CBS/NBC affiliate in Yuma, Arizona
"KSWT" redirects here. Not to be confused with
KSTW
.
KYMA-DT
(channels 11 and 13) is a
television station
licensed to
Yuma, Arizona
, United States, serving the Yuma, Arizona?
El Centro, California
market
as an affiliate of
CBS
and
NBC
. It is owned by
Imagicomm Communications
, which maintains a
shared services
agreement (SSA) with
News-Press & Gazette Company
, owner of El Centro?licensed
Fox
/
ABC
/
CW+
affiliate
KECY-TV
(channel 9) and Yuma-licensed
low-power
Telemundo
affiliate
KESE-LD
(channel 35), for the provision of certain services. The three stations share studios on South 4th Avenue in downtown Yuma, with an advertising sales office on West Main Street in El Centro; KYMA-DT's transmitter is located northwest of Yuma.
The current KYMA-DT, which operated as KSWT from 1991 to 2020, is the result of the merger of the program streams on co-owned KSWT and
the former KYMA-DT
, which was required as a condition of their acquisition by
Apollo Global Management
in 2019.
History
[
edit
]
KBLU-TV
[
edit
]
When the
Federal Communications Commission
(FCC) lifted the freeze on new television station applications in 1952, they allocated VHF channels 11 and 13 for broadcast television service in Yuma. Valley Telecasting quickly applied for and opened
KIVA
on channel 11, becoming the city's first television station in October 1953. Wrather-Alvarez Broadcasting, owners of
KFMB-TV
in
San Diego
, followed with a January 1956 application to build KYAT on channel 13, but failed, and in September 1958, the
construction permit
was dismissed.
[4]
[5]
[6]
By November 1961, more than eight years after the arrival of local television, Yuma was still a one-station town.
In November 1961, Robert Crites, owner and manager of local CBS-affiliated radio station
KBLU
, formed a partnership, called Desert Telecasting, and applied to the FCC on November 30, 1961, for a construction permit to build a station on channel 13. New England Industries had filed a competing application for the same channel nearly a month earlier, but on July 23, 1962, the FCC granted the construction permit to Desert Telecasting, and KBLU came into existence, to be the market's CBS television affiliate.
[1]
[7]
It would not be an easy road to sign-on, as Bruce Merrill, owner of both KIVA and the local cable television system, was convinced that the market could not support a second local television station and fought to keep the new station from opening. Merrill opposed a KBLU-TV partnership restructure, an extension of time to construct the station, and a proposal to increase power, then, in September 1963, filed a "motion to stay" to prevent KBLU-TV from building its facilities.
[8]
[9]
[10]
All of Merrill's petitions were denied, and on the evening of December 2, 1963, one hour after receiving notice of program test authority, KBLU-TV began broadcasting.
[2]
The station expanded its coverage to El Centro in 1965 with another increase in power, and relocation of its transmitter from within the city of Yuma to a site atop Black Mountain, 28 miles (45 km) northwest of Yuma, at a much greater height above average terrain. It also opened an office and studio in El Centro to better serve the
Imperial Valley
.
[11]
On December 7, 1966, Desert Telecasting filed an application to transfer the stations to Eller Telecasting, part of Eller Outdoor Advertising Company. Ownership of the station would pass to
Karl Eller
, but the station would continue to be managed by Crites, who became president of Eller Telecasting.
[12]
KBLU-TV became part of Combined Communications in 1968, when its parent, Eller Outdoor Advertising Company, merged with KTAR Broadcasting Company.
[13]
[14]
The sudden demise of KIVA on January 31, 1970,
[15]
spelled more changes for KBLU-TV, which immediately moved to acquire the
NBC
affiliation, while the CBS affiliation passed to new station KECC-TV (now sister station KECY-TV).
[16]
KBLU-TV also took over the television studio facilities formerly occupied by KIVA.
In July 1977, Combined Communications announced that it was selling both radio station KBLU and TV station KBLU-TV, but to different owners. The TV station would keep its NBC affiliation, but was to be sold to Chapman Television of Tuscaloosa, effective January 1, 1978, pending FCC approval.
[17]
As FCC rules in effect at the time prohibited two stations to share call letters unless commonly-owned, and the radio station was keeping the KBLU call letters, Chapman requested the call sign KYEL-TV (for Yuma and El Centro). The call sign was found to be in use, but it was on a ship which had not been in service since 1803.
[18]
The FCC approved the sale on November 1, 1977, and on January 1, 1978, KBLU-TV became KYEL-TV.
