w9wi said:

Won't speak for Trip but I'm here to argue with those who get it wrong. Get it right, and you get ignored.
In my case, I dislike arguing in general, and find Radio-Info to be terribly frustrating in how people a number of people don't seem to listen to anything. I find that when I try to correct things, I'm either ignored as though my post didn't exist, or argued with over easily verified facts. So a lot of times I don't bother anymore.
- As (I hope) I stated elsewhere, I don't think Fox *can* prohibit non-O&O affiliates from running subchannels. I think it would violate the FCC requirement that licensees have sole control over what they air.
They don't prohibit Fox on subchannels. They prohibit airing Fox-HD on subchannels. I believe it's in the network contract though I'm not certain, and there might be a case or two where it's grandfathered. (KXII comes to mind, as they were the first.)
- If I'm wrong about that... and Fox *does* prohibit subchannels on non-O&O affiliates... I might presume they made an exception in WKBN's case. If they hadn't made an exception, their OTA presence in the Youngstown market would be a 25kw analog signal...
No, it would just be Fox-SD instead of Fox-HD. Could even be Fox in wide SD; a few stations do that. (WBOC comes to mind.)
My information is that the primary Fox affiliate in the Youngstown market is WYFX-CA channel 62. According to Trip's site, WYFX's digital station, authorized on channel 19, is not yet on the air; the station is strictly analog at this point.
I've been wondering if Fox is okay with a dual-HD setup so long as another affiliate that is not dual-HD is available, including analogs that could go digital. Because I've seen a few cases where it has happened where that could be argued. (KCPQ's 13-1 HD feed airing on KMYQ 22-2, for instance.)
I would suggest the presence of Fox in 720p on WKBN 27-2 is a courtesy to Fox. If Fox tried to require WKBN to give all their bandwidth to 27-2, they'd of course have to drop CBS from 27-1. Presumably New Vision has made a business decision that WKBN is more profitable as a CBS affiliate. Or, their CBS contract still has years to run. Or both. In any case, if Fox were to threaten to walk if WKBN continues to share their bandwidth, WKBN would tell Fox to go ahead & walk. And Fox would have no digital OTA presence in the Youngstown market at all.
The fact of the matter is that there are a number of Fox affiliates that have done dual-HD or wanted to do dual-HD and not been able to. I remember hearing WBOC was going to be dual-HD and had bought all the gear a number of months ago and it never happened. KCOY tested dual HD and flipped it back after a few days. WLIO was only feeding upconverted SD from Fox over the air even though the rest of the time, 8-2 airs programming in HD. WLUC has not added 6-2 in HD for unspecified "contractual reasons."
Now from what I hear, Fox seemingly doesn't mind the dual HD thing so long as Fox is on the -1 subchannel, oddly enough. This is why WGXA gets away with Fox on 24-1 and ABC on 24-2, and explains why WGBC in Meridian has Fox on 30-1 and NBC on 30-2 even though it was NBC in analog, and the same goes for WAGM with Fox on 8-1 and CBS on 8-2.
The only dual HD case that's on-going that I can't explain away as I did in any of my above comments is Montana. I suspect Fox realized in that case that nobody else would be willing or able to provide Fox-HD and provide it to the whole state the way Max Media is, and went with it on that basis alone.
- Trip