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{{short description|TV station in Hoover, Alabama}}
{{Infobox broadcast
{{update|date=January 2021}}
| call_letters = WPXH-TV
{{Use mdy dates|date=March 2024}}
| city = Gadsden, Alabama
{{Infobox television station
| station_logo =
| station_branding = Ion Television | callsign = WPXH-TV
| city = Hoover, Alabama{{efn|Originally licensed to ]; moved to Hoover in 2019.<ref name="wpxhhoover">{{cite web|url=https://enterpriseefiling.fcc.gov/dataentry/api/download/attachment/25076f91677bbdd8016780570ee00539|title=COL Petition for Rulemaking - WPXH-TV Gadsden to Hoover|work=Licensing and Management System|publisher=]|date=December 3, 2018|access-date=February 9, 2019}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=https://enterpriseefiling.fcc.gov/dataentry/public/tv/draftCopy.html?displayType=html&appKey=25076f916a4c56eb016a518346f0028f&id=25076f916a4c56eb016a518346f0028f&goBack=N|title=Modification of a License for DTV Application|work=Licensing and Management System|publisher=]|date=May 7, 2019|access-date=May 7, 2019}}</ref>}}
| station_slogan = ''Positively Entertaining''
| branding = Ion
| digital = 45 (])<br>]: 44 (])
| digital = 33 (])
| subchannels = 44.1 Ion Television<br>44.2 ]<br>44.3 ]<br>44.4 iShop<br>44.5 ]<br>44.6 ]
| other_chs = | virtual = 44
| affiliations = ] | subchannels =
| affiliations = {{ubl|'''44.1:''' ]|''for others, see {{section link||Subchannels}}''}}
| owner = ]
| licensee = Ion Media License Company, LLC | owner = Inyo Broadcast Holdings
| location = ]/] | licensee = Inyo Broadcast Licenses ]
| country = ] | location = ]–]
| country = United States
| airdate = {{start date and age|1986|04}}<ref>The ''Broadcasting and Cable Yearbook'' says April 26, while the ''Television and Cable Factbook'' says April 25.</ref>
| enddate = | founded = July 16, 1984
| airdate = {{Start date and age|1986|4}}{{efn|The ''Broadcasting and Cable Yearbook'' says April 26, while the ''Television and Cable Factbook'' says April 25.}}
| callsign_meaning = '''P'''a'''X''' TV Birming'''H'''am
| sister_stations = | callsign_meaning = "Pax"
| former_callsigns = WNAL-TV (1986–1998) | former_callsigns = WNAL-TV (1986–1998)
| former_channel_numbers = '''Analog''':<br>44 (UHF, 1986–2009) | former_channel_numbers = {{ubl|'''Analog:''' 44 (UHF, 1986–2009)|'''Digital:''' 45 (UHF, until 2019)}}
| former_affiliations = '''Primary''':<br>] (1986–1996; as satellite of ], 1991–1996)<br>] (1996–1999)<br>] (1999)<br>] (1999–2005)<br>] (2005–2007)<br>'''Secondary''':<br>] (1996) | former_affiliations = {{ubl|] (April–October 1986, May–August 1999)|] (1986–1996; via ], 1991–1996)|] (1996–May 1999)|] (secondary, January−September 1996)}}
| effective_radiated_power = 225 ] | erp = 300 ]
| HAAT = 309 m | haat = {{convert|318.4|m|ft|0|abbr=on}}
| facility_id = 73312 | facility_id = 73312
| coordinates = {{coord|33|53|26.8|N|86|28|13.3|W|type:landmark_scale:2000}} | coordinates = {{coord|33|29|2|N|86|48|21|W|type:landmark_scale:2000|display=inline, title}}
| licensing_authority = ] | licensing_authority = ]
| homepage = | website = {{URL|https://iontelevision.com/}}
}} }}


'''WPXH-TV''', ] 44 (] ] channel 45), is an ] ] ] for ], ] to ]. The station is owned by ]. WPXH maintains offices located on Golden Crest Drive in Birmingham, and its transmitter is located in ]. '''WPXH-TV''' (channel 44) is a ] licensed to ], United States, serving the ] area as an affiliate of ]. The station is owned by Inyo Broadcast Holdings, and maintains offices on Golden Crest Drive in Birmingham and a transmitter atop ], near the city's southern edge.


==History== ==History==
===As a satellite of WTTO and WDBB===
In 1986, WDBB (channel 17) in ] was slated to become central Alabama's affiliate for the upstate ] network. Even though it had moved its license from ] earlier in the year and built a more powerful tower closer to Birmingham, its signal was still marginal at best in the northern part of the market. In the days when cable still didn't have much penetration, WDBB faced the problem of getting its signal into the entire market.
The station traces its creation to issues involving ] WDBB (channel 17) in ], which was looking to increase its profile in central Alabama. When that station signed on in October 1984, at a time when ] still did not have much penetration in the region, WDBB faced problems in trying to improve its coverage throughout the central part of the state, as its signal was nowhere near strong enough to cover the northern half of the market, particularly areas to the northeast of Birmingham proper. Although WDBB's founding owner, Dubose Broadcasting, invested heavily in the station and acquired a strong inventory of syndicated programming, the signal's inability to reach most of central Alabama put WDBB at a severe disadvantage against the area's other major independent, ] (channel 21) in Birmingham, which had early on established itself as one of the strongest independent stations in the ] and the United States as a whole.


DuBose found a solution when the ] (FCC) awarded the company a ] to launch a television station in ] on UHF channel 44. That station signed on in April 1986 as WNAL-TV, originally operating as a full-time ] for the northern half of the market—specifically, areas to the east of downtown Birmingham—that could not receive the WDBB signal. Shortly before WNAL signed on, DuBose reached an agreement with the ] to become the network's charter affiliate for central Alabama after WTTO turned down an offer to join the network. WDBB further strengthened its hand by using its forthcoming status as a network affiliate to make a concerted effort to improve its reach in Birmingham by applying to transfer its ] to ], {{convert|15.5|mi|km}} southwest of Birmingham, which allowed it to build a new transmitter tower located closer to Birmingham that would provide a much stronger signal in the western portion of the city.
To solve this problem, owner DuBose Broadcasting signed on '''WNAL-TV''' from Gadsden in late April to serve as a full-time ] for the northern half of the market. WDBB/WNAL officially joined Fox when that network launched on October 6, 1986. Despite the stations' relatively strong program lineup, fellow independent station ] (channel 21) in ] had stronger ratings than channels 44 and 17. Additionally, neither WNAL nor WDBB had a strong signal reach into Birmingham, and several Birmingham cable companies declined to carry the stations. As a result, WDBB/WNAL was not profitable.


