Early history During the 1950s and 1960s, independent stations filled their broadcast hours with movies, sports, cartoons, filmed
travelogues, and some
locally produced television programs, including in some instances newscasts and children's programs. Independents that were on the air during this period would
sign-on at times later than that of stations affiliated with a television network, some not doing so until the early or mid-afternoon hours. Another source of programming became available to independent stations by the mid-1960s:
reruns of network programs which, after completing their initial runs, were sold into
syndication. As cable television franchises began to be incorporated around the United States during the 1960s and 1970s, independent stations from large and mid-sized markets were imported by these systems via wire or
microwave relay to smaller
media markets, which often only had stations that were affiliated with the
Big Three television networks (
ABC,
NBC and CBS); these independents became the first "
superstations," which were distributed on a statewide or regional basis. In December 1976,
Ted Turner decided to uplink his struggling
Atlanta, Georgia station
WTCG to
satellite for national distribution. Soon, other companies decided to copy Turner's idea and applied for satellite uplinks to distribute other stations;
WGN-TV in Chicago,
KTVU in
Oakland-San Francisco, and
WPIX and
WOR-TV in New York City would begin to be distributed nationally during the late 1970s and early 1980s (in the case of KTVU, it would revert to being a regional superstation by the early part of the latter decade). By the start of the 1970s, independent stations typically aired
children's programming in the morning and afternoon hours, and movies and other adult-oriented shows (some stations aired paid
religious programs) during the midday hours. They
counterprogrammed local network-affiliated stations' news programs with syndicated reruns – usually
sitcoms and hour-long dramas – in the early evening, and movies during prime time and
late night hours. In some areas, independent stations carried network programs that were not aired by a local affiliate. In larger markets such as New York City, Chicago and Los Angeles, independent stations benefited from a ruling by the
Federal Communications Commission (FCC) that barred network-affiliated stations within the top 50 television markets from airing network-originated programs in the hour preceding prime time. This legislation, known as the
Prime Time Access Rule, was in effect from 1971 to 1995, and as a result independents faced less competition for syndicated reruns. Some stations in larger markets (such as WGN-TV in Chicago;
KTLA,
KHJ-TV,
KTTV and
KCOP-TV in Los Angeles;
KWGN-TV in
Denver; and (W)WOR-TV, WPIX and
WNEW-TV in New York City) ventured into local news broadcasts, usually airing at 10:00 p.m. in the
Eastern and
Pacific time zones, and 9:00 p.m. in the
Central and
Mountain time zones. Network stations aired their late newscasts an hour later. From the late 1970s through the mid-1980s, independent stations in several U.S. cities, particularly those that had yet to receive a cable franchise, carried a form of a network affiliation through
subscription television networks (such as
ON TV,
Spectrum and
SelecTV); these services – which were formatted very similarly to their pay cable counterparts – ran sports, uncut and commercial-free movies (both mainstream and
pornographic, broadcasts of the latter often created legal issues that were eventually largely cleared up due to an FCC regulation that legally allowed the broadcast of programs featuring content that would otherwise be deemed indecent when broadcast "in the clear" if the encrypted signal was not visible or audible to nonsubscribers), and on some services, television specials. Independents usually ran the services during the evening and overnight hours in lieu of running movies and other programs acquired off the syndication market by the station, although a few eventually began to carry these services for most of the broadcast day. The services required the use of decoder boxes to access the service's programming (some of which were fairly easy to unencrypt due to the transmission methods stations used to scramble the signal during the service's broadcast hours); some required the payment of an additional one-time fee to receive events and adult films. As cities added cable franchises, thus allowing people to subscribe to conventional premium television networks like
HBO and
Showtime, nearly all of the over-the-air subscription services had shuttered operations by the end of the 1980s. Until the late 1970s, independent stations were usually limited to the larger American television markets, due to several factors. Most smaller markets did not have a large enough population to support four commercial stations. Even in markets that were large enough to support a fourth station, the only available license was often on a
UHF channel allocation. During the analog television era, the reception quality of UHF stations was not nearly as good as stations on the
VHF band, especially in areas with rugged terrain (the reverse is true in the present day with the transmission of