[19]
KYEL-TV/KSWT
[
edit
]
Chapman Television did not keep the station long, selling it to Service Broadcasters, Inc. in November 1978, who, in turn, sold it to Beam Broadcasters in November 1983 (later known as Beacon Broadcasters). It remained an NBC affiliate until KYMA took the affiliation on February 1, 1991;
[20]
KYEL-TV took the
ABC
affiliation previously held by KYMA; the station became one of a few handful of TV stations to have held an affiliation with all of the "Big Three" networks in its history. In September 1991, Beacon Broadcasters sold the station to KB Media, who promptly renamed the station KSWT (for the Southwest Triangle, reflecting the triangular shape between the cities of Yuma, El Centro and Mexicali, Baja California) on September 13. In September 1994, CBS affiliate
KECY-TV
flipped to
Fox
, and KSWT took over the CBS affiliation once again; this left Yuma without an ABC affiliate until KECY launched an ABC-affiliated subchannel in January 2007.
[21]
For the twelve years and four months after KECY gained the Fox affiliation, ABC programming was provided on cable via San Diego affiliate
KGTV
(which was carried on cable systems in southeastern California) and Phoenix affiliate
KNXV-TV
(which had been carried on cable systems in west-central Arizona dating back to its time as a Fox affiliate). In February 1998, KB Media sold the station to Eclipse Media, and then in September 2000, Eclipse Media sold the station to
Pappas Telecasting
. KSWT also included
Telemundo
programming during the overnight hours in the 1990s, until local affiliate
KESE-LP
began operations. KSWT aired some
Pax
programming during afternoons beginning in 2000, but had reverted to full-time CBS by 2004.
In September 2006,
The CW
network launched nationwide, and KSWT added the network as a digital subchannel on 13.2. Adding the subchannel soon became a problem, as
Time Warner Cable
, the dominant local cable provider, placed the CW programming on channel 740, in a costlier digital cable package. KSWT requested that the channel be placed in the basic package on channel 6, where the market's cable-only
WB
affiliate, branded
KWUB
, had resided.
[22]
After several months of negotiations, the differences were settled, and in December 2006, KSWT digital subchannel 13.2 was placed on cable channel 6. In 2010, The CW moved to KECY's third digital subchannel, which inherited KSWT-DT2's cable carriage; KSWT replaced CW programming with a standard definition simulcast of its main programming; and 13.2 went dark.
In July 2013, Pappas filed to sell KSWT to Blackhawk Broadcasting, a company that shares ownership with the
Northwest Broadcasting
group. The deal required a failing station waiver, as Blackhawk concurrently acquired KYMA-DT from
Intermountain West Communications Company
.
[23]
The FCC granted the KSWT failed waiver request on December 23.
[24]
[25]
It previously approved the KYMA transaction earlier on August 12.
[26]
The sale of both stations was completed on February 18, 2014.
[27]
[28]
On July 2, 2014,
News-Press & Gazette Company
, owners of KECY-TV and KESE-LP, announced that it had agreed to form a resource sharing agreement with Blackhawk Broadcasting, giving NPG control of the
big four television network
affiliates in the Yuma?El Centro market. All employees of KSWT and KYMA-DT, except for sales personnel, became employees of NPG.
[29]
[30]
Blackhawk continues to operate the sales departments of its stations.
[31]
As a result of the agreement, KSWT and KYMA relocated to KECY's building on 4th Avenue.
[32]
Sale to Cox Media Group
[
edit
]
In 2019,
Apollo Global Management
acquired Northwest Broadcasting and
Cox Media Group
in acquisitions worth a combined $3.1 billion.
[33]
The parties were required, after a court ruling annulled changes in media ownership rules, to condition the transaction on the divestiture of one of the two licenses that Northwest held in two markets: Syracuse and Yuma, which would be done by surrender.
[34]
On January 13, 2020, the two stations switched call letters, with KSWT becoming KYMA-DT and the KYMA-DT license, selected for surrender, becoming KSWT. The KSWT call letters were also removed from all branding collateral for the CBS subchannel. Additionally, KYMA's subchannels were added to the channel 13 multiplex; the station warned antenna viewers to rescan by January 17 to continue receiving all services.
[35]
Sale to Imagicomm
[
edit
]
On March 29, 2022, Cox Media Group announced it would sell KYMA-DT and 17 other stations to Imagicomm Communications, an affiliate of the parent company of the
INSP
cable channel, for $488 million;
[36]
the sale was completed on August 1.
