Scott Fybush said:And a couple more infomercial-heavy perpetual indies in the Philly market: WTVE 51 Reading and WMCN 44 (ex-WWAC 53) Atlantic City.
Nate Wesley said:Consider the journey of WJTC-TV 44 (Pensacola, FL/Mobile, AL). It signed on as an independent on Christmas Eve 1984, and it served as the Mobile-Pensacola market's UPN station from 1995-2006. It never secured an agreement to affiliate with The CW or MyNetworkTV. It opted for a independent life again under 'UTV 44' branding, which is still has today.
You forgot WLXI-TV 61 (RF 43) in Greensboro, which has always been religious. Also WRAY-TV 30 (RF 42) in the Raleigh market, which is currently religious but was a shopping channel.RadioDaze said:WHKY-TV 14 (RF 40) in Hickory, NC, has been independent since its debut on Valentine's Day, 1968, as has Manteo-licensed WSKY-TV 4 (RF 9), though it's targeted at Hampton Roads, Virginia and is only ten years old. Kannapolis-licensed but Charlotte-targeted WAXN-TV 64 (RF 50) has never had a formal network affiliation, though it did air some programming from the former PAX network from 1998-2000. Other than that, the 14 North Carolina full-power TV stations not affiliated with the "Big 4" or PBS--and not mentioned above-- air CW, MyNet, ion, Univision, or TCT (Marion, Illinois-based Christian broadcaster).
In the L.A. market, other indies that always have been indies include KXLA (physical 51, virtual 44) Rancho Palos Verdes/Los Angeles (which signed on in December 2000 as KRPA, changing its call letters to the current KXLA on 8/1/01), is infomercials by day, and multicultural programming by night; KVMD (physical 23, virtual 31) Twentynine Palms, which started broadcasting on 12/1/97 and was the first station in the country to go digital only in 2003; and KHIZ (physical 44, virtual 64) Barstow (all three of whose programming schedules are similar to the aforementioned KSCI); and KBBC channel 20 Bishop (yes, for those who don't know, Inyo County is included in the L.A. market), which went on the air on 8/21/07 as a Spanish-language indie (most of its broadcast day is filled by... wait for it... INFOMERCIALS!); this station has a repeater based in L.A. proper on KNLA-CD (physical 50, virtual 20). The programming premiered on what used to be the -LP when it was analog KNLA-LP channel 27 (not sure if the analog is still on the air or not) before adding the full-power KBBC, at which time KNLA became a repeater, and later changing its license from an -LP to an -LD, and then to a -CD.Robnoxious said:KWHY-22 Los Angeles has always been an indie unless you count their dabble as the Selec-TV LA outlet in the 70's and early 80's. Also KSCI-18 Long Beach/Los Angeles.