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1994–1996 United States broadcast television realignment

Between 1994 and 1996, a wide-ranging realignment of television network affiliations took place in the United States as the result of a multimillion-dollar deal between the Fox Broadcasting Company and New World Communications, announced on May 23, 1994. Unprecedented in the broadcast industry, the deal resulted in twelve stations owned by, or in the process of being purchased by New World, switching network affiliations to Fox over the course of a two-year period when existing contracts expired. These stations were long-standing affiliates of the traditional "Big Three" television networksCBS, NBC, and ABC—in some of the country's largest markets, with the majority having been aligned with CBS individually for over 40 years.

The major impetus for the changes was to allow Fox to improve its local affiliate coverage after having successfully outbid CBS for broadcast rights to the National Football Conference (NFC), which the National Football League (NFL) awarded to the fledgling network in December 1993. The alliance started a domino effect of similar deals between the other networks and their affiliates, mainly to shore up existing affiliate bases and, in the case of CBS, to recoup lost affiliates; CBS signed a critical pact with Westinghouse Broadcasting that resulted in Westinghouse's parent company purchasing CBS outright. The switches took place throughout the United States between September 1994 and September 1996, with one additional switch taking place in February 1997, in markets ranging in size from Atlanta, Georgia, to Miles City, Montana. In the case of four markets, CBS and NBC exchanged owned-stations between each other, with one market seeing their CBS and NBC-owned stations swap both channel positions and transmitters. The complexities of these deals saw the "Big Three" affiliates in two markets, Baltimore and Denver, exchange networks with each other, but the Fox affiliate was unchanged. In total, these constitute some of the most sweeping and expansive changes in American television history.

As a result of this realignment, Fox ascended to the status of a major television network, comparable in influence to CBS, NBC, and ABC. Multiple New World-owned stations (which Fox purchased outright in 1996) struggled to adjust to their new affiliations, but many ultimately recovered with news-intensive schedules and were buoyed by Fox's success in prime time, particularly throughout the 2000s. CBS was most impacted among the "Big Three" networks, consigned to UHF stations with high channel numbers in markets like Milwaukee, Detroit and Cleveland, but started to recover in the late 1990s by claiming the American Football Conference (AFC) rights. Fox Sports, particularly the NFL on Fox, has won acclaim since its 1994 launch for innovations in game presentation, and the network's aggressive bidding in 1993 signaled long-term trends both in American television and professional sports.

Television affiliation switches prior to 1994

The traditional "Big Three" television networks
 
ABC
 
CBS
 
NBC

Affiliation switches led by changing fortunes at the major national networks—the traditional "Big Three" of ABC, CBS, and NBC—began in the late 1970s with the rise of ABC, which had traditionally been in third place, to number one in the national ratings. Even though ABC's national coverage alone was not a disadvantage, the quality of affiliates in larger markets was, and the network began a concerted campaign to pry loose stations associated with its competitors.[1] From January 1976 to the end of 1978 alone, ABC secured defections from 20 affiliates of the other "Big Three" networks, 11 from CBS and 9 from NBC. By 1983, NBC alone had lost 20 affiliates to ABC, defections that cost the network a full rating point on the NBC Nightly News and resulted in the loss of $9 million in advertising revenue from Nightly and $15 million in prime time.[2] Among the defections from NBC were a string of major coups in sizable markets: WRTV in Indianapolis; KGTV in San Diego; WSOC-TV in Charlotte; KSTP-TV in the Twin Cities;[3] and WSB-TV in Atlanta.[4]

However, as NBC became the number-one network in the mid-1980s, it gained the upper hand. One of the last defectors from NBC to ABC was KOTA-TV in Rapid City, South Dakota, which changed in 1984; the reversal in fortune was not what KOTA-TV officials had expected and instead brought them closer with their primary competitor.[5] The next year, NBC began a campaign to reverse some of the losses it had experienced.[4] Two former NBC affiliates returned to the network after short stints with ABC: WSAV-TV in Savannah, Georgia, returned after three years, as did KCEN-TV in Temple, Texas, after changing in 1984.[6] Between then and 1988, NBC upgraded its affiliations in a number of markets, including Omaha, Nebraska; Knoxville, Tennessee; and Jacksonville, Florida. NBC president Pierson Mapes told Electronic Media that NBC was looking for upgrades based on a number of factors: "Mostly it's because the local news product isn't what it should be, the owners don't want to invest in the station to improve its performance or it's a UHF outlet that we want to upgrade."[2] Many of the stations added to NBC were stronger than their replacements; the Knoxville station, WBIR-TV, was the dominant station there and commanded nearly half of the television audience for its early evening newscast.[7] ABC struck back in 1990 with the signing of WHAS-TV in Louisville, Kentucky, the market's number-one station and a CBS outlet for 40 years; this attracted interest on the part of as many as a dozen CBS affiliates in switching to ABC.[8]

In one of the largest single affiliation switches, six television stations in the Miami and West Palm Beach markets in South Florida changed affiliations on January 1, 1989, when CBS purchased Miami's Fox affiliate WCIX (channel 6) after NBC purchased Miami's CBS affiliate WTVJ (channel 4).[9]

Fox launches and pursues the NFL

The genesis of the Fox Broadcasting Company took place through two 1985 transactions made by News Corporation, headed by Australian publishing magnate Rupert Murdoch. After a failed takeover of Warner Communications, Murdoch purchased a 50 percent interest in 20th Century-Fox Film Corporation (TCF) on March 20, 1985, for $250 million.[10][11] Murdoch and TCF minority investor Marvin Davis then announced a $3.5 billion purchase of Metromedia's program syndication unit and six television stations—including WNEW-TV in New York City, KTTV in Los Angeles and WTTG in Washington, D.C.—from John Kluge on May 6, 1985, for $2.55 billion. Murdoch boasted that the Metromedia stations could exploit TCF's film and television library, prompting speculation these stations might form a new "fourth television network" alongside ABC, CBS, and NBC.[12] To win regulatory approval for the deal, Murdoch gave up his Australian citizenship and became a naturalized U.S. citizen on September 4, 1985.[13] Davis, who later revealed he declined to participate in the Metromedia purchase, sold his stake in TCF to Murdoch 20 days later.[14][15] The Metromedia deal closed on March 6, 1986, forming Fox Television Stations Group.[16] After consummation, Fox, which only consisted of president Jamie Kellner and his secretary, began recruiting an executive team.[17]

In July 1986, syndicated newspaper columnist Gary Deeb reported on the possibility ABC might not renew their broadcast rights to Monday Night Football (MNF), then the league's top-rated program, unless NFL commissioner Pete Rozelle agreed to lower the television rights fee significantly. The previous contract was set in 1981 when the annual inflation was at a substantial 13 percent, a rate that fell to 3–4 percent by 1986, in turn, causing ABC Sports to lose $40 million.[18] ABC had been purchased earlier in 1986 by Capital Cities, owner of some of ABC's most influential affiliates, and was under pressure to cut costs in both their news and sports divisions.[19] By September 1986, CBS, rights-holder for the National Football Conference (NFC), and NBC, rights-holder for the American Football Conference (AFC), declined any interest in MNF, but Fox considered making a bid and even invited former MNF announcer Howard Cosell to be a part of it.[20]

Fox formally launched as a network on October 9, 1986, with the debut of The Late Show with Joan Rivers, and was preparing to unveil its first night of prime time programming on April 5, 1987.[21][a] Against this backdrop, TCF chairman Barry Diller announced in January 1987 that Fox was ready to bid on MNF in an attempt to win legitimacy, telling the Miami Herald, "We would take ABC's (current) contract and sign it today."[23] Diller viewed an MNF bid as making a long-term investment, and was prepared for Fox to "lose money in the double-digit eight figures" with such a deal[21] buoyed by Murdoch's financial resources.[23] ABC decided to bid for a renewal based largely on Fox's interest in MNF,[24] with a fee reduction saving the network approximately $20 million per year and low-rated Sunday and Thursday games moved to ESPN.[25] While Fox bid $7 million per game compared to ABC's $6.5 million per game,[26] Rozelle was reportedly uninterested in the Fox offer as the network was still unestablished.[27] NFL officials also expressed a willingness to remain with ABC and were unsure if Fox would exist in three years, a fate shared by other past attempts at a "fourth network".[28]

Securing the NFC rights

In 1993, six years after Fox's failed MNF bid, the NFL opened up negotiations for all broadcast contracts, including the NFC and AFC rights. At the same time, Dallas Cowboys owner Jerry Jones and Denver Broncos owner Pat Bowlen asserted control over the NFL's broadcasting committee, usurping Cleveland Browns owner Art Modell, who had been a long-time ally of CBS. Murdoch privately called Jones and declared his intent to bid, saying, "Jerry, I think I was a stalking horse last time (in 1990). I'm not going to do that and be just a stalking horse."[29] When negotiations began on December 7, Murdoch presented to the broadcasting committee a sizzle reel by Sky Sports president David Hill[30] proposing Fox could produce NFL games similarly to Sky's soccer coverage, with emphasis on more cameras and in-game natural sounds, and have the network market the league year-round. Jones later said, "I was just mesmerized by their imaginative thinking. They were changing the presentation of the game."[29]

It'll be first class. We want to make the NFL look better than what we've seen. We have the crown jewel of all sports.

Lucie Salhany, Fox network president, on the network securing a broadcast deal for the NFL's NFC games[31]

On December 17, 1993, Fox stunned the sports and television worlds by reaching a four-year, $1.58 billion contract with for NFC regular season and playoff games, effective with the 1994 season.[32] News of the Fox–NFC deal was first reported on during the CBS Evening News with Dan Rather.[33] As part of the deal, Fox was also awarded broadcast rights to Super Bowl XXXI in 1997.[34] The NFC package had been owned by CBS since 1956—fourteen years before the AFL–NFL merger and subsequent restructuring into the NFC and the AFC—and had been considered a "cornerstone" for CBS Sports.[33] Fox's deal was regarded as a loss leader;[35] network CEO Chase Carey framed it as one that would not directly make money but instead establish momentum for Fox and elevate it to the "Big Three" networks.[29] Fox had pursued the NFC rights from the beginning as the conference had more teams located in the country's largest broadcast markets.[35]

CBS lost close to $100 million on their prior NFC deal signed in 1990, a situation shared by the NFL's other broadcast partners due to aftereffects of the early 1990s recession.[33] Underestimating the value of the NFC broadcast rights, CBS's chairman Laurence Tisch insisted on offering a bid equal to their 1990 contract,[29] resulting in Fox exceeding CBS's bid by as much as $1.29 billion (or more than $100 million per year).[33] NBC, which held the AFC broadcast rights since 1970, retained the rights after a last-minute bidding war with CBS, shutting out the network from pro football entirely.[31] Morale at CBS Sports was depicted as "somber and not optimistic", with veteran announcer Pat Summerall saying, "[I]t's a shock. It hurts. It's a big part of my life."[34] Murdoch expressed a want to hire Summerall's broadcast partner John Madden,[31] which happened the following month.[36] Most of the NFL on CBS announcing team, including Summerall, Terry Bradshaw and James Brown, also left to join Fox Sports.[29] Early financial projections for CBS owned-stations and affiliates were grim: network flagship WCBS-TV alone stood to lose $5 million a year without the NFL, with their general manager calling it "a straight drop to the bottom line." The general manager of affiliate KDFW in DallasFort Worth, Texas, called it "a big financial kick."[31]

Fox upgrades in small markets

CBS was saying to the NFL, "If you move (the NFC) rights to Fox, in these 60 [sic] cities there will be no free over-the-air broadcast of the NFL." Mr. Murdoch said, "You got to come to this meeting with the NFL TV committee." Mr. Murdoch did not tell me what he was going to say. We stand up in front of the TV committee, and he says, "Within 60 days, Preston will get a secondary affiliation with some TV station in every one of these 60 markets." I just about wet my pants.

Preston Padden, Fox president of network distribution[29]

Entering 1994, Fox's 141-station affiliate base remained smaller than ABC, CBS or NBC, which each boasted more that 200 affiliates; this resulted in an approximate six percent differential in terms of national reach. The network supplied Foxnet for cable systems in smaller markets that did not have a dedicated affiliate.[37] Some affiliates still had no local newscasts, with the prior recession resulting in Fox lessening the priority level on affiliates to establish them. One of these affiliates, WOIO in Cleveland, Ohio, initiated plans to launch a news service after seeing success with co-owned WXIX-TV in Cincinnati.[38] While WUAB already had an established 10 p.m. newscast in the Cleveland market, an unnamed executive told the Akron Beacon Journal in 1992, "they (WOIO) don't have to get ratings, they just have to exist."[39] Scripps-Howard Broadcasting started developing newscasts for two of their three Fox affiliates, KNXV-TV in Phoenix and KSHB-TV in Kansas City. KSHB's newscast launched in August 1993 with an irreverent tone and de-emphasis on sports and weather;[40][41] likewise, KNXV was assembling their news department with an unconventional style in line with Fox's younger demographics.[42] WOIO, WXIX, KNXV and KSHB were all UHF stations, which accounted for 85 percent of Fox's affiliate roster.[29]

Fox also lacked coverage in 47 markets where only three or fewer commercial TV stations operated. In these markets, it began discussing secondary affiliations with the local ABC, CBS, and NBC affiliates.[37] Though most of the CBS affiliates turned down Fox's overture, a number of small-market ABC affiliates agreed to Fox's terms, which included the carriage of at least six hours a week of Fox prime time programs.[b] CBS and ABC responded by threatening to withhold 60 Minutes (in the case of CBS) and postseason baseball (in the case of ABC) from affiliates that added Fox programming. CBS president of affiliate relations Tony Malara said that if 60 Minutes did not air nationally at the same time, it would lose value to advertisers.[45][46] CBS followed through with its threat; KXMB-TV in Bismarck, North Dakota, added Fox football and lost 60 Minutes for the duration of the football season.[47] WSBT-TV in South Bend, Indiana, also signed up for Fox football and lost 60 Minutes, with CBS offering the show to WHME-TV.[48][49] Dual NBC/ABC affiliate KTEN in AdaArdmore, Oklahoma, joined Fox on a tertiary basis to accommodate Dallas Cowboys fans and boasted a "monopoly of football" with Fox, NBC and MNF; as part of the deal, KTEN also aired select Fox prime time shows beginning in July 1994.[50]

The network began making overtures to group operators like Freedom Newspapers, Stauffer Communications and Brisette Broadcasting about having their stations switch to Fox, mostly to upgrade in markets with UHF affiliates that transmitted at a lower radiated power than their VHF counterparts.[37][c] Led by network distribution president Preston Padden, videotaped pitches asserted Fox affiliates could sell more local ads and generate more revenue.[51] Several affiliate defections were announced prior to May 1994. The first was ABC affiliate KARD in West Monroe, Louisiana, announced in January 1994 with an April changeover.[36] In April, Robinson Everett's CBS stations—KECY-TV in El Centro, California, and WJKA-TV in Wilmington, North Carolina—announced they would affiliate with Fox. Several factors motivated the Everett switch, including CBS's insistence that the stations restore previously unsuccessful news operations, a desire for more network compensation in Wilmington, and particularly CBS's refusal to make KECY-TV translator "KDBA" the CBS affiliate of record for Palm Springs, California, because it felt cable coverage of Los Angeles station KCBS-TV was adequate.[52] WJKA, which also supplanted Foxnet in the Myrtle Beach market, switched to Fox under the new WSFX-TV call sign on September 18, 1994.[53]

There had previously been two "Big Three" stations to join Fox: WSVN in Miami switched from NBC on January 1, 1989, and KLMG (now KFXK-TV) in Longview, Texas, switched from CBS on April 1, 1991.[54] WSVN's conversion to Fox came under unique circumstances, as it was part of the two-market, six-station South Florida realignment.[9][55] Unlike any other Fox affiliate or owned-station, WSVN adopted a news-intensive tabloid format[56][57] which shattered conventional wisdom and proved a ratings and financial success.[58] WSVN news director Joel Cheatwood briefly worked with Fox on developing a network news service in 1990,[59] and by May 1994, Fox network president Lucie Salhany called the station "the future of television".[60]

Fox had also occasionally changed its affiliate in a given market. Most notably, over the course of 1990, it moved to higher-rated independent stations in Birmingham, Alabama; Little Rock; and Memphis and Nashville, Tennessee.[61] Consolidation among independents also led to switches such as the Nashville move, in which new affiliate WZTV bought the Fox affiliation and the rights to much of the programming aired by WXMT;[62] the 1990 programming merger of WNYB-TV into WUTV in Buffalo, New York;[63][64] and the 1992 purchase of the assets of bankrupt WXGZ-TV serving Green Bay, Wisconsin, by that city's WGBA-TV.[65]

The New World–Fox affiliation pact

New World stations affected by the Fox affiliation deal
Station Market Channel Prior affiliation
KDFW DallasFort Worth, TX 4 CBS
KSAZ-TV Phoenix, AZ 10 CBS
KTBC-TV Austin, TX 7 CBS
KTVI St. Louis, MO 2 ABC
WAGA-TV Atlanta, GA 5 CBS
WBRC-TV Birmingham, AL 6 ABC
WDAF-TV Kansas City, MO 4 NBC
WGHP GreensboroWinston-Salem, NC 8 ABC
WITI Milwaukee, WI 6 CBS
WJBK-TV Detroit, MI 2 CBS
WJW-TV Cleveland, OH 8 CBS
WTVT Tampa, FL 13 CBS

Originally constituted as an independent producer of low-budget feature films, and later as a television studio, New World Pictures was purchased by investor Ronald Perelman in 1989 while in the middle of a Chapter 11 bankruptcy restructuring. Under Perelman, New World purchased a majority stake in SCI Television on February 17, 1993, for $100 million and $63 million in newly issued debt.[66] SCI contained most of the assets of the former Storer Communications and was itself undergoing a complex debt restructuring;[67] as part of the deal, SCI and New World merged to form New World Communications.[68] In May 1994, two major purchases were announced by New World in the span of three days: four stations from Argyle Television Holdings for $717 million, and four Great American Communications stations for $350 million and $10 million in share warrants.[69][70][71]

On May 23, 1994, Fox purchased a 20 percent stake in New World Communications in what was a $500 million investment.[72] This deal contained a groupwide multi-year affiliation agreement that would have the majority of stations owned by—or in the process of being acquired by—New World, switch network affiliations to Fox after existing contracts expired per-station.[73][74] Calling the agreement "the largest network affiliation realignment in television history", Murdoch said it would "forever change the competitive landscape of network television".[72]

 
Ronald Perelman, CEO of New World Communications.

Several stations were divested by New World in the process: NBC affiliates KNSD in San Diego, California, and WVTM-TV in Birmingham, Alabama, were sold to the network for $425 million on May 22, 1996.[d][76] WSBK-TV in Boston, operating as an independent, was excluded due to Fox's repurchase of WFXT[77] and was sold to Paramount Stations Group, affiliating with UPN.[78] WVTM-TV's sale was necessitated as WVTM (included as part of the Argyle Television deal) was in the same market as WBRC (which was part of the Great American deal). WBRC and WGHP were placed in a trust and operated by Great American successor Citicasters[79] until April 1995, when operating control for both stations were transferred to Fox Television Stations Group.[80] Fox purchased both WBRC and WGHP on July 22, 1995, in exchange for $130 million in promissory notes.[81] Two Fox-owned stations displaced by the New World deal were also sold: WATL in Atlanta and KDAF in Dallas–Fort Worth, went to Renaissance Communications for $100 million and joined The WB, with Renaissance concurrently selling KDVR in Denver to Fox for $70 million.[82][83][84]

In total, twelve New World-owned stations were affected by the Fox affiliation pact, eight of which were long-tenured CBS affiliates in some of the nation's largest cities.[85] KDFW had been with CBS for 45 years,[86] WJBK-TV for 44 years,[87] KTBC-TV and WAGA-TV for 43 years,[88] WJW-TV and KSAZ-TV for 40 years[89][90] and WTVT for 39 years.[91] Additionally, WDAF-TV had been an NBC affiliate for 45 years.[92] The majority of these stations were also located in markets with established NFC teams,[93][e] which served as "a significant factor" for New World, along with Fox's programming lineup being largely limited to prime time, enabling the stations to sell more local advertising.[73] News of the agreement caught CBS's Tony Malara off guard when notified over the phone; as Malara later explained, "I said (to New World CEO William C. Bevins), 'In what market?' ... He said, 'All of them.' I said, 'What the hell are you doing?'"[95] Management at the New World stations, including WJW-TV general manager Virgil Dominic, were notified of the pending deal five days in advance and sworn to secrecy. Dominic later said, "My mouth fell to my knees. There was five or six seconds of absolute silence after (New World stations president Bob Selwyn) told me. It really was a shock."[96]

The Scripps–ABC alliance

The Scripps–ABC affiliation deal at a glance
Station Market Channel Prior affiliation
WEWS-TV Cleveland, OH 5 ABC
WXYZ-TV Detroit, MI 7 ABC
KNXV-TV Phoenix, AZ 15 Fox
WMAR-TV Baltimore, MD 2 NBC
WFTS-TV Tampa, FL 28 Fox

Immediately following the Fox–New World announcement, CBS courted Scripps-Howard, owners of WEWS-TV in Cleveland and WXYZ-TV in Detroit, two long-standing ABC affiliates, along with three Fox affiliates impacted by Fox–New World: KNXV-TV, KSHB-TV and WFTS-TV in Tampa. As part of a possible deal leaked to Broadcasting & Cable, CBS would also affiliate with KNXV and WFTS and acquire a minority stake in Scripps's cable channel HGTV.[97] In discussions with ABC, Scripps insisted that KNXV-TV and WFTS-TV, along with NBC affiliate WMAR-TV in Baltimore, switch to ABC as a condition of any renewal with WEWS and WXYZ[98][99]: 16  and threatened to switch both to CBS if KNXV in particular was not included.[99]: 7  KNXV's inclusion came at the expense of KTVK, the market leader for local news and regarded as a model ABC affiliate[100] but was a standalone family-run station and not part of a larger group.[101] The network offered Scripps $25 million as an alternative to KNXV-TV, which was rejected in what ABC executive Bryce Rathbone described as Scripps "[having] a gun to their head".[99]: 16  When KTVK general manager Bill Miller asked Capital Cities/ABC CEO Tom Murphy if there was anything the station could do, Murphy replied, "you should light some candles".[99]: 5 

ABC acquiesced to Scripps's demands and announced on June 15, 1994, that KNXV, WFTS and WMAR would join the network, and WEWS and WXYZ would remain affiliates.[102][103] Scripps's other former Fox affiliate, KSHB, replaced WDAF-TV as Kansas City's NBC affiliate; KSHB was tied to contract renewals for KJRH-TV in Tulsa, Oklahoma, and WPTV-TV in West Palm Beach.[104] The new ABC alliance prompted WFTS-TV to expedite work on establishing a news department,[105] with local newscasts launching the day of the switch from facilities formerly used by the Home Shopping Network in a temporary setup.[106][107] Stripped of the ABC affiliation and failing to land CBS,[101][108] KTVK spent the next few months rebuilding itself into a news-intensive independent.[109] Scripps's Cincinnati station, WCPO-TV, also signed a 10-year deal with ABC in September 1995 unrelated to the earlier group deal,[110] and switched from CBS on June 3, 1996.[111]

The CBS–Westinghouse deal

The CBS–Group W affiliation deal at a glance
Station Market Channel Prior affiliation
KDKA-TV Pittsburgh, PA 2 CBS
KPIX-TV San Francisco, CA 5 CBS
KYW-TV Philadelphia, PA 3 NBC
WBZ-TV Boston, MA 4 NBC
WJZ-TV Baltimore, MD 13 ABC

Scripps's insistence on WMAR-TV joining ABC came at the expense of WJZ-TV, which had been with ABC since 1948 and was the network's longest-tenured affiliate.[112] WJZ-TV owner Westinghouse Broadcasting (Group W) engaged in off-and-on discussions over the past six months with CBS, NBC and Fox over a possible group-wide affiliation deal, which accelerated when the Scripps-ABC agreement was announced.[113] Industry trade publications also suggested a possibility of Fox purchasing Group W.[112] On July 14, 1994, Group W and CBS agreed to a group-wide 10-year contract, renewing CBS's existing ties with KDKA-TV in Pittsburgh and KPIX in San Francisco and adding WJZ-TV, WBZ-TV in Boston and KYW-TV in Philadelphia to the network, the latter two stations switching from NBC.[114][115] As part of the deal, Group W and CBS formed a joint venture to acquire other television stations and operate a syndication company.[116] WJZ-TV and WBZ-TV switched to CBS on January 1, 1995,[98] with Baltimore and Boston's existing CBS affiliates, WBAL-TV and WHDH-TV, switching to NBC, the former in a three-way affiliation swap.[117][118] NBC agreed to pay WHDH-TV owner Sunbeam Television a total of $100 million to $150 million over a ten-year span, coincidentally reuniting Sunbeam with the network that had bypassed their Miami station WSVN five years earlier.[119]

 
KYW-TV studios in Philadelphia, c. 2007.