WDBB and WNAL became a Fox charter affiliate when the network officially launched on October 9, 1986. As was the case with other Fox stations during the network's early years, channels 17 and 44 continued to program as ''de facto'' independent stations as the ] ''] Starring ]'' was the network's only program initially; when Fox debuted its prime time schedule in April 1987, the network only carried evening programming on weekends, and would not carry seven nights a week of programming until June 1993. Until Fox began airing programming on a nightly basis, WDBB and WNAL aired ] (and later, syndicated programs) at 7&nbsp;p.m. on nights when the network was not scheduled to air any programming.
In January 1991, after all efforts to get better cable coverage for WDBB/WNAL failed, Fox moved its Birmingham affiliation to WTTO. Soon afterward, WDBB and WNAL began simulcasting WTTO for all but two hours of the broadcast day. By 1993, WDBB and WNAL operated as full-time satellites of WTTO. The WTTO/WNAL/WDBB combination (which nonetheless branded only as "Fox 21", signifying WTTO's channel allocation) eventually became one of the strongest Fox affiliates in the country. In 1995, both WNAL and WDBB began airing separate programming during the daytime hours. That year, WNAL was purchased by Fant Broadcasting.


Despite covering roughly half of central Alabama over-the-air and the two stations maintaining a relatively strong program lineup, the signal of WDBB did not provide better than ] coverage (at best) within Birmingham proper. Due to the eastward location of its transmitter tower, WNAL's signal did not penetrate well into Birmingham either, only reaching as far west as extreme eastern ]. In addition, several major cable providers in the Birmingham market, including in Jefferson and ] counties, refused to carry the station for this reason. Ultimately, WDBB/WNAL was not profitable. After all efforts to increase the stations' cable coverage failed, Fox signed an agreement to make WTTO its new Birmingham affiliate and moved its programming to channel 21 in January 1991.
In 1994, ] sold longtime ] affiliate ] (channel 6) to ] (which had signed a deal with Fox that May to affiliate with twelve of its stations after acquiring the rights to the ]'s ] television package<ref>{{cite news|title=Fox Gains 12 Stations in New World Deal|url=http://www.highbeam.com/doc/1P2-4230288.html|accessdate=June 1, 2013|newspaper=]|date=May 23, 1994}}</ref>) – only to place it in an outside trust company, which would then sell it directly to Fox, after New World purchased ] affiliate ] (channel 13) in a four-station deal with Argyle Broadcasting (which would have left New World over the FCC-mandated limit of 12 stations that was in effect at the time). This forced a complicated series of affiliation changes for six central Alabama stations that took effect on September 1, 1996. On that date, WBRC became the sole Fox affiliate for central Alabama (after having to be run as an ABC affiliate for a year under Fox ownership as its affiliation contract with the network did not expire until September 1); ] affiliates WCFT-TV (channel 33) in Tuscaloosa and WJSU-TV (channel 40) in ], became full-power satellites to the Birmingham market’s new ABC affiliate, ] (channel 58). WNAL, which prior to the massive affiliation switch had become a secondary affiliate of ], became the CBS affiliate for northeast Alabama.


Soon afterward, DuBose reached an agreement with Abry Communications in which WDBB and WNAL would convert into ] of WTTO and begin simulcasting its programming for the vast majority of their broadcast day, with separate syndicated programming airing during the three hours that the stations continued to program themselves. As part of the deal, WDBB/WNAL merged its stronger inventory of programming onto WTTO's schedule, with the local rights to some classic ]s on its schedule that it could not retain or move elsewhere on the schedule being sold to ] (channel 68) in Birmingham, which converted into a general entertainment independent around the same time the WTTO/WDBB/WNAL simulcasting arrangement went into place. The station subsequently began identifying as "Fox 21", using the channel allocation of WTTO as a universal brand for it and its repeaters. The combination of WTTO, WDBB and WNAL provided a strong combined signal throughout the central third of Alabama that was comparable to those of ] affiliate ] (channel 6) and ] affiliate ] (channel 13). In 1993, Abry had purchased WDBB and WNAL outright and converted both stations into full-time satellite stations of WTTO, resulting in the removal of local programming on the former two stations.
In 1998, the Tuscaloosa and Anniston/Gadsden areas were merged back into the Birmingham market as the result of the 1996 merger of WCFT, WJSU, and WBMA-LP into Birmingham's ABC affiliate, causing it to jump 12 places from 51st to 39th place among the Nielsen media markets;<ref name="em121597">Lafayette, Jon. "Birmingham's WBMG-TV cleans house with news staff." ''Electronic Media'' 15 December 1997: 2.</ref> in effect, resulting in the market becoming very large geographically, stretching across nearly the entire width of the state from the Alabama-] state line westward to the ]-Alabama border. The market's official CBS affiliate was Birmingham-licensed WBMG (channel 42, now ]).


By 1994, the WTTO/WDBB/WNAL combination had become one of the highest-rated Fox affiliates in the country, and managed to overtake then-underperforming ] affiliate WBMG (channel 42, now ]) as the third-highest-rated television station in central Alabama. Late that year, both WDBB and WNAL began airing separate programming during the daytime and late evening hours, consisting of syndicated sitcoms, ] and ] that WTTO did not hold the rights to broadcast as well as local newscasts. That same year, the ]–based ] acquired WTTO, WDBB and WNAL when it merged with Abry Communications, which also assumed a ] with WABM (a deal signed the previous year when WABM was sold to a locally based group). In 1995, WNAL was purchased by Fant Broadcasting, but continued to simulcast WTTO's programming through a time brokerage agreement.
Around this time, Paxson Communications (now ]) purchased WNAL with the intent of making it a charter ] of Pax TV (later i: Independent Television, now ]) for the Birmingham market. Soon afterwards, the station changed its call letters to '''WPXH-TV'''. However, channel 44 remained a CBS affiliate even after Pax TV debuted on August 31, 1998. In May 1999, WPXH dropped its CBS affiliation, and briefly became an independent station targeting Anniston and surrounding areas. The station finally switched to Pax TV in August 1999.


