Any spot between two cities – or three if spaced properly – will yield a bounty of local stations but make DX harder. Lake and McHenry County in Illinois are tremendous for Chicago and Milwaukee FM and TV, and in McHenry County, add in Rockford and, if you want to work for it, Madison. A family member lived in central McHenry County, had an antenna on a tower with a rotor and had no trouble picking up Chicago, Rockford and Milwaukee on TV in the analog days. I'd imagine it would be the same today with the exceptions of co-channel stations, and maybe even then with precise aiming.
New Jersey between New York and Philadelphia is another good one. Not many blank spots on the dial.
The late Jeff Kadet, renowned TV DXer, moved to Macomb, Ill., in part because it was without a VHF station, and with his setup – 80-foot tower and multiple antennae – soaked up some kind of DX almost every day on low VHF.
Here's his setup, archived from 2002:
New Jersey between New York and Philadelphia is another good one. Not many blank spots on the dial.
The late Jeff Kadet, renowned TV DXer, moved to Macomb, Ill., in part because it was without a VHF station, and with his setup – 80-foot tower and multiple antennae – soaked up some kind of DX almost every day on low VHF.
Here's his setup, archived from 2002:
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