TomCat4680 (talk | contribs) |
out of date - there are no current "affiliates" - this is no longer an active network since 2009 |
||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
{{outofdate}}{{cleanup}} |
|||
This is a '''list of affiliates of [[MyNetworkTV]]''', which launched on September 5, 2006, together with their former affiliation. The new network was created by [[Fox Television Stations Group]] to fill the void left on their [[UPN]] affiliates after [[The WB Television Network|the WB]] and UPN merged to form [[The CW Television Network]] on January 24, 2006. MNTV was then announced on February 22 of that year. |
This is a '''list of affiliates of [[MyNetworkTV]]''', which launched on September 5, 2006, together with their former affiliation. The new network was created by [[Fox Television Stations Group]] to fill the void left on their [[UPN]] affiliates after [[The WB Television Network|the WB]] and UPN merged to form [[The CW Television Network]] on January 24, 2006. MNTV was then announced on February 22 of that year. |
||
Revision as of 02:32, 13 February 2011
You must add a |reason=
parameter to this Cleanup template – replace it with {{Cleanup|reason=<Fill reason here>}}
, or remove the Cleanup template.
This is a list of affiliates of MyNetworkTV, which launched on September 5, 2006, together with their former affiliation. The new network was created by Fox Television Stations Group to fill the void left on their UPN affiliates after the WB and UPN merged to form The CW Television Network on January 24, 2006. MNTV was then announced on February 22 of that year.
The new network is based around nine UPN affiliates and one independent station owned by FTSG (a division of News Corporation). From March 1, 2006 to present, 157 more affiliates have signed up with the network, bringing MyNetworkTV's total distribution to 167 stations, covering 96 percent of the country. The largest of these additional affiliate groups is the Sinclair Broadcast Group, which has committed broadcast stations in 17 markets in which it operates. On May 15, 2006, Tribune Company announced that it will commit its last remaining three WB stations to MyNetworkTV. [2] All of Tribune's other WB stations are already joining The CW—since Tribune held a minority stake in The WB Television Network. Also, Univision, the largest Spanish language broadcaster in the United States, has committed its only English language station, KUVI-TV in Bakersfield, California.
KWKB in Iowa City, Iowa, owned by KM Communications, is currently the only station which carries both The CW (as a primary) and MyNetworkTV (as a secondary); until October 20, 2009, KNVA in Austin, Texas, owned by LIN Television, was the other. In addition, WTVY in Dothan, Alabama, a CBS affiliate owned by Gray Television, now carries MyNetworkTV on a digital subchannel which was previously affiliated with UPN, and also added a third digital subchannel for The CW. WTOK-TV in Meridian, Mississippi, also owned by Gray, has added a secondary MyNetworkTV affiliation to its then-Fox-affiliated digital subchannel and added another digital subchannel for The CW, in addition to ABC on its main channel.
On July 12, 2006, the network announced the affiliation of CBS Corporation-owned UPN affiliates WBFS in Miami, Florida and WUPL in New Orleans, Louisiana (the latter has since been sold to Belo) and WB affiliate WTCN-CA in West Palm Beach, Florida,[3] This agreement is surprising considering that MyNetworkTV came to be as a retaliatory move to the merger of UPN and The WB into The CW. Also announced on the same day were affiliation agreements in four additional markets, including Denver's KTVD-UPN 20, a Gannett owned station. In late July, MNTV added WZMY in Derry, New Hampshire (Boston-Manchester area), ending the long search for an affiliate in the Boston market.
On August 11, 2006, MNTV announced on its affiliates' website the addition of four new stations—WNAC, WNGT-LP, WEPX/WPXU, and KMMF.
On August 22, 2006, UPN station KAUT of Oklahoma City (previously owned by CBS Corporation, and owned by The New York Times Company at the time of MyNetworkTV's launch, now owned by Local TV), which was errorneously announced in the original CW press release as an affiliate for that network, was listed on MyNetworkTV's site as an affiliate. Shortly thereafter, an email from the station confirmed the same, and two days later MyNetworkTV confirmed it in the industry press. This officially gives the network full distribution in the top 50 markets. MyNetworkTV now has broadcast or cable affiliation in all of the top 100 markets; ironically, The CW is still missing three markets in the top 100 (see List of CW affiliates).
