BRNout said:There are many smaller markets than Manchester/Concord/Portsmouth market which are perfectly viable. That theoretical market would have a MUCH larger population than your Zanesville analogy would imply (almost 1 million, if done right).
azumanga said:bpatrick said:Huntsville/Decatur/Florence, AL had two NBC affiliates: WAFF/48 Huntsville (and
before that, 1968-77, WAAY/31) and WOWL/15 Florence. 15 has since dropped
NBC for MyNetwork.
Wasn't WHDF (the former WOWL) UPN before becoming a MyNetwork affiliate?
BRNout said:In NH, there is quite a bit of grousing about how Boston stations seemingly ignore NH news, politics and weather. Now, in all fairness, only a relatively small percentage of their market's population lives in the Granite State. The same is true of those who live in the Portland and Burlington markets. WMUR has managed to gain statewide coverage and it has filled a lot of that demand quite nicely.
But others could do so too. Were NH in its own market, WMUR could have a FOX affiliate as a subchannel (for example). WFXT does a particularly bad job at acknowledging that it serves anyone in New Hampshire. And, Granite Staters could get that 3rd NFL game on a Pats home Sunday. The one that Providence viewers (located on Foxborough's doorstep) can get.
OhioMediaWatch said:BRNout said:There are many smaller markets than Manchester/Concord/Portsmouth market which are perfectly viable. That theoretical market would have a MUCH larger population than your Zanesville analogy would imply (almost 1 million, if done right).
But though it's not quite that large, you still have the same problem we have in Akron/Canton - proximity to the larger market...Boston in this case, Cleveland in our case.
Youngstown is a smaller market, but got stations very early on, and has natural terrain issues (it's in a Valley) and enough distance from Cleveland where Cleveland viewing is mostly secondary.
I don't know how well the Boston stations come in, in Manchester and Concord, but I suspect well enough that any new entry (see WNHT) has a rough hill to climb.
tripinva said:As I recall, WMUR used to air Fox on two of its translators.
- Trip
BRNout said:taylorjsdad said:Rick Rose 2.0 said:The Tampa Bay market has 2 ABC affiliates as well. WFTS Tampa and WWSB Sarasota.
So does Boston... WCVB-Boston and WMUR-Manchester, NH. Both are now owned by Hearst.
Somewhat like the Lincoln, NE market, Boston is a larger market than it should be. By rights, the southern 2/3 of New Hampshire (and nearby Windham County, VT) should be it's own market. But, adding those counties to "Boston" has stemmed population losses elsewhere in that market and has kept Boston in the top 10.
WMUR covers New Hampshire news as a local should (doing a wonderful job) while WCVB has long had Boston's most popular newscasts. Cable subs in NH and much of northeastern MA get 2 ABCs as a result.
RadioDaze said:Another unusual situation here in the Raleigh-Durham market is our NBC affiliate being on a UHF channel licensed to an outlying city on the market's eastern edge, WNCN-TV 17/Goldsboro. As regular visitors to this board have likely read, NBC has come up with the short straw in this market, which had only two successful commercial TV stations WRAL-TV 5 in Raleigh (ABC) and WTVD, channel 11 in Durham (CBS and NBC), until 1968 when WRDU-TV 28/Durham signed on. The station was NBC, but mostly the less-popular programs WTVD didn't air until the FCC stepped in. The Peacock Network stayed on channel 28 through two different owners, with nowhere to go on VHF (WTVD became an ABC O&O in 1985, with CBS going to WRAL, who had no interest in going NBC). By 1995, channel 28 was now known as WRDC with no news operation for the past four years and weaker ratings than the then-Fox affiliate WLFL. NBC bought independent station WNCN-TV and literally built a network affiliate from the ground up out of a station that, just a few years earlier was known as WYED-TV, a 1988 sign-on airing home shopping and weekend fishing shows. Media General owns the station now.
RadioDaze said:Another unusual situation here in the Raleigh-Durham market is our NBC affiliate being on a UHF channel licensed to an outlying city on the market's eastern edge, WNCN-TV 17/Goldsboro. As regular visitors to this board have likely read, NBC has come up with the short straw in this market, which had only two successful commercial TV stations WRAL-TV 5 in Raleigh (ABC) and WTVD, channel 11 in Durham (CBS and NBC), until 1968 when WRDU-TV 28/Durham signed on. The station was NBC, but mostly the less-popular programs WTVD didn't air until the FCC stepped in. The Peacock Network stayed on channel 28 through two different owners, with nowhere to go on VHF (WTVD became an ABC O&O in 1985, with CBS going to WRAL, who had no interest in going NBC). By 1995, channel 28 was now known as WRDC with no news operation for the past four years and weaker ratings than the then-Fox affiliate WLFL. NBC bought independent station WNCN-TV and literally built a network affiliate from the ground up out of a station that, just a few years earlier was known as WYED-TV, a 1988 sign-on airing home shopping and weekend fishing shows. Media General owns the station now.
kilamanjero said:NBC was so stupid for selling WNCN because the Raleigh-Durham-Fayetteville market is now larger than Hartford (where O&O WVIT resides) and San Diego (where virtual O&O KNSD resides) nowadays. They basically gave Media General a station to screw up (which they have since it's now flat in ratings) when they should have just sold the overlapping stations in Hartford and San Diego, which aren't considered rapidly growing markets. Raleigh-Durham will likely be in the top 20 in market size in the next 10 years, but NBC will still wonder why they didn't hold on to this property.
jsu5381m said:I wonder why New Hampshire doesn't have its own TV market?