===As a CBS affiliate===
{{ION DTV|44}}<ref></ref>
In March 1994, ] agreed to sell WBRC to ], as part of a deal that also involved three of the former group's other television stations (] in ], ] in ] and ] in ]).<ref>{{cite news|title=COMPANY NEWS; GREAT AMERICAN SELLING FOUR TELEVISION STATIONS|url=https://www.nytimes.com/1994/05/06/business/company-news-great-american-selling-four-television-stations.html|newspaper=]|date=May 6, 1994|access-date=December 12, 2015}}</ref><ref name="Geoffrey Foisie">{{cite web|title=Argyle socks away profit. (New World Communications Group Inc. acquires Argyle Television Holdings)|url=https://www.highbeam.com/doc/1G1-15493423.html|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160109123708/https://www.highbeam.com/doc/1G1-15493423.html|url-status=dead|archive-date=January 9, 2016|first=Geoffrey|last=Foisie|periodical=Broadcasting & Cable|publisher=Cahners Business Information|date=May 30, 1994|access-date=December 12, 2015}}</ref><ref name="highbeam.com">{{cite news|title=Fox Gains 12 Stations in New World Deal|url=http://www.highbeam.com/doc/1P2-4230288.html|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20131011163409/http://www.highbeam.com/doc/1P2-4230288.html|url-status=dead|archive-date=October 11, 2013|newspaper=]|publisher=]|date=May 23, 1994|access-date=June 1, 2013}}</ref> Subsequently, three weeks later, New World agreed to purchase WVTM and three other stations (] in ], ] in ], and ] in ]) from Argyle Television Holdings.<ref name="Geoffrey Foisie"/> New World was now faced with the prospect of having to divest as many as three of the acquired stations as the FCC forbade broadcasting companies from owning two commercial television stations in the same market, and restricted them from owning more than twelve stations nationwide (the concurrent acquisitions of the Argyle and Citicasters stations put New World three stations over the national television ownership cap).


On May 23, 1994, six months after the network signed a deal with the ] (NFL) to acquire the rights to the ] television package, New World signed an affiliation agreement with Fox to switch twelve of its television stations—six that New World had already owned and eight that the company was in the process of acquiring through the Argyle and Citicasters deals, including WBRC—to the network, once their existing affiliation contracts with CBS, NBC or ABC expired.<ref name="highbeam.com"/> Although WTTO was one of Fox's strongest affiliates at the time, the network saw the opportunity to affiliate with WBRC because it had been the highest-rated station in the Birmingham market for most of its history.
===Analog-to-digital conversion===

WPXH-TV shut down its analog signal, over ] channel 44, on June 12, 2009, the official date in which full-power television stations in the United States ] under federal mandate. The station's digital signal remained on its pre-transition UHF channel 45.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://hraunfoss.fcc.gov/edocs_public/attachmatch/DA-06-1082A2.pdf |title=DTV Tentative Channel Designations for the First and Second Rounds |format=PDF |date= |accessdate=2012-03-24}}</ref> Through the use of ], digital television receivers display the station's ] as its former UHF analog channel 44.
Seeing a chance to solve its ownership conflicts in Birmingham, New World reached an agreement with Citicasters to sell WBRC (as well as WGHP) directly to the network's ] group, ], in return for $130 million in ]s; New World would also establish an outside ] that would operate channel 6 until the sale was completed.<ref>{{cite web|title=Fox et al. to buy three stations; affiliation shuffle continues|url=https://www.highbeam.com/doc/1G1-15738628.html|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160109123708/https://www.highbeam.com/doc/1G1-15738628.html|url-status=dead|archive-date=January 9, 2016|first=Geoffrey|last=Foisie|first2=Julie A.|last2=Zier|periodical=]|publisher=]|date=August 22, 1994|access-date=December 12, 2015}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|title=The FCC last week approved New World's plans to transfer WGHP-TV Greensboro, N.C., and WBRC-TV Birmingham, Ala., into a trust for eventual sale to Fox|url=https://www.highbeam.com/doc/1G1-16799904.html|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20151016073449/http://www.highbeam.com/doc/1G1-16799904.html|url-status=dead|archive-date=October 16, 2015|first=Kim|last=McAvoy|periodical=Broadcasting & Cable|publisher=Cahners Business Information|date=April 10, 1995|access-date=December 12, 2015}}</ref>

Even though the sale would be finalized on July 24, 1995, Fox Television Stations could not convert WBRC into a Fox owned-and-operated station in the short term as the station's affiliation agreement with ABC was not set to expire until August 31, 1996. While this put WBRC in the rare position of being owned by the O&O group of one network while still affiliated with another, it also gave ABC enough time to find a replacement affiliate in Birmingham; this was also instrumental in causing a complicated series of affiliation changes involving six central Alabama stations. In November 1995, as part of its $20 million purchase of CBS affiliate WCFT-TV (channel 33, now ] affiliate ]) in Tuscaloosa from Federal Broadcasting, ] signed a deal with Fant Broadcasting to assume operational responsibilities and provide programming to WNAL-TV under a local marketing agreement. Allbritton backed out of the LMA proposal with Fant in January 1996, and instead signed a deal with Osborne Communications Corporation to acquire the non-license assets of CBS affiliate WJSU-TV (channel 40, now Heroes & Icons affiliate ]) in ] under an LMA.<ref>{{cite web|title=Allbritton takes another route to Birmingham|url=https://www.highbeam.com/doc/1G1-17986166.html|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160109123708/https://www.highbeam.com/doc/1G1-17986166.html|url-status=dead|archive-date=January 9, 2016|first=Elizabeth|last=Rathbun|periodical=Broadcasting & Cable|publisher=Cahners Business Information|date=January 8, 1996|access-date=December 12, 2015}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|title=Allbrigton Has Designs On CBS Affiliate WCFT|url=https://variety.com/1995/tv/features/allbrigton-has-designs-on-cbs-affiliate-wcft-99123941/|first=Dennis|last=Wharton|periodical=]|publisher=]|date=November 19, 1995|access-date=December 12, 2015}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|title=Tuscaloosa, Ala. (TV stations change hands)|url=https://business.highbeam.com/137332/article-1G1-17785711/tuscaloosa-ala|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20151222094445/https://business.highbeam.com/137332/article-1G1-17785711/tuscaloosa-ala|url-status=dead|archive-date=December 22, 2015|first=Mark|last=Gimein|periodical=Mediaweek|date=January 8, 1996|access-date=December 12, 2015}}</ref> The Allbritton deals served as the catalyst for an affiliation agreement between ABC and Allbritton in April 1996 that renewed or established new affiliation deals with the group's seven television stations.<ref>{{cite web|title=Allbritton Communications Co. and ABC have signed a 10-year affiliation agreement|url=https://www.highbeam.com/doc/1G1-18220783.html|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160109123708/https://www.highbeam.com/doc/1G1-18220783.html|url-status=dead|archive-date=January 9, 2016|periodical=Broadcasting & Cable|publisher=Cahners Business Information|date=April 22, 1996|access-date=December 12, 2015}}</ref>

