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・ WQKT
・ WQKX
・ WQKY
・ WQKZ
・ WQL
・ WQLA
・ WQLB
・ WPX Energy
・ WPXA-TV
・ WPXC
・ WPXC (FM)
・ WPXC-TV
・ WPXD-TV
・ WPXE-TV
・ WPXG
WPXH-TV
・ WPXI
・ WPXJ
・ WPXJ-TV
・ WPXK-TV
・ WPXL-TV
・ WPXM-TV
・ WPXN
・ WPXN (FM)
・ WPXN-TV
・ WPXO-LD
・ WPXP-TV
・ WPXQ-TV
・ WPXR
・ WPXR-TV


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WPXH-TV : ウィキペディア英語版
WPXH-TV

WPXH-TV, virtual channel 44 (UHF digital channel 45), is an Ion Television owned-and-operated television station for Birmingham, Alabama, licensed to Gadsden. The station is owned by Ion Media Networks. WPXH maintains offices located on Golden Crest Drive in Birmingham, and its transmitter is located in Oneonta.
==History==
In 1984, WDBB (channel 17) in Tuscaloosa had a problem. The two-year-old station was looking to increase its profile in central Alabama, but its signal was nowhere near strong enough to cover the northern half of the market. In the days when cable still didn't have much penetration, WDBB faced the problem of improving its coverage in the vast central Alabama market. This put it at a severe disadvantage to Birmingham's other major independent, WTTO (channel 21), which had early on established itself as one of the strongest independent stations in the Deep South and the nation.
Owner DuBose Broadcasting found a solution when it won a construction permit for a channel 45 allocation in Gadsden. That station signed on in April 1986 as WNAL-TV, serving as a full-time satellite station for the northern half of the market. When WTTO passed on the Fox affiliation for central Alabama, WDBB/WNAL quickly snapped up the affiliation. WDBB further strengthened its hand just months before Fox officially launched on October 6, 1986 by moving its license to Bessemer, 18 miles south of Birmingham, which allowed it to build a stronger tower closer to Birmingham. Despite the stations' relatively strong program lineup, WDBB/WNAL remained. 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.
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) provided a strong combined signal comparable to those of ABC affiliate WBRC-TV (channel 6) and NBC affiliate WVTM-TV (channel 13). It soon 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.
In 1994, Citicasters sold WBRC to New World Communications. Soon afterward, New World acquired WVTM as part of its merger with Argyle Broadcasting. New World now faced the prospect of being over the FCC-mandated limit of 12 stations that was in effect at the time. However, soon after its purchase of WBRC closed, New World signed a deal with Fox that May to affiliate with twelve of its stations after acquiring the rights to the NFL's National Football Conference television package) Seeing a chance to solve its Birmingham ownership problem, New World opted to sell WBRC directly to Fox, placing channel 6 in an outside trust that would caretake it through the sale. 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 Fox ran it for a year as an ABC affiliate as its affiliation contract with ABC did not expire until September 1); CBS affiliates WCFT-TV (channel 33) in Tuscaloosa and WJSU-TV (channel 40) in Anniston, became full-power satellites to the Birmingham market’s new ABC affiliate, WBMA-LP (channel 58). WNAL, which prior to the massive affiliation switch had become a secondary affiliate of The WB, became the CBS affiliate for northeast Alabama.
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.〔Lafayette, Jon. "Birmingham's WBMG-TV cleans house with news staff." ''Electronic Media'' 15 December 1997: 2.〕 As part of the deal, WNAL dropped CBS, making WBMG (channel 42, now WIAT) the sole CBS affiliate for a much-enlarged market which stretched across nearly the entire width of the state, from the Alabama-Georgia state line westward to the Mississippi-Alabama border.
Around this time, Paxson Communications (now Ion Media Networks) purchased WNAL with the intent of making it a charter owned-and-operated station of Pax TV (later i: Independent Television, now Ion Television) 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.
〔(RabbitEars TV Query for WPXH )〕

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