KML-224 said:What exactly is Outlet Broadcasting, LLC anyways? I saw that at the end of WVIT-TV's newscast last night. Last I checked, WVIT-TV was still an NBC O&O.
RadioDaze said:Don't know if they're related, but it was Outlet Broadcasting that originally bought the former WYED-TV 17/Goldsboro from Beasley Broadcast Group (that's right- WYED was the radio conglomerate's first and only TV station) in 1994. Outlet owned NBC affiliates WJAR/Providence and WCMH/Columbus at the time and won the Raleigh-Durham market NBC affiliation for their newly acquired channel 17 (which they renamed WNCN). NBC bought Outlet in 1995. All three stations were spun to Media General in 2008.
KeithE4 said:Miami is sometimes called "the 6th borough of New York City" so NBC's presence there isn't surprising.
BRNout said:viewing habits to change - which can take some time.
azumanga said:KeithE4 said:Miami is sometimes called "the 6th borough of New York City" so NBC's presence there isn't surprising.
However, in 2008, NBC received FCC approval to sell WTVJ to Post-Newsweek, the owners of ABC affiliate WPLG -- the sale was possible because, according to the FCC, WTVJ was "not ranked among the top 4 stations in terms of audience share." The sale was cancelled by the end of 2008, due to poor economic conditions.
BRNout said: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.)
Two points of correction/clarification that I'd like to point out:
1) "Most" New Hampshire residents are NOT from Massachusetts. The majority are still natives and, although a solid percentage come from MA, the majority do not. Many of the transplants have come from other states such as CT, NY, NJ, PA and even ME. That comment is too rash of a generalization. Yes, sometimes it seems that way if you're from Salem or Nashua - but its not the case.
As an aside, many say that NH has become more politically liberal thanks to the people moving in from MA. That's a myth; over half who've moved in from MA tend to vote more conservatively. NH is where Massachusetts' Republicans have gone. Now, the transplants from the Mid Atlantic region are overwhelmingly liberal. The comment is based on some research that the Nashua Telegraph did back in 2004.
2) I've seen a couple of citations about WNHT-21 as if that's proof positive that another network affiliate cannot exist in NH. Sorry, but that's absolute nonsense. The station was hobbled with a poor signal that didn't even cover Manchester well and could not be received clearly anywhere in southern NH. The owners didn't have nearly the funds to ride things out long enough for viewing habits to change - which can take some time. They lasted, what, 8 months? You have to have more start up $$$ than that! And (this is important), that was 1989! The state has 400,000 more residents now. Most now have cable. Viewing habits are totally different. There's must-carry and negotiated channel positioning now (which did not exist then). No, I'm sorry but the WNHT thing means nothing. Had it been properly bankrolled and executed, it could have worked. It was neither.
Look, if Springfield, MA (a much smaller and less affluent market) can support 4 commercial network outlets now, even with bigger Hartford and Boston market signals available on the market periphery, so can the southern half of New Hampshire. For decades, viewers in Springfield watched channel 3 from Hartford as their CBS. No more, now that Meredith's low powered WSHM supplanted it from cable. Talk about a bitter way to break a viewership habit!!
A NH market would have a population of between 850,000 and 1,000,000 - depending on how it is divvied out. It is absolutely viable - and could immediately support a FOX affiliate. WFXT hardly comes in anywhere in NH anymore. With digital signals, most Boston stations' OTA signals have a harder time penetrating NH anyway. The whole thing makes sense.
crainbebo said:Two PBS members in the Seattle area, KCTS 9 (Seattle) and KBTC 28 (Tacoma).
taylorjsdad said:Getting a CBS or Fox affiliate is just not going to happen as long as both networks have O&O's in the market.
KML-224 said:What exactly is Outlet Broadcasting, LLC anyways? I saw that at the end of WVIT-TV's newscast last night. Last I checked, WVIT-TV was still an NBC O&O.
RadioDaze said:Don't know if they're related, but it was Outlet Broadcasting that originally bought the former WYED-TV 17/Goldsboro from Beasley Broadcast Group (that's right- WYED was the radio conglomerate's first and only TV station) in 1994. Outlet owned NBC affiliates WJAR/Providence and WCMH/Columbus at the time and won the Raleigh-Durham market NBC affiliation for their newly acquired channel 17 (which they renamed WNCN). NBC bought Outlet in 1995. All three stations were spun to Media General in 2008.