ABC and Allbritton reached a precursor agreement to that affiliation deal two months prior, after it declined an offer by the Sinclair Broadcast Group. Sinclair's notification to the network that the station had no intention of starting a news department and wanted to only carry its prime time and ] programming led ABC to turn down an offer to affiliate with WTTO (which, along with WNAL and WDBB, was set to lose its Fox affiliation to WBRC). Under that deal, Allbritton agreed to make WCFT and WJSU the new Central Alabama affiliates of ABC, with WJSU initially intending to act as the satellite station to WCFT (Allbritton would subsequently purchase low-power independent station W58CK (channel 58, now ]) in Birmingham to allow the two others to be counted in Nielsen ratings reports for that market). In January 1996, WNAL-TV became a secondary affiliate of ]; it carried WB programming on ] on Sunday and Wednesday nights after Fox network programming. Fant Broadcasting subsequently approached CBS about switching to the network, and in February 1996, reached a deal to make WNAL-TV the network's new affiliate for northeastern Alabama.<ref>{{cite web|title=Birmingham TV News: A Bit on 33/40|url=http://www.reocities.com/southernmedia1/stationhistories.htm|website=ReoCities}}</ref>

On September 1, 1996, when WBRC officially became a Fox owned-and-operated station and W58CK, WCFT and WJSU became ABC affiliates, WNAL officially discontinued its part-time simulcast of WTTO (which, along with WDBB, became independent stations); WCFT and WJSU ceded the CBS programming rights in central Alabama to WNAL, which became the CBS affiliate for the Anniston–Gadsden market, and WBMG, which had recently upgraded its transmitter to provide a much stronger full-power signal throughout much of the central third of the state. Channel 44's switch left Central Alabama without a WB affiliate until WTTO/WDBB switched to the network in January 1997.

===Sale to Paxson Communications===
In September 1996, shortly after it became a CBS affiliate, Fant Broadcasting sold WNAL-TV to Paxson Communications (now ]), which initially intended to shift it to its ]-focused Infomall TV Network (inTV).<ref>{{cite web|title=Paxson picks up CBS affiliate|url=https://www.highbeam.com/doc/1G1-18698456.html|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140610085341/http://www.highbeam.com/doc/1G1-18698456.html|url-status=dead|archive-date=June 10, 2014|first=Elizabeth A.|last=Rathbun|periodical=Broadcasting & Cable|publisher=Cahners Business Information|date=September 16, 1996|access-date=December 10, 2015}}</ref> However, Paxson continued to operate the station as a CBS affiliate after the sale was completed, as its affiliation contract with CBS did not expire until April 1999.

On January 13, 1998, the station changed its call letters to WPXH in preparation of becoming the Birmingham market's charter owned-and-operated station of Pax TV (later i: Independent Television, now ]), though it would continue to honor the CBS affiliation contract in full even after the network's debut on August 31, 1998. That year, the station moved its transmitter facilities to a tower near Inland Lake, south of ] in ].

In September 1998, Nielsen merged the Tuscaloosa and Anniston–Gadsden markets back into the Birmingham market as a result of the consolidation of WCFT, WJSU, and WBMA-LP into Birmingham's ABC affiliate two years earlier, which expanded the designated market area to encompass nearly the entire width of the state, stretching from the Alabama–] state line westward to the ]–Alabama border. The move benefited all of the major Birmingham stations as it increased their available viewership in the three cities and resulted in the newly expanded market's placement in Nielsen's national market rankings jumping by twelve spots from 51st to 39th place.<ref>{{cite web|title=A Quick Jaunt Through Birmingham, Alabama|page=A selection from a decade of visits to tower and studio sites in the Northeast and beyond|url=http://www.fybush.com/site-020605.html|first=Scott|last=Fybush|website=Fybush.com|date=June 5, 2002|access-date=January 30, 2014}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|title=Nielsen mulling expansion of market|url=https://business.highbeam.com/137332/article-1G1-19721562/nielsen-mulling-expansion-market|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20151222085300/https://business.highbeam.com/137332/article-1G1-19721562/nielsen-mulling-expansion-market|url-status=dead|archive-date=December 22, 2015|first=Claude|last=Brodesser|periodical=Mediaweek|date=September 1, 1997|access-date=December 12, 2015}}</ref><ref name="em121597">{{cite news|title=Birmingham's WBMG-TV cleans house with news staff|first=Jon|last=Lafayette|periodical=Electronic Media|page=2|date=December 15, 1997}}</ref>

WPXH officially disaffiliated from CBS on April 30, 1999, with Paxson deciding to hold out on converting the station to its network for a few months. The CBS affiliation rights for Central Alabama were then ceded exclusively to WIAT, which became the network's sole affiliate for the enlarged Birmingham market. The station finally began to carry Pax TV on August 1, 1999.

In the late 2010s, what was now Ion Media applied to change WPXH's physical channel from 45 to 33 as part of the FCC's spectrum reallocation, along with moving its transmitter from Oneonta and into Birmingham proper, broadcasting from the Red Mountain site just south of town where the market's other television stations originate. With the change, it would no longer have any signal serving Gadsden. WPXH-TV's ] was thus moved to the Birmingham suburb of ]. The new transmitter was activated early in 2020, centralizing channel 44 as a Birmingham area station once and for all.


==Newscasts== ==Newscasts==
{{see|WVTM-TV#News operation}}
When WPXH (as WNAL-TV) became a CBS affiliate in 1996, it opted not to start its own news department. Instead, the station entered into a news share agreement with WBMG to simulcast its 6:00 and 10:00 p.m. newscasts (which were briefly suspended when the station's newscasts were temporarily canceled in early 1998, as its news department was being rebooted due to persistent low ratings); the WIAT news simulcasts were dropped in 1999, when channel 44 became an independent station.
Unlike other former independent stations and Fox affiliates that joined a Big Three network displaced due to Fox's affiliation deals with longtime major network stations, WPXH-TV (as WNAL-TV) did not invest in its own news department after it was affiliated with CBS in September 1996. Instead of local news programming, WNAL opted to air religious programming on weekday mornings before '']'' (as well as the '']'') and at 10&nbsp;p.m., and syndicated comedy and drama series at 5 and 6&nbsp;p.m. In February 1998, the station entered into a news share agreement with Birmingham CBS affiliate WIAT (which temporarily shut down its news department the month prior, as part of a reboot of its news department in an effort to increase the persistently low ratings of its news programming), in which it would simulcast that station's nightly 5 and 10&nbsp;p.m. newscasts; the WIAT news simulcasts were dropped in May 1999, when channel 44 became an independent station.

