After the
Federal Communications Commission (FCC) lifted its freeze on television station grants in 1952, Meyer Broadcasting Company filed for channel 5 in Bismarck on November 28, 1952. Also filing for channel 5 was M. B. Rudman, an oilman from
Minot. In February 1953, Rudman changed his application to specify the other
VHF channel in the city, channel 12, clearing the way for both groups to be granted
construction permits on March 4. From a temporary transmission facility atop the
North Dakota State Capitol, KFYR-TV began broadcasting on December 19, 1953. It held affiliations with NBC and
CBS; KFYR's relationship with NBC in radio dated to 1931. The State Capitol transmitter, said to be the only one of its kind in the country, was replaced in 1954 by the permanent facility, a more typical mast east of Bismarck. A second television station came to Bismarck in 1955, KBMB-TV (channel 12, later changed to
KXMB-TV), which was a CBS affiliate and served as an extension of
KXJB-TV in
Valley City and
KCJB-TV in
Minot. Earlier that year, KFYR-TV began broadcasting live network programming to Bismarck. KFYR-TV would continue to air some ABC programming until a full-time ABC service,
KBMY, began broadcasting in 1985. Meyer Broadcasting expanded its reach with the construction of two new stations in 1957 and 1958. The first application to be granted was that for channel 10 in Minot (KMOT-TV), in October 1955, and Meyer was unopposed in its bid for channel 8 at Williston (KUMV-TV), which was approved in 1956. Dickinson would have to wait much longer for its full-power station, KQCD, to begin in 1980. Local news inserts from Dickinson ended on December 31, 1991, with the station turning to rebroadcasting KFYR's Bismarck news. In 1995, Meyer acquired KTHI-TV in Fargo, which it renamed KVLY-TV. When Meyer opted to exit broadcasting in 1998, KFYR-TV and its associated stations were sold to
Sunrise Television Corporation for $63.75 million; at that time, KFYR-TV accounted for 57 percent of all broadcast TV viewing in Bismarck. The sale separated KFYR radio and television, which at the time shared several on-air personalities and a news director. It was the first of several sales for KFYR-TV. In 2002, North Dakota Television LLC, a consortium of private equity firms The Wicks Group of Companies,
JP Morgan Partners, and Halyard Capital acquired the KFYR system as well as KVLY-TV in Fargo.
Hoak Media of Dallas acquired these stations, as well as
KSFY-TV in
Sioux Falls, South Dakota, and its satellites in 2006. The NBC North Dakota network picked up
MeTV in April 2013, with an official launch date of May 1, 2013. On November 20, 2013,
Gray Television announced it would purchase Hoak Media in a $335 million deal. Gray initially planned, through Excalibur Broadcasting, to also acquire Fox affiliate
KNDX/KXND for $7.5 million and operate them under a local marketing agreement. On March 25, 2014, Prime Cities Broadcasting, owner of KNDX/KXND, requested that the FCC dismiss the sale of that station to Excalibur. Gray would instead acquire the stations' non-license assets; upon the closure of the Hoak purchases on June 13, 2014, KNDX/KXND were shuttered and their Fox programs moved to subchannels of KFYR and its satellites. ==News operation==