Noticed that quite a bit with the Phoenix TV market, with many stations marketing themselves as "Arizona" as if the stations broadcast statewide, which is an easy mistake to make considering how large that market is in terms of size covering pretty much all of AZ except for 5 counties, 4 to the south/southwest (Tucson, Yuma) & Apache in the northeast (Albuquerque, NM).Unfortunately replaced a few years ago with the bland "Arizona PBS" moniker (apparently ignoring KUAT - Arizona Public Media -down in Tucson).
The Phoenix stations DO transmit statewide, or at least the northern 2/3 of the state. The major stations have translator networks that cover most of the parts of the state where people actually reside.Noticed that quite a bit with the Phoenix TV market, with many stations marketing themselves as "Arizona" as if the stations broadcast statewide, which is an easy mistake to make considering how large that market is in terms of size covering pretty much all of AZ except for 5 counties, 4 to the south/southwest (Tucson, Yuma) & Apache in the northeast (Albuquerque, NM).
Yes, it's a similar setup, though I am assuming without the legendary "daisy-chain" translator network (created before satellite transmission was possible) that blankets the farthest corners of Utah with the major Salt Lake City stations. Utah is such a socially cohesive and comparatively homogeneous state (the LDS church and other related factors) that any other arrangement there probably would have been a non-starter.The Phoenix stations DO transmit statewide, or at least the northern 2/3 of the state. The major stations have translator networks that cover most of the parts of the state where people actually reside.
WBTV has had this logo since 2001
And WSOC has pretty much had this logo since the 80s.
That is a non-starter. Both Tucson and Yuma predate Phoenix. Yuma started out as Colorado City (no relation to the current one on the Utah border) in the 1850s. Tucson predates the American Revolution by a year or so. Phoenix was founded in 1867.But, as noted, it is different due to the existence of Tucson and Yuma. If those two urban areas did not exist, Phoenix would indeed blanket the whole state pretty much by default.

View attachment 3124 WBTV, Charlotte Joke is if you turn your head 90 degrees left it looks like a girl in a bikini. I heard CBS didn't like their logo half covered.
When I worked at WBT in the '80's CBS had there Southeastern US news bureau at the station so CBS and WBTV have been close for years. I'm surprised CBS didn't buy the station. I guess the market isn't big enough to interest them but it's growing fast!Yep, that's the joke. It's the kind of thing that once you see, you can never un-see.
When an affiliate has been a legacy station as long as WBTV has, I guess they can do pretty much anything they want to, except for that business of constantly pre-empting network programming. WLWT in Cincinnati and their affiliates in Dayton and Columbus were notorious for this WRT NBC back in the day. Fox doesn't play that.
Well they still could…honestly I wish they would…I don’t like how Gray has let a lot of the good talent leave and let the sports department be whittled down to next to nothing but I’m sure they don’t mind not having any syndicated programming.I'm surprised CBS didn't buy the station.
Are you talking about WBT radio or WBTV?When I worked at WBT in the '80's CBS had there Southeastern US news bureau at the station so CBS and WBTV have been close for years. I'm surprised CBS didn't buy the station. I guess the market isn't big enough to interest them but it's growing fast!
I was today years old when I realized that.View attachment 3124 WBTV, Charlotte Joke is if you turn your head 90 degrees left it looks like a girl in a bikini. I heard CBS didn't like their logo half covered.