In September 2001, as a Pax TV owned-and-operated station, WPXH entered into a news share agreement with WVTM-TV as part of an overall corporate management agreement between Paxson Communications and NBC. Under the agreement, WPXH-TV began airing rebroadcasts of WVTM's 6 and 10&nbsp;p.m. newscasts on a half-hour tape delay (at 6:30 and 10:30&nbsp;p.m.) each Monday through Friday night. The newscasts were discontinued after the 10&nbsp;p.m. news rebroadcast on June 30, 2005, as Paxson had decided to end the news share agreements for its owned-and-operated stations upon Pax's rebranding as i: Independent Television.

==Technical information==
=== Subchannels ===
The station's signal is ]:
{| class="wikitable"
|+Subchannels of WPXH-TV<ref name="RabbitEars WPXH">{{Cite web|title=RabbitEars TV Query for WPXH|url=https://www.rabbitears.info/market.php?request=station_search&callsign=WPXH#station|access-date=March 6, 2021}}</ref>
! scope = "col" | ]
! scope = "col" | ]
! scope = "col" | ]
! scope = "col" | Short name
! scope = "col" | Programming
|-
! scope = "row" | 44.1
| rowspan=2 |]
| rowspan=9 |]
|ION
|]
|-
! scope = "row" | 44.2
|CourtTV
|]
|-
! scope = "row" | 44.3
| rowspan=7 |]
|Grit
|]
|-
! scope = "row" | 44.4
|Laff
|]
|-
! scope = "row" | 44.5
|Mystery
|]
|-
! scope = "row" | 44.6
|Get TV
|]
|-
! scope = "row" | 44.7
|HSN
|]
|-
! scope = "row" | 44.8
|QVC
|]
|-
! scope = "row" | 44.9
|ShopLC
|]
|-
|}

=== Analog-to-digital conversion ===
WPXH-TV signed on its digital signal on ] channel 45 in November 2002. The station ended regular programming on its analog signal, over UHF channel 44, on June 12, 2009, the official date on which full-power television stations in the United States ] under federal mandate. The station's digital signal remained on its pre-transition UHF channel 45,<ref>{{cite web |title=DTV Tentative Channel Designations for the First and Second Rounds |url=http://hraunfoss.fcc.gov/edocs_public/attachmatch/DA-06-1082A2.pdf |publisher=] |date=March 24, 2012 |url-status=dead |access-date=March 24, 2012 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20130829004251/http://hraunfoss.fcc.gov/edocs_public/attachmatch/DA-06-1082A2.pdf |archive-date=August 29, 2013 }}</ref> using ] 44.

As it opted to become a participant of the ] amendment in the ],<ref>{{cite web|title=Appendix B All Full Power Station By DMA, Indicating Those Terminating Analog service On Or Before February 17, 2009|url=http://hraunfoss.fcc.gov/edocs_public/attachmatch/DA-09-221A5.pdf|publisher=Federal Communications Commission}}</ref><ref name="FCC Nightlight">{{cite web|url=http://fjallfoss.fcc.gov/edocs_public/attachmatch/DOC-291375A1.pdf|title=UPDATED List of Participants in the Analog Nightlight Program|publisher=Federal Communications Commission|date=June 12, 2009|access-date=June 4, 2012}}</ref> for two weeks after the transition date until June 26, 2009, WPXH-TV continued to provide programming on its analog signal to air a loop of ]s informing viewers on the digital transition.


==Notes==
After becoming a Pax TV owned-and-operated station, WPXH entered into a news share agreement with WVTM-TV as part of the network's management agreement with NBC, and began airing rebroadcasts that station's 6:00 and 10:00 p.m. newscasts on a half-hour delay (at 6:30 and 10:30 p.m.) starting in 2001; the rebroadcasts were dropped on June 30, 2005, the day prior to Pax's rebranding as i: Independent Television.
{{notelist}}


==References== ==References==
{{Reflist}} {{Reflist|2}}


==External links== ==External links==
* * {{Official website|https://iontelevision.com/}}
*{{TVQ|WPXH}}
*{{BIA|WPXH|TV|TV}}


{{Birmingham TV}} {{Birmingham TV}}
{{Other Alabama Stations}} {{Other Alabama Stations}}
{{ION}}


{{DEFAULTSORT:Wpxh-Tv}} {{DEFAULTSORT:Wpxh-Tv}}
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Latest revision as of 04:35, 6 December 2024

TV station in Hoover, Alabama
This article needs to be updated. Please help update this article to reflect recent events or newly available information. (January 2021)

WPXH-TV
CityHoover, Alabama
Channels
BrandingIon
Programming
Affiliations
Ownership
Owner
  • Inyo Broadcast Holdings
  • (Inyo Broadcast Licenses LLC)
History
FoundedJuly 16, 1984
First air dateApril 1986; 38 years ago (1986-04)
Former call signsWNAL-TV (1986–1998)
Former channel number(s)
  • Analog: 44 (UHF, 1986–2009)
  • Digital: 45 (UHF, until 2019)
Former affiliations
  • Independent (April–October 1986, May–August 1999)
  • Fox (1986–1996; via WTTO, 1991–1996)
  • CBS (1996–May 1999)
  • The WB (secondary, January−September 1996)
Call sign meaning"Pax"
Technical information
Licensing authorityFCC
Facility ID73312
ERP300 kW
HAAT318.4 m (1,045 ft)
Transmitter coordinates33°29′2″N 86°48′21″W / 33.48389°N 86.80583°W / 33.48389; -86.80583
Links
Public license information
Websiteiontelevision.com

WPXH-TV (channel 44) is a television station licensed to Hoover, Alabama, United States, serving the Birmingham area as an affiliate of Ion Television. The station is owned by Inyo Broadcast Holdings, and maintains offices on Golden Crest Drive in Birmingham and a transmitter atop Red Mountain, near the city's southern edge.