The Philadelphia market, however, posed an immediate logistical issue as KYW-TV would replace CBS-owned WCAU-TV; consequently, both NBC and Fox made offers for WCAU-TV, while CBS expressed interest in conducting an asset swap.[115] In September 1994, Fox agreed to purchase existing Philadelphia affiliate WTXF-TV.[120] With NBC remaining as the only bidder for WCAU-TV, talks began in earnest over an swap of stations between the two networks. An early outline leaked to Mediaweek had NBC offering KCNC-TV in Denver and KUTV in Salt Lake City to CBS, along with the channel 4 signal in Miami.[121] This was largely confirmed on November 21, 1994, with NBC selling KCNC and KUTV to the Group W–CBS joint venture, along with WTVJ's channel 4 license and transmitter site; CBS would sell to NBC both WCAU-TV and WCIX's channel 6 license and transmitter site.[122][123] The transmitter and license swap in Miami would see WCIX "move" to channel 4, renamed WFOR-TV, and WTVJ "move" to channel 6.[124]

In Denver, another three-station affiliation swap took place: NBC-owned KCNC-TV became CBS-owned, outgoing CBS affiliate KMGH-TV joined ABC, and outgoing ABC affiliate KUSA linked with NBC.[125] KMGH was part of a group-wide deal between ABC and owner McGraw-Hill announced on October 21, 1994,[126] with McGraw's other CBS affiliate, KERO-TV in Bakersfield, California,[127] switching to ABC on March 1, 1996.[128] Prior to finalizing their trade with Renaissance for KDVR, Fox had been rumored to acquire Tribune's KWGN-TV via a station trade.[129][130] In Salt Lake City, KSL-TV agreed to switch from CBS to NBC.[125] Because of the complexity of the NBC-CBS asset swap, the FCC granted approval in August 1995 after weeks of delays, with the Philadelphia, Miami, Denver and Salt Lake City market affiliation switches all taking place on September 10, 1995.[131][132]

CBS scrambles for replacement affiliates

Replacement CBS affiliates in New World markets
Station Market Channel Prior affiliation
KBVO-TV Austin, TX 42 Fox
KPHO-TV Phoenix, AZ 5 Independent
KTVT DallasFort Worth, TX 11 The WB
WDJT-TV Milwaukee, WI 58 Independent
WGNX Atlanta, GA 46 Independent
WGPR-TV Detroit, MI 62 Independent
WOIO Cleveland, OH 19 Fox
WTSP Tampa, FL 10 ABC

Relegated to the UHF dial in Cleveland, CBS signed former Fox affiliate WOIO,[133] which despite having no news department, committed to launching one by taking over WUAB through a local marketing agreement.[134] Tampa was equally straightforward, with outgoing ABC affiliate WTSP joining CBS.[106] CBS signed up KBVO-TV to fill the void in Austin left by KTBC-TV;[135] when that switch took place on July 1, 1995, KBVO was renamed KEYE-TV.[136] Dallas–Fort Worth was also resolved on July 1 via KTVT, a VHF independent owned by Gaylord Broadcasting. As a condition set forth by Gaylord, KSTW in SeattleTacoma, Washington, also joined CBS at the expense of long-standing affiliate KIRO-TV.[137] Both KTVT and KSTW were slated to join The WB, but after that network's launch was delayed, Gaylord sued to void the pending contracts. In turn, The WB sued Gaylord for breach of contract.[138] The Seattle switches took place on March 16, 1995, with KIRO-TV joining UPN but maintaining their local news schedule.[139][140][f]

A multi-station deal with CBS and Meredith Corporation saw Phoenix independent KPHO-TV replace KSAZ-TV, and WNEM-TV in Bay City, Michigan, switch from NBC to CBS, as part of a renewal with KCTV in Kansas City.[108] The Meredith deal resulted in another side deal: after rumors of NBC courting existing ABC affiliate WJRT-TV in Flint, Michigan, Capital Cities/ABC purchased it and WTVG in Toledo, Ohio, from SJL Broadcasting for $155 million on October 1994, converting the latter from NBC to ABC.[142] Capital Cities/ABC's purchase was made largely to prevent NBC from signing, or purchasing, WJRT as a replacement for WNEM.[143][135][144] As a result, former CBS affiliate WEYI-TV became Flint–Bay City's NBC affiliate.[145] In Detroit, however, outgoing Fox affiliate WKBD-TV and independents WXON-TV and WADL rejected affiliation or purchase offers by CBS,[146] effectively forcing the network to purchase WGPR-TV (channel 62) from the International Free and Accepted Modern Masons for $24 million.[147] WGPR-TV was the first Black-owned television station in the mainland United States[148] and, up until October 1992, employed an 11-person news department with daily newscasts focused on the city's Black population.[149] Despite this, an unnamed CBS executive told New York Times reporter Bill Carter about WGPR-TV: "[T]his station has no news and no history in the market. It's amazing."[150]

Struggling to secure either WATL or WGNX as a replacement affiliate in Atlanta, CBS made a $22 million purchase offer for WVEU (channel 69) out of desperation in September 1994.[151] Even with the pending deal, CBS continued to lobby WATL and WGNX, and reached an affiliation with WGNX on November 16, 1994;[152] the purchase of WVEU and an immediate resale was also made official.[153][154] The Milwaukee market proved to be the most problematic for CBS. Sinclair Broadcast Group, owner of outgoing Fox affiliate WCGV-TV[155] and operator of WVTV, turned down all offers made by CBS,[156] the Wisconsin Voice of Christian Youth turned down a longshot purchase offer for their TV station,[157] and Weigel Broadcasting, owner of WDJT-TV (channel 58) ended talks due to CBS's continued pursuit of another station.[158] CBS's situation in Milwaukee was dire to the point the network agreed to supply their owned-stations in Chicago and Green Bay to cable providers in the event no replacement affiliate could be secured.[159] Five days before WITI's contract was to lapse, on December 6, 1994, Weigel and CBS reached an agreement to affiliate WDJT-TV in a 10-year deal.[160]

Savoy, Petracom and Blackstar link with Fox

SF Broadcasting, Blackstar and Petracom stations
Station Market Channel Prior affiliation Owner
KEVN-TV Rapid City, SD 7 NBC Blackstar
KHON-TV Honolulu, HI 2 NBC SF Broadcasting
WALA-TV Mobile, AL 10 NBC SF Broadcasting
WLUK-TV Green Bay, WI 11 NBC SF Broadcasting
WTVW Evansville, IN 7 ABC Petracom
WVUE New Orleans, LA 8 ABC SF Broadcasting

In March 1994, Fox and Savoy Pictures established a venture called SF Broadcasting to acquire and operate additional television stations. Fox held no voting stock in the company—which instead was held entirely by Savoy Pictures chairmen Victor Kaufman and Lewis Korman—but supplied 58 percent of the original $100 million in capital.[161] SF acquired four stations owned by Burnham Broadcasting in two separate deals: WLUK-TV in Green Bay, Wisconsin, on July 29, 1994, for $38 million,[162] and WALA-TV in Mobile, Alabama, KHON-TV in Honolulu, Hawaii, and WVUE in New Orleans, Louisiana, one month later on August 25 for $229 million. The deal further upgraded Fox's affiliation base in two additional NFC markets.[163] NBC protested the sale of WLUK before the FCC, alleging SF was a shell created by News Corporation to circumvent FCC limits on the amount of capital that a foreign company can invest in an American television station.[164] This petition was soon followed with another protesting Fox's KDVR purchase and concurrent station sales in Dallas and Atlanta to Renaissance.[165] NBC withdrew these and all other petitions against Fox on February 17, 1995.[166][167]

I sometimes think there are a lot of people out there who are giving us credit for being a lot smarter than we are. We're simply investing in companies that believe in our business plan and are attracted to affiliations with our network, just like NBC and ABC are out investing in operators who believe in their business plan.

Preston Padden, defending Fox's investment into LLC Blackstar Communications[51]

Fox also made two other equity investments in broadcasters that converted at least one station to Fox. In October 1994, it agreed to purchase an equity stake in Blackstar Communications, a Black-owned company owned by John Oxendine. Blackstar's three existing stations aired the Home Shopping Network;[168] the company intended to buy as many as 11 VHF stations in mid-sized to smaller markets for conversion. The company made its first station acquisition after the deal in July 1995, when it announced a $20 million deal to purchase the Nebraska Television Network (NTV), a group of ABC affiliates in central and western Nebraska that were already secondary affiliates of Fox, to convert them to Fox.[169][170] However, the transaction was delayed, ultimately to the point of being called off, by an FCC petition over a matter unrelated to the possible switch.[g] Blackstar then spent $14 million to purchase KEVN in Rapid City, South Dakota, in September 1995.[174] After the purchase, Blackstar announced it would switch KEVN to Fox,[175] which took place on July 15, 1996.[176]

In May 1995, Fox invested $15 million in exchange for 20 percent of Petracom, which was in the middle of buying four TV stations from Banam Broadcasting. Among the four stations were two small-market Fox affiliates[h] and ABC affiliate WTVW in Evansville, Indiana, which converted to Fox as part of the deal; rumors of the deal occurring had prompted ABC to sign an affiliation agreement with existing CBS affiliate WEHT.[178][179] The affiliation switch with those stations and WEVV-TV, which changed from Fox to CBS, took place on December 3, 1995.[180]

Fox also continued to pursue station purchases on their own. On August 18, 1994, the network purchased ABC affiliate WHBQ-TV in Memphis, Tennessee, from Communications Corporation of America (ComCorp).[181] ComCorp originally bought WHBQ-TV for an estimated $43 million in April, but when two investors backed out, Fox provided the needed financing; following consummation, Fox offered to buy it from ComCorp outright for $80 million, concurrent with their offers for WBRC and WGHP;[79] former Fox affiliate WPTY-TV assumed the ABC affiliation on December 1, 1995.[182] More "Big Three" affiliate defections to Fox took place: Quincy Newspapers's WSJV in ElkhartSouth Bend, Indiana, agreed to switch from ABC to Fox in April 1995,[183] with ABC pulling their programming off of Quincy's WREX in Rockford, Illinois, in retaliation.[184] The switch took place on October 18, with Weigel Broadcasting signing on W58BT (channel 58)[i] as South Bend's new ABC affiliate, having constructed it from the ground up over a seven-week span.[185]

Even the smallest of media markets were affected: KYUS-TV in Miles City, Montana, then operating as a satellite of Billings station KSVI,[186] switched to Fox in 1995 after being purchased by The Marks Group, owner of dual NBC/CBS affiliate KXGN-TV in Glendive;[187] KXGN had previously taken Fox football in 1994 via a tertiary affiliation.[188]

Station group influence

Additional affiliation deals between the traditional "Big Three" networks and station group operators took place between 1994 and 1997:

  • The Outlet Company reached a long-term deal with NBC renewing the network's ties with WJAR-TV and WCMH-TV, while also switching WNCN in the RaleighDurham market to NBC. WNCN's inclusion was centered around NBC's long-standing ties with Outlet.[189][190] Prior to WNCN switching, on August 3, 1995, NBC offered to purchase Outlet for $396 million.[191]
  • River City Broadcasting signed a multi-station deal with ABC that renewed contracts with WSYX and WLOS, while also making former Fox affiliate KDNL-TV St. Louis's new ABC affiliate, replacing KTVI.[192]
  • The Belo Corporation included CBS affiliate KXTV in Sacramento, California, as part of their deal with ABC that renewed affiliations with WFAA in Dallas and WVEC in HamptonNorfolk, Virginia.[193] As a result, River City's KOVR switched from ABC to CBS on March 6, 1995.[194]
  • Young Broadcasting signed a deal with ABC in September 1994 renewing all six of their affiliates and later involved the switching of NBC affiliate WTVO in Rockford, Illinois, to ABC; in turn, Capital Cities/ABC made a $25 million investment into Young.[184]
  • Pulitzer Publishing agreed to extend affiliations with their six NBC affiliates across-the-board despite overtures made by Capital Cities/ABC to convert WDSU and WXII-TV to ABC as replacements for WVUE and WGHP, respectively. WDSU general manager Wayne Barrett said, "My opinion was we should stay home (with NBC). The stations that don't change are the ones that stand to benefit the most."[195]
  • Allbritton Communications, owner of ABC affiliate WJLA-TV in Washington, D.C., inked a 10-year affiliation contract that would either renew or convert their entire station group to ABC, including NBC affiliate WCIV in Charleston, South Carolina.[196]

Initiating the switches

 
WJBK studios in Southfield, Michigan
 
WAGA studios in Atlanta, Georgia
 
KTBC-TV studios in Austin, Texas
 
WITI studios in Milwaukee, Wisconsin
 
WLUK-TV studios in Green Bay, Wisconsin
 
WBRC studios in Birmingham, Alabama

The Cleveland market was the first in the Fox–New World agreement to initiate an affiliation swap on September 3, 1994, between CBS affiliate WJW-TV and Fox affiliate WOIO.[89] As the New World stations had the right to decline carriage of Fox Kids, WBNX-TV in Akron, Ohio, an independent owned by televangelist Ernest Angley, agreed to pick up the children's programming block, finalizing a contract two days beforehand.[197] CBS expressed confidence with WOIO, with Anthony Malara saying, "[W]e got a terrific television station here ... If we have the same kind of experience in every one of our switch markets, it's going to be a lot easier."[95] With the switch, WJW-TV hired multiple personnel and added a local morning show, giving it the largest news staff and news output of any Ohio television station,[89] but notably eschewed directly marketing their incoming Fox affiliation. Days after the Fox–New World agreement was announced, WJW general manager Virgil Dominic told The Plain Dealer, "I guarantee you one thing. We are not going to be 'Fox 8.' There is no way in the world we are going to become 'Fox 8'. We are 'Cleveland's Own' and 'Newscenter 8,' and we intend to stay that way."[96] Conversely, WOIO was tasked with reconciling their youthful, irreverent image with CBS's older-skewing lineup.[198]

The rest of the New World chain switched in a staggered manner. WDAF-TV and KSHB-TV traded affiliations on September 12, 1994,[199] the same day KSAZ-TV's CBS contract ran out and was picked up by KPHO-TV.[90] Due to contractual obligations with KNXV-TV, KSAZ operated as an independent for a three-month interregnum until December 12,[200] when KNXV dropped Fox and picked up all ABC News programming, including World News Tonight and Nightline, while KTVK continued to run ABC's daytime and primetime lineups until January 9, 1995.[201] Tampa also switched on December 12,[106] while Detroit,[202] Milwaukee[160] and Atlanta[203] all had their affiliation switches the day before. Detroit's changes were the most dramatic largely because of WGPR-TV's prior obscurity: WGPR's ratings for their first night with CBS rose by 11,000 percent compared to their former programming, while CBS's ratings dropped by 25 percent.[204] Following the switch, WJBK-TV fielded 10,000 phone calls from viewers over a two-day span.[98]

Changes in Dallas and Austin[205] occurred on July 1, 1995. St. Louis followed on August 7; Fox Kids in that market went to KNLC after WB affiliate KPLR-TV turned it down,[206] but moved to KTVI in September 1996 after multiple incidents involving KNLC's religious ownership that embarrassed Fox.[207] GreensboroWinston-Salem, North Carolina, switched on September 3, 1995, with Fox affiliate WNRW and satellite WGGT picking up the ABC affiliation vacated by WGHP,[j] with WNRW renamed WXLV-TV.[209][k] Three days before the Greensboro market switches, WLUK-TV and WGBA-TV exchanged NBC and Fox in Green Bay. WGBA's NBC pickup was seen as a "triumph" for the station, which had previously fought off bankruptcy twice, and with ownership planning local newscasts.[212] The three other SF Broadcasting stations switched to Fox on January 1, 1996. In Honolulu and Mobile, former Fox affiliates KHNL and WPMI-TV assumed the dropped NBC affiliations,[213][214] but New Orleans saw a three-way swap where ABC affiliate WVUE joined Fox, WB affiliate WGNO take ABC, and Fox affiliate WNOL-TV link with the WB.[215]

Birmingham was the last New World market to switch on September 1, 1996, but initiated the most complicated realignment. Despite having completed their purchase of WBRC in July 1995,[79][81] Fox honored the balance of WBRC's ABC contract, allowing ABC nearly 15 months to find a replacement. Allbritton acted to buy two CBS affiliates outside of the market:[l] Tuscaloosa's WCFT-TV in November 1995 and Anniston's WJSU-TV in January 1996, the latter after a deal for Gadsden Fox affiliate WNAL-TV fell through.[217] Allbritton announced both stations would be converted to ABC for the Birmingham market,[217] this would later become part of Allbritton's 10-year, group-wide contract with ABC.[196] WCFT and WJSU's operations were consolidated into one identity, "ABC 33/40",[218] purchasing W58CK (channel 58) as a low-power simulcast in Birmingham proper. WNAL-TV switched to CBS at the same time, but plans to establish a news department with multiple former WJSU staffers were abruptly suspended with no reason;[219][220] two weeks after the switch, Paxson Communications purchased WNAL.[221] Outgoing Fox affiliates WTTO and semi-satellite WDBB became independents[222] before affiliating with The WB in February 1997 as part a larger group deal with owner Sinclair Broadcast Group.[223]

The Allbritton–ABC agreement would wind up affecting another market, as Allbritton was in the process of purchasing WBSG-TV in Brunswick, Georgia, the WB affiliate for Jacksonville, Florida. Allbritton announced that WBSG would become Jacksonville's ABC affiliate, usurping WJKS;[224] as WBSG's signal did not cover the entire market, an unbuilt station on channel 25 licensed to Orange Park was acquired.[225] WJKS contested the loss of their ABC contract until giving up in August 1996,[226] but began aggressively preempting the majority of the network lineup starting in January 1997; this forced WBSG's switch to be moved up from April to February.[227] The Orange Park station—taking the WJXX call sign—took to the air as the new Jacksonville ABC affiliate on February 9, 1997, with WBSG acting as a semi-satellite.[228]

As the Birmingham switches were imminent, News Corporation offered to purchase the remainder of New World for $2.48 billion in stock; once the deal closed on January 22, 1997, Fox's 22 owned-stations (ten of which were from New World) surpassed CBS and Tribune Broadcasting as the largest television station owner in the United States with an estimated 40 percent total market reach.[229][230][m] Silver King Communications (then the owned-station group for HSN) acquired Savoy Pictures and SF Broadcasting on November 28, 1995. Headed by former TCF chairman Barry Diller, Silver King's purchase set off industry speculation that Diller could potentially launch another broadcast network backed by the 31-station group.[235] The four Fox affiliates were ultimately sold to Emmis Communications on April 1, 1998.[236][n]

