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WABC-TV
The WJZ callsign has since been reassigned to the CBS owned station in Baltimore, Maryland, although that station was a former ABC affiliate by coincidence until 1995.
DTV transition in the United States
Eventually, Max Media chose to move the affiliation to digital subchannels of their respective new sister stations, all ABC affiliates.
WTNH
The station became a sole ABC affiliate though it shared ABC programming with Waterbury-based WATR-TV (now WTXX) until 1966.
U.S. television network affiliate switches of 1994
Scripps' two highest-profile stations, ABC affiliates WEWS in Cleveland and WXYZ-TV in Detroit, were being courted by CBS to replace WJW and WJBK, respectively.
WSAV-TV
In 1982, the station swapped affiliations with WJCL and became an ABC affiliate.
KARE
Metromedia sold about half of its cartoons and syndicated programming to former ABC affiliate KMSP-TV, which eventually became the Twin Cities' largest independent station.
WHOI (TV)
In 1963, WHOI was bumped down to UHF channel 19 so that a third commercial VHF station could sign-on in the Quad Cities using that channel (the new station, WQAD-TV, is also an ABC affiliate).
WCSC-TV
WCSC and ABC affiliate WCIV are the only stations in the market to broadcast news weeknights at 7.
NewsChannel
The name was first used at KTVK in Phoenix, Arizona in 1986, when the now-independent station was an ABC affiliate; the name became popular as the 1990s progressed, along with "24-Hour News Sources", meaning television stations would broadcast news updates every hour.
WDSU
One of WDSU's sister stations, ABC affiliate KOCO-TV (channel 5) in Oklahoma City, also provided coverage of Hurricane Gustav via its second digital subchannel for evacuees who came to Oklahoma City.
WJZ (AM)
(Coincidentally, WJZ-TV, the television station that ESPN Radio 1300 shares its callsign with, was an ABC affiliate until 1995.)
WWSB
As a result, this station is technically a secondary ABC affiliate for St. Petersburg particularly on the eastern side of Tampa Bay.
WWSB
On cable, the station is the sole ABC affiliate on Comcast's Southern Sarasota County systems and it competes with Fort Myers-based WZVN-TV (also known on-air as "ABC 7") in Desoto and Charlotte Counties and Orlando's WFTV in Hardee County.
WLQP-LP
On September 1, 2006, this station became an affiliate of ABC.
WDHN
The station has always been an ABC affiliate.
First Warning
Another Oklahoma City television station, ABC affiliate KOCO-TV, created an automated version of this product called First Alert (a name the station has since used for its doppler radar system, now known as Advantage Doppler HD, and which the station currently uses as its weather branding), in which the weather information is updated by the computer itself, delivered by a form of the National Weather Service's Weather Wire system.
WBOY-DT2
The station reaches a total of 85,000 Households through cable, and is the only ABC affiliate available on Dish Network in the DMA.
WBRC
Most of Taft's TV stations were ABC affiliates, including its flagship station, WKRC-TV in Cincinnati, which was one of ABC's strongest affiliates.
WSYR-TV
The station was later owned by The Coca-Cola Company and has always been an ABC affiliate.
WFAA
The station is one of the only ABC affiliates to broadcast HDTV in a 1080i format; other ABC affiliates broadcast in 720p.
WNCF
The station has always been an ABC affiliate although it has gone through several owners including Bahakel Communications and Media General among others.
WKBW-TV
Cynics will point to the fact that WKBW's prime location on the VHF portion of the dial, in an era when most ABC affiliates were weaker UHF stations, was the cause of this.
WHSV-TV
Under Gilmore's ownership, the station became a primary ABC affiliate in 1968--an unusual move since it was the only station in its market; ABC was not nearly on par with CBS and NBC at the time.
WLOS
The TV station has always been an ABC affiliate, and is the second-longest tenured primary ABC affiliate south of Washington, D.C. (behind Lynchburg's WSET-TV, coincidentally also on channel 13).
Match Game
Match Game PM did not contain ticket plugs since most of the stations that aired the show were ABC affiliates.
WNAC-TV
At that time, the station was located on channel 16 and was an ABC affiliate.
WFIE
The station was an affiliate of NBC, ABC, and DuMont.
Media in San Jose, California
Channel 11: KNTV - NBC, "NBC 11", originally an ABC affiliate (San Jose's first television station)
KSHB-TV
The Action News branding, as a UHF owned by Scripps, is also shared with sister station WFTS in Tampa-St. Petersburg, which is an ABC affiliate.
WDTN
The station became a sole ABC affiliate in 1980.
WFTS-TV
These newsbreaks were discontinued in December 1994 after the station became an ABC affiliate and launched a full-scale news operation.
WJLA-TV
Ironically, WJLA-TV is the largest ABC affiliate to use the Circle 7 that is not an ABC owned-and-operated station.