History

As a satellite of WTTO and WDBB

The station traces its creation to issues involving independent station WDBB (channel 17) in Tuscaloosa, which was looking to increase its profile in central Alabama. When that station signed on in October 1984, at a time when cable television still did not have much penetration in the region, WDBB faced problems in trying to improve its coverage throughout the central part of the state, as its signal was nowhere near strong enough to cover the northern half of the market, particularly areas to the northeast of Birmingham proper. Although WDBB's founding owner, Dubose Broadcasting, invested heavily in the station and acquired a strong inventory of syndicated programming, the signal's inability to reach most of central Alabama put WDBB at a severe disadvantage against the area's other major independent, WTTO (channel 21) in Birmingham, which had early on established itself as one of the strongest independent stations in the Deep South and the United States as a whole.

DuBose found a solution when the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) awarded the company a construction permit to launch a television station in Gadsden on UHF channel 44. That station signed on in April 1986 as WNAL-TV, originally operating as a full-time satellite station for the northern half of the market—specifically, areas to the east of downtown Birmingham—that could not receive the WDBB signal. Shortly before WNAL signed on, DuBose reached an agreement with the Fox Broadcasting Company to become the network's charter affiliate for central Alabama after WTTO turned down an offer to join the network. WDBB further strengthened its hand by using its forthcoming status as a network affiliate to make a concerted effort to improve its reach in Birmingham by applying to transfer its city of license to Bessemer, 15.5 miles (24.9 km) southwest of Birmingham, which allowed it to build a new transmitter tower located closer to Birmingham that would provide a much stronger signal in the western portion of the city.

WDBB and WNAL became a Fox charter affiliate when the network officially launched on October 9, 1986. As was the case with other Fox stations during the network's early years, channels 17 and 44 continued to program as de facto independent stations as the late-night talk show The Late Show Starring Joan Rivers was the network's only program initially; when Fox debuted its prime time schedule in April 1987, the network only carried evening programming on weekends, and would not carry seven nights a week of programming until June 1993. Until Fox began airing programming on a nightly basis, WDBB and WNAL aired movies (and later, syndicated programs) at 7 p.m. on nights when the network was not scheduled to air any programming.

Despite covering roughly half of central Alabama over-the-air and the two stations maintaining a relatively strong program lineup, the signal of WDBB did not provide better than Grade B coverage (at best) within Birmingham proper. Due to the eastward location of its transmitter tower, WNAL's signal did not penetrate well into Birmingham either, only reaching as far west as extreme eastern Jefferson County. In addition, several major cable providers in the Birmingham market, including in Jefferson and Shelby counties, refused to carry the station for this reason. Ultimately, WDBB/WNAL was not profitable. After all efforts to increase the stations' cable coverage failed, Fox signed an agreement to make WTTO its new Birmingham affiliate and moved its programming to channel 21 in January 1991.

Soon afterward, DuBose reached an agreement with Abry Communications in which WDBB and WNAL would convert into semi-satellites of WTTO and begin simulcasting its programming for the vast majority of their broadcast day, with separate syndicated programming airing during the three hours that the stations continued to program themselves. As part of the deal, WDBB/WNAL merged its stronger inventory of programming onto WTTO's schedule, with the local rights to some classic sitcoms on its schedule that it could not retain or move elsewhere on the schedule being sold to WABM (channel 68) in Birmingham, which converted into a general entertainment independent around the same time the WTTO/WDBB/WNAL simulcasting arrangement went into place. The station subsequently began identifying as "Fox 21", using the channel allocation of WTTO as a universal brand for it and its repeaters. The combination of WTTO, WDBB and WNAL provided a strong combined signal throughout the central third of Alabama that was comparable to those of ABC affiliate WBRC-TV (channel 6) and NBC affiliate WVTM-TV (channel 13). In 1993, Abry had purchased WDBB and WNAL outright and converted both stations into full-time satellite stations of WTTO, resulting in the removal of local programming on the former two stations.

By 1994, the WTTO/WDBB/WNAL combination had become one of the highest-rated Fox affiliates in the country, and managed to overtake then-underperforming CBS affiliate WBMG (channel 42, now WIAT) as the third-highest-rated television station in central Alabama. Late that year, both WDBB and WNAL began airing separate programming during the daytime and late evening hours, consisting of syndicated sitcoms, drama and animated series that WTTO did not hold the rights to broadcast as well as local newscasts. That same year, the Hunt Valley, Maryland–based Sinclair Broadcast Group acquired WTTO, WDBB and WNAL when it merged with Abry Communications, which also assumed a local marketing agreement with WABM (a deal signed the previous year when WABM was sold to a locally based group). In 1995, WNAL was purchased by Fant Broadcasting, but continued to simulcast WTTO's programming through a time brokerage agreement.

As a CBS affiliate

In March 1994, Great American Communications agreed to sell WBRC to New World Communications, as part of a deal that also involved three of the former group's other television stations (WDAF-TV in Kansas City, KSAZ-TV in Phoenix and WGHP in High Point, North Carolina). Subsequently, three weeks later, New World agreed to purchase WVTM and three other stations (KTVI in St. Louis, KDFW in Dallas, and KTBC in Austin, Texas) from Argyle Television Holdings. New World was now faced with the prospect of having to divest as many as three of the acquired stations as the FCC forbade broadcasting companies from owning two commercial television stations in the same market, and restricted them from owning more than twelve stations nationwide (the concurrent acquisitions of the Argyle and Citicasters stations put New World three stations over the national television ownership cap).

On May 23, 1994, six months after the network signed a deal with the National Football League (NFL) to acquire the rights to the National Football Conference television package, New World signed an affiliation agreement with Fox to switch twelve of its television stations—six that New World had already owned and eight that the company was in the process of acquiring through the Argyle and Citicasters deals, including WBRC—to the network, once their existing affiliation contracts with CBS, NBC or ABC expired. Although WTTO was one of Fox's strongest affiliates at the time, the network saw the opportunity to affiliate with WBRC because it had been the highest-rated station in the Birmingham market for most of its history.

Seeing a chance to solve its ownership conflicts in Birmingham, New World reached an agreement with Citicasters to sell WBRC (as well as WGHP) directly to the network's owned-and-operated station group, Fox Television Stations, in return for $130 million in promissory notes; New World would also establish an outside trust company that would operate channel 6 until the sale was completed.

