/Odessa.
M.J. said:I've sometimes wondered if Alpena, MI should be merged into the Traverse City-Cadillac market, which completely surrounds it. Alpena has its own CBS affiliate, otherwise they get a rebroadcast of a PBS station in the Flint-Saginaw-Bay City market (which also serves Traverse City-Cadillac), and they do not have their own affiliates of NBC, ABC, or Fox.
Dave said:I always wonder why Lafayette Indiana has its own market, but only has 1 TV station, WFLI, a CBS affiliate. That market has to rely on WRTV for ABC, WTHR for NBC, WXIN for Fox, & the WTTK simulcast of WTTV for CW out of Indianapolis. The Indianapolis DMA has many counties in their market, & I can't see adding Tippacanoe, Benton, & Warren Counties into the Indianapolis market. As it stands, they have to rely on cable for network stations, except for CBS, though they also carry CBS affiliate WISH-TV from Indianapolis on cable in that market, along side WLFI (the local CBS affiliate). For PBS, they mainly rely on WFYI Indianapolis & maybe WIPB Muncie. They also carry WTTW from Chicago on cable too, along with WTTW subchannels WTTW Prime (PBS minus childrens programming), Create, & V-Me. It is possible to pickup Indianapolis stations with an outdoor antenna, but you need a deep fringe antenna, & even then, you only get the stations that broadcast north of Indianapolis. No one gets the stations that broadcast from the Trafalgar farm (or any other station that's licensed to Bloomington, nor get WIPB OTA.
If the reason to make Lafayette Indiana its own market to protect Indianapolis from Chicago sports blackouts, Lafayette is already 90 miles SE of Gary, IN (I've traveled I-65 between Gary & Lafayette & know the actual mileage), & the reason is moot, unless the blackout radius is larger than 75 miles. White County, which is close to the Lafayette DMA is actually part of the Indianapolis market, but close to Jasper County (part of the Chicago DMA).
unclehonkey said:M.J. said:I've sometimes wondered if Alpena, MI should be merged into the Traverse City-Cadillac market, which completely surrounds it. Alpena has its own CBS affiliate, otherwise they get a rebroadcast of a PBS station in the Flint-Saginaw-Bay City market (which also serves Traverse City-Cadillac), and they do not have their own affiliates of NBC, ABC, or Fox.
Alpena has 3 of the Big 4 stations
11-1 CBS (HD)
11-2 FOX/MY (SD)
11-3 ABC (SD)
http://www.rabbitears.info/market.php?request=station_search&callsign=wbkb#station
Disagree. Neither one of them is a big enough market (by itself) to support ALL of the "big three" networks, although Cape also picked up a FOX affil with KBSI in 1987. And by air miles, they really aren't that far apart.nomadcowatbk said:Cape Girardeau MO and Paducah, KY (over 90 minutes drive) should not be in the same market
Mark said:WLFI was an early station from the 50s. Like most of these markets, locals and politicians wanted to make sure they got a TV station. WLFI was owned by the same people who had stations in Bloomington, IN and Fort Wayne. Add to that Northern Indiana was certain to be a UHF island(s) and you wanted coverage.
In this case with Bloomington farther south of Indy, I'm thinking they wanted some coverage on the northern end of the market, the station owners, that is.
DMAs suffer from huge population shifts, especially out West. You see the East Coast having too many, and the Western half is still pretty isolated. But San Diego for instance was only allotted two VHFs. Los Angeles was allotted SEVEN COMMERCIAL VHFs. That wouldn't have happened if San Diego was a major city back them. Same for San Jose.
If you look in the Midwest you have a lot of mid sized towns, that are too small for more than one station and are too far apart to be combined. Look at Champaign-Springfield, IL market. It's too spread out and the networks need two channels each to cover it. It should be two markets.
Lafayette is also home to about 40,000 college students and an additional 5,000+ teachers.
They probably thought at one time Lafayette could be big enough to support at least two networks, NBC and CBS.
I think WISH-TV broadcast from the southeast side until 1997 or 1998, when they signed on WISH-DT (RF 9). By that time, I think LIN TV owned both WISH and WLFI.KeithE4 said:Part of the reason WFAM/WLFI was able to stay on the air with a CBS affiliation is that, until the '80s (?) WISH-TV transmitted from the southeast side of Indy, rather than the NW side where they are now, and where WFBM/WRTV and WLWI/WTHR always were. WISH wasn't viewable in Lafayette without a good antenna or cable.
PTBoardOp94 said:KeithE4 said:Part of the reason WFAM/WLFI was able to stay on the air with a CBS affiliation is that, until the '80s (?) WISH-TV transmitted from the southeast side of Indy, rather than the NW side where they are now, and where WFBM/WRTV and WLWI/WTHR always were. WISH wasn't viewable in Lafayette without a good antenna or cable.
I think WISH-TV broadcast from the southeast side until 1997 or 1998, when they signed on WISH-DT (RF 9).
By my rough measurements, it was more than 100 air miles from the old WISH-TV site to the state line in Warren county. The rest of the stations are about 15 miles closer.
firepoint525 said:Disagree. Neither one of them is a big enough market (by itself) to support ALL of the "big three" networks, although Cape also picked up a FOX affil with KBSI in 1987. And by air miles, they really aren't that far apart.nomadcowatbk said:Cape Girardeau MO and Paducah, KY (over 90 minutes drive) should not be in the same market
Furthermore, they are both over 100 miles from St. Louis, and over 150 miles from Memphis.
nomadcowatbk said:firepoint525 said:Disagree. Neither one of them is a big enough market (by itself) to support ALL of the "big three" networks, although Cape also picked up a FOX affil with KBSI in 1987. And by air miles, they really aren't that far apart.nomadcowatbk said:Cape Girardeau MO and Paducah, KY (over 90 minutes drive) should not be in the same market
Furthermore, they are both over 100 miles from St. Louis, and over 150 miles from Memphis.
but the stations only seem to cover news in one state or another, the NBC affiliate is Kentucky centric while the CBS stations is Missouri centric