Tribune is an odd duck in the American broadcast landscape, a weird mix of old and new. Against all odds, they have resisted any attempt to take it over, and the end result is that if there's a general-purpose entertainment station in the largest markets, chances are it's owned by CBS, NBC, Disney, Fox, or Tribune. Tribune is not even one of the largest players in the cable universe, with the odd duck that is WGN America its only cable property, a microcosm of Tribune itself. That it is now going into original production - not merely original programming, original
production - only highlights its odd status (and suggests that Tribune may want to launch a new network wholly its own once its CW affiliation agreements run out, its own little MyNet-esque fiefdom).
As such, many of Tribune's stations - many of which run their own newscasts, and I can probably count the other CW affiliates that do so on one hand - are incredibly valuable to anyone who wishes to start a fifth broadcast network, as it was for the WB back in the day...yet if Tribune was that interested in doing so, many if not most of them would be Fox affiliates now (especially in markets like Chicago and Denver, where Tribune owns a legacy-VHF and Fox is on UHF). Instead, many of Tribune's CW affiliates play up how fiercely independent they are even as they run CW programming in primetime, evoking the days when being truly independent was truly a viable option even after Fox ran scared of the notion back in 2006. Making it all the odder is that Tribune
also owns a number of ABC and Fox affiliates, so it's also a lot like a typical mid-market station owner at the same time.
I can't help but wonder if Tribune's new owners will eventually decide to split the company's two identities - since Time Warner now no longer really owns Time Warner Cable, I bet they'll at least try to pony up the dough for most of Tribune's CW affiliates in 2016 so they can re-start the WB entirely on their own, if only to stop Tribune from going it alone. That could put WGN America in common ownership with former rival TBS, but that might not be its best use.
I've
suggested in another thread that former MyNet affiliates could form an alliance to negotiate for the rights to local teams' games. The two likeliest companies to spearhead such a movement, Tribune and Sinclair, are unfortunately also the two most critical for the success of a fifth network (without Tribune Fox sure as hell isn't interested in crippling its own RSN business - unless cord-cutting was already all the rage - and CBS isn't much more interested), but if they were to spearhead such a movement I could see WGN America evolving into a national version of this "sixth network" showing out-of-market programming, not unlike Canada's SportsNet One. If it were carried on the digital subchannels of most members of this alliance, it might actually be the best bet for challenging ESPN. (Even if WGN America ended up in Turner's hands, I suspect they'd immediately try to turn it into a sports network - they've been flirting with doing so with TruTV for a while now anyway.)