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TBN

Don't forget San Francisco.

The major holes in TBN's over-the-air distribution chain are Boston, the SF Bay Area and Washington. Maybe you could add Detroit in there also, but I wouldn't worry about those smaller New England markets.
 
Apparently TBN sold a number of its terrestrial stations in 2010. However, from what I can see, TBN reaches all of those markets either by satellite or cable.

The one fact I see in this is that TBN was concerned about reaching the 39% saturation point that has been discussed regarding Sinclair and Tribune. A number of the TBN stations are UHF, and might have qualified for a UHF discount. But it wasn't available before 2016.

My question to the OP is why do you ask?
 
I thought TBN was on the level of ABC, CBS, Fox, NBC and PBS even the CW, Telemundo and Univision?

Have you ever seen TBN? If you had, you wouldn't make that kind of statement.

TBN makes ION look professional.
 
Have you ever seen TBN? If you had, you wouldn't make that kind of statement.

TBN makes ION look professional.

At least Paul and Jan (RIP) made sure they had 24 hours of programming day in and day out before turning things over to the kids...too bad they gave up on shortwave though. At least 7505 lives on as the "new" WRNO.
 
The closest affiliate I have even seen to central Connecticut was WTBY-TV channel 54 of Poughkeepsie, NY.

Low-Power Channel 67 in Springfield, Mass was TBN until WFSB purchased and launched it as CBS TV 3. In the analog TV days I had a pocket sized TV and I could pick up Channel 67 from Springfield going up Route 6 in Farmington, CT heading towards New Britain.
 
...too bad they gave up on shortwave though. At least 7505 lives on as the "new" WRNO.

Wasn't the shortwave station just the TV audio? Not exactly riveting radio. The old transmitter went to the Caribbean Beacon and now broadcasts "University Network" Melissa and the late Gene Scott (6090/11775).
 
Wasn't the shortwave station just the TV audio? Not exactly riveting radio. The old transmitter went to the Caribbean Beacon and now broadcasts "University Network" Melissa and the late Gene Scott (6090/11775).

TBN was the outfit that took over KUSW when that commercial shortwave experiment failed, right?
 
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