KTGM
The station is owned by Sorensen Television Systems, Inc. and is the ABC affiliate for United States territory of Guam.
Nationwide Communications
All three stations were ABC affiliates (WXEX-TV switched from NBC to ABC in 1965, WATE-TV switched from NBC to ABC in 1979, and WBAY-TV switched from CBS to ABC in 1992).
ION Media Networks
The television stations were network affiliates of ABC and NBC.
WLYH-TV
Under Triangle, the station became a part-time ABC affiliate and received other programs from sister station WFIL-TV (now WPVI-TV) in Philadelphia.
WSUN (defunct)
Until 1974, the station offered a variety of programming including dramas, talk, music, and was an ABC affiliate.
WCTI-TV
The station has been an ABC affiliate since its inception.
WTVD
Five months later on August 4, the station swapped affiliations with WRAL and became an ABC affiliate.
Brunswick, Georgia
The station became an ABC affiliate in 1996, but in 2001, Allbritton Communications sold the station and, therefore, the station lost its affiliation.
WPBF
The station was one of three ABC affiliates in the state of Florida that preempted the movie.
KATV
The station was an ABC affiliate; during the late 1950s, the station was also briefly affiliated with the NTA Film Network.
Owned-and-operated station
Correct formal phrasing could be, "ABC affiliate WJLA is an Allbritton station."
WXLV-TV
WXLV and sister station KDNL in St. Louis are the only two ABC affiliates under Sinclair to have no newscasts to this day.
KHBS
The two stations became full-time ABC affiliates in 1978 after KLMN-TV (now KFTA-TV) signed on.
KTXL
The station became a primary ABC affiliate by 1955, after KCRA-TV and KBET-TV (now KXTV) signed on; and dropped DuMont after that network folded in 1956. [1] It was the Sacramento-Stockton-Modesto area's first television station.
KRCG
KRCG and KOMU-TV, the NBC affiliate in Columbia, were the only two VHF network affiliates in the market, and it was feared that if KMOS was sold, the station could potentially become a full-power ABC affiliate.
KSAZ-TV
The station was originally an CBS and ABC affiliate until 1955, when KTVK (channel 3) signed on and took the ABC affiliation.
KFXB-TV
The station signed on September 12, 1976 as KDUB-TV, and was an ABC affiliate.
WCBD-TV
This station then became a full-time ABC affiliate.
WCPO-TV
The station was originally a primary ABC affiliate, and also carried a secondary affiliation with the DuMont Television Network.
WRDQ
The station can be considered an alternate ABC affiliate.
WTVA
These stations are the FOX affiliate WLOV-TV and ABC affiliate WKDH.
KITV
The station has been an ABC affiliate since its sign-on, making KITV one of the two major television stations in Honolulu that has never changed its network affiliation; local CBS outlet KGMB is the other.
WICD (TV)
Originally, the station was a low-powered ABC affiliate broadcasting on channel 24 with a signal which radiated about 25 miles from its transmitter in Danville.
WGGB-TV
The station became a sole ABC affiliate in 1958 after DuMont folded in 1956 and WTIC-TV in Hartford, Connecticut (now WFSB), previously an independent, moved to CBS and became that network's affiliate of record in Springfield.
KTRK-TV
The station was an ABC affiliate; during the late 1950s, the station was also briefly affiliated with the NTA Film Network.
KOCO-TV
The station was an ABC affiliate; during the late 1950s, the station was also briefly affiliated with the NTA Film Network.
KOCO-TV
In fact, the three highest-rated ABC affiliates in the nation are all Hearst stations (KOCO, along with WISN in Milwaukee, Wisconsin and KMBC in Kansas City, Missouri).
WMDT
In 1992, the station became a sole ABC affiliate carrying that network's programming as well as a mix of syndicated shows.
KULR-TV
On September 1, 1975, the station became a primary ABC affiliate—the fourth in Montana—while relegating NBC to secondary status.
WISN-TV
In fact, the three highest-rated ABC affiliates in the nation are all Hearst stations (WISN, plus KOCO in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma and KMBC in Kansas City, Missouri).
Duopoly (broadcasting)
The South Bend low-power TV triopoly (ABC affiliate WBND-LP, CW station WCWW-LP and MyNetworkTV's WMYS-LP) is in the process of being sold to Schurz Communications, owners of full power WSBT-TV.
KTXS-TV
The station became a sole ABC affiliate when KTAB-TV signed on in 1979 and took over as Abilene's CBS affiliate.
KTXS-TV
In 1979, the station dropped CBS and became a full ABC affiliate after KTAB-TV signed on.
WKPT-TV
That concept was later used by WATE, when that station became an ABC affiliate in 1979.
KFXB
Originally, the station was known as KDUB, and was an ABC affiliate, and it was based out of Dubuque, Iowa.