Though KFDF-CA (UPN) had previously been announced as the MyNetworkTV affiliate for the Fort Smith, Arkansas market (and is still listed as such on the MyNetworkTV website), its sister station KPBI-CA, which is losing its Fox affiliation, will assume the MyNetworkTV affiliation instead; KFDF-CA will instead join Retro Television Network. [4] (Due to the ownership change at KPBI, KFSM has picked up My Network for 5.2 as of Oct 1,2009)
In the summer of 2009 as the network converted to a syndicated programming service, the network lost several affiliates due to two factors. The first was the aftermath of the digital transition of June 12 and the Equity Media Holdings bankruptcy, where several stations which had not completed their digital facilities ended broadcasting and had also been purchased at auction by the religious broadcaster Daystar Television Network. Those stations which were low-power and unaffected by the transition were quickly converted to Daystar, with the remainder to follow once the digital facilities are built.
The network also nullified all affiliation agreements to convert to a programming service, leading Ion Media Networks to end their carriage of the service on September 28, 2009 on three stations and resume carrying Ion Television fulltime (those stations had been owned by another party which agreed to carry the network at the time of MyNetworkTV's launch, although they were managed by Ion directly). This led to MyNetworkTV's first agreement with CW affiliate WLMT in Memphis, Tennessee where that station would only air WWE SmackDown and disregard the other four nights of their schedule in order to keep that program airing in one of WWE's strongest markets. Additionally, Pappas Telecasting-owned KDMI in Des Moines, Iowa also dropped MyNetworkTV and became a full-time This TV affiliate; sister station KCWI-TV, the market's CW affiliate, then began airing SmackDown in a similar arrangement to WLMT. (The arrangements ended in October 2010 when the show moved to cable channel Syfy; thereafter, WLMT's Retro Television Network (RTV)-affiliated second digital subchannel picked up the entire MyNetworkTV lineup as a secondary affiliation.) And Sinclair-owned KMYS in San Antonio, Texas swapped affiliations with former CW affiliate KCWX, becoming the first known instance of an affiliation swap between a CW affiliate and a MyNetworkTV affiliate in the same market since the formation of both "networks" in 2006. Both of those stations are expected to change their call signs to KCWS and KMYX, respectively, some time in 2011 although neither of the changes has been confirmed yet.
For more information about the affiliation process, refer to the main network article.
Affiliates
- AThis column indicates the station's (or subchannel's, where applicable) network affiliation prior to My Network TV's launch. All networks shown were the station's full, primary affiliation unless noted otherwise.
- 1These stations carry MyNetworkTV on a digital subchannel viewable to anyone with a digital television; their digital mapping locations are shown.
- ²These stations carry MyNetworkTV as a secondary affliliation.
- ³This market's Fox affiliation switched from WUFX-TV to WDBD-TV on July 3.[5] (Note: Chip cites a story in the Clarion-Ledger.)
- 4Will also be carried on a digital subchannel of KFXK.
- 5Station became a 100% repeater of KREX-TV in January 2008, following a fire at that station's studios; KGJT returned to its own schedule in Fall 2008.
