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Revision as of 12:18, 16 July 2006

The Fox Television Stations Group (FTSG) is a group of television stations located throughout the United States which are owned-and-operated by the Fox Broadcasting Company. FTSG also produces the Fox program Cops and syndicated Double Dare and Finders Keepers.

Fox Television Stations was formed in April 1986 after the acquisition of the Metromedia-owned independent stations by the 20th Century Fox film studio, at the time jointly owned by Australian media mogul Rupert Murdoch's News Corporation, and Denver-based billionaire Marvin Davis. These stations would later go on to form the seeds of the newly formed Fox television network. Not long after the Metromedia deal was made, Murdoch purchased Davis's shares and News Corporation assumed complete control of 20th Century Fox.

Starting with the original six stations, Fox Television Stations gained the bulk of its group through two large transactions: the 1997 purchase of New World Communications, succeeding a 1993 business deal between the two companies which led to all of New World's stations switching from other networks to Fox during 1994-95; and the 2001 acquisition of the Chris-Craft/United group, which gave Fox ownership of several stations affiliated with the UPN network, and also created several duopolies (two stations in the same market owned by the same company).

List of Fox owned and operated stations

Currently, a total of 35 stations, consisting of 25 Fox stations, one independent station and nine UPN stations.

The Fox-owned UPN affiliates that are listed here are not included in the UPN/WB merger, and these stations have already removed references to UPN from their on-air branding and websites. On February 22, 2006, Fox Television Stations announced that all of their non-Fox outlets (the nine UPN affiliates and one independent) will be charter affiliates of a new service known as My Network TV [1]. The new network will tentatively debut on September 5, 2006.

Note: **Indicates original Fox-owned stations from the network's inception in 1986.

Current DMA# Market Station Owned Since Current Affiliation
1. New York City WNYW 5 ** 1986 Fox
WWOR-TV 9 2001 UPN
(to be My Network TV in Sept. 2006)
2. Los Angeles KTTV 11 ** 1986 Fox
KCOP 13 2001 UPN
(to be My Network TV in Sept. 2006)
3. Chicago WFLD-TV 32 ** 1986 Fox
WPWR-TV 50 2002 UPN
(to be My Network TV in Sept. 2006)
4. Philadelphia WTXF-TV 29 1995 Fox
5. Boston WFXT 25 1995
(previously owned from 1987-91)
Fox
7. Dallas - Fort Worth KDFW-TV 4 1997 Fox
KDFI-TV 27 1998 independent
(to be My Network TV in Sept. 2006)
8. Washington, D.C. WTTG 5 ** 1986 Fox
WDCA-TV 20 2002 UPN
(to be My Network TV in Sept. 2006)
9. Atlanta WAGA-TV 5 1997 Fox
10. Houston KRIV-TV 26 ** 1986 Fox
KTXH 20 2002 UPN
(to be My Network TV in Sept. 2006)
11. Detroit WJBK-TV 2 1997 Fox
12. Tampa-St. Petersburg WTVT 13 1997 Fox
14. Phoenix KSAZ-TV 10 1997 Fox
KUTP 45 2001 UPN
(to be My Network TV in Sept. 2006)
15. Minneapolis-St. Paul KMSP-TV 9 2001 Fox
WFTC 29 2002 UPN
(to be My Network TV in Sept. 2006)
16. Cleveland WJW-TV 8 1997 Fox
18. Denver KDVR 31 1993 Fox
20. Orlando - Daytona Beach WOFL 35 2002 Fox
WRBW 65 2001 UPN
(to be My Network TV in Sept. 2006)
21. St. Louis KTVI 2 1997 Fox
24. Baltimore WUTB 24 2001 UPN
(to be My Network TV in Sept. 2006)
31. Kansas City, Missouri WDAF-TV 4 1997 Fox
33. Milwaukee WITI-TV 6 1997 Fox
36. Salt Lake City KSTU 13 1990 Fox
40. Birmingham, Alabama WBRC-TV 6 1995 Fox
44. Memphis WHBQ-TV 13 1994 Fox
47. High Point - Greensboro -
Winston-Salem, N.C.
WGHP 8 1995 Fox
53. Austin, Texas KTBC-TV 7 1997 Fox
57. Little Rock, AR KLRT 16** 1986 Fox
KASN 38 1990 UPN (The CW in Sept. 2006)
162. Gainesville, Florida WOGX 51 2002 Fox

Former Fox-owned stations

  • Atlanta: WATL-TV 36 -- A charter Fox affiliate which was bought by the network in 1993. A year later, after New World (then the owners of WAGA-TV) announced its partnership with Fox, WATL was sold to Qwest Broadcasting, which was controlled by musician Quincy Jones. It is currently a WB affiliate owned by Tribune Broadcasting (although it is being sold to Gannett, as announced on June 5, 2006), and will become a My Network TV affiliate in fall 2006.
  • Boston: WCVB-TV 5 -- The seventh Metromedia station was included in the original sale of the Metromedia television group to News Corporation in 1986. However, News Corp. spun off the station immediately to the Hearst Corporation, honoring an promise Metromedia made to Hearst in 1982 (after Metromedia sold KMBC-TV in Kansas City to Hearst), giving the latter company a right-of-first-refusal opportunity to purchase WCVB if the station ever again went up for sale.
  • Dallas-Fort Worth: KDAF 33 -- One of six original Fox O&Os. After the Fox/New World alliance saw KDFW-TV pick up the Fox affiliation, KDAF would be sold to Renaissance Broadcasting and become a WB affiliate. It is currently owned by Tribune Broadcasting and will become the Dallas-Fort Worth affiliate of the CW in fall 2006.
  • Portland, Oregon: KPTV 12 -- A charter Fox affiliate (1986-88) was a UPN station when Fox bought out Chris-Craft, then traded it to the Meredith Corporation for WOFL Orlando and WOGX Gainesville in 2001. Ironically, KPTV would swap affiliations with new sister station KPDX two years later.
  • Salt Lake City: KTVX 4 -- ABC affiliate owned by Chris-Craft/United. As Fox already owned KSTU, KTVX could not be retained (the Salt Lake City market could not support such a duopoly under current FCC rules, which prohibit one company from owning two of the four largest stations in a single market), so KTVX was packaged along with KMOL-TV to Clear Channel (see below).
  • San Antonio: WOAI-TV 4 -- NBC affiliate owned by Chris-Craft/United. When Chris-Craft sold its stations to Fox, the then-KMOL-TV (along with KTVX) was traded to San Antonio-based Clear Channel Communications for Minneapolis-St. Paul's WFTC, then a Fox outlet. Clear Channel, which has owned WOAI radio since 1975, changed this station's calls back to the original WOAI-TV. WFTC would then trade affiliations with KMSP and become a UPN station.
  • San Francisco: KBCW 44 -- UPN station acquired through the Chris-Craft purchase, previously known as KBHK-TV. With Fox already committed to KTVU as its Bay Area station through a long-term deal, KBHK was traded to Viacom (whose broadcasting properties were spun off as part of CBS Corporation in 2006) for KTXH and WDCA-TV in 2002. It was alleged that Fox tried to buy KTVU, but was repeatedly turned down by Cox Enterprises, who owns the station.