[37]
Programming
[
edit
]
Syndicated programming
[
edit
]
Syndicated
programming featured on KYMA-DT includes
Entertainment Tonight
,
AgDay
,
Rachael Ray
, and
The Doctors
.
News operation
[
edit
]
The CBS and NBC subchannels air separate newscasts at different times, retaining separate branding as they have since NPG took over operation of the then-Blackhawk stations.
[32]
On weekdays, the NBC subchannel airs an hour-long morning newscast at 6 a.m., as well as half-hour newscasts at 5, 6 and 10 p.m. titled
News 11
, as well as weekend early evening and late newscasts.
The CBS subchannel does not offer a live morning newscast; instead, it airs two hour-long evening newscasts at 4 and 6 p.m., and a 10 p.m. newscast, all titled
13 On Your Side
. Its only weekend newscasts air at 10 p.m.
Notable former on-air staff
[
edit
]
Technical information
[
edit
]
Subchannels
[
edit
]
The station's signal is
multiplexed
:
When the channel 11 multiplex was shut down, its subchannels of NBC and Ion Television moved to the channel 13 transmitter as subchannels 11.1 and 13.4.
Analog-to-digital conversion
[
edit
]
KSWT shut down its analog signal, over
VHF
channel 13, on June 12, 2009, the official date on which full-power television stations in the United States
transitioned from analog to digital broadcasts
under federal mandate. The station's digital signal relocated from its pre-transition
UHF
channel 16 to VHF channel 13 for post-transition operations.
[42]
Former rebroadcasters
[
edit
]
Both programming streams of then-KSWT had been rebroadcast on stations licensed to
Wellton-Mohawk, Arizona
, until the translator stations' licensee, Wellton-Mohawk Irrigation & Drainage District, shut down the stations on August 18, 2009.
[43]
See also
[
edit
]
References
[
edit
]
- ^
a
b
"Channel 13 Is Allocated To Yuma TV Firm"
,
Yuma Daily Sun, The
, p. 10, July 25, 1962
- ^
a
b
"KBLU-TV On the Air"
,
Yuma Daily Sun, The
, p. 2, December 3, 1963
- ^
"Facility Technical Data for KYMA-DT"
.
Licensing and Management System
.
Federal Communications Commission
.
- ^
"Second Television Station for Yuma Approved by FCC"
,
Yuma Daily Sun, The
, p. 1, January 26, 1956
- ^
"Rejection Urged For Proposed Yuma TV Station",
Yuma Daily Sun, The
, p. 1, June 26, 1958
- ^
"Yuma TV Petition Rejected by FCC"
,
Yuma Daily Sun, The
, p. 1, September 18, 1958
- ^
"Battle Looms for Channel 13 Here"
,
Yuma Daily Sun, The
, p. 1, December 5, 1961
- ^
"KIVA Opposes Petitions Presented by KBLU-TV"
,
Yuma Daily Sun, The
, p. 1, April 12, 1963
- ^
"KBLU-TV Request To Hike Visual Power Is Opposed"
,
Yuma Daily Sun, The
, p. 1, June 6, 1963
- ^
"KIVA Seeks To Halt Work On KBLU-TV"
,
Yuma Daily Sun, The
, p. 1, September 17, 1963
- ^
"KBLU Plans Increase In Power"
,
Yuma Daily Sun, The
, p. 12, August 22, 1965
- ^
"Public Notices",
Yuma Daily Sun, The
, p. 11, December 16, 1966
- ^
"Yuma TV and Radio Outlets in Merger Plan"
,
Yuma Daily Sun, The
, p. 1, December 27, 1967
- ^
"Legal Advertisements"
,
Yuma Daily Sun, The
, p. 9-B, May 22, 1968
- ^
"KIVA-TV Will Go Off The Air as of Jan. 31st"
.
Yuma Daily Sun
. January 14, 1970. p. 1.
- ^
"Networks Turn Over"
,
Yuma Daily Sun, The
, p. 5, February 1, 1970
- ^
"Yuma KBLU sold; radio, TV to split"
,
Yuma Daily Sun, The
, p. 1, July 21, 1977
- ^
Johnson, Christina (August 5, 1977),
"Change is coming to local tv station"
,
Yuma Daily Sun, The
, p. 30
- ^
"KBLU radio-TV split is approved by FCC"
,
Yuma Daily Sun, The
, p. 21, November 1, 1977
- ^
"Sunbelt Communications Company Introduction to Internship"
.