Affiliation switches directly attributed to the Fox–New World agreement and related transactions
Market Call sign Channel Affiliation
before switch
Affiliation
after switch
Date of switch
Atlanta, GA WAGA-TV 5 CBS Fox December 11, 1994[203]
WATL 36 Fox The WB
WGNX 46 Independent CBS
WNEG-TV 32 Independent CBS October 2, 1995[240]
Austin, TX KTBC 7 CBS Fox July 1, 1995[205]
KBVO 42 Fox CBS
Bakersfield, CA KERO-TV 23 CBS ABC March 1, 1996[241]
KBAK-TV 29 ABC CBS
Baltimore, MD WMAR-TV 2 NBC ABC January 2, 1995[242]
WBAL-TV 11 CBS NBC
WJZ-TV 13 ABC CBS
Binghamton, NY WICZ-TV 40 NBC Fox April 4, 1996[243]
BirminghamTuscaloosaAnniston, AL WBRC-TV 6 ABC Fox September 1, 1996[244]
WDBB 17 Fox Independent
WTTO 21 Fox Independent
WCFT-TV 33 CBS ABC
WJSU-TV 40 CBS ABC
WNAL-TV 44 Fox CBS
W58CK 58 Independent ABC
Boston, MA WBZ-TV 4 NBC CBS January 2, 1995[245]
WHDH-TV 7 CBS NBC
Charleston, SC WCBD-TV 2 ABC NBC August 19, 1996[246]
WCIV 4 NBC ABC
Cincinnati, OH WCPO-TV 9 CBS ABC June 3, 1996[247]
WKRC-TV 12 ABC CBS
Cleveland, OH WJW-TV 8 CBS Fox September 3, 1994[89]
WOIO 19 Fox CBS
DallasFort Worth, TX KDFW-TV 4 CBS Fox July 1, 1995[137]
KTVT 11 Independent CBS
KDAF 33 Fox The WB
KXTX-TV 39 The WB Independent
Denver, CO KCNC-TV 4 NBC CBS September 10, 1995[126]
KMGH-TV 7 CBS ABC
KUSA-TV 9 ABC NBC
Detroit, MI WJBK-TV 2 CBS Fox December 11, 1994[202]
WKBD-TV 50 Fox UPN
WGPR-TV 62 Independent CBS
Evansville, IN WTVW 7 ABC Fox December 2, 1995[180]
WEHT 25 CBS ABC
WEVV-TV 44 Fox CBS
Fairbanks, AK KTVF 11 CBS NBC April 1, 1996
K13XD 13 CBS August 7, 1996[o][248]
FlintBay CitySaginaw, MI WNEM-TV 5 NBC CBS / UPN January 16, 1995[145]
WEYI-TV 25 CBS NBC
Green BayAppleton, WI WLUK-TV 11 NBC Fox August 28, 1995[249]
WGBA-TV 26 Fox NBC
GreensboroWinston-Salem, NC WGHP 8 ABC Fox September 3, 1995[209]
WNRW 45 Fox ABC / UPN
WGGT 48 Fox ABC / UPN
Honolulu, HI KHON-TV 2 NBC Fox January 1, 1996[214]
KHNL 13 Fox NBC
Jacksonville, FL WJKS 17 ABC The WB February 9, 1997[228]
WBSG 21 The WB ABC
WJXX 25 ABC
Kansas City, MO WDAF-TV 4 NBC Fox September 12, 1994[199]
KSHB-TV 41 Fox NBC
Macon, GA WGXA 24 ABC Fox January 1, 1996[250]
WPGA-TV 58 Fox ABC
Marquette, MI WBKP 5 ABC October 30, 1996
WLUC-TV 6 ABC / NBC / Fox NBC
Memphis, TN WHBQ-TV 13 ABC Fox December 1, 1995[182]
WPTY-TV 24 Fox ABC
MiamiFort Lauderdale, FL WCIX 6 Channel allocations changed September 10, 1995[132]
WTVJ 4
Miles CityGlendive, MT KYUS-TV 3 ABC Fox 1995[187]
Milwaukee, WI WITI-TV 6 CBS Fox December 11, 1994[160]
WCGV-TV 24 Fox UPN
WDJT-TV 58 Independent CBS
Mobile, AL WALA-TV 10 NBC Fox January 1, 1996[251]
WPMI 15 Fox NBC
Monroe, LAEl Dorado, AR KARD 14 ABC Fox April 17, 1994[36]
Myrtle BeachFlorence, SC WGSE 43 The WB Fox November 10, 1996[252]
New Orleans, LA WVUE-TV 8 ABC Fox January 1, 1996[215]
WGNO 26 The WB ABC
WNOL 38 Fox The WB
Philadelphia, PA KYW-TV 3 NBC CBS September 10, 1995[125]
WCAU-TV 10 CBS NBC
Phoenix, AZ KTVK 3 ABC The WB January 9, 1995[201]
KPHO-TV 5 Independent CBS September 12, 1994[90]
KSAZ-TV 10 CBS Independent
Independent Fox December 12, 1994[200]
KNXV-TV 15 Fox ABC
PocatelloIdaho Falls, ID KPVI-TV 6 ABC NBC January 1, 1996[253]
KIFI-TV 8 NBC ABC
Providence, RI WLNE-TV 6 CBS ABC September 10, 1995[254]
WPRI-TV 12 ABC CBS
RaleighDurham, NC WNCN 17 The WB NBC September 10, 1995[255]
WRDC 28 NBC UPN
Rapid City, SD KEVN-TV[p] 7 NBC Fox July 15, 1996[176]
KNBN-LP 24 NBC
Reno, NV KRXI-TV 11 Fox December 3, 1995[256]
KAME-TV 21 Fox UPN
Rockford, IL WREX 13 ABC NBC August 14, 1995[257]
WTVO 17 NBC ABC
St. Louis, MO KTVI 2 ABC Fox August 7, 1995[192]
KDNL-TV 30 Fox ABC
Sacramento, CA KXTV 10 CBS ABC March 6, 1995[193]
KOVR 13 ABC CBS
Salt Lake City, UT KUTV 2 NBC CBS September 10, 1995[125]
KSL-TV 5 CBS NBC
San Antonio, TX KABB 29 Independent Fox January 16, 1995[258]
KRRT 35 Fox UPN
SeattleTacoma, WA KIRO-TV 7 CBS UPN March 13, 1995[140]
KSTW 11 Independent CBS
South Bend, IN WSJV 28 ABC Fox October 18, 1995[259]
W58BT 58 ABC
TampaSt. Petersburg, FL WTSP 10 ABC CBS December 12, 1994[106]
WTVT 13 CBS Fox
WFTS-TV 28 Fox ABC
Terre Haute, IN WBAK-TV 38 ABC Fox January 31, 1995[260]
Toledo, OH WTVG 13 NBC ABC October 28, 1995[261]
WNWO-TV 24 ABC NBC
TupeloColumbusWest Point, MS WLOV-TV 27 ABC / Fox Fox October 10, 1995[262]
Twin Falls, ID KKVI-TV 35 ABC Fox January 22, 1996[263]
Wilmington, NC WJKA-TV 26 CBS Fox September 18, 1994[53]
Yuma, AZEl Centro, CA KECY-TV 9 CBS Fox September 18, 1994[264]
KSWT 13 ABC CBS

Ramifications

Distress at CBS, then recovery

 
David Letterman

CBS's position entering the 1994–95 television season was particularly dire. The loss of the NFC and multiple tenured affiliates, combined with a long-held strategy of pursuing older, less-desirable audiences in prime time, resulted in the network crashing to last place among the "Big Three".[265] The network's lone bright spot, Late Show with David Letterman, was negatively impacted with the affiliate defections: in Detroit, Late Show was placed at 11 p.m. on WGPR-TV instead of the network time slot of 11:35 p.m. due to WGPR-TV having no local news presence.[266] Ratings for Late Show began to slide in early 1995 against The Tonight Show with Jay Leno and Nightline, which David Letterman directly blamed on the switches, saying, "You can do a great show, but if it's on Channel 93 in West Tipton, Indiana, it's not going to be easy to find it."[267] Jay Leno's acclaimed July 10, 1995, interview with actor Hugh Grant resulted in Tonight topping Late Show in the ratings for the first time, a position Leno maintained until ceding hosting duties in 2009.[268] Laurence Tisch began exploring a sale of CBS amid the turmoil, with Westinghouse announcing a $5.4 billion purchase of the network on August 1, 1995.[q] Westinghouse CEO Michael H. Jordan credited a growing relationship with Tisch thanks to their joint venture that made the deal possible.[265][272][r] Several months after the deal closed, network flagship WCBS-TV fired much of their on-air talent on October 2, 1996, a move meant to address the station's low ratings.[275]

... the negative impact was so severe that CBS went to the NFL and said, 'Name your price and we'll pay whatever to get a package.' We lost affiliates, ratings, the male audience and a lot of sports sponsorships. But when CBS got the NFL back (in 1997), everything picked up again.

Neal Pilson, former CBS Sports president[276]

CBS attempted to fill the void left by the NFL on Sunday afternoons in 1994 with made-for-TV movie reruns aimed at a female audience.[277][278] By December 1994, the network announced a contract renewal with the NCAA, particularly for the Division I men's basketball tournament, a franchise CBS had held since 1982.[279] CBS Sports also presented a higher emphasis on NASCAR programming including the Winston Cup, Busch Series and Craftsman Truck series,[280] along with the PGA Tour and US Open.[281] In late 1995, CBS was approached by the CFL about a television contract for the league's American teams.[282] Sean McManus was appointed as president of CBS Sports in November 1996, which was interpreted as the network intending to bid aggressively for the NFL for the next rights deal, as McManus had a reputation for being the "kingpin of big TV negotiations".[283] CBS successfully outbid NBC for the AFC contract on January 13, 1998, signing an eight-year contract worth $4 billion; NBC Sports president Dick Ebersol was told by General Electric officials not to do anything "reckless" and saw the package as third-tier behind the NFC and MNF.[284] The return of football was especially seen as a comeback vehicle for Jim Nantz, one of the few high-profile sports announcers that remained with CBS throughout.[281]

New World stations struggle to adapt

It's pretty much a flop in every category.

Dave Walker, television writer for The Arizona Republic, assessing the aftermath of KSAZ-TV's switch to Fox[285]

The New World Fox stations struggled to reconcile their new network programming, which targeted a younger audience, with their older-skewing newscasts. In Phoenix, KSAZ-TV's existing 5, 6, and 10 p.m. newscasts lost half their ratings in the first year of the switch. In dumping the popular syndicated shows Jeopardy! and Wheel of Fortune because they attracted older viewers, the station lost a valuable lead-in and lead-out around its newscasts. The two shows were then picked up by KTVK, which showed unexpected aggression in buying syndicated programs. KTVK also launched the market's first longform morning newscast, which emerged a winner as KSAZ-TV's effort struggled.[285] It was not until 1997 that the station began to turn around its news ratings by dropping its sputtering 9 p.m. Arizona Prime in favor of Fox 10 News at 9, which featured an emphasis on breaking news and entertainment stories designed to be more compatible with Fox prime time shows.[286]

In Cleveland, WJW-TV's issues were fairly pronounced. WJW's switch came with three months notice and altered more than 20 hours of programming per day,[287] or 87 percent of the schedule.[288] Ratings declined in all time slots but especially fell by half for the late-evening news after moving from 11 p.m.—a time slot WJW had won in since 1981—to 10 p.m., but still topped WUAB's newscast.[289][290] WJW's morning show also failed to retain the audience of their lead-in 6 a.m. news.[291] Virgil Dominic retired in May 1995 and was replaced by KNXV general manager Bob Rowe;[287] under Rowe, the station rebranded to "Fox is Ei8ht" / "Ei8ht is News" in November 1995,[290] a slogan derided among viewers for its continuous on-air repetition.[292] The morning newscasts were retooled into a three-hour program[290] and had its audience double year-over-year during the first month, while WJW saw ratings increases in several dayparts.[293] Fox's purchase of New World resulted in WJW rebranding as "Fox 8" in August 1996.[294] By 1998, WJW was beating WUAB at 10 p.m. by a 2–1 margin[295] and in 2000 was ranked first sign-on to sign-off in multiple key demographics, besting WEWS.[296]

In Milwaukee, WITI had been the market's second-rated outlet generally in May 1994.[297] However, its ratings sank after the affiliation switch, with the 10 p.m. news, which was retained, dropping by roughly half.[298] Initially resisting changes to their CBS-era presentation,[299] WITI rebranded as "Fox is Six" / "Six is News" in November 1995 parallel to WJW's "Ei8ht" rebranding[290] but kept their long-running "Friend You Can Count On" slogan.[300] By 1997, WITI was rebounding in local ratings but still fell short of their pre-switch levels[301] and remained in third place by 2000.[302] Atlanta's WAGA was the number two station leading into the affiliation switches.[303] Its new 10 p.m. newscast held most of the viewers of its prior 11 p.m. broadcast, which Atlanta Journal-Constitution TV critic Phil Kloer attributed to the station's strength and news anchors.[304] The station remained in second place by 2000, though it was a distant second to longtime Atlanta ratings powerhouse WSB-TV, an unchanged ABC affiliate.[305]

WBRC in Birmingham weathered the switches well and by 2000 was the highest-rated Fox-owned station in morning, evening, and late news, as well as prime time. Uniquely, the station initially produced separate half-hour newscasts at 9 and 10 p.m. because it lacked the resources to produce 90 minutes of late news. However, its 5 and 10 p.m. newscasts placed a close second to the new WBMA.[306] WBMA also benefitted from the immediate acquisition of meteorologist James Spann, who sued to be released from his WBRC contract objecting to Fox programs on moral and religious grounds.[307] WBRC anchor Brenda Ladun also filed suit against the station seeking a contract release[308] and followed Spann to WBMA.[309] WGHP remained the number-two station in the North Carolina Piedmont in its early evening and morning newscasts, though its 10 p.m. news initially fared poorly in comparison to the 11 p.m. news it aired as an ABC affiliate.[310] By 2000, the WGHP 10 p.m. newscast had doubled its audience share from 9 percent in November 1995[310] to 17 percent, with a higher rating than the 11 p.m. newscasts on market leader WFMY-TV and WXII-TV.[311]

They probably tried to do too much too fast.

John Spinola, WJBK general manger, on prior management's intentions to make the station a local form of CNN[312]

In Tampa, WTVT lost its first-place position among the market's local television newscasts to NBC affiliate WFLA-TV, the only station in the market not affected by the switches, whose newscasts had placed second.[313] It was the first time since 1989 that WFLA-TV had swept the ratings.[314] WFLA also became the market's number-one station in total viewing in every sweeps period until November 1998, when WTVT surpassed it.[315] WJBK in Detroit was a third-rated station before the switch, attracting just over half of the audience as primary competitors WDIV-TV and WXYZ-TV.[316] While its 10 p.m. news surpassed incumbent WKBD-TV, the 6 p.m. newscast was beaten by entertainment programming on that station.[317] WJBK returned to the 11 p.m. news race in May 1995 with Bonds Tonight, hosted by former WXYZ anchor Bill Bonds,[318] but was moved to 6:30 p.m. in September and canceled by mid-November due to low ratings. WJBK's overall poor ratings performance following the switch also saw their 4 p.m. news eliminated and multiple staffers laid off.[312] In Austin, KTBC's news ratings slumped significantly in the years after the Fox affiliation switch, while third-place KXAN-TV there began a climb to the top; KEYE-TV even outdrew KTBC in assorted dayparts.[319][320]

KDFW was the third-rated news outlet in Dallas–Fort Worth prior to the switches.[321] It saw immediate year-over-year declines in the viewership for its 6 and 10 p.m. newscasts; KDFW, which retained its 10 p.m. news in addition to a 9 p.m. news hour, saw notable late news declines because the prior newscast was a poorer lead-in than CBS entertainment programming.[322] By 2000, KTVT had pulled into a dead heat with KDFW for third place.[323] WDAF-TV, a third-rated station in local news in its last years as an NBC affiliate, remained in third but saw significant declines in news viewing in the aftermath of its switch and doubling of weekday news output. Its 10 p.m. news went from attracting 23 percent of TV viewers at that hour to 13 percent, and the station's new morning news attracted just over half the audience share of The Today Show, which it replaced.[324] In prime time, however, WDAF largely outperformed the national average for Fox affiliates.[325][326] WDAF maintained their NBC-era "Newschannel 4" branding until being renamed "Fox 4" in 1997 after Fox assumed ownership.[327] It was still in third place at the end of the decade.[328] KTVI also remained a third-rated news outlet in St. Louis.[329] It did not introduce a 9 p.m. newscast until August 1997[330] and remained third in its market by 2000.[331]

 
A WHBQ-TV ENG van parked next to a van for WMC-TV. WHBQ's competitiveness improved with Fox's investments, but the station could not surpass market leaders WMC-TV or WREG-TV.

Though not owned by New World, WHBQ-TV in Memphis was in a similar position. Prior to the switch, it was only producing half-hour newscasts at 6 and 10 p.m.[332] Coinciding with the switch, its weekday news output quadrupled with the introduction of a two-hour morning newscast, Mornings on Fox, and the reinstatement of a noon newscast after nearly three years; the early evening news was moved to 5 p.m. and the late news to 9 p.m., both an hour in length.[333][334] However, WHBQ-TV continued to rank third in Memphis behind WMC-TV and WREG-TV, the traditional first- and second-place news outlets in Memphis.[335]

A cultural conflict largely existed between the New World stations and Fox. Stations like KSAZ, WJW, WDAF and WITI continued news presentations similar to their "Big Three" affiliations, which analysts saw as unsustainable with younger-skewing Fox shows like Party of Five as lead-ins.[286] Fox Entertainment president John Matoian told The Plain Dealer in July 1995 that the network was planning to expand beyond their original target 18–34 demographic, which was partly based off of stations like WJW refusing to identify with the network.[336] By the time Fox purchased New World, the stations were seen as underperformers, largely attributed to station managers unwilling to embrace their new affiliations.[337] WITI news director Jill Geisler was known for stressing a "fair, concerned, balanced position" at the station[299] while Virgil Dominic was seen as "avuncular" in his stewardship of WJW.[292] One financial analyst suggested incoming Fox management would drastically overhaul the stations and "obviously make 'em full-blown Fox monsters."[299] Fox chairman Chase Carey said, "Without question, the [New World] stations could be performing better than they are today."[338]

The local news production boom

 
An interview segment at KHON-TV. A former "Big Three" affiliate that switched to Fox in 1996, KHON invested heavily into a news-intensive operation.

The New World stations all committed to increased local news production when they switched to Fox. This was partly out of necessity as Fox only programmed a two-hour prime time program block, but also because the stations stood to generate more revenue selling local advertising.[301] While with CBS, WJW could only sell two minutes of local ads during the 10 p.m. hour, which increased to 16 minutes after their late news moved to that hour.[288] Industry analysts cited WSVN's success with a news-intensive format: having more control over programming and advertising, WSVN generated more revenue than it ever had with NBC.[339] Precedent also existed: when a dispute over revenue compensation emerged between CBS and the affiliate body in 1992, WAGA and WJBK dropped CBS This Morning in favor of local morning shows.[340][341] When Late Show debuted over CBS in 1993, WJW delayed it to midnight in favor of Murphy Brown reruns,[342] and later with the New World-produced Valley of the Dolls, shows they could sell additional local advertising for, to the network's chagrin; CBS president of affiliate relations Tony Malara later said, "The fact of the matter is, it ain't exactly chopped liver we're offering."[343][s]

By June 1994, Fox was still in the planning stages for a network news service,[t] but Rupert Murdoch dismissed the idea of a nightly evening newscast similar to the "Big Three" networks airing over Fox, saying, "I don't think people watch them very much. People prefer watching a newscast edited and customized for them in their communities."[349] The New World stations gained access to a news sharing service among Fox owned-stations and affiliates while also retaining existing CNN Newsource affiliations,[350] simulcasting CNN in the event of breaking news.[351] WDAF, WJBK, KTBC and KHON launched nightly half-hour newscasts with emphasis on national and international coverage, but produced locally.[352][353][214] The New World stations moved their late-evening newscasts by an hour and extended them to 60-minutes in length (due to Fox only programming for two hours), or in the cases of WDAF and WITI, created a 90-minute long newscast.[324][301] KTVI and KTBC were exceptions: KTVI moved their late-evening news from 10 to 9 p.m. in 1997,[330] while KTBC did the same in 2002; for the latter, the newscasts replaced sitcom reruns in the 9 p.m. hour.[354] KHON maintained a late-evening newscast at 10 p.m. until September 2014, when a 9 p.m. newscast was launched.[355]

A number of people thought we'd fall off the face of the earth. But we've proven them wrong. As far as WAGA is concerned, we'll continue to grow. We wouldn't add people if we didn't believe in what WAGA is doing. There will be no slowing down; we'll continue to grow and grow and grow.

Budd McEntee, WAGA-TV news director[356]

An unprecedented level of hiring took place among both the New World stations and the replacement "Big Three" affiliates to account for the overall increase in local news, with as many as 1,500 to 2,000 jobs being created during this period.[356] In Cleveland, WJW boasted a news staff of over 120 people,[89] while WOIO used WUAB's news department as the foundation for their own, moving both stations to new facilities at Reserve Square.[357] Kansas City saw KSHB add 54 people to create a workforce of 72, while WDAF doubled their news staff for a total of 110. WNCN hired 68 full-time staffers in 1995 as they prepared to take the NBC affiliation, WGNX increased their headcount to 50 after linking with CBS, and WHBQ bolstered their staffing from 28 to 55 under Fox ownership.[356] Technical advancements were also made with the increased manpower. WBMA boasted all-digital equipment when their news room launched, with Allbritton executive John Hillis saying, "We had the luxury of a clean sheet on paper."[358] Spurned by ABC, KTVK invested heavily into syndicated programming and newsroom staffing, and broke ground on new studios to house their expanded operations.[109]

Among unchanged Fox affiliates, Sacramento's KTXL began hiring staff and extended their late-evening news to an hour,[356] and KOKH-TV in Oklahoma City began assembling a news staff for a 1996 launch.[359] KOKH's entry was a complete reversal from June 1994, when general manager Harlan Reams publicly expressed no desire to do local news, saying, "From a business standpoint, if you want to watch news, hey, watch 4, 5 and 9, watch CNN, read the newspaper. But I'm here to entertain."[360] "Big Three" affiliates in unchanged markets like KVBC in Las Vegas and KIVI-TV in Boise, Idaho, also saw their news output increased with additional staffing. Ball State University professor Bob Papper estimated in 1996 that several more thousand jobs could be created if other older Fox affiliates started local news, or expanded their output to match up with the New World stations.[356]

Ratings headwinds for new news operations

Many of the new "Big Three" affiliates, which had been either former Fox affiliates or independents on the UHF dial with no news presence, found difficulty garnering ratings traction against their traditional VHF competitors. While most of these replacement affiliates have maintained local news production, with some even experiencing gradual ratings growth, some stations eventually cancelled or outsourced operations outright.

Among CBS's replacement affiliates, WGPR-TV (renamed WWJ-TV[361]) proved to be the network's biggest challenge.[362] A $1 million promotional blitz saw the network's star talent make fun of the station's embarrassingly high channel number,[266][363] but ratings for network programming in Detroit fell 46 percent year-over-year following the switch.[364] CBS announced plans to establish a news department in Detroit in late 1995,[365] only to withdraw them entirely after several months.[366] Two attempts at local news in 2001 and 2009 failed[367][368] before CBS News launched a hyperlocal streaming news service in January 2023 that WWJ-TV simulcasts.[369] Unlike WWJ-TV, WOIO, WGNX and WDJT-TV were all successful in debuting local news after linking with CBS, but still struggled against established competition. Until relaunching with a tabloid format in 2002, WOIO was beset by continued talent instability and dismal ratings.[370] This distinction was shared by WGNX despite a 1998 sale to Meredith,[371] a renaming to WGCL-TV in 2000,[372] multiple rebrands and continual executive upheaval.[373] When succeeding owner Gray Television relaunched WGCL as WANF, for Atlanta News First, management conceded the station had no brand at all.[374] WDJT-TV's fortunes have been mixed: the station has thrived in prime time since picking up Jeopardy! and Wheel of Fortune as a lead-in,[375] but its news operation continues to trail the competition.[376]

...in St. Louis, the landscape for news is always treacherous, especially for a station like KDNL. News viewership here is deeply entrenched, with television watchers overwhelmingly choosing KSDK and KMOV. Read a ratings report from 10 years ago, or even 20, and the substance is very much the same: Channel 5 in first place, and Channel 4 battling to go ahead but never quite managing.