Despite WNCN's being an NBC O&O, from 1995-2008, it was, as it is now even moreso under MG, never a serious contender in this market, and NBC didn't really seem to put a lot of resources into trying to do so. Really the only signs NBC 17 was an O&O were the graphics packages and the copyright at the end of their newscasts. There was definitely a noticeable difference when compared to our market's ABC O&O, WTVD. Under Media General, the station went HD and has a new news set. MG did bring in their standard graphics package, but didn't outfit WNCN with one of their standard wide-number, crescent-style logos, they retained their somewhat hard-to-see logo from the NBC ownership days (likely due to the MG stations, with the standardized logo--now sans-crescent--in neighboring Roanoke/Lynchburg (WSLS), Greenville/New Bern/Jacksonville (WNCT) and Florence/Myrtle Beach (WBTW) markets).
azumanga said:crainbebo said:Two PBS members in the Seattle area, KCTS 9 (Seattle) and KBTC 28 (Tacoma).
That ain't as unusual as you think -- many parts of the country have two or more PBS stations, such as Los Angeles (KOCE, KLCS and, until recently, KCET), Chicago (WTTW, WYCC and WYIN), New York City (WNET, WLIW, Connecticut Public TV and NJN), Cincinnati (WCET, WPTO and KET station WCVN), Tampa Bay (WEDU and WUSF), Miami (WPBT and WLRN), Orlando (WDSC, WBCC and, until June, at least, WMFE), and Flint / Saginaw (WDCQ and WCMU), among many others.
wncc said:Charlotte has three PBS affiliates: WTVI; WNSC (SC ETV); WUNG (UNC-TV)
azumanga said:crainbebo said:Two PBS members in the Seattle area, KCTS 9 (Seattle) and KBTC 28 (Tacoma).
That ain't as unusual as you think -- many parts of the country have two or more PBS stations, such as Los Angeles (KOCE, KLCS and, until recently, KCET), Chicago (WTTW, WYCC and WYIN), New York City (WNET, WLIW, Connecticut Public TV and NJN), Cincinnati (WCET, WPTO and KET station WCVN), Tampa Bay (WEDU and WUSF), Miami (WPBT and WLRN), Orlando (WDSC, WBCC and, until June, at least, WMFE), and Flint / Saginaw (WDCQ and WCMU), among many others.
kilamanjero said:KML-224 said:What exactly is Outlet Broadcasting, LLC anyways? I saw that at the end of WVIT-TV's newscast last night. Last I checked, WVIT-TV was still an NBC O&O.
RadioDaze said:Don't know if they're related, but it was Outlet Broadcasting that originally bought the former WYED-TV 17/Goldsboro from Beasley Broadcast Group (that's right- WYED was the radio conglomerate's first and only TV station) in 1994. Outlet owned NBC affiliates WJAR/Providence and WCMH/Columbus at the time and won the Raleigh-Durham market NBC affiliation for their newly acquired channel 17 (which they renamed WNCN). NBC bought Outlet in 1995. All three stations were spun to Media General in 2008.
Despite WNCN's being an NBC O&O, from 1995-2008, it was, as it is now even moreso under MG, never a serious contender in this market, and NBC didn't really seem to put a lot of resources into trying to do so. Really the only signs NBC 17 was an O&O were the graphics packages and the copyright at the end of their newscasts. There was definitely a noticeable difference when compared to our market's ABC O&O, WTVD. Under Media General, the station went HD and has a new news set. MG did bring in their standard graphics package, but didn't outfit WNCN with one of their standard wide-number, crescent-style logos, they retained their somewhat hard-to-see logo from the NBC ownership days (likely due to the MG stations, with the standardized logo--now sans-crescent--in neighboring Roanoke/Lynchburg (WSLS), Greenville/New Bern/Jacksonville (WNCT) and Florence/Myrtle Beach (WBTW) markets).
It is related. Outlet Broadcasting was the licensee for the most of the lower market O&O stations except for WVTM, which was "Birmingham Broadcasting Company, LLC" WVTM was placed into a trust by New World (because they owned WBRC at the same time whom they spun off to Fox) before NBC bought them outright, but keep the licensee tag for their duration as an O&O.
Oh yeah, Media General bought the 4 stations from NBCU in 2006 not 2008. I wished it was that recent tho... :-\
bpatrick said:Charlotte has three: WTVI/42, owned by the Charlotte-Mecklenburg
school board; WUNG/58 Concord, NC, part of UNC-TV; and WNSC/30
Rock Hill, SC, part of SCETV. Also WUNE/17 Linville, NC, also part of
UNC-TV, is considered part of the Charlotte DMA.
SCETV has three stations in the Greenville/Spartanburg/Asheville market:
WNTV/29 Greenville; WNEH/38 Greenwood, SC; WRET/49 Spartanburg.
UNC-TV's WUNF/33 Asheville and WUNW/27 Canton, NC, are available
in parts of the market.
RadioDaze said:While some on the periphery of the market "may" be able to get weak signals from SCETV's WJPM-TV 33 in Florence, Richmond's WCVE-TV 23, or Blue Ridge Public TV's WBRA-TV 15 in Roanoke, there isn't really a non-UNC-TV public TV alternative in Raleigh-Durham, as in Charlotte.