College of Southern Nevada
. 2008. Archived from
the original
(DOC)
on May 28, 2010
. Retrieved
December 29,
2017
.
- ^
"New Fox affiliates KECY-TV Yuma-El Centro, Ariz., and KARD-TV Monroe, La., drew strong November sweeps numbers"
.
Broadcasting & Cable
. January 2, 1995
. Retrieved
April 8,
2008
.
- ^
Reynolds, Sarah (November 29, 2006).
"Time's Almost Up for KSWT, Time Warner Negotiations"
.
The Sun (Yuma AZ)
. Retrieved
April 8,
2008
.
- ^
"Application For Consent To Assignment Of Broadcast Station Construction Permit Or License"
.
CDBS Public Access
.
Federal Communications Commission
. July 22, 2013
. Retrieved
July 23,
2013
.
- ^
"Archived copy"
(PDF)
. Archived from
the original
(PDF)
on January 16, 2014
. Retrieved
January 14,
2014
.
{{
cite web
}}
: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (
link
)
- ^
http://licensing.fcc.gov/cgi-bin/prod/cdbs/forms/prod/getimportletter_exh.cgi?import_letter_id=45843
[
bare URL PDF
]
- ^
"Archived copy"
(PDF)
. Archived from
the original
(PDF)
on January 16, 2014
. Retrieved
January 14,
2014
.
{{
cite web
}}
: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (
link
)
- ^
Consummation Notice
,
CDBS Public Access
,
Federal Communications Commission
, Retrieved February 19, 2014
- ^
Consummation Notice
,
CDBS Public Access
,
Federal Communications Commission
, Retrieved February 19, 2014
- ^
NPG Takes Over Yuma/El Centro Stations
ftvlive.com
, July 2, 2014, Retrieved July 9, 2014.
- ^
One Station Group Makes Big Move in a Small Market
,
TVSpy.com
, July 3, 2014, Retrieved July 9, 2014.
- ^
Lobeck, Joyce (July 9, 2014).
"4 major TV network affiliates here will share management"
.
Yuma Sun
. Retrieved
July 14,
2014
.
- ^
a
b
Lobeck, Joyce (July 9, 2014).
"Yuma TV stations await completion of agreement"
.
Yuma Sun
. Retrieved
July 14,
2014
.
- ^
Jessell, Harry A. (March 6, 2019).
"Cox TV Valued At $3.1 Billion In Apollo Acquisition"
.
TVNewsCheck
. NewsCheckMedia LLC
. Retrieved
March 6,
2019
.
- ^
"Court Decision Forces Cox And Apollo To Rework Their Deal"
.
Inside Radio
. October 31, 2019
. Retrieved
January 14,
2020
.
- ^
"Rescan your TV to keep valued programming"
.
KYMA
. January 9, 2020
. Retrieved
January 14,
2020
.
- ^
Venta, Lance (March 30, 2022).
"Cox Breaks Up Combined Radio/TV Cluster In Tulsa As Part Of Twelve Market Divestiture"
.
RadioInsight
. Retrieved
March 30,
2022
.
- ^
Winslow, George (August 1, 2022).
"Cox Media Group, INSP Close Deal for Sale of Cox TV Stations to Imagicomm"
.
TVTechnology
. Retrieved
August 2,
2022
.
- ^
"Fox News Bios"
.
Fox News
. Retrieved
July 27,
2009
.
- ^
"KNBC-TV Talent Biographies"
. Retrieved
April 8,
2008
.
- ^
Bohannan, Larry (December 26, 2023).
"Fred Roggin trading Los Angeles sports for a new kind of newscast in the desert"
.
The Desert Sun
. Retrieved
January 7,
2024
.
- ^
RabbitEars TV Query for KYMA-DT
- ^
"DTV Tentative Channel Designations for the First and the Second Rounds"
(PDF)
. Archived from
the original
(PDF)
on August 29, 2013
. Retrieved
March 24,
2012
.
- ^
"Station Search Details"
.
FCC CDBS Database
. August 18, 2009
. Retrieved
October 26,
2010
.