Gail Pennington, St. Louis Post-Dispatch[377]

Replacement ABC affiliates KDNL-TV and WXLV-TV experienced severe difficulty establishing a news presence, and had their efforts shut down by owner Sinclair Broadcast Group. KDNL's newscasts, which debuted prior to the switch,[378] struggled to gain viewership amid repeated changes in management, on-air talent and news sets, with ABC network programming equally underperforming.[377] Former owner River City held an option to sell their St. Louis holdings, and sold it to Emmis Communications in June 1999,[379] sparking a year-long lawsuit between Sinclair and Emmis.[380][u] The lawsuit forced KDNL onto an austerity budget cancelling the 5 p.m. news, while a failing transmitter repeatedly forced the station off-air.[377] The 5 p.m. news was restored in October 2000 but failed to register any measurable audience, while the 10 p.m. news drew half the ratings as Friends reruns on KPLR,[382] resulting in the news department's disbanding on October 12, 2001.[380] WXLV-TV, which frequently failed to make progress in area ratings against the more established WFMY-TV, WGHP and WXII-TV,[383][384] had their morning and weekend newscasts cancelled in late 2000[385] and ultimately shuttered outright on January 11, 2002.[386][387] Utilizing Sinclair's hybrid News Central format, an 11 p.m. newscast ran from 2004 to 2005, when it was again scrapped due to poor ratings.[388] In February 2012, News 14 Carolina began producing daily newscasts for WXLV as part of a retransmission consent dispute settlement between Time Warner Cable and Sinclair.[389]

This was not limited to new CBS, NBC, or ABC affiliates in New World markets. KHNL in Honolulu began airing newscasts on April 12, 1995, more than eight months before switching to NBC.[390] The station's newscasts, however, failed to find ratings success in spite of NBC's strength in entertainment programming in the late 1990s, as well as the hiring of several notable personalities in the market.[391][392] WPTY-TV's news department was hastily assembled to make the deadline for their Fox-ABC switch,[393][332] with multiple technical gaffes and on-air talent misidentifying area landmarks plaguing their debut.[333] The weeknight anchor lineup changed within two weeks[394] and the news director was fired after a year.[395] Low ratings continued to plague the station[335][396] through a 2013 relaunch as WATN-TV under Nexstar ownership.[397] New NBC affiliate WGBA-TV in Green Bay, Wisconsin, did not begin producing newscasts until July 1, 1996; it had doubled its payroll and expanded its studios in order to accommodate its news operation.[398] Its newscasts lagged the other three local stations in the ratings, and turnover of on-air talent was high.[399]

WEVV-TV in Evansville, Indiana, which switched from Fox to CBS, shut down their news department in July 2001 amid poor ratings;[400] after the station was sold to Bayou City Broadcasting, WEVV (which reclaimed the Fox affiliation on a digital subchannel in 2011) relaunched local newscasts.[401] In South Bend, Indiana, replacement ABC affiliate WBND-LP did not offer local news until 2008, albeit produced by WDJT,[402] and established a staffed newsroom in April 2011.[403] Because of its competitive and technical weakness, Weigel tried to sell WBND-LP, WCWW-LP and WMYS-LP to WSBT-TV owner Schurz Communications in 2008, but the deal was abandoned in August 2009.[404]

Effects in Mexico and Canada

Fox's acquisition of football rights brought the number of Fox affiliates broadcasting from Mexico from one to three. It also resulted in changes in Canadian cable regulations.

In San Diego, UPN affiliate KUSI-TV tried unsuccessfully to take the Fox affiliation away from Tijuana, Baja California, Mexico-licensed XETV, citing FCC regulations preventing any foreign station from airing live programming from the United States to U.S. audiences without an FCC-approved permit. Fox was eventually granted the permit allowing XETV to carry the games.[405][406] XETV lost its affiliation to CW affiliate KSWB-TV in 2008 through a deal with Tribune Broadcasting; in turn, XETV assumed the CW affiliation.[407] The permit to carry live programming also benefited two stations set up by Televisa with Fox programming: XHFOX-TV in Matamoros/Reynosa (serving the HarlingenBrownsvilleMcAllen market) and XHFTX-TV in Nuevo Laredo (serving the Laredo market). However, these stations continued to have to "bicycle" tapes of programming across the border.[408] These stations dropped their Fox affiliations on February 28, 2002, due to increased reverse compensation fees with Fox and high costs of local news production. Both stations became affiliates of Televisa's Canal de las Estrellas.[409]

While the NFL signed Canadian rights agreements for both the NFC and AFC packages on television in Canada by signing agreements with the CanWest Global System and Western International Communications,[410] the switches led to increased interest by Canadian cable companies in adding a U.S. Fox station to their lineups. However, since 1978, the availability of U.S. network affiliates on Canadian cable had been governed by the Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission (CRTC)'s "3 plus 1" rule, allowing the carriage of three American network affiliates plus a PBS station,[411] with frequent exemptions for border towns where additional stations were receivable over-the-air. In June 1994, the CRTC stated it was unwilling to modify the rule;[412] the next month, a group of 48 Canadian cable systems, many belonging to major operators, petitioned the CRTC to allow them to add Fox programming.[413] Canadian broadcasters lobbied against any change, fearing that the addition of Fox would "Americanize the system further" and occupy channel capacity needed to provide new Canadian services.[413] External pressure led the CRTC to reverse course by September, allowing Canadian cable providers to pick up a Fox affiliate without having to drop a "Big Three" affiliate.[414]

The ascendance of Fox Sports

 
The Fox NFL Sunday hosts, 2009.

Fox Sports has been cited as one of the fastest start-ups in modern television history, and the most successful. Aided by a number of off- and on-air personnel that defected from CBS Sports, David Hill—who was transferred as Sky Sports president to like duties for Fox—assembled the division in less that eight months.[276] John Madden jokingly mused upon joining Fox Sports that the "s" should be removed from the name, "... because the only sport ... we had at Fox was football, NFL football."[415] Adopting the slogan of "same game, new attitude", the NFL on Fox's centerpiece program was an hour-long pregame show, Fox NFL Sunday, incorporating comedy and entertainment with co-host Terry Bradshaw quickly becoming a breakout star.[29] NFL Sunday's success demonstrated viewers held an appetite for football that extended beyond the game itself.[276] Along with a theme song composed by Scott Schreer that has since become symbolic of the entire network,[416] technical innovations included the "Fox Box" displaying the clock and score continuously (Hill perfected a similar on-screen bug for Sky's soccer coverage) and the use of parabolic microphones for in-game sound.[29] NFL on Fox also provided a launching pad for other established announcers including Kenny Albert, Kevin Harlan and Joe Buck.[276]

The affiliation switches helped elevate Fox to major network status, on par with its older, established competitors.[29] The growth of Fox Sports was as quick as its founding: on September 9, 1994, Fox secured rights to the National Hockey League from 1995 to 1999, again outbidding CBS.[417] Major League Baseball followed on November 7, 1995, initially via a shared arrangement with NBC.[418] Fox Sports extended into regional sports networks beginning in 1996 through a joint venture with TCI's Liberty Media, creating Fox Sports Net from the former Prime Sports and SportsChannel networks.[419][420] NASCAR coverage was added in 2000, including the Daytona 500, plus the Winston Cup and Busch Series.[421] Along with the NFL, NASCAR on Fox and the MLB on Fox remain cornerstones of Fox Sports into the present day.[422][423]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ The network identified itself as "FBC" in between these two dates before adopting the name "Fox" outright.[22]
  2. ^ One CBS affiliate, KGAN in Cedar Rapids, Iowa, added Fox football due to the distress of the market's Fox affiliate, KOCR. KOCR was unable to construct a broadcast tower that could serve the entire market, and allowed Fox to offer the NFC package to another station.[43] By October 1994, KOCR was forced off-air after being evicted from their facilities and failing to make electrical payments.[44]
  3. ^ For more, see UHF television broadcasting § UHF vs VHF.
  4. ^ Prior to this sale, New World and NBC reached a "shows-for-stations" agreement that extended the affiliations for KNSD and WVTM for 10 years each. In turn, NBC agreed to jointly produce, and took out an equity stake in, a prime access syndicated newsmagazine that would become Access Hollywood.[75]
  5. ^ This does not include KTVI, which became a "home station" for the St. Louis Rams after that team's relocation from Los Angeles in 1995.[94]
  6. ^ KIRO-TV and KSTW exchanged network affiliations on June 30, 1997, with CBS returning to KIRO-TV and KSTW joining UPN.[141]
  7. ^ See KLKN. At the time Blackstar attempted to acquire NTV from Fant Broadcasting, Fant was in dispute with Citadel Communications over television station allocations in Albion, Nebraska. Citadel filed a petition in hopes that it would spur the FCC into investigating an attempt by Fant to pursue the same Albion channel as Citadel. Citadel needed the new Albion channel in order to move what was then KCAN from Albion to Lincoln.[171] The deal was then scuttled because Citadel's petition delayed FCC approval.[172] Fant then sold NTV to Pappas Telecasting, which retained the ABC affiliation.[173]
  8. ^ One of the two Fox affiliates was KARD; the other station, KDEB-TV in Springfield, Missouri, joined Fox in 1986 after ABC terminated its affiliation.[177] Petracom also purchased Fox affiliate WQRF-TV in Rockford, Illinois, prior to the Banam deal.[178]
  9. ^ Even with the W58BT call sign, the station was referred to as "WBND-TV" in contemporary news coverage. The WBND-LP calls were officially adopted by the end of the year.
  10. ^ WXLV and WGGT also carried UPN on a secondary basis until September 1, 1996, when WGGT was converted to full-time UPN affiliate WUPN.[208]
  11. ^ The renaming was done with the blessing of the widow of former channel 45 staffer William Norbert Rismiller, which inspired the WNRW calls after he was murdered in 1984.[210] Ownership established a college scholarship in his name, and a planned newsroom was named in his honor.[211]
  12. ^ Tuscaloosa and Anniston were annexed from the Birmingham DMA by Arbitron in 1977, and eventually were collapsed back into that market by Nielsen in September 1998.[216]
  13. ^ Fox sold WJW, KTVI, WDAF-TV, WITI, WBRC and WGHP, along with WHBQ-TV, KDVR and KSTU, to Local TV LLC on December 21, 2007, for $1.1 billion.[231] WITI was repurchased by Fox in November 2019 as part of a larger transaction involving Nexstar Media Group,[232] which acquired Local TV successor Tribune Broadcasting.[233] WHBQ-TV, along with WFXT, were traded to Cox Media Group in June 2014 in exchange for San Francisco affiliate KTVU and independent KICU-TV.[234]
  14. ^ As part of Emmis's divestment of their television portfolio, WLUK and WALA were sold to LIN TV[237] and KHON was sold to Montecito Broadcast Group.[238] WVUE's sale was complicated and delayed due to damage sustained by Hurricane Katrina, with New Orleans Saints owner Tom Benson purchasing the station in 2008.[239]
  15. ^ Co-owned KFXF, the Fox affiliate, aired selected CBS programs in the interim.
  16. ^ And its satellite, KIVV in Lead, South Dakota.
  17. ^ The Westinghouse buyout was announced one month before WPRI-TV in Providence, Rhode Island, which CBS purchased in March 1995 for $80 million,[269][270] was to switch affiliations from ABC to CBS; WPRI was spun off to Clear Channel Communications for $68 million on April 14, 1996.[271]
  18. ^ The first iteration of Viacom bought CBS for $36 billion in September 1999, but split into separate entities in December 2005, Viacom and CBS Corporation.[273] CBS Corporation re-merged with Viacom in 2019 to form ViacomCBS,[274] renamed Paramount Global in 2022.
  19. ^ KMEG in Sioux City, Iowa, also refused to carry the show at first after due to the ratings and financial success of their syndicated fare in late night[344] but cleared it live the following year.[345]
  20. ^ The creation of Fox News was formally announced on January 30, 1996,[346] and the cable channel was launched on October 7, 1996.[347] Fox News Sunday debuted over the Fox network on April 28, 1996.[348]
  21. ^ The sale also included Sinclair's six St. Louis radio stations also inherited from River City; as part of a court settlement, Sinclair divested these radio stations to Emmis and retained KDNL.[381]