Even though the sale would be finalized on July 24, 1995, Fox Television Stations could not convert WBRC into a Fox owned-and-operated station in the short term as the station's affiliation agreement with ABC was not set to expire until August 31, 1996. While this put WBRC in the rare position of being owned by the O&O group of one network while still affiliated with another, it also gave ABC enough time to find a replacement affiliate in Birmingham; this was also instrumental in causing a complicated series of affiliation changes involving six central Alabama stations. In November 1995, as part of its $20 million purchase of CBS affiliate WCFT-TV (channel 33, now Heroes & Icons affiliate WSES) in Tuscaloosa from Federal Broadcasting, Allbritton Communications signed a deal with Fant Broadcasting to assume operational responsibilities and provide programming to WNAL-TV under a local marketing agreement. Allbritton backed out of the LMA proposal with Fant in January 1996, and instead signed a deal with Osborne Communications Corporation to acquire the non-license assets of CBS affiliate WJSU-TV (channel 40, now Heroes & Icons affiliate WGWW) in Anniston under an LMA. The Allbritton deals served as the catalyst for an affiliation agreement between ABC and Allbritton in April 1996 that renewed or established new affiliation deals with the group's seven television stations.

ABC and Allbritton reached a precursor agreement to that affiliation deal two months prior, after it declined an offer by the Sinclair Broadcast Group. Sinclair's notification to the network that the station had no intention of starting a news department and wanted to only carry its prime time and news programming led ABC to turn down an offer to affiliate with WTTO (which, along with WNAL and WDBB, was set to lose its Fox affiliation to WBRC). Under that deal, Allbritton agreed to make WCFT and WJSU the new Central Alabama affiliates of ABC, with WJSU initially intending to act as the satellite station to WCFT (Allbritton would subsequently purchase low-power independent station W58CK (channel 58, now WBMA-LD) in Birmingham to allow the two others to be counted in Nielsen ratings reports for that market). In January 1996, WNAL-TV became a secondary affiliate of The WB; it carried WB programming on tape delay on Sunday and Wednesday nights after Fox network programming. Fant Broadcasting subsequently approached CBS about switching to the network, and in February 1996, reached a deal to make WNAL-TV the network's new affiliate for northeastern Alabama.

On September 1, 1996, when WBRC officially became a Fox owned-and-operated station and W58CK, WCFT and WJSU became ABC affiliates, WNAL officially discontinued its part-time simulcast of WTTO (which, along with WDBB, became independent stations); WCFT and WJSU ceded the CBS programming rights in central Alabama to WNAL, which became the CBS affiliate for the Anniston–Gadsden market, and WBMG, which had recently upgraded its transmitter to provide a much stronger full-power signal throughout much of the central third of the state. Channel 44's switch left Central Alabama without a WB affiliate until WTTO/WDBB switched to the network in January 1997.

Sale to Paxson Communications

In September 1996, shortly after it became a CBS affiliate, Fant Broadcasting sold WNAL-TV to Paxson Communications (now Ion Media), which initially intended to shift it to its infomercial-focused Infomall TV Network (inTV). However, Paxson continued to operate the station as a CBS affiliate after the sale was completed, as its affiliation contract with CBS did not expire until April 1999.

On January 13, 1998, the station changed its call letters to WPXH in preparation of becoming the Birmingham market's charter owned-and-operated station of Pax TV (later i: Independent Television, now Ion Television), though it would continue to honor the CBS affiliation contract in full even after the network's debut on August 31, 1998. That year, the station moved its transmitter facilities to a tower near Inland Lake, south of Oneonta in Blount County.

In September 1998, Nielsen merged the Tuscaloosa and Anniston–Gadsden markets back into the Birmingham market as a result of the consolidation of WCFT, WJSU, and WBMA-LP into Birmingham's ABC affiliate two years earlier, which expanded the designated market area to encompass nearly the entire width of the state, stretching from the Alabama–Georgia state line westward to the Mississippi–Alabama border. The move benefited all of the major Birmingham stations as it increased their available viewership in the three cities and resulted in the newly expanded market's placement in Nielsen's national market rankings jumping by twelve spots from 51st to 39th place.

WPXH officially disaffiliated from CBS on April 30, 1999, with Paxson deciding to hold out on converting the station to its network for a few months. The CBS affiliation rights for Central Alabama were then ceded exclusively to WIAT, which became the network's sole affiliate for the enlarged Birmingham market. The station finally began to carry Pax TV on August 1, 1999.

In the late 2010s, what was now Ion Media applied to change WPXH's physical channel from 45 to 33 as part of the FCC's spectrum reallocation, along with moving its transmitter from Oneonta and into Birmingham proper, broadcasting from the Red Mountain site just south of town where the market's other television stations originate. With the change, it would no longer have any signal serving Gadsden. WPXH-TV's city of license was thus moved to the Birmingham suburb of Hoover. The new transmitter was activated early in 2020, centralizing channel 44 as a Birmingham area station once and for all.

Newscasts

Further information: WVTM-TV § News operation

Unlike other former independent stations and Fox affiliates that joined a Big Three network displaced due to Fox's affiliation deals with longtime major network stations, WPXH-TV (as WNAL-TV) did not invest in its own news department after it was affiliated with CBS in September 1996. Instead of local news programming, WNAL opted to air religious programming on weekday mornings before CBS This Morning (as well as the CBS Morning News) and at 10 p.m., and syndicated comedy and drama series at 5 and 6 p.m. In February 1998, the station entered into a news share agreement with Birmingham CBS affiliate WIAT (which temporarily shut down its news department the month prior, as part of a reboot of its news department in an effort to increase the persistently low ratings of its news programming), in which it would simulcast that station's nightly 5 and 10 p.m. newscasts; the WIAT news simulcasts were dropped in May 1999, when channel 44 became an independent station.

In September 2001, as a Pax TV owned-and-operated station, WPXH entered into a news share agreement with WVTM-TV as part of an overall corporate management agreement between Paxson Communications and NBC. Under the agreement, WPXH-TV began airing rebroadcasts of WVTM's 6 and 10 p.m. newscasts on a half-hour tape delay (at 6:30 and 10:30 p.m.) each Monday through Friday night. The newscasts were discontinued after the 10 p.m. news rebroadcast on June 30, 2005, as Paxson had decided to end the news share agreements for its owned-and-operated stations upon Pax's rebranding as i: Independent Television.

