KFBB-TV began broadcasting on March 21, 1954. As the first television station in Great Falls, KFBB-TV was affiliated with all four major networks, and would broadcast programming from all three until
KRTV signed on and took the
NBC affiliation in October 1958. KFBB-TV continued to air
CBS and ABC programming as a member of the Skyline Network (as the
Montana Television Network was then called). At first KFBB-TV was owned by Wilkins Broadcasting along with KFBB radio (1310 AM, now
KEIN), of which
The Anaconda Company owned a 27.5% share. Anaconda, through its Fairmount division, controlled most of the major newspapers in Montana (although not the
Great Falls Tribune) and was notorious for manipulating the state's political visions for its own needs. Then in 1959, Anaconda sold its media holdings to
Lee Enterprises of
Davenport, Iowa. Because of antitrust concerns, Lee decided to sell KFBB. The station was sold in 1962 to Harriscope Broadcasting, which in 1965 scored a deal for a primary ABC affiliation—Montana's first. The new affiliation took effect on February 1, 1966. Harriscope severed KFBB's links with the Skyline Network (which signed up with KRTV), and sold off KFBB radio in February 1969, but continued to run KFBB-TV, eventually selling it to Donald P. Nathanson in 1977. After affiliating primarily with ABC, the station continued secondary affiliation with CBS until that network switched to KRTV in 1969, and then started running NBC on a per program basis as late as December 1986, when KTGF (now
KJJC-TV) signed on and took over the NBC affiliation. KFBB also carried
Sesame Street for several years, before Montana had a
PBS service of its own. KFBB's ABC affiliation allowed it to be carried on
cable television systems in both
Alberta and
Saskatchewan; it even maintained a sales office in
Saskatoon, as did
Williston stations
KUMV-TV and
KXMD-TV. This arrangement continued until 1986, when KFBB was largely replaced by a satellite signal from
WXYZ-TV, the ABC affiliate in
Detroit. An April 1981 application with the
Federal Communications Commission (FCC) requested transfer of control of the licensee corporation from owner Donald P. Nathanson to his estate, following his death. In early 1982, the station saw a flurry of transfers that saw KFBB-TV moved, first from the Nathanson estate to Advance TV of California, then from Advance TV to Wooster Republican Printing Company of Ohio, which would operate the station through various holding companies (e.g., KFBB Corporation, KFBB LLC, Dix Communications). In June 2003, Wooster Republican Printing made deep cuts in local news production, ending morning, noon and weekend newscasts. It retained KFBB until November 2004, when it was sold to
Max Media of Montana, owner of KTGF. Since the Great Falls market did not have enough full-power television stations to allow a
broadcast duopoly, Max Media kept the more-established KFBB and sold KTGF. In 2008, the station began using an on-air logo identical to the former logos of ABC affiliate
WEWS-TV in
Cleveland and CBS affiliate
KREX-TV in
Grand Junction, Colorado—neither station is related to KFBB. In 2012, the station returned to the "ABC 5" branding (which had been used prior to 2006). On September 30, 2013, the
Cowles Company acquired Max Media's Montana television station cluster (KULR, and ABC affiliates
KWYB/
Butte, KFBB-TV/Great Falls, KHBB-LD/Helena and
KTMF/
Missoula) for $18 million. The sale was completed on November 29. Soon after the purchase, Cowles merged its Montana ABC stations into a regional network based at KFBB, under the branding "ABC Montana."
KFBB-DT2/KHBB-LD2 (Fox Montana) Since July 13, 2009, KFBB's subchannel has been carrying
Fox programs. Prior to that, only KHBB did so, since October 2008, as Fox was received via KLMN, and before that, in Helena, viewers received Fox programming via
KMTF, later from
Foxnet, when KMTF joined Pax TV (later i, now
Ion) in 2001, and then from the network's Denver affiliate
KDVR after Foxnet shut down in 2006. Fox is broadcast on digital channel 21.2, and, like 21.1, is available in
720p high definition. Programming from Fox's secondary
MyNetworkTV service is aired unbranded an hour after Fox prime time, after a half-hour newscast and
Inside Edition on weeknights. ==News operation==