digital signals) or in markets that cover large geographic areas. Since independent stations had to buy an additional 16 hours of programming per day – a burden not faced by network-affiliated stations – these factors made prospective owners skittish about signing on a television station as an independent. By the 1970s, however, cable television had gained enough penetration to make independent stations viable in smaller markets. This was especially true in markets that were either located in rugged terrain or covered large areas; in these regions, cable (and later satellite) are all but essential for acceptable television. Nearly 300 independent stations existed in the United States by the mid-1980s, in markets of varying sizes, up from fewer than 100 in 1980. They could buy new shows without cash using
barter syndication. Many stations belonged to the Association of Independent Television Stations (INTV), a group similar to the
National Association of Broadcasters, and which lobbied the FCC on behalf of independents. In the 1980s, television syndicators began offering original,
first-run series such as
Solid Gold,
Lifestyles of the Rich and Famous,
Star Search,
Independent Network News and
Star Trek: The Next Generation (as well as canceled network series revived for first-run syndication such as
Fame,
Too Close for Comfort,
Charles in Charge, ''
It's a Living and Baywatch), and made-for-television movies and miniseries like Sadat''. This trend primarily benefited independent stations. Independents scheduled these first-run programs during prime time and on weekends. In the United States, many independent stations were commonly owned. Companies that operated three or more independents included: •
Chris-Craft Industries, and its subsidiary
BHC Communications •
Christian Broadcasting Network •
Clear Channel Communications •
Cox Enterprises •
Gaylord Broadcasting •
Grant Broadcasting System •
Kaiser Broadcasting, and its successor
Field Communications •
Meredith Corporation •
Metromedia •
Pappas Telecasting Companies •
Renaissance Broadcasting •
RKO General •
Scripps-Howard Broadcasting •
Sinclair Broadcast Group •
Taft Television and Radio Company •
Tribune Broadcasting •
TVX Broadcast Group, and its successor
Paramount Stations Group Decline In 1986 several independent outlets, led by the Metromedia stations, formed the
Fox Broadcasting Company, the first major venture at a
fourth U.S. broadcast television network since the
DuMont Television Network shut down in August 1956 (which resulted in some of its affiliates, including those owned by Metromedia, becoming independents). Fox made efforts, slowly at first, to have its affiliates emulate a network programming style as much as possible; but in turn, Fox only carried a
late-night talk show at its launch in October 1986, and beginning in April 1987, offered one night of prime time programming a week (on Sundays). The network only programmed two hours of prime time programming each night (and, beginning in the 1990s, some children's programming through
Fox Kids), but gradually expanded its prime time lineup to all seven nights until January 1993. Fox's owned-and-operated stations left INTV in March 1992. The lack of programming in other dayparts forced most Fox affiliates to maintain the same programming model as independent stations during non-prime time slots, and during its early years, on nights without prime time programming from the network. Fox coerced most of its affiliates to air
prime time newscasts (there were some holdouts as late as 2013, while many others opted to run outsourced local newscasts from a competing network affiliate) as well as news programming in other dayparts common with other major network affiliates. When
a complicated six-station affiliation switch in South Florida saw
WSVN in Miami switch from NBC to Fox in 1989, the station adopted a news-intensive format unlike any independent station or Fox affiliate prior, a scheduling choice initially ridiculed in local media but which quickly attracted industry attention and saw ratings success. This model was copied by stations owned by
New World Communications and
SF Broadcasting that
switched to Fox in the mid-1990s, and to other news-producing Fox and minor network affiliates, and independent stations, by the 2000s. In September 1993, many independents began carrying the
Prime Time Entertainment Network (PTEN), an ad-hoc programming service that emulated a network model, which featured drama series and made-for-TV movies intended for first-run syndication. In January 1995, many remaining independents, including those that carried PTEN, joined upstart networks
The WB and the United Paramount Network (
UPN). The WB, UPN and their affiliates used a very similar programming model to that initially used by Fox and its stations during their first four years of existence (although neither network would expand their prime time lineups to all seven nights); the launch of those networks resulted in PTEN's demise in 1997, as most stations that became affiliates of UPN and The WB (whose respective founding parents, Chris-Craft Industries and
Time Warner, jointly owned PTEN) either dropped the service or moved its lineup out of prime time when those networks launched. Other stations banded together to become charter outlets of the Pax TV (now