External links
[
edit
]
|
---|
Reception may vary by location and some stations may only be viewable with
cable television
|
Yuma, Arizona
El Centro, California
|
- KYUM-LD
(2/15
Vida
)
- KVYE
(7.1
UNI
, 7.2
blank
, 7.3
Comet
, 7.4
Charge
, 7.5
Court
)
- K19CX-D
(8.1
PBS
, 8.2 Eight Life, 8.3
World
, 8.4
PBS Kids
24/7, 8.5
KBAQ
simulcast)
- KECY-TV
(9.1
Fox
/
MNTV
, 9.2
ABC
, 9.3
CW+
,
9.4
TMD
)
- KYMA-DT
(11.1
NBC
, 13.1
CBS
, 13.3
Estrella
, 13.4
Ion
)
- K17LM-D
- K33MD-D/K42KZ-D
(33.x/42.x XHILA-TDT)
- K24NI-D (24.1 GNTV, 24.2
3ABN
Latino, 24.3 GNTV Kids, 24.4 AFTV)
- KAZS
(27.1
AZFS
, 27.2
Outlaw
, 27.3
The365
)
- KESE-LD
(35.1
TMD
)
- KBFY-LD
(41.1
blank
, 41.2
Scripps News
, 41.3
Laff
, 41.4
Defy
, 41.5 unknown, 41.6
Buzzr
)
- KAJB
(54.1
UniMas
, 54.2
LATV
, 54.3
TBD
, 54.4
Nest
)
|
---|
Mexicali, BC
San Luis, Son.
| |
---|
Adjacent locals
| Phoenix, AZ
|
- KTVK
(3.1
Ind.
, 3.2
Comet
, 3.3
Outlaw
, 3.4
This
, 3.5 Weather)
- KPHO-TV
(5.1
CBS
, 5.2
Cozi
, 5.3
Dabl
, 5.4
LC
, 5.5
TBD
)
- KAET
(8.1
PBS
, 8.2
Life
, 8.3
World
, 8.4
Kids
, 8.5
K-Bach
Audio
)
- KSAZ-TV
(10.1
Fox
, 10.3
H&I
, 10.4
Grio
, 10.5
FWC
)
- KPNX
(12.1
NBC
, 12.2
LC
, 12.3
Crime
, 12.4
Quest
, 12.5
Nest
)
- KNXV-TV
(15.1
ABC
, 15.2
ANT
, 15.3
Laff
, 15.5
QVC2
)
- KPAZ-TV
(21.1
TBN
, 21.2
Inspire
, 21.3
Smile
, 21.4
Enlace
, 21.5
Positiv
)
- KTVW-DT
(33.1
UNI
,
33.2
UniMas
, 33.3
Grit
, 33.4
Bounce
, 33.5
LC
)
- KTAZ
(39.1
TMD
, 39.2
TXO
, 39.3
Cozi
, 39.4
LX
, 39.5
Oxygen
)
- KUTP
(
10.2
UHF
simulcast of
Fox
, 45.1
MNT
, 45.2
Movies!
, 45.3
Buzzr
, 45.4
Catchy
, 45.5
Start
)
- KPPX-TV
(51.1
Ion
, 51.2
Bounce
, 51.3
Court
, 51.4
Scripps
, 51.5
Defy
, 51.6
Grit
, 51.7
JTV
, 51.8
QVC
)
- KASW
(61.1
Ind.
, 61.2
HSN
, 61.5
Grit
, 61.6
Mystery
)
|
---|
Prescott, AZ
| |
---|
Los Angeles, CA
|
- KCBS-TV
(2.1
CBS
, 2.2
Start
, 2.3
Dabl
, 2.4
Fave
)
- KNBC
(4.1
NBC
, 4.2
Cozi
4.3
LX
, 4.4
Oxygen
)
- KTLA
(5.1
CW
, 5.2
ANT
, 5.3
Court
, 5.4
TBD
, 5.5
REW
)
- KCAL-TV
(9.1
Ind
, 9.2
Nest
, 9.3
Charge!
, 9.4
HSN
, 9.5
QVC
)
- KTTV
(11.1
Fox
, 11.2
Fox WX
, 11.3
Grio
, 11.4
Catchy
)
- KCOP-TV
(13.1
MNTV
, 13.2
Buzzr
, 13.3
Movies!
, 13.4
H&I
)
|
---|
San Diego, CA
| |
---|
|
---|
Cable-only
| |
---|
Defunct stations
| |
---|
|
|
---|
ABC
| |
---|
CBS
| |
---|
Fox
| |
---|
NBC
| |
---|
The CW
| |
---|
MyNetworkTV
| |
---|
Ion
| |
---|
PBS
| |
---|
Religious
| |
---|
Other stations and
subchannels
| Phoenix market
|
- KTVK 3
(Phoenix,
Ind.