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1994, 1996, united, states, broadcast, television, realignment, between, 1994, 1996, wide, ranging, realignment, television, network, affiliations, took, place, united, states, result, multimillion, dollar, deal, between, broadcasting, company, world, communic. Between 1994 and 1996 a wide ranging realignment of television network affiliations took place in the United States as the result of a multimillion dollar deal between the Fox Broadcasting Company and New World Communications announced on May 23 1994 Unprecedented in the broadcast industry the deal resulted in twelve stations owned by or in the process of being purchased by New World switching network affiliations to Fox over the course of a two year period when existing contracts expired These stations were long standing affiliates of the traditional Big Three television networks CBS NBC and ABC in some of the country s largest markets with the majority having been aligned with CBS individually for over 40 years The major impetus for the changes was to allow Fox to improve its local affiliate coverage after having successfully outbid CBS for broadcast rights to the National Football Conference NFC which the National Football League NFL awarded to the fledgling network in December 1993 The alliance started a domino effect of similar deals between the other networks and their affiliates mainly to shore up existing affiliate bases and in the case of CBS to recoup lost affiliates CBS signed a critical pact with Westinghouse Broadcasting that resulted in Westinghouse s parent company purchasing CBS outright The switches took place throughout the United States between September 1994 and September 1996 with one additional switch taking place in February 1997 in markets ranging in size from Atlanta Georgia to Miles City Montana In the case of four markets CBS and NBC exchanged owned stations between each other with one market seeing their CBS and NBC owned stations swap both channel positions and transmitters The complexities of these deals saw the Big Three affiliates in two markets Baltimore and Denver exchange networks with each other but the Fox affiliate was unchanged In total these constitute some of the most sweeping and expansive changes in American television history As a result of this realignment Fox ascended to the status of a major television network comparable in influence to CBS NBC and ABC Multiple New World owned stations which Fox purchased outright in 1996 struggled to adjust to their new affiliations but many ultimately recovered with news intensive schedules and were buoyed by Fox s success in prime time particularly throughout the 2000s CBS was most impacted among the Big Three networks consigned to UHF stations with high channel numbers in markets like Milwaukee Detroit and Cleveland but started to recover in the late 1990s by claiming the American Football Conference AFC rights Fox Sports particularly the NFL on Fox has won acclaim since its 1994 launch for innovations in game presentation and the network s aggressive bidding in 1993 signaled long term trends both in American television and professional sports Contents 1 Television affiliation switches prior to 1994 2 Fox launches and pursues the NFL 3 Securing the NFC rights 4 Fox upgrades in small markets 5 The New World Fox affiliation pact 6 The Scripps ABC alliance 7 The CBS Westinghouse deal 8 CBS scrambles for replacement affiliates 9 Savoy Petracom and Blackstar link with Fox 10 Station group influence 11 Initiating the switches 12 Ramifications 12 1 Distress at CBS then recovery 12 2 New World stations struggle to adapt 12 3 The local news production boom 12 4 Ratings headwinds for new news operations 12 5 Effects in Mexico and Canada 12 6 The ascendance of Fox Sports 13 See also 14 Notes 15 References 16 External linksTelevision affiliation switches prior to 1994 EditThe traditional Big Three television networks ABC CBS NBC Affiliation switches led by changing fortunes at the major national networks the traditional Big Three of ABC CBS and NBC began in the late 1970s with the rise of ABC which had traditionally been in third place to number one in the national ratings Even though ABC s national coverage alone was not a disadvantage the quality of affiliates in larger markets was and the network began a concerted campaign to pry loose stations associated with its competitors 1 From January 1976 to the end of 1978 alone ABC secured defections from 20 affiliates of the other Big Three networks 11 from CBS and 9 from NBC By 1983 NBC alone had lost 20 affiliates to ABC defections that cost the network a full rating point on the NBC Nightly News and resulted in the loss of 9 million in advertising revenue from Nightly and 15 million in prime time 2 Among the defections from NBC were a string of major coups in sizable markets WRTV in Indianapolis KGTV in San Diego WSOC TV in Charlotte KSTP TV in the Twin Cities 3 and WSB TV in Atlanta 4 However as NBC became the number one network in the mid 1980s it gained the upper hand One of the last defectors from NBC to ABC was KOTA TV in Rapid City South Dakota which changed in 1984 the reversal in fortune was not what KOTA TV officials had expected and instead brought them closer with their primary competitor 5 The next year NBC began a campaign to reverse some of the losses it had experienced 4 Two former NBC affiliates returned to the network after short stints with ABC WSAV TV in Savannah Georgia returned after three years as did KCEN TV in Temple Texas after changing in 1984 6 Between then and 1988 NBC upgraded its affiliations in a number of markets including Omaha Nebraska Knoxville Tennessee and Jacksonville Florida NBC president Pierson Mapes told Electronic Media that NBC was looking for upgrades based on a number of factors Mostly it s because the local news product isn t what it should be the owners don t want to invest in the station to improve its performance or it s a UHF outlet that we want to upgrade 2 Many of the stations added to NBC were stronger than their replacements the Knoxville station WBIR TV was the dominant station there and commanded nearly half of the television audience for its early evening newscast 7 ABC struck back in 1990 with the signing of WHAS TV in Louisville Kentucky the market s number one station and a CBS outlet for 40 years this attracted interest on the part of as many as a dozen CBS affiliates in switching to ABC 8 In one of the largest single affiliation switches six television stations in the Miami and West Palm Beach markets in South Florida changed affiliations on January 1 1989 when CBS purchased Miami s Fox affiliate WCIX channel 6 after NBC purchased Miami s CBS affiliate WTVJ channel 4 9 Fox launches and pursues the NFL Edit Rupert Murdoch Barry Diller The genesis of the Fox Broadcasting Company took place through two 1985 transactions made by News Corporation headed by Australian publishing magnate Rupert Murdoch After a failed takeover of Warner Communications Murdoch purchased a 50 percent interest in 20th Century Fox Film Corporation TCF on March 20 1985 for 250 million 10 11 Murdoch and TCF minority investor Marvin Davis then announced a 3 5 billion purchase of Metromedia s program syndication unit and six television stations including WNEW TV in New York City KTTV in Los Angeles and WTTG in Washington D C from John Kluge on May 6 1985 for 2 55 billion Murdoch boasted that the Metromedia stations could exploit TCF s film and television library prompting speculation these stations might form a new fourth television network alongside ABC CBS and NBC 12 To win regulatory approval for the deal Murdoch gave up his Australian citizenship and became a naturalized U S citizen on September 4 1985 13 Davis who later revealed he declined to participate in the Metromedia purchase sold his stake in TCF to Murdoch 20 days later 14 15 The Metromedia deal closed on March 6 1986 forming Fox Television Stations Group 16 After consummation Fox which only consisted of president Jamie Kellner and his secretary began recruiting an executive team 17 In July 1986 syndicated newspaper columnist Gary Deeb reported on the possibility ABC might not renew their broadcast rights to Monday Night Football MNF then the league s top rated program unless NFL commissioner Pete Rozelle agreed to lower the television rights fee significantly The previous contract was set in 1981 when the annual inflation was at a substantial 13 percent a rate that fell to 3 4 percent by 1986 in turn causing ABC Sports to lose 40 million 18 ABC had been purchased earlier in 1986 by Capital Cities owner of some of ABC s most influential affiliates and was under pressure to cut costs in both their news and sports divisions 19 By September 1986 CBS rights holder for the National Football Conference NFC and NBC rights holder for the American Football Conference AFC declined any interest in MNF but Fox considered making a bid and even invited former MNF announcer Howard Cosell to be a part of it 20 Fox formally launched as a network on October 9 1986 with the debut of The Late Show with Joan Rivers and was preparing to unveil its first night of prime time programming on April 5 1987 21 a Against this backdrop TCF chairman Barry Diller announced in January 1987 that Fox was ready to bid on MNF in an attempt to win legitimacy telling the Miami Herald We would take ABC s current contract and sign it today 23 Diller viewed an MNF bid as making a long term investment and was prepared for Fox to lose money in the double digit eight figures with such a deal 21 buoyed by Murdoch s financial resources 23 ABC decided to bid for a renewal based largely on Fox s interest in MNF 24 with a fee reduction saving the network approximately 20 million per year and low rated Sunday and Thursday games moved to ESPN 25 While Fox bid 7 million per game compared to ABC s 6 5 million per game 26 Rozelle was reportedly uninterested in the Fox offer as the network was still unestablished 27 NFL officials also expressed a willingness to remain with ABC and were unsure if Fox would exist in three years a fate shared by other past attempts at a fourth network 28 Securing the NFC rights EditIn 1993 six years after Fox s failed MNF bid the NFL opened up negotiations for all broadcast contracts including the NFC and AFC rights At the same time Dallas Cowboys owner Jerry Jones and Denver Broncos owner Pat Bowlen asserted control over the NFL s broadcasting committee usurping Cleveland Browns owner Art Modell who had been a long time ally of CBS Murdoch privately called Jones and declared his intent to bid saying Jerry I think I was a stalking horse last time in 1990 I m not going to do that and be just a stalking horse 29 When negotiations began on December 7 Murdoch presented to the broadcasting committee a sizzle reel by Sky Sports president David Hill 30 proposing Fox could produce NFL games similarly to Sky s soccer coverage with emphasis on more cameras and in game natural sounds and have the network market the league year round Jones later said I was just mesmerized by their imaginative thinking They were changing the presentation of the game 29 It ll be first class We want to make the NFL look better than what we ve seen We have the crown jewel of all sports Lucie Salhany Fox network president on the network securing a broadcast deal for the NFL s NFC games 31 On December 17 1993 Fox stunned the sports and television worlds by reaching a four year 1 58 billion contract with for NFC regular season and playoff games effective with the 1994 season 32 News of the Fox NFC deal was first reported on during the CBS Evening News with Dan Rather 33 As part of the deal Fox was also awarded broadcast rights to Super Bowl XXXI in 1997 34 The NFC package had been owned by CBS since 1956 fourteen years before the AFL NFL merger and subsequent restructuring into the NFC and the AFC and had been considered a cornerstone for CBS Sports 33 Fox s deal was regarded as a loss leader 35 network CEO Chase Carey framed it as one that would not directly make money but instead establish momentum for Fox and elevate it to the Big Three networks 29 Fox had pursued the NFC rights from the beginning as the conference had more teams located in the country s largest broadcast markets 35 CBS lost close to 100 million on their prior NFC deal signed in 1990 a situation shared by the NFL s other broadcast partners due to aftereffects of the early 1990s recession 33 Underestimating the value of the NFC broadcast rights CBS s chairman Laurence Tisch insisted on offering a bid equal to their 1990 contract 29 resulting in Fox exceeding CBS s bid by as much as 1 29 billion or more than 100 million per year 33 NBC which held the AFC broadcast rights since 1970 retained the rights after a last minute bidding war with CBS shutting out the network from pro football entirely 31 Morale at CBS Sports was depicted as somber and not optimistic with veteran announcer Pat Summerall saying I t s a shock It hurts It s a big part of my life 34 Murdoch expressed a want to hire Summerall s broadcast partner John Madden 31 which happened the following month 36 Most of the NFL on CBS announcing team including Summerall Terry Bradshaw and James Brown also left to join Fox Sports 29 Early financial projections for CBS owned stations and affiliates were grim network flagship WCBS TV alone stood to lose 5 million a year without the NFL with their general manager calling it a straight drop to the bottom line The general manager of affiliate KDFW in Dallas Fort Worth Texas called it a big financial kick 31 Fox upgrades in small markets EditCBS was saying to the NFL If you move the NFC rights to Fox in these 60 sic cities there will be no free over the air broadcast of the NFL Mr Murdoch said You got to come to this meeting with the NFL TV committee Mr Murdoch did not tell me what he was going to say We stand up in front of the TV committee and he says Within 60 days Preston will get a secondary affiliation with some TV station in every one of these 60 markets I just about wet my pants Preston Padden Fox president of network distribution 29 Entering 1994 Fox s 141 station affiliate base remained smaller than ABC CBS or NBC which each boasted more that 200 affiliates this resulted in an approximate six percent differential in terms of national reach The network supplied Foxnet for cable systems in smaller markets that did not have a dedicated affiliate 37 Some affiliates still had no local newscasts with the prior recession resulting in Fox lessening the priority level on affiliates to establish them One of these affiliates WOIO in Cleveland Ohio initiated plans to launch a news service after seeing success with co owned WXIX TV in Cincinnati 38 While WUAB already had an established 10 p m newscast in the Cleveland market an unnamed executive told the Akron Beacon Journal in 1992 they WOIO don t have to get ratings they just have to exist 39 Scripps Howard Broadcasting started developing newscasts for two of their three Fox affiliates KNXV TV in Phoenix and KSHB TV in Kansas City KSHB s newscast launched in August 1993 with an irreverent tone and de emphasis on sports and weather 40 41 likewise KNXV was assembling their news department with an unconventional style in line with Fox s younger demographics 42 WOIO WXIX KNXV and KSHB were all UHF stations which accounted for 85 percent of Fox s affiliate roster 29 Fox also lacked coverage in 47 markets where only three or fewer commercial TV stations operated In these markets it began discussing secondary affiliations with the local ABC CBS and NBC affiliates 37 Though most of the CBS affiliates turned down Fox s overture a number of small market ABC affiliates agreed to Fox s terms which included the carriage of at least six hours a week of Fox prime time programs b CBS and ABC responded by threatening to withhold 60 Minutes in the case of CBS and postseason baseball in the case of ABC from affiliates that added Fox programming CBS president of affiliate relations Tony Malara said that if 60 Minutes did not air nationally at the same time it would lose value to advertisers 45 46 CBS followed through with its threat KXMB TV in Bismarck North Dakota added Fox football and lost 60 Minutes for the duration of the football season 47 WSBT TV in South Bend Indiana also signed up for Fox football and lost 60 Minutes with CBS offering the show to WHME TV 48 49 Dual NBC ABC affiliate KTEN in Ada Ardmore Oklahoma joined Fox on a tertiary basis to accommodate Dallas Cowboys fans and boasted a monopoly of football with Fox NBC and MNF as part of the deal KTEN also aired select Fox prime time shows beginning in July 1994 50 The network began making overtures to group operators like Freedom Newspapers Stauffer Communications and Brisette Broadcasting about having their stations switch to Fox mostly to upgrade in markets with UHF affiliates that transmitted at a lower radiated power than their VHF counterparts 37 c Led by network distribution president Preston Padden videotaped pitches asserted Fox affiliates could sell more local ads and generate more revenue 51 Several affiliate defections were announced prior to May 1994 The first was ABC affiliate KARD in West Monroe Louisiana announced in January 1994 with an April changeover 36 In April Robinson Everett s CBS stations KECY TV in El Centro California and WJKA TV in Wilmington North Carolina announced they would affiliate with Fox Several factors motivated the Everett switch including CBS s insistence that the stations restore previously unsuccessful news operations a desire for more network compensation in Wilmington and particularly CBS s refusal to make KECY TV translator KDBA the CBS affiliate of record for Palm Springs California because it felt cable coverage of Los Angeles station KCBS TV was adequate 52 WJKA which also supplanted Foxnet in the Myrtle Beach market switched to Fox under the new WSFX TV call sign on September 18 1994 53 There had previously been two Big Three stations to join Fox WSVN in Miami switched from NBC on January 1 1989 and KLMG now KFXK TV in Longview Texas switched from CBS on April 1 1991 54 WSVN s conversion to Fox came under unique circumstances as it was part of the two market six station South Florida realignment 9 55 Unlike any other Fox affiliate or owned station WSVN adopted a news intensive tabloid format 56 57 which shattered conventional wisdom and proved a ratings and financial success 58 WSVN news director Joel Cheatwood briefly worked with Fox on developing a network news service in 1990 59 and by May 1994 Fox network president Lucie Salhany called the station the future of television 60 Fox had also occasionally changed its affiliate in a given market Most notably over the course of 1990 it moved to higher rated independent stations in Birmingham Alabama Little Rock and Memphis and Nashville Tennessee 61 Consolidation among independents also led to switches such as the Nashville move in which new affiliate WZTV bought the Fox affiliation and the rights to much of the programming aired by WXMT 62 the 1990 programming merger of WNYB TV into WUTV in Buffalo New York 63 64 and the 1992 purchase of the assets of bankrupt WXGZ TV serving Green Bay Wisconsin by that city s WGBA TV 65 The New World Fox affiliation pact EditSee also New World Pictures New World Communications 1992 1997 New World stations affected by the Fox affiliation deal Station Market Channel Prior affiliationKDFW Dallas Fort Worth TX 4 CBSKSAZ TV Phoenix AZ 10 CBSKTBC TV Austin TX 7 CBSKTVI St Louis MO 2 ABCWAGA TV Atlanta GA 5 CBSWBRC TV Birmingham AL 6 ABCWDAF TV Kansas City MO 4 NBCWGHP Greensboro Winston Salem NC 8 ABCWITI Milwaukee WI 6 CBSWJBK TV Detroit MI 2 CBSWJW TV Cleveland OH 8 CBSWTVT Tampa FL 13 CBSOriginally constituted as an independent producer of low budget feature films and later as a television studio New World Pictures was purchased by investor Ronald Perelman in 1989 while in the middle of a Chapter 11 bankruptcy restructuring Under Perelman New World purchased a majority stake in SCI Television on February 17 1993 for 100 million and 63 million in newly issued debt 66 SCI contained most of the assets of the former Storer Communications and was itself undergoing a complex debt restructuring 67 as part of the deal SCI and New World merged to form New World Communications 68 In May 1994 two major purchases were announced by New World in the span of three days four stations from Argyle Television Holdings for 717 million and four Great American Communications stations for 350 million and 10 million in share warrants 69 70 71 On May 23 1994 Fox purchased a 20 percent stake in New World Communications in what was a 500 million investment 72 This deal contained a groupwide multi year affiliation agreement that would have the majority of stations owned by or in the process of being acquired by New World switch network affiliations to Fox after existing contracts expired per station 73 74 Calling the agreement the largest network affiliation realignment in television history Murdoch said it would forever change the competitive landscape of network television 72 Ronald Perelman CEO of New World Communications Several stations were divested by New World in the process NBC affiliates KNSD in San Diego California and WVTM TV in Birmingham Alabama were sold to the network for 425 million on May 22 1996 d 76 WSBK TV in Boston operating as an independent was excluded due to Fox s repurchase of WFXT 77 and was sold to Paramount Stations Group affiliating with UPN 78 WVTM TV s sale was necessitated as WVTM included as part of the Argyle Television deal was in the same market as WBRC which was part of the Great American deal WBRC and WGHP were placed in a trust and operated by Great American successor Citicasters 79 until April 1995 when operating control for both stations were transferred to Fox Television Stations Group 80 Fox purchased both WBRC and WGHP on July 22 1995 in exchange for 130 million in promissory notes 81 Two Fox owned stations displaced by the New World deal were also sold WATL in Atlanta and KDAF in Dallas Fort Worth went to Renaissance Communications for 100 million and joined The WB with Renaissance concurrently selling KDVR in Denver to Fox for 70 million 82 83 84 In total twelve New World owned stations were affected by the Fox affiliation pact eight of which were long tenured CBS affiliates in some of the nation s largest cities 85 KDFW had been with CBS for 45 years 86 WJBK TV for 44 years 87 KTBC TV and WAGA TV for 43 years 88 WJW TV and KSAZ TV for 40 years 89 90 and WTVT for 39 years 91 Additionally WDAF TV had been an NBC affiliate for 45 years 92 The majority of these stations were also located in markets with established NFC teams 93 e which served as a significant factor for New World along with Fox s programming lineup being largely limited to prime time enabling the stations to sell more local advertising 73 News of the agreement caught CBS s Tony Malara off guard when notified over the phone as Malara later explained I said to New World CEO William C Bevins In what market He said All of them I said What the hell are you doing 95 Management at the New World stations including WJW TV general manager Virgil Dominic were notified of the pending deal five days in advance and sworn to secrecy Dominic later said My mouth fell to my knees There was five or six seconds of absolute silence after New World stations president Bob Selwyn told me It really was a shock 96 The Scripps ABC alliance EditThe Scripps ABC affiliation deal at a glance Station Market Channel Prior affiliationWEWS TV Cleveland OH 5 ABCWXYZ TV Detroit MI 7 ABCKNXV TV Phoenix AZ 15 FoxWMAR TV Baltimore MD 2 NBCWFTS TV Tampa FL 28 FoxImmediately following the Fox New World announcement CBS courted Scripps Howard owners of WEWS TV in Cleveland and WXYZ TV in Detroit two long standing ABC affiliates along with three Fox affiliates impacted by Fox New World KNXV TV KSHB TV and WFTS TV in Tampa As part of a possible deal leaked to Broadcasting amp Cable CBS would also affiliate with KNXV and WFTS and acquire a minority stake in Scripps s cable channel HGTV 97 In discussions with ABC Scripps insisted that KNXV TV and WFTS TV along with NBC affiliate WMAR TV in Baltimore switch to ABC as a condition of any renewal with WEWS and WXYZ 98 99 16 and threatened to switch both to CBS if KNXV in particular was not included 99 7 KNXV s inclusion came at the expense of KTVK the market leader for local news and regarded as a model ABC affiliate 100 but was a standalone family run station and not part of a larger group 101 The network offered Scripps 25 million as an alternative to KNXV TV which was rejected in what ABC executive Bryce Rathbone described as Scripps having a gun to their head 99 16 When KTVK general manager Bill Miller asked Capital Cities ABC CEO Tom Murphy if there was anything the station could do Murphy replied you should light some candles 99 5 ABC acquiesced to Scripps s demands and announced on June 15 1994 that KNXV WFTS and WMAR would join the network and WEWS and WXYZ would remain affiliates 102 103 Scripps s other former Fox affiliate KSHB replaced WDAF TV as Kansas City s NBC affiliate KSHB was tied to contract renewals for KJRH TV in Tulsa Oklahoma and WPTV TV in West Palm Beach 104 The new ABC alliance prompted WFTS TV to expedite work on establishing a news department 105 with local newscasts launching the day of the switch from facilities formerly used by the Home Shopping Network in a temporary setup 106 107 Stripped of the ABC affiliation and failing to land CBS 101 108 KTVK spent the next few months rebuilding itself into a news intensive independent 109 Scripps s Cincinnati station WCPO TV also signed a 10 year deal with ABC in September 1995 unrelated to the earlier group deal 110 and switched from CBS on June 3 1996 111 The CBS Westinghouse deal EditThe CBS Group W affiliation deal at a glance Station Market Channel Prior affiliationKDKA TV Pittsburgh PA 2 CBSKPIX TV San Francisco CA 5 CBSKYW TV Philadelphia PA 3 NBCWBZ TV Boston MA 4 NBCWJZ TV Baltimore MD 13 ABCScripps s insistence on WMAR TV joining ABC came at the expense of WJZ TV which had been with ABC since 1948 and was the network s longest tenured affiliate 112 WJZ TV owner Westinghouse Broadcasting Group W engaged in off and on discussions over the past six months with CBS NBC and Fox over a possible group wide affiliation deal which accelerated when the Scripps ABC agreement was announced 113 Industry trade publications also suggested a possibility of Fox purchasing Group W 112 On July 14 1994 Group W and CBS agreed to a group wide 10 year contract renewing CBS s existing ties with KDKA TV in Pittsburgh and KPIX in San Francisco and adding WJZ TV WBZ TV in Boston and KYW TV in Philadelphia to the network the latter two stations switching from NBC 114 115 As part of the deal Group W and CBS formed a joint venture to acquire other television stations and operate a syndication company 116 WJZ TV and WBZ TV switched to CBS on January 1 1995 98 with Baltimore and Boston s existing CBS affiliates WBAL TV and WHDH TV switching to NBC the former in a three way affiliation swap 117 118 NBC agreed to pay WHDH TV owner Sunbeam Television