Former affiliates
DMA #
|
Market | Station | Former NetworkA | Ownership | Status |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
32. | Salt Lake City | KJZZ-TV 14 | Independent | Larry H. Miller Communications Corp. | Ended agreement with network and resumed independent status on August 18, 2008; network was programmed after midnight on this station due to sports and news coverage, and station never explicitly branded with the network |
Cedar City-St. George-Salt Lake City | KCSG 14 | America One | Southwest Media, LLC | Affiliation moved to KMYU/KUTV-DT2 in fall 2010; now affiliated with RTV full-time | |
37. | San Antonio, Texas | KMYS 35 | WB | Sinclair Broadcast Group | Swapped affiliations with KCWX and became a CW affiliate on August 30, 2010 |
44. | Austin, Texas | KNVA 54 | WB | LIN Television | Became affiliated solely with The CW on October 21, 2009; was a secondary affiliate airing the network immediately after CW programming. Mother station KXAN-TV converted its Llano satellite station KBVO to a full MyNetworkTV station serving the Austin market on September 28, 2009. |
48. | Memphis, Tennessee | WPXX-TV 50 | ION Network | ION Media Networks | Returned to airing Ion Television full-time September 28, 2009 |
63. | Lexington, Kentucky | WBLU-LP 62 | independent | Equity Broadcasting | Became a full-time Retro Television Network affiliate in 2008 [1]; temporarily went dark on or about July 22, 2008 due to "intermittent signal delivery issues".[2] Went dark permanently on March 4, 2009. Station was sold to the Daystar Television Network but never resumed broadcasting since that time. The station's license was cancelled on June 25, 2010. |
73. | Des Moines-Ames, Iowa | KDMI 56-11 | America One | Pappas Telecasting Companies | Became a full-time affiliate of This TV on September 21, 2009. |
KCWI 23 | N/A | Pappas Telecasting Companies | Station aired only WWE SmackDown from the network until September 11, 2010 (when it reverted to being a sole CW affiliate) and declined the remainder of the network's lineup. | ||
74. | Springfield, Missouri | KWBM 31 | WB | Equity Broadcasting | Sold in bankruptcy to Daystar and switched to that network 7/2009. |
95. | Burlington, VT-Plattsburgh, N.Y. | WGMU-CA 39 | UPN | Equity Broadcasting | Station was silent for several months in 2009 due to financial difficulties of Equity. Station since sold in an auction to Convergence Media and is now a satellite of RTV affiliate WNMN. Network affiliation moved to a new WNMN subchannel in mid-2010. |
101. | Greenville-New Bern-Washington, N.C. | WEPX 38 WPXU 35 |
ION Network | ION Media Networks | Returned to airing Ion Television full-time September 28, 2009 |
103. | Evansville, Indiana | WTSN-LP 63 | UPN | Evansville Low Power Partnership | Ended partnership with WEVV in May 2009. Station flash-cut to digital as WTSN-LD (on channel 36) and affiliated with America One full-time in June 2009. |
117. | Montgomery, Alabama | WRJM-TV 67 | UPN | Josie Park Broadcasting | Converted to American Music Video Network in April 2009. The station was subsequently renamed WIYC. |
138. | Monroe, Louisiana | KEJB 43 | UPN | KM Communications | Left the air June 4, 2010 due to equipment failure. License canceled on December 22, 2010 for not filing for a license to cover its digital facilities. |
141. | Beaumont-Port Arthur, TX | KUMY-LP 22 | Independent | Minority Broadcasting Company, LLC | Converted to the Retro Television Network (RTV) on October 1, 2010 |
166. | Missoula, Montana | KMMF 17² | Fox | Equity Broadcasting | Station's intellectual assets sold in April 2009 to Max Media, which purchased the assets at auction solely for acquiring the Fox affiliation. Fox moved to a KTMF subchannel in July 2009, and KMMF was shut down on June 12, 2009 due to lack of digital facilities constructed by Equity. It is unknown whether or not KTMF-DT2 picked up MyNetworkTV. |
173. | Rapid City, South Dakota | KKRA-LP 24 | ION Network | Rapid Broadcasting | Became a repeater of the main signal from full-power NBC affiliate KNBN in 2009. MyNetworkTV moved to that station's new third subchannel (see above). |
190. | Great Falls, Montana | KLMN 26 | UPN | Equity Broadcasting | Became a Fox affiliate in May 2007. Station sold in April 2009 to Max Media at auction, which bought the station solely for acquiring the Fox affiliation. Fox moved to a KFBB-TV subchannel in July 2009, and KLMN was shut down on June 12, 2009 due to lack of digital facilities constructed by Equity. The MyNetworkTV affiliation is now on KFBB's Fox subchannel as its secondary affiliation. |
201. | Lima, Ohio | WOHL-CA 25² | Fox | West Central Ohio Broadcasting (operated by Block Communications) |
Flash-cut to digital as WOHL-CD on June 12, 2009; switched to ABC on September 28, 2009 when that network's then-affiliate WLQP-LP temporarily ceased analog operations |