KeithE4 said:kilamanjero said:NBC was so stupid for selling WNCN because the Raleigh-Durham-Fayetteville market is now larger than Hartford (where O&O WVIT resides) and San Diego (where virtual O&O KNSD resides) nowadays. They basically gave Media General a station to screw up (which they have since it's now flat in ratings) when they should have just sold the overlapping stations in Hartford and San Diego, which aren't considered rapidly growing markets. Raleigh-Durham will likely be in the top 20 in market size in the next 10 years, but NBC will still wonder why they didn't hold on to this property.
Three words: Location, location, location, and Raleigh/Durham ain't the right location.
Since when has NBC given a rodent's hiney about anything but the northeast and west coast? Hartford and San Diego are in their "core" territories and fit their desired demos. North Carolina (as well as their former O&O cities of Columbus and Birmingham) does not.
Outside of #3 Chicago and #5 Dallas/Ft. Worth, NBC has no interest in Flyover Country. Miami is sometimes called "the 6th borough of New York City" so NBC's presence there isn't surprising. I'm surprised they didn't keep WJAR-TV Providence since they can't get into Boston.
taylorjsdad said:jsu5381m said:I wonder why New Hampshire doesn't have its own TV market?
Let me see if I remember this from my Research in Broadcasting class.
Television markets are defined by viewership. In most cases the rating services take a county (or if the county is large or part of a county has different viewing patterns than another part of a county) and determines which area is most of the over-the-air viewership belongs to. In fact when Arbitron was rating local television markets they were called ADI's (Areas of Dominant Influence).
New Hampshire has a couple of things going against it which I think will prevent it from becoming it's own television market. First of all there is only one station (WMUR) affiliated with the 'Big 4' networks. The remaining commercial stations are affiliated with Ion (a satellite of Boston's Ion O&O), Telemundo (owned by NBC but operated by ZGS - owners of the low power Telemundo station in Boston), and MyNetwork TV. Even when Southern NH had two affiliates (Ch 21 in Concord was a CBS affiliate in the late 1980's - while I was away at college) viewers still were watching the Boston stations more than NH. While WMUR is widely watched in the Granite State and was even back then... the Boston stations as a total were much more watched than the NH stations. And the chance of stations in NH affiliating with CBS and Fox are close to nil since CBS and Fox own stations in Boston. I am not even sure that NBC would want to make their station in Merrimack, NH an NBC O&O.
The other thing NH has going against them is the majority of people moving into the state come from Massachusetts. Their viewing patters are closer to the Boston stations. That and what Southern NH has for stations right now really make it hard to make that area a market. When you get outside of Hillsborough and Rockingham counties... there is not another full power commercial station licensed in the state. WMUR has some translators in the North Country and there are some low power stations which Bill Binnie is putting together to create a statewide network (with the flagship being at WZMY in Derry). That is why two counties (Sullivan and Grafton) are part of the Burlington-Plattsburgh market and two other counties (Carrol and Coos) are in the Portland market.)
kilamanjero said:RadioDaze said:Another unusual situation here in the Raleigh-Durham market is our NBC affiliate being on a UHF channel licensed to an outlying city on the market's eastern edge, WNCN-TV 17/Goldsboro. As regular visitors to this board have likely read, NBC has come up with the short straw in this market, which had only two successful commercial TV stations WRAL-TV 5 in Raleigh (ABC) and WTVD, channel 11 in Durham (CBS and NBC), until 1968 when WRDU-TV 28/Durham signed on. The station was NBC, but mostly the less-popular programs WTVD didn't air until the FCC stepped in. The Peacock Network stayed on channel 28 through two different owners, with nowhere to go on VHF (WTVD became an ABC O&O in 1985, with CBS going to WRAL, who had no interest in going NBC). By 1995, channel 28 was now known as WRDC with no news operation for the past four years and weaker ratings than the then-Fox affiliate WLFL. NBC bought independent station WNCN-TV and literally built a network affiliate from the ground up out of a station that, just a few years earlier was known as WYED-TV, a 1988 sign-on airing home shopping and weekend fishing shows. Media General owns the station now.
NorthEast/West Coast Bias?
NBC was so stupid for selling WNCN because the Raleigh-Durham-Fayetteville market is now larger than Hartford (where O&O WVIT resides) and San Diego (where virtual O&O KNSD resides) nowadays. They basically gave Media General a station to screw up (which they have since it's now flat in ratings) when they should have just sold the overlapping stations in Hartford and San Diego, which aren't considered rapidly growing markets. Raleigh-Durham will likely be in the top 20 in market size in the next 10 years, but NBC will still wonder why they didn't hold on to this property.
KML-224 said:Does WMUR-TV (ABC) channel 9 have any subchannels?