a total of 100 million to 150 million over a ten year span coincidentally reuniting Sunbeam with the network that had bypassed their Miami station WSVN five years earlier 119 KYW TV studios in Philadelphia c 2007 The Philadelphia market however posed an immediate logistical issue as KYW TV would replace CBS owned WCAU TV consequently both NBC and Fox made offers for WCAU TV while CBS expressed interest in conducting an asset swap 115 In September 1994 Fox agreed to purchase existing Philadelphia affiliate WTXF TV 120 With NBC remaining as the only bidder for WCAU TV talks began in earnest over an swap of stations between the two networks An early outline leaked to Mediaweek had NBC offering KCNC TV in Denver and KUTV in Salt Lake City to CBS along with the channel 4 signal in Miami 121 This was largely confirmed on November 21 1994 with NBC selling KCNC and KUTV to the Group W CBS joint venture along with WTVJ s channel 4 license and transmitter site CBS would sell to NBC both WCAU TV and WCIX s channel 6 license and transmitter site 122 123 The transmitter and license swap in Miami would see WCIX move to channel 4 renamed WFOR TV and WTVJ move to channel 6 124 In Denver another three station affiliation swap took place NBC owned KCNC TV became CBS owned outgoing CBS affiliate KMGH TV joined ABC and outgoing ABC affiliate KUSA linked with NBC 125 KMGH was part of a group wide deal between ABC and owner McGraw Hill announced on October 21 1994 126 with McGraw s other CBS affiliate KERO TV in Bakersfield California 127 switching to ABC on March 1 1996 128 Prior to finalizing their trade with Renaissance for KDVR Fox had been rumored to acquire Tribune s KWGN TV via a station trade 129 130 In Salt Lake City KSL TV agreed to switch from CBS to NBC 125 Because of the complexity of the NBC CBS asset swap the FCC granted approval in August 1995 after weeks of delays with the Philadelphia Miami Denver and Salt Lake City market affiliation switches all taking place on September 10 1995 131 132 CBS scrambles for replacement affiliates EditReplacement CBS affiliates in New World markets Station Market Channel Prior affiliationKBVO TV Austin TX 42 FoxKPHO TV Phoenix AZ 5 IndependentKTVT Dallas Fort Worth TX 11 The WBWDJT TV Milwaukee WI 58 IndependentWGNX Atlanta GA 46 IndependentWGPR TV Detroit MI 62 IndependentWOIO Cleveland OH 19 FoxWTSP Tampa FL 10 ABCRelegated to the UHF dial in Cleveland CBS signed former Fox affiliate WOIO 133 which despite having no news department committed to launching one by taking over WUAB through a local marketing agreement 134 Tampa was equally straightforward with outgoing ABC affiliate WTSP joining CBS 106 CBS signed up KBVO TV to fill the void in Austin left by KTBC TV 135 when that switch took place on July 1 1995 KBVO was renamed KEYE TV 136 Dallas Fort Worth was also resolved on July 1 via KTVT a VHF independent owned by Gaylord Broadcasting As a condition set forth by Gaylord KSTW in Seattle Tacoma Washington also joined CBS at the expense of long standing affiliate KIRO TV 137 Both KTVT and KSTW were slated to join The WB but after that network s launch was delayed Gaylord sued to void the pending contracts In turn The WB sued Gaylord for breach of contract 138 The Seattle switches took place on March 16 1995 with KIRO TV joining UPN but maintaining their local news schedule 139 140 f A multi station deal with CBS and Meredith Corporation saw Phoenix independent KPHO TV replace KSAZ TV and WNEM TV in Bay City Michigan switch from NBC to CBS as part of a renewal with KCTV in Kansas City 108 The Meredith deal resulted in another side deal after rumors of NBC courting existing ABC affiliate WJRT TV in Flint Michigan Capital Cities ABC purchased it and WTVG in Toledo Ohio from SJL Broadcasting for 155 million on October 1994 converting the latter from NBC to ABC 142 Capital Cities ABC s purchase was made largely to prevent NBC from signing or purchasing WJRT as a replacement for WNEM 143 135 144 As a result former CBS affiliate WEYI TV became Flint Bay City s NBC affiliate 145 In Detroit however outgoing Fox affiliate WKBD TV and independents WXON TV and WADL rejected affiliation or purchase offers by CBS 146 effectively forcing the network to purchase WGPR TV channel 62 from the International Free and Accepted Modern Masons for 24 million 147 WGPR TV was the first Black owned television station in the mainland United States 148 and up until October 1992 employed an 11 person news department with daily newscasts focused on the city s Black population 149 Despite this an unnamed CBS executive told New York Times reporter Bill Carter about WGPR TV T his station has no news and no history in the market It s amazing 150 Struggling to secure either WATL or WGNX as a replacement affiliate in Atlanta CBS made a 22 million purchase offer for WVEU channel 69 out of desperation in September 1994 151 Even with the pending deal CBS continued to lobby WATL and WGNX and reached an affiliation with WGNX on November 16 1994 152 the purchase of WVEU and an immediate resale was also made official 153 154 The Milwaukee market proved to be the most problematic for CBS Sinclair Broadcast Group owner of outgoing Fox affiliate WCGV TV 155 and operator of WVTV turned down all offers made by CBS 156 the Wisconsin Voice of Christian Youth turned down a longshot purchase offer for their TV station 157 and Weigel Broadcasting owner of WDJT TV channel 58 ended talks due to CBS s continued pursuit of another station 158 CBS s situation in Milwaukee was dire to the point the network agreed to supply their owned stations in Chicago and Green Bay to cable providers in the event no replacement affiliate could be secured 159 Five days before WITI s contract was to lapse on December 6 1994 Weigel and CBS reached an agreement to affiliate WDJT TV in a 10 year deal 160 Savoy Petracom and Blackstar link with Fox EditSF Broadcasting Blackstar and Petracom stations Station Market Channel Prior affiliation OwnerKEVN TV Rapid City SD 7 NBC BlackstarKHON TV Honolulu HI 2 NBC SF BroadcastingWALA TV Mobile AL 10 NBC SF BroadcastingWLUK TV Green Bay WI 11 NBC SF BroadcastingWTVW Evansville IN 7 ABC PetracomWVUE New Orleans LA 8 ABC SF BroadcastingIn March 1994 Fox and Savoy Pictures established a venture called SF Broadcasting to acquire and operate additional television stations Fox held no voting stock in the company which instead was held entirely by Savoy Pictures chairmen Victor Kaufman and Lewis Korman but supplied 58 percent of the original 100 million in capital 161 SF acquired four stations owned by Burnham Broadcasting in two separate deals WLUK TV in Green Bay Wisconsin on July 29 1994 for 38 million 162 and WALA TV in Mobile Alabama KHON TV in Honolulu Hawaii and WVUE in New Orleans Louisiana one month later on August 25 for 229 million The deal further upgraded Fox s affiliation base in two additional NFC markets 163 NBC protested the sale of WLUK before the FCC alleging SF was a shell created by News Corporation to circumvent FCC limits on the amount of capital that a foreign company can invest in an American television station 164 This petition was soon followed with another protesting Fox s KDVR purchase and concurrent station sales in Dallas and Atlanta to Renaissance 165 NBC withdrew these and all other petitions against Fox on February 17 1995 166 167 I sometimes think there are a lot of people out there who are giving us credit for being a lot smarter than we are We re simply investing in companies that believe in our business plan and are attracted to affiliations with our network just like NBC and ABC are out investing in operators who believe in their business plan Preston Padden defending Fox s investment into LLC Blackstar Communications 51 Fox also made two other equity investments in broadcasters that converted at least one station to Fox In October 1994 it agreed to purchase an equity stake in Blackstar Communications a Black owned company owned by John Oxendine Blackstar s three existing stations aired the Home Shopping Network 168 the company intended to buy as many as 11 VHF stations in mid sized to smaller markets for conversion The company made its first station acquisition after the deal in July 1995 when it announced a 20 million deal to purchase the Nebraska Television Network NTV a group of ABC affiliates in central and western Nebraska that were already secondary affiliates of Fox to convert them to Fox 169 170 However the transaction was delayed ultimately to the point of being called off by an FCC petition over a matter unrelated to the possible switch g Blackstar then spent 14 million to purchase KEVN in Rapid City South Dakota in September 1995 174 After the purchase Blackstar announced it would switch KEVN to Fox 175 which took place on July 15 1996 176 In May 1995 Fox invested 15 million in exchange for 20 percent of Petracom which was in the middle of buying four TV stations from Banam Broadcasting Among the four stations were two small market Fox affiliates h and ABC affiliate WTVW in Evansville Indiana which converted to Fox as part of the deal rumors of the deal occurring had prompted ABC to sign an affiliation agreement with existing CBS affiliate WEHT 178 179 The affiliation switch with those stations and WEVV TV which changed from Fox to CBS took place on December 3 1995 180 Fox also continued to pursue station purchases on their own On August 18 1994 the network purchased ABC affiliate WHBQ TV in Memphis Tennessee from Communications Corporation of America ComCorp 181 ComCorp originally bought WHBQ TV for an estimated 43 million in April but when two investors backed out Fox provided the needed financing following consummation Fox offered to buy it from ComCorp outright for 80 million concurrent with their offers for WBRC and WGHP 79 former Fox affiliate WPTY TV assumed the ABC affiliation on December 1 1995 182 More Big Three affiliate defections to Fox took place Quincy Newspapers s WSJV in Elkhart South Bend Indiana agreed to switch from ABC to Fox in April 1995 183 with ABC pulling their programming off of Quincy s WREX in Rockford Illinois in retaliation 184 The switch took place on October 18 with Weigel Broadcasting signing on W58BT channel 58 i as South Bend s new ABC affiliate having constructed it from the ground up over a seven week span 185 Even the smallest of media markets were affected KYUS TV in Miles City Montana then operating as a satellite of Billings station KSVI 186 switched to Fox in 1995 after being purchased by The Marks Group owner of dual NBC CBS affiliate KXGN TV in Glendive 187 KXGN had previously taken Fox football in 1994 via a tertiary affiliation 188 Station group influence EditAdditional affiliation deals between the traditional Big Three networks and station group operators took place between 1994 and 1997 The Outlet Company reached a long term deal with NBC renewing the network s ties with WJAR TV and WCMH TV while also switching WNCN in the Raleigh Durham market to NBC WNCN s inclusion was centered around NBC s long standing ties with Outlet 189 190 Prior to WNCN switching on August 3 1995 NBC offered to purchase Outlet for 396 million 191 River City Broadcasting signed a multi station deal with ABC that renewed contracts with WSYX and WLOS while also making former Fox affiliate KDNL TV St Louis s new ABC affiliate replacing KTVI 192 The Belo Corporation included CBS affiliate KXTV in Sacramento California as part of their deal with ABC that renewed affiliations with WFAA in Dallas and WVEC in Hampton Norfolk Virginia 193 As a result River City s KOVR switched from ABC to CBS on March 6 1995 194 Young Broadcasting signed a deal with ABC in September 1994 renewing all six of their affiliates and later involved the switching of NBC affiliate WTVO in Rockford Illinois to ABC in turn Capital Cities ABC made a 25 million investment into Young 184 Pulitzer Publishing agreed to extend affiliations with their six NBC affiliates across the board despite overtures made by Capital Cities ABC to convert WDSU and WXII TV to ABC as replacements for WVUE and WGHP respectively WDSU general manager Wayne Barrett said My opinion was we should stay home with NBC The stations that don t change are the ones that stand to benefit the most 195 Allbritton Communications owner of ABC affiliate WJLA TV in Washington D C inked a 10 year affiliation contract that would either renew or convert their entire station group to ABC including NBC affiliate WCIV in Charleston South Carolina 196 Initiating the switches Edit WJBK studios in Southfield Michigan WAGA studios in Atlanta Georgia KTBC TV studios in Austin Texas WITI studios in Milwaukee Wisconsin WLUK TV studios in Green Bay Wisconsin WBRC studios in Birmingham Alabama The Cleveland market was the first in the Fox New World agreement to initiate an affiliation swap on September 3 1994 between CBS affiliate WJW TV and Fox affiliate WOIO 89 As the New World stations had the right to decline carriage of Fox Kids WBNX TV in Akron Ohio an independent owned by televangelist Ernest Angley agreed to pick up the children s programming block finalizing a contract two days beforehand 197 CBS expressed confidence with WOIO with Anthony Malara saying W e got a terrific television station here If we have the same kind of experience in every one of our switch markets it s going to be a lot easier 95 With the switch WJW TV hired multiple personnel and added a local morning show giving it the largest news staff and news output of any Ohio television station 89 but notably eschewed directly marketing their incoming Fox affiliation Days after the Fox New World agreement was announced WJW general manager Virgil Dominic told The Plain Dealer I guarantee you one thing We are not going to be Fox 8 There is no way in the world we are going to become Fox 8 We are Cleveland s Own and Newscenter 8 and we intend to stay that way 96 Conversely WOIO was tasked with reconciling their youthful irreverent image with CBS s older skewing lineup 198 The rest of the New World chain switched in a staggered manner WDAF TV and KSHB TV traded affiliations on September 12 1994 199 the same day KSAZ TV s CBS contract ran out and was picked up by KPHO TV 90 Due to contractual obligations with KNXV TV KSAZ operated as an independent for a three month interregnum until December 12 200 when KNXV dropped Fox and picked up all ABC News programming including World News Tonight and Nightline while KTVK continued to run ABC s daytime and primetime lineups until January 9 1995 201 Tampa also switched on December 12 106 while Detroit 202 Milwaukee 160 and Atlanta 203 all had their affiliation switches the day before Detroit s changes were the most dramatic largely because of WGPR TV s prior obscurity WGPR s ratings for their first night with CBS rose by 11 000 percent compared to their former programming while CBS s ratings dropped by 25 percent 204 Following the switch WJBK TV fielded 10 000 phone calls from viewers over a two day span 98 Changes in Dallas and Austin 205 occurred on July 1 1995 St Louis followed on August 7 Fox Kids in that market went to KNLC after WB affiliate KPLR TV turned it down 206 but moved to KTVI in September 1996 after multiple incidents involving KNLC s religious ownership that embarrassed Fox 207 Greensboro Winston Salem North Carolina switched on September 3 1995 with Fox affiliate WNRW and satellite WGGT picking up the ABC affiliation vacated by WGHP j with WNRW renamed WXLV TV 209 k Three days before the Greensboro market switches WLUK TV and WGBA TV exchanged NBC and Fox in Green Bay WGBA s NBC pickup was seen as a triumph for the station which had previously fought off bankruptcy twice and with ownership planning local newscasts 212 The three other SF Broadcasting stations switched to Fox on January 1 1996 In Honolulu and Mobile former Fox affiliates KHNL and WPMI TV assumed the dropped NBC affiliations 213 214 but New Orleans saw a three way swap where ABC affiliate WVUE joined Fox WB affiliate WGNO take ABC and Fox affiliate WNOL TV link with the WB 215 Birmingham was the last New World market to switch on September 1 1996 but initiated the most complicated realignment Despite having completed their purchase of WBRC in July 1995 79 81 Fox honored the balance of WBRC s ABC contract allowing ABC nearly 15 months to find a replacement Allbritton acted to buy two CBS affiliates outside of the market l Tuscaloosa s WCFT TV in November 1995 and Anniston s WJSU TV in January 1996 the latter after a deal for Gadsden Fox affiliate WNAL TV fell through 217 Allbritton announced both stations would be converted to ABC for the Birmingham market 217 this would later become part of Allbritton s 10 year group wide contract with ABC 196 WCFT and WJSU s operations were consolidated into one identity ABC 33 40 218 purchasing W58CK channel 58 as a low power simulcast in Birmingham proper WNAL TV switched to CBS at the same time but plans to establish a news department with multiple former WJSU staffers were abruptly suspended with no reason 219 220 two weeks after the switch Paxson Communications purchased WNAL 221 Outgoing Fox affiliates WTTO and semi satellite WDBB became independents 222 before affiliating with The WB in February 1997 as part a larger group deal with owner Sinclair Broadcast Group 223 The Allbritton ABC agreement would wind up affecting another market as Allbritton was in the process of purchasing WBSG TV in Brunswick Georgia the WB affiliate for Jacksonville Florida Allbritton announced that WBSG would become Jacksonville s ABC affiliate usurping WJKS 224 as WBSG s signal did not cover the entire market an unbuilt station on channel 25 licensed to Orange Park was acquired 225 WJKS contested the loss of their ABC contract until giving up in August 1996 226 but began aggressively preempting the majority of the network lineup starting in January 1997 this forced WBSG s switch to be moved up from April to February 227 The Orange Park station taking the WJXX call sign took to the air as the new Jacksonville ABC affiliate on February 9 1997 with WBSG acting as a semi satellite 228 As the Birmingham switches were imminent News Corporation offered to purchase the remainder of New World for 2 48 billion in stock once the deal closed on January 22 1997 Fox s 22 owned stations ten of which were from New World surpassed CBS and Tribune Broadcasting as the largest television station owner in the United States with an estimated 40 percent total market reach 229 230 m Silver King Communications then the owned station group for HSN acquired Savoy Pictures and SF Broadcasting on November 28 1995 Headed by former TCF chairman Barry Diller Silver King s purchase set off industry speculation that Diller could potentially launch another broadcast network backed by the 31 station group 235 The four Fox affiliates were ultimately sold to Emmis Communications on April 1 1998 236 n Affiliation switches directly attributed to the Fox New World agreement and related transactions Market Call sign Channel Affiliationbefore switch Affiliationafter switch Date of switchAtlanta GA WAGA TV 5 CBS Fox December 11 1994 203 WATL 36 Fox The WBWGNX 46 Independent CBSWNEG TV 32 Independent CBS October 2 1995 240 Austin TX KTBC 7 CBS Fox July 1 1995 205 KBVO 42 Fox CBSBakersfield CA KERO TV 23 CBS ABC March 1 1996 241 KBAK TV 29 ABC CBSBaltimore MD WMAR TV 2 NBC ABC January 2 1995 242 WBAL TV 11 CBS NBCWJZ TV 13 ABC CBSBinghamton NY WICZ TV 40 NBC Fox April 4 1996 243 Birmingham Tuscaloosa Anniston AL WBRC TV 6 ABC Fox September 1 1996 244 WDBB 17 Fox IndependentWTTO 21 Fox IndependentWCFT TV 33 CBS ABCWJSU TV 40 CBS ABCWNAL TV 44 Fox CBSW58CK 58 Independent ABCBoston MA WBZ TV 4 NBC CBS January 2 1995 245 WHDH TV 7 CBS NBCCharleston SC WCBD TV 2 ABC NBC August 19 1996 246 WCIV 4 NBC ABCCincinnati OH WCPO TV 9 CBS ABC June 3 1996 247 WKRC TV 12 ABC CBSCleveland OH WJW TV 8 CBS Fox September 3 1994 89 WOIO 19 Fox CBSDallas Fort Worth TX KDFW TV 4 CBS Fox July 1 1995 137 KTVT 11 Independent CBSKDAF 33 Fox The WBKXTX TV 39 The WB IndependentDenver CO KCNC TV 4 NBC CBS September 10 1995 126 KMGH TV 7 CBS ABCKUSA TV 9 ABC NBCDetroit MI WJBK TV 2 CBS Fox December 11 1994 202 WKBD TV 50 Fox UPNWGPR TV 62 Independent CBSEvansville IN WTVW 7 ABC Fox December 2 1995 180 WEHT 25 CBS ABCWEVV TV 44 Fox CBSFairbanks AK KTVF 11 CBS NBC April 1 1996K13XD 13 CBS August 7 1996 o 248 Flint Bay City Saginaw MI WNEM TV 5 NBC CBS UPN January 16 1995 145 WEYI TV 25 CBS NBCGreen Bay Appleton WI WLUK TV 11 NBC Fox August 28 1995 249 WGBA TV 26 Fox NBCGreensboro Winston Salem NC WGHP 8 ABC Fox September 3 1995 209 WNRW 45 Fox ABC UPNWGGT 48 Fox ABC UPNHonolulu HI KHON TV 2 NBC Fox January 1 1996 214 KHNL 13 Fox NBCJacksonville FL WJKS 17 ABC The WB February 9 1997 228 WBSG 21 The WB ABCWJXX 25 ABCKansas City MO WDAF TV 4 NBC Fox September 12 1994 199 KSHB TV 41 Fox NBCMacon GA WGXA 24 ABC Fox January 1 1996 250 WPGA TV 58 Fox ABCMarquette MI WBKP 5 ABC October 30 1996WLUC TV 6 ABC NBC Fox NBCMemphis TN WHBQ TV 13 ABC Fox December 1 1995 182 WPTY TV 24 Fox ABCMiami Fort Lauderdale FL WCIX 6 Channel allocations changed September 10 1995 132 WTVJ 4Miles City Glendive MT KYUS TV 3 ABC Fox 1995 187 Milwaukee WI WITI TV 6 CBS Fox December 11 1994 160 WCGV TV 24 Fox UPNWDJT TV 58 Independent CBSMobile AL WALA TV 10 NBC Fox January 1 1996 251 WPMI 15 Fox NBCMonroe LA El Dorado AR KARD 14 ABC Fox April 17 1994 36 Myrtle Beach Florence SC WGSE 43 The WB Fox November 10 1996 252 New Orleans LA WVUE TV 8 ABC Fox January 1 1996 215 WGNO 26 The WB ABCWNOL 38 Fox The WBPhiladelphia PA KYW TV 3 NBC CBS September 10 1995 125 WCAU TV 10 CBS NBCPhoenix AZ KTVK 3 ABC The WB January 9 1995 201 KPHO TV 5 Independent CBS September 12 1994 90 KSAZ TV 10 CBS IndependentIndependent Fox December 12 1994 200 KNXV TV 15 Fox ABCPocatello Idaho Falls ID KPVI TV 6 ABC NBC January 1 1996 253 KIFI TV 8 NBC ABCProvidence RI WLNE TV 6 CBS ABC September 10 1995 254 WPRI TV 12 ABC CBSRaleigh Durham NC WNCN 17 The WB NBC September 10 1995 255 WRDC 28 NBC UPNRapid City SD KEVN TV p 7 NBC Fox July 15 1996 176 KNBN LP 24 NBCReno NV KRXI TV 11 Fox December 3 1995 256 KAME TV 21 Fox UPNRockford IL WREX 13 ABC NBC August 14 1995 257 WTVO 17 NBC ABCSt Louis MO KTVI 2 ABC Fox August 7 1995 192 KDNL TV 30 Fox ABCSacramento CA KXTV 10 CBS ABC March 6 1995 193 KOVR 13 ABC CBSSalt Lake City UT KUTV 2 NBC CBS September 10 1995 125 KSL TV 5 CBS NBCSan Antonio TX KABB 29 Independent Fox January 16 1995 258 KRRT 35 Fox UPNSeattle Tacoma WA KIRO TV 7 CBS UPN March 13 1995 140 KSTW 11 Independent CBSSouth Bend IN WSJV 28 ABC Fox October 18 1995 259 W58BT 58 ABCTampa St Petersburg FL WTSP 10 ABC CBS December 12 1994 106 WTVT 13 CBS FoxWFTS TV 28 Fox ABCTerre Haute IN WBAK TV 38 ABC Fox January 31 1995 260 Toledo OH WTVG 13 NBC ABC October 28 1995 261 WNWO TV 24 ABC NBCTupelo Columbus West Point MS WLOV TV 27 ABC Fox Fox October 10 1995 262 Twin Falls ID KKVI TV 35 ABC Fox January 22 1996 263 Wilmington NC WJKA TV 26 CBS Fox September 18 1994 53 Yuma AZ El Centro CA KECY TV 9 CBS Fox September 18 1994 264 KSWT 13 ABC CBSRamifications EditMain article Repercussions of the 1994 1996 United States broadcast TV realignment Distress at CBS then recovery Edit David Letterman CBS s position entering the 1994 95 television season was particularly dire The loss of the NFC and multiple tenured affiliates combined with a long held strategy of pursuing older less desirable audiences in prime time resulted in the network crashing to last place among the Big Three 265 The network s lone bright spot Late Show with David Letterman was negatively impacted with the affiliate defections in Detroit Late Show was placed at 11 p m on WGPR TV instead of the network time slot of 11 35 p m due to WGPR TV having no local news presence 266 Ratings for Late Show began to slide in early 1995 against The Tonight Show with Jay Leno and Nightline which David Letterman directly blamed on the switches saying You can do a great show but if it s on Channel 93 in West Tipton Indiana it s not going to be easy to find it 267 Jay Leno s acclaimed July 10 1995 interview with actor Hugh Grant resulted in Tonight topping Late Show in the ratings for the first time a position Leno maintained until ceding hosting duties in 2009 268 Laurence Tisch began exploring a sale of CBS amid the turmoil with Westinghouse announcing a 5 4 billion purchase of the network on August 1 1995 q Westinghouse CEO Michael H Jordan credited a growing relationship with Tisch thanks to their joint venture that made the deal possible 265 272 r Several months after the deal closed network flagship WCBS TV fired much of their on air talent on October 2 1996 a move meant to address the station s low ratings 275 the negative impact was so severe that CBS went to the NFL and said Name your price and we ll pay whatever to get a package We lost affiliates ratings the male audience and a lot of sports sponsorships But when CBS got the NFL back in 1997 everything picked up again Neal Pilson former CBS Sports president 276 CBS attempted to fill the void left by the NFL on Sunday afternoons in 1994 with made for TV movie reruns aimed at a female audience 277 278 By December 1994 the network announced a contract renewal with the NCAA particularly for the Division I men s basketball tournament a franchise CBS had held since 1982 279 CBS Sports also presented a higher emphasis on NASCAR programming including the Winston Cup Busch Series and Craftsman Truck series 280 along with the PGA Tour and US Open 281 In late 1995 CBS was approached by the CFL about a television contract for the league s American teams 282 Sean McManus was appointed as president of CBS Sports in November 1996 which was interpreted as the network intending to bid aggressively for the NFL for the next rights deal as McManus had a reputation for being the kingpin of big TV negotiations 283 CBS successfully outbid NBC for the AFC contract on January 13 1998 signing an eight year contract worth 4 billion NBC Sports president Dick Ebersol was told by General Electric officials not to do anything reckless and saw the package as third tier behind the NFC and MNF 284 The return of football was especially seen as a comeback vehicle for Jim Nantz one of the few high profile sports announcers that remained with CBS throughout 281 New World stations struggle to adapt Edit It s pretty much a flop in every category Dave Walker television writer for The Arizona Republic assessing the aftermath of KSAZ TV s switch to Fox 285 The New World Fox stations struggled to reconcile their new network programming which targeted a younger audience with their older skewing newscasts In Phoenix KSAZ TV s existing 5 6 and 10 p m newscasts lost half their ratings in the first year of the switch In dumping the popular syndicated shows Jeopardy and Wheel of Fortune because they attracted older viewers the station lost a valuable lead in and lead out around its newscasts The two shows were then picked up by KTVK which showed unexpected aggression in buying syndicated programs KTVK also launched the market s first longform morning newscast which emerged a winner as KSAZ TV s effort struggled 285 It was not until 1997 that the station began to turn around its news ratings by dropping its sputtering 9 p m Arizona Prime in