)
- KTVK-DT 3.2
(Phoenix,
Comet
)
- KPHO-DT 5.2
(Phoenix,
Cozi
)
- KMOH-TV 6.1
(
Kingman
,
MeTV
)
- KAZT-DT 7.2
(Prescott,
MeTV
)
- KAZT-DT 7.3
(Prescott,
HSN
)
- KAZT-DT 7.4
(Prescott,
Charge!
)
- KSAZ-DT 10.2
(Phoenix,
H&I
)
- KSAZ-DT 10.3
(Phoenix,
Grio
)
- KWKM-LP 10
(
Show Low
,
A1
)
- KPNX-DT 12.3
(Mesa,
Crime
)
- KPNX-DT 12.4
(Mesa,
Quest
)
- KWSJ-LP 12
(
Snowflake
,
A1
)
- KNXV-DT 15.2
(Phoenix,
ANT
)
- KNXV-DT 15.3
(Phoenix,
Laff
)
- K18DD-D
(
Camp Verde
,
3ABN
/
EVINE Live
)
- KTVW-DT 33.3
(Phoenix,
Grit
- KTVW-DT 33.4
(Phoenix,
Bounce
)
- KKAX-LD 36
(Kingman,
A1
)
- K14RK-D 38.2
(Phoenix,
Tuff
)
- K14RK-D 38.3
(Phoenix,
Videos
)
- K14RK-D 38.4
(Phoenix,
CMT
)
- KEJR-LD 40.2
(Phoenix,
MeTV+
)
- KPDF-CD 41.4
(Phoenix,
Ads
)
- KPHE-LD 44
(Phoenix,
Ind.
)
- KLHU-CD 45
(
Lake Havasu City
, Community/
Ind.
)
- KSAZ-LD
STA
(
Whiteriver
,
MNTV
/
Fox
)
- KUTP-LD 45
(
Williams
,
MNTV
/
Fox
)
- KUTP-DT 45.2
(Phoenix,
Movies!
)
- KUTP-DT 45.3
(Phoenix,
Buzzr
)
- KECY-LD 46
(
Parker
/
Blythe, CA
,
ABC
/
CBS
/
The CW
)
- K48NG
(Parker/Blythe, CA,
Fox
/
MNTV
/
NBC
)
- KDVD-LD 50 (Phoenix,
Ads
)
- KPPX-DT 51.2
(
Tolleson
,
Bounce TV
)
- KPPX-DT 51.3
(Tolleson,
Court TV
)
- KDPH-LD 58
(Phoenix,
JTV
)
- KASW 61
ATSC 3.0
(Phoenix,
Ind.
)
- KASW-DT 61.2
(Phoenix,
Start
)
- KASW-DT 61.3
(Phoenix,
Grit
)
- KASW-DT 61.4
(Phoenix,
Mystery
)
|
---|
Tucson market
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- KVOA-DT 4.2
(Tucson,
Cozi
)
- KVOA-DT 4.3
(Tucson,
Mystery
)
- KGUN-DT 9.2
(Tucson,
Laff
)
- KGUN-DT 9.3
(Tucson,
ANT
)
- KGUN-DT 9.4
(Tucson,
Bounce
)
- KMSB-DT 11.2
(Tucson,
Movies!
)
- KMSB-DT 11.3
(Tucson,
Crime
)
- KMSB-DT 11.4
(Tucson,
Quest
)
- KOLD-DT 13.2
(Tucson,
MeTV
)
- KOLD-DT 13.3
(Tucson,
Circle
)
- KTTU-DT 18.3
(Tucson,
H&I
)
- K35OU-D 21
(Tucson,
HSN
)
- KUVE-DT 46.3
(
Green Valley
,
getTV
)
- KUVE-DT 46.4
(Green Valley,
Mystery
)
- KWBA-DT 58.3
(
Sierra Vista
,
Grit
)
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Defunct
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Newspapers
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Radio stations
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Television stations
(by primary affiliations)
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- 1
This station was built and signed on by NPG.
- 2
This station is owned by VistaWest Media, LLC, but is operated by NPG under an
SSA
.
- 3
This station is owned by
Imagicomm Communications
, but is operated by NPG under an SSA.
- 4
This station carries a secondary MyNetworkTV affiliation on its primary channel.
- 5
This station carries a secondary
Retro Television Network
affiliation on its second digital subchannel.
- 6
This station is owned by
Hubbard Broadcasting
, but is operated by NPG.
- 7
Originally operating as a cable-only channel, News-Press 3 NOW is also relayed on a third digital subchannel of KNPN-LD.
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