Technical information

Subchannels

The station's signal is multiplexed:

Subchannels of WPXH-TV
Channel Res. Aspect Short name Programming
44.1 720p 16:9 ION Ion Television
44.2 CourtTV Court TV
44.3 480i Grit Grit
44.4 Laff Laff
44.5 Mystery Ion Mystery
44.6 Get TV Get
44.7 HSN HSN
44.8 QVC QVC
44.9 ShopLC ShopLC

Analog-to-digital conversion

WPXH-TV signed on its digital signal on UHF channel 45 in November 2002. The station ended regular programming on its analog signal, over UHF channel 44, 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 remained on its pre-transition UHF channel 45, using virtual channel 44.

As it opted to become a participant of the Short-term Analog Flash and Emergency Readiness Act amendment in the DTV Delay Act, for two weeks after the transition date until June 26, 2009, WPXH-TV continued to provide programming on its analog signal to air a loop of public service announcements informing viewers on the digital transition.

Notes

  1. Originally licensed to Gadsden, Alabama; moved to Hoover in 2019.
  2. The Broadcasting and Cable Yearbook says April 26, while the Television and Cable Factbook says April 25.

References

  1. "COL Petition for Rulemaking - WPXH-TV Gadsden to Hoover". Licensing and Management System. Federal Communications Commission. December 3, 2018. Retrieved February 9, 2019.
  2. "Modification of a License for DTV Application". Licensing and Management System. Federal Communications Commission. May 7, 2019. Retrieved May 7, 2019.
  3. "Facility Technical Data for WPXH-TV". Licensing and Management System. Federal Communications Commission.
  4. "COMPANY NEWS; GREAT AMERICAN SELLING FOUR TELEVISION STATIONS". The New York Times. May 6, 1994. Retrieved December 12, 2015.
  5. ^ Foisie, Geoffrey (May 30, 1994). "Argyle socks away profit. (New World Communications Group Inc. acquires Argyle Television Holdings)". Broadcasting & Cable. Cahners Business Information. Archived from the original on January 9, 2016. Retrieved December 12, 2015.
  6. ^ "Fox Gains 12 Stations in New World Deal". Chicago Sun-Times. Hollinger International. May 23, 1994. Archived from the original on October 11, 2013. Retrieved June 1, 2013.
  7. Foisie, Geoffrey; Zier, Julie A. (August 22, 1994). "Fox et al. to buy three stations; affiliation shuffle continues". Broadcasting & Cable. Cahners Business Information. Archived from the original on January 9, 2016. Retrieved December 12, 2015.
  8. McAvoy, Kim (April 10, 1995). "The FCC last week approved New World's plans to transfer WGHP-TV Greensboro, N.C., and WBRC-TV Birmingham, Ala., into a trust for eventual sale to Fox". Broadcasting & Cable. Cahners Business Information. Archived from the original on October 16, 2015. Retrieved December 12, 2015.
  9. Rathbun, Elizabeth (January 8, 1996). "Allbritton takes another route to Birmingham". Broadcasting & Cable. Cahners Business Information. Archived from the original on January 9, 2016. Retrieved December 12, 2015.
  10. Wharton, Dennis (November 19, 1995). "Allbrigton Has Designs On CBS Affiliate WCFT". Variety. Cahners Business Information. Retrieved December 12, 2015.
  11. Gimein, Mark (January 8, 1996). "Tuscaloosa, Ala. (TV stations change hands)". Mediaweek. Archived from the original on December 22, 2015. Retrieved December 12, 2015.
  12. "Allbritton Communications Co. and ABC have signed a 10-year affiliation agreement". Broadcasting & Cable. Cahners Business Information. April 22, 1996. Archived from the original on January 9, 2016. Retrieved December 12, 2015.
  13. "Birmingham TV News: A Bit on 33/40". ReoCities.
  14. Rathbun, Elizabeth A. (September 16, 1996). "Paxson picks up CBS affiliate". Broadcasting & Cable. Cahners Business Information. Archived from the original on June 10, 2014. Retrieved December 10, 2015.
  15. Fybush, Scott (June 5, 2002). "A Quick Jaunt Through Birmingham, Alabama". Fybush.com. p. A selection from a decade of visits to tower and studio sites in the Northeast and beyond. Retrieved January 30, 2014.
  16. Brodesser, Claude (September 1, 1997). "Nielsen mulling expansion of market". Mediaweek. Archived from the original on December 22, 2015. Retrieved December 12, 2015.
  17. Lafayette, Jon (December 15, 1997). "Birmingham's WBMG-TV cleans house with news staff". Electronic Media. p. 2.
  18. "RabbitEars TV Query for WPXH". Retrieved March 6, 2021.
  19. "DTV Tentative Channel Designations for the First and Second Rounds" (PDF). Federal Communications Commission. March 24, 2012. Archived from the original (PDF) on August 29, 2013. Retrieved March 24, 2012.
  20. "Appendix B All Full Power Station By DMA, Indicating Those Terminating Analog service On Or Before February 17, 2009" (PDF). Federal Communications Commission.
  21. "UPDATED List of Participants in the Analog Nightlight Program" (PDF). Federal Communications Commission. June 12, 2009. Retrieved June 4, 2012.

External links

Broadcast television in Central Alabama
This region includes the following cities: Birmingham
Tuscaloosa
Anniston
Gadsden
Reception may vary by location and some stations may only be viewable with cable television
Local stations
Birmingham/
Hoover
Tuscaloosa
Anniston/
Mount Cheaha
Gadsden
ATSC 3.0
Outlying areas
See also
Atlanta TV
Columbus–Tupelo TV
Huntsville TV
Montgomery TV
Broadcast television stations by affiliation in the state of Alabama
ABC
CBS
Fox
NBC
The CW
MyNetworkTV
Ion
PBS (APT)
Huntsville market
WHIQ 25 (Huntsville)
WFIQ 36 (Florence)
Birmingham market
WCIQ 7 (Mount Cheaha)
WBIQ 10 (Birmingham)
Meridian, MS market
WIIQ 41 (Demopolis)
Montgomery market
WDIQ 2 (Dozier)
WAIQ 26 (Montgomery)
Columbus, GA market
WGIQ 43 (Louisville)
Mobile market
WEIQ 42 (Mobile)
Other
Huntsville market:
  • WTZT-CD 11 (Athens, Cozi)
Tupelo, MS market:
Birmingham market:
Atlanta, GA market:
Montgomery market:
Columbus, GA market:
Dothan market:
Mobile market:
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