favor of Fox 10 News at 9 which featured an emphasis on breaking news and entertainment stories designed to be more compatible with Fox prime time shows 286 In Cleveland WJW TV s issues were fairly pronounced WJW s switch came with three months notice and altered more than 20 hours of programming per day 287 or 87 percent of the schedule 288 Ratings declined in all time slots but especially fell by half for the late evening news after moving from 11 p m a time slot WJW had won in since 1981 to 10 p m but still topped WUAB s newscast 289 290 WJW s morning show also failed to retain the audience of their lead in 6 a m news 291 Virgil Dominic retired in May 1995 and was replaced by KNXV general manager Bob Rowe 287 under Rowe the station rebranded to Fox is Ei8ht Ei8ht is News in November 1995 290 a slogan derided among viewers for its continuous on air repetition 292 The morning newscasts were retooled into a three hour program 290 and had its audience double year over year during the first month while WJW saw ratings increases in several dayparts 293 Fox s purchase of New World resulted in WJW rebranding as Fox 8 in August 1996 294 By 1998 WJW was beating WUAB at 10 p m by a 2 1 margin 295 and in 2000 was ranked first sign on to sign off in multiple key demographics besting WEWS 296 In Milwaukee WITI had been the market s second rated outlet generally in May 1994 297 However its ratings sank after the affiliation switch with the 10 p m news which was retained dropping by roughly half 298 Initially resisting changes to their CBS era presentation 299 WITI rebranded as Fox is Six Six is News in November 1995 parallel to WJW s Ei8ht rebranding 290 but kept their long running Friend You Can Count On slogan 300 By 1997 WITI was rebounding in local ratings but still fell short of their pre switch levels 301 and remained in third place by 2000 302 Atlanta s WAGA was the number two station leading into the affiliation switches 303 Its new 10 p m newscast held most of the viewers of its prior 11 p m broadcast which Atlanta Journal Constitution TV critic Phil Kloer attributed to the station s strength and news anchors 304 The station remained in second place by 2000 though it was a distant second to longtime Atlanta ratings powerhouse WSB TV an unchanged ABC affiliate 305 WBRC in Birmingham weathered the switches well and by 2000 was the highest rated Fox owned station in morning evening and late news as well as prime time Uniquely the station initially produced separate half hour newscasts at 9 and 10 p m because it lacked the resources to produce 90 minutes of late news However its 5 and 10 p m newscasts placed a close second to the new WBMA 306 WBMA also benefitted from the immediate acquisition of meteorologist James Spann who sued to be released from his WBRC contract objecting to Fox programs on moral and religious grounds 307 WBRC anchor Brenda Ladun also filed suit against the station seeking a contract release 308 and followed Spann to WBMA 309 WGHP remained the number two station in the North Carolina Piedmont in its early evening and morning newscasts though its 10 p m news initially fared poorly in comparison to the 11 p m news it aired as an ABC affiliate 310 By 2000 the WGHP 10 p m newscast had doubled its audience share from 9 percent in November 1995 310 to 17 percent with a higher rating than the 11 p m newscasts on market leader WFMY TV and WXII TV 311 They probably tried to do too much too fast John Spinola WJBK general manger on prior management s intentions to make the station a local form of CNN 312 In Tampa WTVT lost its first place position among the market s local television newscasts to NBC affiliate WFLA TV the only station in the market not affected by the switches whose newscasts had placed second 313 It was the first time since 1989 that WFLA TV had swept the ratings 314 WFLA also became the market s number one station in total viewing in every sweeps period until November 1998 when WTVT surpassed it 315 WJBK in Detroit was a third rated station before the switch attracting just over half of the audience as primary competitors WDIV TV and WXYZ TV 316 While its 10 p m news surpassed incumbent WKBD TV the 6 p m newscast was beaten by entertainment programming on that station 317 WJBK returned to the 11 p m news race in May 1995 with Bonds Tonight hosted by former WXYZ anchor Bill Bonds 318 but was moved to 6 30 p m in September and canceled by mid November due to low ratings WJBK s overall poor ratings performance following the switch also saw their 4 p m news eliminated and multiple staffers laid off 312 In Austin KTBC s news ratings slumped significantly in the years after the Fox affiliation switch while third place KXAN TV there began a climb to the top KEYE TV even outdrew KTBC in assorted dayparts 319 320 KDFW was the third rated news outlet in Dallas Fort Worth prior to the switches 321 It saw immediate year over year declines in the viewership for its 6 and 10 p m newscasts KDFW which retained its 10 p m news in addition to a 9 p m news hour saw notable late news declines because the prior newscast was a poorer lead in than CBS entertainment programming 322 By 2000 KTVT had pulled into a dead heat with KDFW for third place 323 WDAF TV a third rated station in local news in its last years as an NBC affiliate remained in third but saw significant declines in news viewing in the aftermath of its switch and doubling of weekday news output Its 10 p m news went from attracting 23 percent of TV viewers at that hour to 13 percent and the station s new morning news attracted just over half the audience share of The Today Show which it replaced 324 In prime time however WDAF largely outperformed the national average for Fox affiliates 325 326 WDAF maintained their NBC era Newschannel 4 branding until being renamed Fox 4 in 1997 after Fox assumed ownership 327 It was still in third place at the end of the decade 328 KTVI also remained a third rated news outlet in St Louis 329 It did not introduce a 9 p m newscast until August 1997 330 and remained third in its market by 2000 331 A WHBQ TV ENG van parked next to a van for WMC TV WHBQ s competitiveness improved with Fox s investments but the station could not surpass market leaders WMC TV or WREG TV Though not owned by New World WHBQ TV in Memphis was in a similar position Prior to the switch it was only producing half hour newscasts at 6 and 10 p m 332 Coinciding with the switch its weekday news output quadrupled with the introduction of a two hour morning newscast Mornings on Fox and the reinstatement of a noon newscast after nearly three years the early evening news was moved to 5 p m and the late news to 9 p m both an hour in length 333 334 However WHBQ TV continued to rank third in Memphis behind WMC TV and WREG TV the traditional first and second place news outlets in Memphis 335 A cultural conflict largely existed between the New World stations and Fox Stations like KSAZ WJW WDAF and WITI continued news presentations similar to their Big Three affiliations which analysts saw as unsustainable with younger skewing Fox shows like Party of Five as lead ins 286 Fox Entertainment president John Matoian told The Plain Dealer in July 1995 that the network was planning to expand beyond their original target 18 34 demographic which was partly based off of stations like WJW refusing to identify with the network 336 By the time Fox purchased New World the stations were seen as underperformers largely attributed to station managers unwilling to embrace their new affiliations 337 WITI news director Jill Geisler was known for stressing a fair concerned balanced position at the station 299 while Virgil Dominic was seen as avuncular in his stewardship of WJW 292 One financial analyst suggested incoming Fox management would drastically overhaul the stations and obviously make em full blown Fox monsters 299 Fox chairman Chase Carey said Without question the New World stations could be performing better than they are today 338 The local news production boom Edit An interview segment at KHON TV A former Big Three affiliate that switched to Fox in 1996 KHON invested heavily into a news intensive operation The New World stations all committed to increased local news production when they switched to Fox This was partly out of necessity as Fox only programmed a two hour prime time program block but also because the stations stood to generate more revenue selling local advertising 301 While with CBS WJW could only sell two minutes of local ads during the 10 p m hour which increased to 16 minutes after their late news moved to that hour 288 Industry analysts cited WSVN s success with a news intensive format having more control over programming and advertising WSVN generated more revenue than it ever had with NBC 339 Precedent also existed when a dispute over revenue compensation emerged between CBS and the affiliate body in 1992 WAGA and WJBK dropped CBS This Morning in favor of local morning shows 340 341 When Late Show debuted over CBS in 1993 WJW delayed it to midnight in favor of Murphy Brown reruns 342 and later with the New World produced Valley of the Dolls shows they could sell additional local advertising for to the network s chagrin CBS president of affiliate relations Tony Malara later said The fact of the matter is it ain t exactly chopped liver we re offering 343 s By June 1994 Fox was still in the planning stages for a network news service t but Rupert Murdoch dismissed the idea of a nightly evening newscast similar to the Big Three networks airing over Fox saying I don t think people watch them very much People prefer watching a newscast edited and customized for them in their communities 349 The New World stations gained access to a news sharing service among Fox owned stations and affiliates while also retaining existing CNN Newsource affiliations 350 simulcasting CNN in the event of breaking news 351 WDAF WJBK KTBC and KHON launched nightly half hour newscasts with emphasis on national and international coverage but produced locally 352 353 214 The New World stations moved their late evening newscasts by an hour and extended them to 60 minutes in length due to Fox only programming for two hours or in the cases of WDAF and WITI created a 90 minute long newscast 324 301 KTVI and KTBC were exceptions KTVI moved their late evening news from 10 to 9 p m in 1997 330 while KTBC did the same in 2002 for the latter the newscasts replaced sitcom reruns in the 9 p m hour 354 KHON maintained a late evening newscast at 10 p m until September 2014 when a 9 p m newscast was launched 355 A number of people thought we d fall off the face of the earth But we ve proven them wrong As far as WAGA is concerned we ll continue to grow We wouldn t add people if we didn t believe in what WAGA is doing There will be no slowing down we ll continue to grow and grow and grow Budd McEntee WAGA TV news director 356 An unprecedented level of hiring took place among both the New World stations and the replacement Big Three affiliates to account for the overall increase in local news with as many as 1 500 to 2 000 jobs being created during this period 356 In Cleveland WJW boasted a news staff of over 120 people 89 while WOIO used WUAB s news department as the foundation for their own moving both stations to new facilities at Reserve Square 357 Kansas City saw KSHB add 54 people to create a workforce of 72 while WDAF doubled their news staff for a total of 110 WNCN hired 68 full time staffers in 1995 as they prepared to take the NBC affiliation WGNX increased their headcount to 50 after linking with CBS and WHBQ bolstered their staffing from 28 to 55 under Fox ownership 356 Technical advancements were also made with the increased manpower WBMA boasted all digital equipment when their news room launched with Allbritton executive John Hillis saying We had the luxury of a clean sheet on paper 358 Spurned by ABC KTVK invested heavily into syndicated programming and newsroom staffing and broke ground on new studios to house their expanded operations 109 Among unchanged Fox affiliates Sacramento s KTXL began hiring staff and extended their late evening news to an hour 356 and KOKH TV in Oklahoma City began assembling a news staff for a 1996 launch 359 KOKH s entry was a complete reversal from June 1994 when general manager Harlan Reams publicly expressed no desire to do local news saying From a business standpoint if you want to watch news hey watch 4 5 and 9 watch CNN read the newspaper But I m here to entertain 360 Big Three affiliates in unchanged markets like KVBC in Las Vegas and KIVI TV in Boise Idaho also saw their news output increased with additional staffing Ball State University professor Bob Papper estimated in 1996 that several more thousand jobs could be created if other older Fox affiliates started local news or expanded their output to match up with the New World stations 356 Ratings headwinds for new news operations Edit Many of the new Big Three affiliates which had been either former Fox affiliates or independents on the UHF dial with no news presence found difficulty garnering ratings traction against their traditional VHF competitors While most of these replacement affiliates have maintained local news production with some even experiencing gradual ratings growth some stations eventually cancelled or outsourced operations outright Among CBS s replacement affiliates WGPR TV renamed WWJ TV 361 proved to be the network s biggest challenge 362 A 1 million promotional blitz saw the network s star talent make fun of the station s embarrassingly high channel number 266 363 but ratings for network programming in Detroit fell 46 percent year over year following the switch 364 CBS announced plans to establish a news department in Detroit in late 1995 365 only to withdraw them entirely after several months 366 Two attempts at local news in 2001 and 2009 failed 367 368 before CBS News launched a hyperlocal streaming news service in January 2023 that WWJ TV simulcasts 369 Unlike WWJ TV WOIO WGNX and WDJT TV were all successful in debuting local news after linking with CBS but still struggled against established competition Until relaunching with a tabloid format in 2002 WOIO was beset by continued talent instability and dismal ratings 370 This distinction was shared by WGNX despite a 1998 sale to Meredith 371 a renaming to WGCL TV in 2000 372 multiple rebrands and continual executive upheaval 373 When succeeding owner Gray Television relaunched WGCL as WANF for Atlanta News First management conceded the station had no brand at all 374 WDJT TV s fortunes have been mixed the station has thrived in prime time since picking up Jeopardy and Wheel of Fortune as a lead in 375 but its news operation continues to trail the competition 376 in St Louis the landscape for news is always treacherous especially for a station like KDNL News viewership here is deeply entrenched with television watchers overwhelmingly choosing KSDK and KMOV Read a ratings report from 10 years ago or even 20 and the substance is very much the same Channel 5 in first place and Channel 4 battling to go ahead but never quite managing Gail Pennington St Louis Post Dispatch 377 Replacement ABC affiliates KDNL TV and WXLV TV experienced severe difficulty establishing a news presence and had their efforts shut down by owner Sinclair Broadcast Group KDNL s newscasts which debuted prior to the switch 378 struggled to gain viewership amid repeated changes in management on air talent and news sets with ABC network programming equally underperforming 377 Former owner River City held an option to sell their St Louis holdings and sold it to Emmis Communications in June 1999 379 sparking a year long lawsuit between Sinclair and Emmis 380 u The lawsuit forced KDNL onto an austerity budget cancelling the 5 p m news while a failing transmitter repeatedly forced the station off air 377 The 5 p m news was restored in October 2000 but failed to register any measurable audience while the 10 p m news drew half the ratings as Friends reruns on KPLR 382 resulting in the news department s disbanding on October 12 2001 380 WXLV TV which frequently failed to make progress in area ratings against the more established WFMY TV WGHP and WXII TV 383 384 had their morning and weekend newscasts cancelled in late 2000 385 and ultimately shuttered outright on January 11 2002 386 387 Utilizing Sinclair s hybrid News Central format an 11 p m newscast ran from 2004 to 2005 when it was again scrapped due to poor ratings 388 In February 2012 News 14 Carolina began producing daily newscasts for WXLV as part of a retransmission consent dispute settlement between Time Warner Cable and Sinclair 389 This was not limited to new CBS NBC or ABC affiliates in New World markets KHNL in Honolulu began airing newscasts on April 12 1995 more than eight months before switching to NBC 390 The station s newscasts however failed to find ratings success in spite of NBC s strength in entertainment programming in the late 1990s as well as the hiring of several notable personalities in the market 391 392 WPTY TV s news department was hastily assembled to make the deadline for their Fox ABC switch 393 332 with multiple technical gaffes and on air talent misidentifying area landmarks plaguing their debut 333 The weeknight anchor lineup changed within two weeks 394 and the news director was fired after a year 395 Low ratings continued to plague the station 335 396 through a 2013 relaunch as WATN TV under Nexstar ownership 397 New NBC affiliate WGBA TV in Green Bay Wisconsin did not begin producing newscasts until July 1 1996 it had doubled its payroll and expanded its studios in order to accommodate its news operation 398 Its newscasts lagged the other three local stations in the ratings and turnover of on air talent was high 399 WEVV TV in Evansville Indiana which switched from Fox to CBS shut down their news department in July 2001 amid poor ratings 400 after the station was sold to Bayou City Broadcasting WEVV which reclaimed the Fox affiliation on a digital subchannel in 2011 relaunched local newscasts 401 In South Bend Indiana replacement ABC affiliate WBND LP did not offer local news until 2008 albeit produced by WDJT 402 and established a staffed newsroom in April 2011 403 Because of its competitive and technical weakness Weigel tried to sell WBND LP WCWW LP and WMYS LP to WSBT TV owner Schurz Communications in 2008 but the deal was abandoned in August 2009 404 Effects in Mexico and Canada Edit Fox s acquisition of football rights brought the number of Fox affiliates broadcasting from Mexico from one to three It also resulted in changes in Canadian cable regulations In San Diego UPN affiliate KUSI TV tried unsuccessfully to take the Fox affiliation away from Tijuana Baja California Mexico licensed XETV citing FCC regulations preventing any foreign station from airing live programming from the United States to U S audiences without an FCC approved permit Fox was eventually granted the permit allowing XETV to carry the games 405 406 XETV lost its affiliation to CW affiliate KSWB TV in 2008 through a deal with Tribune Broadcasting in turn XETV assumed the CW affiliation 407 The permit to carry live programming also benefited two stations set up by Televisa with Fox programming XHFOX TV in Matamoros Reynosa serving the Harlingen Brownsville McAllen market and XHFTX TV in Nuevo Laredo serving the Laredo market However these stations continued to have to bicycle tapes of programming across the border 408 These stations dropped their Fox affiliations on February 28 2002 due to increased reverse compensation fees with Fox and high costs of local news production Both stations became affiliates of Televisa s Canal de las Estrellas 409 While the NFL signed Canadian rights agreements for both the NFC and AFC packages on television in Canada by signing agreements with the CanWest Global System and Western International Communications 410 the switches led to increased interest by Canadian cable companies in adding a U S Fox station to their lineups However since 1978 the availability of U S network affiliates on Canadian cable had been governed by the Canadian Radio television and Telecommunications Commission CRTC s 3 plus 1 rule allowing the carriage of three American network affiliates plus a PBS station 411 with frequent exemptions for border towns where additional stations were receivable over the air In June 1994 the CRTC stated it was unwilling to modify the rule 412 the next month a group of 48 Canadian cable systems many belonging to major operators petitioned the CRTC to allow them to add Fox programming 413 Canadian broadcasters lobbied against any change fearing that the addition of Fox would Americanize the system further and occupy channel capacity needed to provide new Canadian services 413 External pressure led the CRTC to reverse course by September allowing Canadian cable providers to pick up a Fox affiliate without having to drop a Big Three affiliate 414 The ascendance of Fox Sports Edit See also Fox Sports United States NFL on Fox and Fox NFL Sunday The Fox NFL Sunday hosts 2009 Fox Sports has been cited as one of the fastest start ups in modern television history and the most successful Aided by a number of off and on air personnel that defected from CBS Sports David Hill who was transferred as Sky Sports president to like duties for Fox assembled the division in less that eight months 276 John Madden jokingly mused upon joining Fox Sports that the s should be removed from the name because the only sport we had at Fox was football NFL football 415 Adopting the slogan of same game new attitude the NFL on Fox s centerpiece program was an hour long pregame show Fox NFL Sunday incorporating comedy and entertainment with co host Terry Bradshaw quickly becoming a breakout star 29 NFL Sunday s success demonstrated viewers held an appetite for football that extended beyond the game itself 276 Along with a theme song composed by Scott Schreer that has since become symbolic of the entire network 416 technical innovations included the Fox Box displaying the clock and score continuously Hill perfected a similar on screen bug for Sky s soccer coverage and the use of parabolic microphones for in game sound 29 NFL on Fox also provided a launching pad for other established announcers including Kenny Albert Kevin Harlan and Joe Buck 276 The affiliation switches helped elevate Fox to major network status on par with its older established competitors 29 The growth of Fox Sports was as quick as its founding on September 9 1994 Fox secured rights to the National Hockey League from 1995 to 1999 again outbidding CBS 417 Major League Baseball followed on November 7 1995 initially via a shared arrangement with NBC 418 Fox Sports extended into regional sports networks beginning in 1996 through a joint venture with TCI s Liberty Media creating Fox Sports Net from the former Prime Sports and SportsChannel networks 419 420 NASCAR coverage was added in 2000 including the Daytona 500 plus the Winston Cup and Busch Series 421 Along with the NFL NASCAR on Fox and the MLB on Fox remain cornerstones of Fox Sports into the present day 422 423 See also Edit1989 South Florida television affiliation switch 1994 in American television 2006 United States broadcast television realignment 2001 Vancouver TV realignment 2007 Canada broadcast TV realignmentNotes Edit The network identified itself as FBC in between these two dates before adopting the name Fox outright 22 One CBS affiliate KGAN in Cedar Rapids Iowa added Fox football due to the distress of the market s Fox affiliate KOCR KOCR was unable to construct a broadcast tower that could serve the entire market and allowed Fox to offer the NFC package to another station 43 By October 1994 KOCR was forced off air after being evicted from their facilities and failing to make electrical payments 44 For more see UHF television broadcasting UHF vs VHF Prior to this sale New World and NBC reached a shows for stations agreement that extended the affiliations for KNSD and WVTM for 10 years each In turn NBC agreed to jointly produce and took out an equity stake in a prime access syndicated newsmagazine that would become Access Hollywood 75 This does not include KTVI which became a home station for the St Louis Rams after that team s relocation from Los Angeles in 1995 94 KIRO TV and KSTW exchanged network affiliations on June 30 1997 with CBS returning to KIRO TV and KSTW joining UPN 141 See KLKN At the time Blackstar attempted to acquire NTV from Fant Broadcasting Fant was in dispute with Citadel Communications over television station allocations in Albion Nebraska Citadel filed a petition in hopes that it would spur the FCC into investigating an attempt by Fant to pursue the same Albion channel as Citadel Citadel needed the new Albion channel in order to move what was then KCAN from Albion to Lincoln 171 The deal was then scuttled because Citadel s petition delayed FCC approval 172 Fant then sold NTV to Pappas Telecasting which retained the ABC affiliation 173 One of the two Fox affiliates was KARD the other station KDEB TV in Springfield Missouri joined Fox in 1986 after ABC terminated its affiliation 177 Petracom also purchased Fox affiliate WQRF TV in Rockford Illinois prior to the Banam deal 178 Even with the W58BT call sign the station was referred to as WBND TV in contemporary news coverage The WBND LP calls were officially adopted by the end of the year WXLV and WGGT also carried UPN on a secondary basis until September 1 1996 when WGGT was converted to full time UPN affiliate WUPN 208 The renaming was done with the blessing of the widow of former channel 45 staffer William Norbert Rismiller which inspired the WNRW calls after he was murdered in 1984 210 Ownership established a college scholarship in his name and a planned newsroom was named in his honor 211 Tuscaloosa and Anniston were annexed from the Birmingham DMA by Arbitron in 1977 and eventually were collapsed back into that market by Nielsen in September 1998 216 Fox sold WJW KTVI WDAF TV WITI WBRC and WGHP along with WHBQ TV KDVR and KSTU to Local TV LLC on December 21 2007 for 1 1 billion 231 WITI was repurchased by Fox in November 2019 as part of a larger transaction involving Nexstar Media Group 232 which acquired Local TV successor Tribune Broadcasting 233 WHBQ TV along with WFXT were traded to Cox Media Group in June 2014 in exchange for San Francisco affiliate KTVU and independent KICU TV 234 As part of Emmis s divestment of their television portfolio WLUK and WALA were sold to LIN TV 237 and KHON was sold to Montecito Broadcast Group 238 WVUE s sale was complicated and delayed due to damage sustained by Hurricane Katrina with New Orleans Saints owner Tom Benson purchasing the station in 2008 239 Co owned KFXF the Fox affiliate aired selected CBS programs in the interim And its satellite KIVV in Lead South Dakota The Westinghouse buyout was announced one month before WPRI TV in Providence Rhode Island which CBS purchased in March 1995 for 80 million 269 270 was to switch affiliations from ABC to CBS WPRI was spun off to Clear Channel Communications for 68 million on April 14 1996 271 The first iteration of Viacom bought CBS for 36 billion in September 1999 but split into separate entities in December 2005 Viacom