Ion Television) network in August 1998, although some of the stations that aligned with Pax had earlier affiliated with its predecessor, the Infomall TV Network (inTV), two years before. The launches of these networks drastically reduced the number of independent stations in the United States; some mid-sized markets would not regain a general entertainment independent until the early 2000s, through sign-ons of unaffiliated stations and disaffiliations by existing stations from other commercial and noncommercial networks. In 2001,
Univision Communications purchased several English language independents in larger markets (which mostly operated as
Home Shopping Network affiliates until the late 1990s) from
USA Broadcasting to form the nuclei of the upstart Spanish language network Telefutura (now
UniMás), which launched in January 2002. Several stations affiliated with The WB and UPN became independent again when the respective parent companies of those networks (Time Warner and
CBS Corporation) decided to
shut them down to form
The CW, which launched in September 2006 with a schedule dominated by shows held over from and an affiliate body primarily made up of stations previously aligned with its two predecessors. Some of the newly independent stations subsequently found a new network home through
MyNetworkTV, itself created out of the prospect that the UPN affiliates of corporate sister
Fox Television Stations would become independents due to The CW choosing to affiliate with
CBS Television Stations and Tribune Broadcasting stations in overlapping markets.
Today As a result of the various network launches that have occurred since the 1986 launch of Fox, true independent stations have become a rarity. The smallest stations, which in the past would have been forced to adopt a locally originated independent program schedule, now have other options – 24-hour-a-day networks that require no local or syndicated programming for the station to carry; some of these networks, such as AMG TV or
America One, follow a full-service variety format, while others are devoted primarily to classic television (such as
MeTV) and/or films, or carry mainly niche programming. Many stations that are affiliated with the larger post-1980s networks still behave much like independents, as they program far more hours a day than a station affiliated with one of the Big Three networks. This is especially the case with MyNetworkTV, whose efforts to offer first-run programming were largely unsuccessful. By 2010, the network had abandoned its first-run programming efforts and became a syndication service, with its programming now focused upon off-network reruns of drama series originating from broadcast networks and cable channels. After this transition, many of MyNetworkTV's affiliates began to downplay their affiliation with the network and move the programming to alternate timeslots (such as late-night or overnight); network owner
Fox Television Stations rebranded most of its MyNetworkTV stations as offshoots of their parent Fox stations (such as "
Fox 11 Plus" for
KCOP-TV) Current independents follow a very different program format from their predecessors. While sitcom reruns are still popular, expanded newscasts and other syndicated programs such as talk shows; courtroom shows; reruns of recent scripted comedy and drama series; and no-cost
public domain programming are common. Another type of content being added to many independent station lineups in recent years has been
brokered programming, including
infomercials,
home shopping and
televangelist programs; the Federal Communications Commission did not allow infomercials to be broadcast on American television until 1984, but since then, it has proven to be a lucrative, if somewhat polarizing with viewers, way to fill airtime. During the 1990s when infomercials gained popularity, many stations began broadcasting 24 hours a day rather than signing off at night. By filling the overnight hours with infomercials, the station would be able to generate extra revenue where they had previously been off the air. Home shopping programs (mainly simulcasts of cable services that also have over-the-air distribution such as
QVC and the Home Shopping Network) or syndicated programs fill overnight time periods on stations that do not run infomercials during that day part. Since the FCC revised its media ownership rules to permit station
duopolies in August 1999, independents that operate on a standalone basis have become quite rare in the United States and, in turn, independents that are senior partners in duopolies are fairly uncommon. With the proliferation of duopolies and
local marketing agreements since that point, most independent stations are operated alongside a major network affiliate (more commonly, one of either ABC, NBC, CBS or Fox), which may share syndicated programming with and/or produce newscasts in non-competitive timeslots for its unaffiliated sister. This is because in most markets, independents tend to have lower viewership than that of a network affiliate, and usually fall within part of the FCC's duopoly criteria (which allows a company to own two stations in the same market if one is not among the four highest-rated at the time of an ownership transaction). == List of notable Canadian independent stations ==