and CBS Corporation 273 CBS Corporation re merged with Viacom in 2019 to form ViacomCBS 274 renamed Paramount Global in 2022 KMEG in Sioux City Iowa also refused to carry the show at first after due to the ratings and financial success of their syndicated fare in late night 344 but cleared it live the following year 345 The creation of Fox News was formally announced on January 30 1996 346 and the cable channel was launched on October 7 1996 347 Fox News Sunday debuted over the Fox network on April 28 1996 348 The sale also included Sinclair s six St Louis radio stations also inherited from River City as part of a court settlement Sinclair divested these radio stations to Emmis and retained KDNL 381 References Edit Michie Larry August 25 1976 ABC Woos Other Webs Affiliates Rating Surge Becomes Lure Variety pp 1 67 ProQuest 1401290652 a b Mermigas Diane March 17 1986 Affiliate switch to NBC seen as first of several Electronic Media pp 3 65 WRTV Indianapolis latest to heed ABC s siren song PDF Broadcasting December 4 1978 pp 20 21 ProQuest 1014698010 Archived PDF from the original on January 31 2023 Retrieved April 30 2023 a b Mermigas Diane August 5 1985 Affiliate raids NBC targets markets for station swaps Electronic Media pp 1 32 Switch in network affiliations has put KOTA and KEVN near parity Rapid City Journal April 26 1985 p 28 Retrieved April 30 2023 via Newspapers com Mermigas Diane September 30 1985 Switch Lost NBC affiliate returns to the fold Electronic Media p 3 Buckman Adam June 27 1988 Top Knoxville station dumps CBS in favor of NBC Electronic Media pp 1 48 Brown Rich Sabatini Vicki July 27 1990 Texas CBS affil may defect to ABC The Hollywood Reporter pp 3 52 ProQuest 2732592314 via ProQuest a b Sonsky Steve January 1 1989 3 million TV viewers affected The Miami Herald Miami Florida p 1A 25A Archived from the original on April 12 2021 Retrieved April 3 2021 via Newspapers com Schrage Michael March 21 1985 Murdoch Agrees to Buy A 50 Percent Share of 20th Century Fox Film The Washington Post Retrieved December 13 2022 Storch Charles March 21 1985 MURDOCH BUYING HALF OF 20TH CENTURY FOX Chicago Tribune Archived from the original on December 13 2022 Retrieved December 13 2022 MURDOCH TO BUY amp TV STATIONS COST 2 BILLION The New York Times May 7 1985 Archived from the original on December 14 2022 Retrieved December 14 2022 Murdoch Becomes U S Citizen Can Buy TV Network Los Angeles Times September 4 1985 Archived from the original on April 29 2023 Retrieved December 14 2022 MURDOCH WILL BUY OUT DAVIS S HOLDINGS IN FOX The New York Times September 24 1985 Archived from the original on December 16 2022 Retrieved December 14 2022 Davis Sells Murdoch His 20th Century Fox Stake for 325 Million The Los Angeles Times September 24 1985 Archived from the original on April 29 2023 Retrieved December 14 2022 In Brief PDF Broadcasting Vol 110 no 10 March 10 1986 p 112 ProQuest 1014725836 Archived PDF from the original on March 8 2021 Retrieved April 27 2023 via World Radio History Closed Circuit Four to get ready PDF Broadcasting Vol 110 no 12 March 24 1986 p 7 ProQuest 1014725157 Archived PDF from the original on January 31 2023 Retrieved April 27 2023 via World Radio History Deeb Gary July 12 1986 Monday Night Football may be dumped because of large expense The Post Crescent Appleton Wisconsin News America Syndicate p 4 Leisure Archived from the original on April 29 2023 Retrieved April 26 2023 via Newspapers com Rothenberg Fred July 14 1986 Networks Tighten Belts Again CBS TV cuts costs eliminates 700 jobs Los Angeles Times Los Angeles California Associated Press p 22 VI Archived from the original on April 29 2023 Retrieved April 26 2023 via Newspapers com Stewart Larry September 5 1986 The Decline and Fall of Monday Night Football Los 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the original on June 13 2013 Retrieved October 21 2012 Cole Smith Steven July 2 1995 TV changes expected to cause a tide of confusion Fort Worth Star Telegram pp F1 F2 F3 Archived from the original on July 21 2021 Retrieved July 20 2021 via Newspapers com Duffy Mike Gunther Marc May 24 1994 Channel 2 dumps CBS joins with Fox Detroit Free Press Detroit Michigan p 1A 2A Archived from the original on January 23 2022 Retrieved January 23 2022 via Newspapers com Kloer Phil May 24 1994 TV shake up in Atlanta Keep your remote control handy this fall The Atlanta Constitution p A1 A4 Archived from the original on August 7 2022 Retrieved August 9 2022 via Newspapers com a b c d e Feran Tom September 2 1994 Touch that dial TV turnabout begins tomorrow on Channels 8 19 43 The Plain Dealer Cleveland Ohio p 1A Archived from the original on January 10 2023 Retrieved October 21 2022 via NewsBank a b c Walker Dave September 10 1994 TV switch Channel 5 to carry CBS today Arizona Republic Phoenix Arizona p A1 A20 Archived from the original on November 26 2021 Retrieved November 26 2021 via Newspapers com Huntley Helen Stevenson Jennifer L May 24 1994 WTVT Ch 13 is switching channels to Fox St Petersburg Times St Petersburg Florida p 1A 6A Archived from the original on February 5 2022 Retrieved December 27 2021 via Newspapers com McTavish Brian May 24 1994 WDAF to leave NBC join Fox The Kansas City Star Kansas City Missouri p A 1 A 8 Archived from the original on February 2 2023 Retrieved February 1 2023 via Newspapers com Walker Dave May 24 1994 Channel 10 would leave CBS to go with Fox Arizona Republic Phoenix Arizona pp A1 A11 Archived from the original on December 17 2021 Retrieved December 17 2021 via Newspapers com Rams Still Waiting For N F L Approval The New York Times March 15 1995 Archived from the original on May 26 2015 Retrieved December 4 2012 a b Feran Tom September 23 1994 CBS enjoying ties with WOIO The Plain Dealer Cleveland Ohio p 7E Archived from the original on January 10 2023 Retrieved October 20 2022 via NewsBank a b Feran Tom May 29 1994 Seismic change The Plain Dealer Cleveland Ohio p 1C Archived from the original on April 29 2023 Retrieved April 29 2023 via NewsBank McClellan Steve June 6 1994 Counterstrike CBS targets Scripps PDF Broadcasting amp Cable Vol 124 no 23 pp 6 8 ProQuest 225338688 Archived PDF from the original on November 8 2021 Retrieved October 5 2022 via World Radio History a b c Zurawik David January 1 1995 Changing Channels Get ready get set get confused in TV s big switch in Baltimore The Baltimore Sun Baltimore Maryland pp 1L 3L Archived from the original on April 29 2023 Retrieved April 28 2023 via Newspapers com a b c d Miller William October 29 1995 Declaration of William Miller Comments of Southern Broadcast Corporation of Sarasota Federal Communications Commission Archived from the original on June 30 2021 Retrieved March 16 2021 Walker Dave June 16 1994 ABC drops Ch 3 after 40 years Arizona Republic Phoenix Arizona p A1 A15 Archived from the original on December 26 2021 Retrieved December 25 2021 via Newspapers com a b Muller Bill June 30 1994 Family owned Ch 3 outmuscled for prize The Arizona Republic pp A1 A7 Archived from the original on June 30 2021 Retrieved March 16 2021 via Newspapers com Stevenson Jennifer L June 16 1994 ABC switching channels in bay area St Petersburg Times p 1A 17A Archived from the original on February 5 2022 Retrieved January 30 2021 COMPANY NEWS TV Stations Shift to ABC The New York Times June 17 1994 Archived from the original on November 11 2012 Retrieved October 21 2012 McClellan Steve August 1 1994 Keeping up with the affiliates PDF Broadcasting amp Cable Vol 124 no 31 p 11 ProQuest 225330473 Archived PDF from the original on January 31 2023 Retrieved May 4 2023 via World Radio History Belcher Walt June 17 1994 TV stations focus on change Tampa Tribune pp 1 10 Archived from the original on February 5 2022 Retrieved January 30 2021 a b c d Yant Monica December 9 1994 This just in Ch 28 will have news St Petersburg Times pp 1B 11B Archived from the original on February 5 2022 Retrieved January 30 2021 Belcher Walt December 13 1994 Big switch helps spark the big hype Tampa Tribune p 5 BayLife Archived from the original on February 5 2022 Retrieved January 31 2021 a b Mattern Hal June 30 1994 Eye say Channel 5 called up to majors Homeless CBS picks longtime independent The Arizona Republic pp A1 A7 Archived from the original on June 30 2021 Retrieved March 16 2021 via Newspapers com a b Walker Dave January 9 1996 Channel 3 maintains stronghold despite loss of network affiliation The Arizona Republic p C5 Archived from the original on June 30 2021 Retrieved November 14 2020 via Newspapers com Jessell Harry A September 11 1995 ABC Fox change partners again PDF Broadcasting amp Cable Vol 125 no 37 p 16 ProQuest 225333563 Archived PDF from the original on June 29 2020 Retrieved December 2 2018 via World Radio History Harper Paul June 7 1996 Trading Places Diary of WCPO Network Switch The Cincinnati Post Cincinnati Ohio pp 1B 8B Archived from the original on May 1 2023 Retrieved May 1 2023 via Newspapers com a b Zurawik David June 17 1994 ABC TV to switch from WJZ to WMAR The Baltimore Sun p 1A 9A Archived from the original on March 28 2023 Retrieved March 28 2023 via Newspapers com THE MEDIA BUSINESS Group W s Negotiations The New York Times New York New York Reuters July 11 1994 p D8 Archived from the original on May 2 2018 Retrieved April 28 2023 Carter Bill July 15 1994 CBS to Add Three Affiliates in Deal With Westinghouse The New York Times Archived from the original on October 23 2014 Retrieved July 12 2012 a b Zier Julie A July 18 1994 CBS Group W form historic alliance affiliations joint station buying program deals in prospect PDF Broadcasting amp Cable p 14 ProQuest 225329759 Archived PDF from the original on March 7 2023 Retrieved March 28 2023 Zurawik David July 15 1994 WJZ to join CBS in 3 station deal The Baltimore Sun Baltimore Maryland pp 1 7A Archived from the original on April 29 2023 Retrieved April 29 2023 via Newspapers com Zurawik David August 5 1994 Delaying switches until Jan annoys WMAR WBAL The Baltimore Sun Baltimore Maryland pp 1D 5D Archived from the original on April 29 2023 Retrieved April 29 2023 via Newspapers com Biddle Frederic M August 3 1994 Boston s TV shuffle will put NBC on Ch 7 The Boston Globe Boston Massachusetts pp 1 8 Archived from the original on April 29 2023 Retrieved April 29 2023 via Newspapers com Biddle Frederic M August 4 1994 NBC pays top dollar to stay on VHF dial The Boston Globe Boston Massachusetts p 62 Archived from the original on April 29 2023 Retrieved April 29 2023 via Newspapers com Zier Julie A September 5 1994 Fox buys WTXF Philly for 200 million plus seller Viacom Paramount rumored to be negotiating for Combined s WGBS TV and WBFS TV PDF Broadcasting amp Cable p 12 ProQuest 225325817 Archived PDF from the original on January 31 2023 Retrieved March 28 2023 Miles Laureen September 5 1994 WTXF Phila fetches 200 million Mediaweek p 5 Gale A15809876 Jicha Tom November 22 1994 CBS NBC Changing Channels South Florida Sun Sentinel Archived from the original on July 3 2011 Boedeker Hal November 22 1994 NBC We re sticking with WTVJ The Miami Herald Miami Florida p 1C 3C Archived from the original on March 28 2023 Retrieved March 28 2023 via Newspapers com Channel 6 will drop CIX for FOR The Miami Herald December 14 1994 p 1C Archived from the original on March 28 2023 Retrieved March 28 2023 via Newspapers com a b c d Mankowski Cal November 22 1994 CBS NBC trade some TV stations The Buffalo News Buffalo New York p B10 Archived from the original on April 29 2023 Retrieved April 28 2023 via Newspapers com a b Saunders Dusty October 22 1994 TV Stations Play Spin the Dial Channel 7 Quits CBS Joins ABC Kicking Off Network Realignment Rocky Mountain News Denver Colorado p 5A Archived from the original on April 29 2023 Retrieved April 29 2023 via NewsBank Denver s Channel 7 goes from CBS to ABC The Daily Sentinel Grand Junction Colorado Associated Press October 24 1994 p 11A Archived from the original on April 29 2023 Retrieved April 28 2023 via Newspapers com Newell Maria March 1 1996 Translator switch won t change much Daily Press Victorville California pp B1 B2 Archived from the original on April 29 2023 Retrieved April 29 2023 via Newspapers com Saunders Dusty October 22 1994 Fox Broadcasting could join Denver TV wheeling dealing Rocky Mountain News p 35A At press time KWGN TV eyes Fox tie Electronic Media November 7 1994 p 1 Whitefield Mimi May 22 1995 Date for channel switch pushed back The Miami Herald p Business Monday 7 Archived from the original on March 28 2023 Retrieved March 28 2023 via Newspapers com a b Dougherty Robin August 18 1995 TV switcheroo II set for Sept 10 The Miami Herald p 1A 17A Archived from the original on March 28 2023 Retrieved March 28 2023 via Newspapers com Feran Tom June 30 1994 Channel 19 likely to be CBS choice The Plain Dealer Cleveland Ohio p 1A Archived from the original on October 6 2022 Retrieved October 5 2022 via NewsBank Feran Tom August 20 1994 WOIO fires 8 at TV 43 in takeover The Plain Dealer Cleveland Ohio p 1E Archived from the original on October 6 2022 Retrieved October 5 2022 via NewsBank a b Zier Julie A October 10 1994 ABC CBS make market moves PDF Broadcasting amp Cable Vol 124 no 11 p 96 ProQuest 225339313 Archived PDF from the original on January 31 2023 Retrieved April 28 2023 via World Radio History Holloway Diane May 31 1995 In CBS switch KBVO will be KEYE Austin American Statesman pp B1 B5 Archived from the original on April 29 2023 Retrieved May 6 2021 a b McClellan Steve Zier Julie September 19 1994 Gaylord gets CBS affiliates in Seattle and Dallas PDF Broadcasting amp Cable Vol 124 no 38 p 14 ProQuest 225325806 Archived PDF from the original on March 8 2021 Retrieved April 29 2023 via World Radio History KSTW In Middle In Network Battles The Seattle Times Seattle Washington Knight Ridder News Service August 27 1994 Archived from the original on November 4 2013 Retrieved April 28 2013 Taylor Chuck January 15 1995 The Expanding Network Universe CBS Move From KIRO To KSTW Is Just Part of the Channel Changing That s Shaking Up Seattle s TV The Seattle Times Seattle Washington Archived from the original on October 23 2013 Retrieved October 23 2012 a b Taylor Chuck March 12 1995 The CBS Switch Questions Answers On Tomorrow s Big Move The Seattle Times Seattle Washington Archived from the original on October 30 2014 Retrieved October 23 2012 Taylor Chuck June 12 1997 KIRO TV Sets Show Lineup For CBS Return The Seattle Times Seattle Washington Archived from the original on December 13 2013 Retrieved June 29 2012 Capital Cities ABC Completes Buy of Two TV Stations Associated Press News August 30 1995 Archived from the original on January 1 2019 Retrieved April 10 2015 Pullen Doug September 2 1994 Channel 5 Adds Weathercaster Channel 25 Focuses On Health Flint Journal Flint Michigan pp C16 C25 Archived from the original on April 29 2023 Retrieved April 29 2023 via GenealogyBank Notes Scramble for affiliates The Journal Times Spectrum Sunday Racine Wisconsin October 16 1994 p 2 Archived from the original on April 29 2023 Retrieved April 29 2023 a b Pullen Doug January 17 1996 The Big Switch One Year Later TV viewers maintain news loyalty but change channels for programs The Flint Journal Flint Michigan p B1 Roush Matt September 26 1994 WGPR sale means CBS spending jag Network may spend millions on expansion hiring Crain s Detroit Business p 3 Duffy Mike September 23 1994 CBS purchase may juice up TV landscape Channel 62 likely to hire big names Detroit Free Press Detroit Michigan p 1A 8A Archived from the original on January 28 2022 Retrieved January 23 2022 via Newspapers com Kiska Tim January 29 2016 Black broadcast pioneer WGPR honored in history exhibit Detroit Free Press Archived from the original on January 23 2022 Retrieved January 23 2022 Kiska Tim October 12 1992 Union busting charged in WGPR firings The Detroit News p 5B Carter Bill September 20 1994 Most chaotic season ever has begun for network TV The Plain Dealer The New York Times p 12E Kloer Phil September 24 1994 Clearing up the local TV picture Price was right But will viewers follow CBS to Channel 69 The Atlanta Constitution p B1 Archived from the original on August 7 2022 Retrieved August 7 2022 via Newspapers com Kloer Phil November 16 1994 Channel surfing CBS to flip from 69 to 46 The Atlanta Constitution p A1 Archived from the original on August 7 2022 Retrieved August 7 2022 via Newspapers com Kloer Phil November 17 1994 The networks go channel surfing The Atlanta Constitution p F1 Archived from the original on August 7 2022 Retrieved August 7 2022 via Newspapers com McClellan Steve November 21 1994 CBS signs WGNX Atlanta PDF Broadcasting amp Cable Vol 124 no 47 p 8 ProQuest 1014760601 Archived PDF from the original on January 31 2023 Retrieved April 29 2023 via World Radio History Kirchen Rich October 1 1994 In CBS search for a mate Channel 24 still plays hard to get Milwaukee Business Journal Gale A16335176 Dudek Duane October 11 1994 Channels 18 24 next to snub CBS Milwaukee Sentinel p News 5 Flint Joe October 3 1994 Nay for Eye on affil buy Variety p 168 ProQuest 1401389916 Dudek Duane October 1 1994 Channel 58 says CBS is too late Owners no longer wooing network Milwaukee Sentinel p News 4 Battaglio Stephen December 2 1994 CBS ensures Milwaukee feed The Hollywood Reporter pp 3 50 ProQuest 2362015453 a b c Kirchen Rich December 10 1994 Down to the wire deal kept Milwaukee on CBS map Milwaukee Business Journal p 2 Gale A16541130 ProQuest 222390177 THE MEDIA BUSINESS Savoy and Fox TV Venture The New York Times March 18 1994 p 15 Archived from the original on March 8 2016 Retrieved February 4 2017 Company Town Annex Los Angeles Times July 29 1994 Archived from the original on May 12 2014 Retrieved May 9 2014 Andy Meisler August 27 1994 COMPANY NEWS Fox Adds 3 Network Affiliated Stations The New York Times Archived from the original on June 3 2021 Retrieved October 22 2012 NBC ASKS FCC TO PUT BRAKES ON FOX S EXPANSION PLANS The Deseret News Salt Lake City Utah The New York Times September 27 1994 Archived from the original on May 12 2014 Retrieved May 9 2014 Flint Joe January 15 1995 NBC Asks FCC To Nix Fox Bid For KDVR Variety Archived from the original on March 4 2016 Retrieved March 4 2016 NBC drops opposition to Fox PDF Broadcasting amp Cable February 20 1995 p 7 ProQuest 1016944810 Archived PDF from the original on March 8 2021 Retrieved July 20 2021 Carter Bill April 28 1995 THE MEDIA BUSINESS F C C Approves Purchase of TV Station by Fox Unit The New York Times Archived from the original on May 12 2014 Retrieved October 22 2012 Boliek Brooks October 7 1994 Fox Blackstar in affil venture The Hollywood Reporter pp 1 32 ProQuest 2362043760 Rathbun Elizabeth A July 17 1995 Blackstar makes first buy PDF Broadcasting amp Cable p 68 ProQuest 1016943761 Archived PDF from the original on January 31 2023 Retrieved April 29 2023 Wharton Dennis July 17 1995 Blackstar deal tests FCC Variety p 68 ProQuest 1401398829 Ricketts Hansen Renee October 8 1995 NTV sale meets resistance FCC to review complaint Grand Island Independent pp 1 D 2 D Archived from the original on April 29 2023 Retrieved April 29 2023 Pending sale of NTV Network fails Grand Island Independent May 5 1996 p 3 D Archived from the original on April 29 2023 Retrieved April 29 2023 Hooper Michael July 9 1996 NTV sold to California company Grand Island Independent pp 1 A 2 A Archived from the original on April 29 2023 Retrieved April 29 2023 Harlan Bill September 14 1995 KEVN TV sold to D C firm Rapid City Journal pp A1 A2 Archived from the original on April 29 2023 Retrieved April 29 2023 via Newspapers com Ross Denise March 22 1996 KEVN ready for switch to Fox More local programming promised after July 17 switch Rapid City Journal pp A1 A2 Archived from the original on April 29 2023 Retrieved April 29 2023 via Newspapers com a b Daly Dan July 12 1996 KNBN KEVN ready for the Fox shuffle Rapid City Journal p B1 Archived from the original on April 29 2023 Retrieved April 29 2023 via Newspapers com Rubin James H October 2 1989 High Court Refuses TV Station Appeal Associated Press Archived from the original on February 17 2022 Retrieved April 8 2021 a b Zier Julie A May 22 1995 Fox buys interest in group owner PDF Broadcasting amp Cable p 77 ProQuest 1016945437 Archived PDF from the original on January 31 2023 Retrieved April 29 2023 Knipe Sandra May 19 1995 Affiliate shuffle is beginning Sale of WTVW Ch 7 awaits FCC approval Evansville Press p 12 Archived from the original on April 29 2023 Retrieved April 29 2023 via Newspapers com a b Fields Chuck December 1 1995 Letter swapping of local stations due this weekend Evansville Press p 33 Archived from the original on April 29 2023 Retrieved April 29 2023 via Newspapers com Meisler Andy August 19 1994 THE MEDIA BUSINESS Fox to Buy Memphis ABC Outlet The New York Times Archived from the original on December 20 2013 Retrieved June 22 2012 a b Walter Tom November 30 1995 WHBQ WPTY switch set to confuse Memphis TV The Commercial Appeal p A14 Archived from the original on March 25 2023 Retrieved April 29 2023 via Newspapers com ABC out Fox in at WSJV The News Sentinel Fort Wayne Indiana Associated Press April 21 1995 p 7F Archived from the original on May 1 2023 Retrieved April 29 2023 via NewsBank a b Flint Joe May 29 1995 Affils in Fine Feather at NBC Meet in Hawaii Variety Archived from the original on April 15 2023 Retrieved April 29 2023 Rocky Start for New South Bend ABC Affiliate Times Union Warsaw Indiana Associated Press October 19 1995 p 7A Archived from the original on September 25 2015 Retrieved October 25 2012 Smith Doug August 1993 TV News PDF VHF UHF Digest p 6 Archived PDF from the original on February 27 2016 Retrieved September 20 2015 a b Glendive may get Fox channel The Billings Gazette March 19 1995 p 8B Retrieved May 4 2023 via Newspapers com Elder Robert K September 30 2003 One man media market Chicago Tribune Chicago Illinois p 2 1 2 2 Archived from the original on May 20 2022 Retrieved May 20 2022 via Newspapers com Langford Bob November 9 1994 NBC WRDC to split The News and Observer Raleigh North Carolina p 1E 4E Retrieved February 21 2022 via Newspapers com In Brief NBC will switch affiliates in 32nd ranked market Raleigh Durham N C on Oct 1 1995 PDF Broadcasting amp Cable Vol 124 no 45 November 7 1994 p 84 ProQuest 1014754436 Retrieved May 7 2023 via World Radio History Marshall Kyle August 4 1995 WNCN to be part of NBC The News amp Observer Raleigh North Carolina pp 9C 10C Archived from the original on June 8 2020 Retrieved February 20 2022 via Newspapers com a b Jessell Harry A August 29 1994 Changing partners in Sacramento PDF Broadcasting amp Cable Vol 124 no 35 p 6 ProQuest 1016944537 Archived PDF from the original on January 31 2023 Retrieved April 30 2023 via World Radio History a b Vierria Dan March 6 1995 Tune into change confusion as TV network swap starts The Sacramento Bee Sacramento California p A1 A10 Archived from the original on August 13 2022 Retrieved August 13 2022 via Newspapers com Vierria Dan August 27 1994 Reset those VCRs Channel 10 13 switch networks The Sacramento Bee Sacramento California p A1 A22 Archived from the original on August 13 2022 Retrieved August 13 2022 via Newspapers com Lorando Mark November 6 1994 ABC switch to WGNO is in the works The Times Picayune New Orleans Louisiana p F1 a b In Brief Allbritton Communications Co and ABC have signed a 10 year affiliation agreement PDF Broadcasting amp Cable Vol 126 no 18 April 22 1996 p 84 ProQuest 1016941173 Archived PDF from the original on January 31 2023 Retrieved April 30 2023 via World Radio History Feran Tom September 2 1994 Channel 55 to air Fox children s shows The Plain Dealer Cleveland Ohio p 6E Archived from the original on January 10 2023 Retrieved October 21 2022 via NewsBank Feran Tom July 11 1994 TV shakeout no simple swap The Plain Dealer Cleveland Ohio p 7E Archived from the original on January 10 2023 Retrieved October 23 2022 via NewsBank a b Garron Barry August 11 1994 TV network shift set for Sept 12 The Kansas City Star p C 1 C 3 Archived from the original on February 2 2023 Retrieved February 1 2023 via Newspapers com a b Walker Dave December 11 1994 Fox leaping to Ch 10 in latest network flip Arizona Republic Phoenix Arizona p A1 A32 A33 Archived from the original on December 17 2021 Retrieved December 17 2021 via Newspapers com a b Walker Dave December 2 1994 Channel 15 receives good news Jennings Koppel moving in early Arizona Republic Phoenix Arizona p E17 Archived from the original on June 30 2021 Retrieved December 25 2021 via Newspapers com a b CBS WGPR poised for Dec 11 switch The Times Herald Port Huron Michigan Associated Press November 18 1994 p 3A Archived from the original on January 26 2022 Retrieved January 26 2022 via Newspapers com a b Exchanging channels Network switch mixes things up The Atlanta Constitution December 9 1994 p P24 Archived from the original on August 9 2022 Retrieved August 9 2022 via Newspapers com Gunther Marc December 13 1994 CBS losses were big but not unexpected Detroit Free Press Detroit Michigan p 5D Archived from the original on January 23 2022 Retrieved January 23 2022 via Newspapers com a b Fox and CBS Pull the Switcheroo Musical Affiliates The Austin Chronicle Austin Texas June 16 1995 Archived from the original on August 9 2011 Retrieved February 6 2013 Pennington Gail August 4 1995 Power Base Rice To Televise Children s Shows For Inspiration St Louis Post Dispatch pp 1A 14A Archived from the original on May 1 2023 Retrieved April 3 2021 via Newspapers com Pennington Gail August 8 1996 Fox Kids Programming Moves To Channel 2 St Louis Post Dispatch p 6G Archived from the original on May 1 2023 Retrieved April 3 2021 via Newspapers com Rowe Jeri August 21 1996 Trekkie fans show gets hazy reception News amp Record p B1 a b Pressley Leigh July 20 1995 Station may change its call letters Greensboro News amp Record p D3 Archived from the original on April 29 2023 Retrieved June 22 2021 On June 25 1984 WJTM TV became WNRW TV PDF Broadcasting July 16 1984 p 2 ProQuest 1014712318 Archived PDF from the original on January 31 2023 Retrieved March 22 2023 Pressley Leigh August 24 1995 WNRW changes station call letters Greensboro News amp Record p B2 Gerds Warren August 27 1995 The Channel Changes What do they mean to you Green Bay Press Gazette Green Bay Wisconsin p D1 Archived from the original on August 11 2022 Retrieved April 30 2023 via Newspapers com Moon Troy January 1 1996 Here s the news Network switch means more news Pensacola News Journal Pensacola Florida p B1 Archived from the original on May 1 2023 Retrieved April 30 2023 via Newspapers com a b c Ryan Tim December 28 1995 It ll be Happy News Year on Hawaii TV stations An explosion of news programming will hit here on Jan 1 Honolulu Star Bulletin Honolulu Hawaii pp A1 A10 Retrieved May 1 2023 via Newspapers com a b Lorando Mark October 11 1995 Stations uncork plans for switch Happy New Year Network affiliations will change on Jan 1 The Times Picayune p E 1 Lafayette Jon December 15 1997 Birmingham s WBMG TV cleans house with news staff Electronic Media p 2 Retrieved April 30 2023 span, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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