The station originated as WKST-TV (UHF
analog channel 45) as the television partner to
WKST radio, and was licensed to
New Castle, Pennsylvania, on April 4, 1953. Besides serving New Castle, it was the default ABC affiliate in Youngstown, making Youngstown at the time one of the smallest markets to have full-time affiliates of all three networks (following the demise of the
DuMont Television Network), as ABC would be relegated to secondary status in many markets until the 1970s. It also served the northern and western portions of the
Pittsburgh market with poor signals from
WENS (frequency now occupied by
WINP-TV). After WENS signed off due to financial problems (some assets would be used to launch what eventually became
WPNT), WKST-TV was the only full-time ABC affiliate in
Western Pennsylvania until September 1958 when
WTAE-TV went live; future sister station
WJET-TV would sign on in
Erie, Pennsylvania, in 1966. After being
dark for a period of time, WKST-TV moved to the stronger channel 33 in 1959, improving its over-the-air signal in the process. After moving channels, WYTV was replaced on channel 45 by
WXTV, an
independent station that signed on in November 1960; WXTV would be forced off the air on February 28, 1962, and never resumed broadcasting, the FCC denied their license application in April 1964 after an extensive investigation into it and co-owned
WWIZ in
Lorain, Ohio. In 1973, channel 45 was re-allocated to nearby
Alliance, Ohio, as an educational channel and became
WNEO. In September 1963, WKST-TV moved its
city of license and most of its operations to Youngstown under its current call letters, WYTV. WYTV was owned by a consortium of local investors until 1965, when a group headed by Adam Young Inc. (whose namesake founder, along with his son Vincent, would start
Young Broadcasting 21 years later) purchased the station. A company known as Aurovideo, Inc., which was owned by the Adams-Russell Company, acquired WYTV on November 13, 1970. On June 22, 1983,
Benedek Broadcasting purchased 50% of the station with investor Robert L. Dudley, and formed the Youngstown Broadcasting Company as licensee. Benedek purchased the remaining stake on November 25, 1985, Like many small television markets, clearance issues arose in Youngstown for the fledgling
Fox network when it obtained
rights to the National Football League in 1994, as there were no stations to take on a primary affiliation with Fox. The network originally approached WKBN-TV to carry its NFL coverage that March, but that station passed due to threats from
CBS to refuse to feed
60 Minutes to any of its affiliates that signed up. With
WFMJ already carrying the
NFL on NBC, WYTV was the only station left and announced a deal to carry Fox's NFL coverage on April 11, 1994. WYTV never cleared any of Fox's prime time programming, which was available to cable subscribers via the network's affiliates in
Cleveland (
WJW) and
Pittsburgh (
WPGH). WYTV retained its secondary affiliation until WKBN-TV's ownership launched
WYFX-LP as the market's primary Fox affiliate in time for the 1998 season—a significant revenue loss that contributed to layoffs and the temporary cancellation of the station's morning newscast. Benedek Broadcasting remained the station's owner until the company's
bankruptcy filing in 2002. Instead of being purchased by
Gray Television, WYTV was bought by Chelsey Television, LLC and was managed by
Barrington Broadcasting. The station has applied to increase its digital signal to one
megawatt at the end of the transition. On February 6, 2007, Chelsey Television filed an application with the
FCC to sell WYTV to Los Angeles–based Parkin Broadcasting (later PBC Broacasting), owned by Todd Parkin, WYTV then moved from its 3800 Shady Run Road studios over to the WKBN/WYFX facilities in Boardman Township. On May 7, 2012,
LIN TV Corporation announced that it will acquire the New Vision Television station group for $330.4 million and the assumption of $12 million in debt. Along with the outright ownership of WKBN-TV, the agreement includes the acquisition of New Vision's shared services agreement with PBC (which is also transferring the licenses of then PBC-owned stations WYTV,
KTKA-TV in
Topeka, Kansas, and
WTGS in
Savannah, Georgia, to Vaughan Media), giving LIN operational control of WYTV. LIN and Vaughan also entered into a joint sales agreement for WYTV. On October 2, the FCC approved the proposed sale to LIN TV. The transaction was closed on October 12, 2012. On March 21, 2014,
Media General announced that it would purchase LIN Media and its stations, including WKBN-TV, WYFX-LD, and the SSA and JSA with WYTV, in a $1.6 billion merger. The FCC approved the deal on December 12, 2014, but a condition of the deal requires Media General to end the JSA between WKBN-TV and WYTV within two years due to tighter regulations on such deals. The merger was completed on December 19. Despite the conditions, WKBN-TV continues to operate WYTV, including after
Nexstar Media Group acquired Media General in early 2017. In 2017, WKBN sold its spectrum for $34 million as part of the FCC's
spectrum reallocation program and will move its broadcasting to WYTV's frequency. WKBN-TV moved to WYTV's frequency on April 23, 2018. To make room for WKBN-TV, Bounce TV moved from 33.3 to WYFX's 19.4 while
Ion Television moved from 27.3 to WYFX 19.3.
MyYTV On June 13, 2006, WYTV announced that it would launch a new second digital subchannel in September 2006 featuring MyNetworkTV. The move made that station the last full-power channel to launch a secondary subchannel in Youngstown. The official launch occurred September 5 while soon after on September 18 WB outlet "
WBCB" (controlled and operated by
NBC affiliate
WFMJ-TV) became part of The CW. The digital subchannel is branded as "MyYTV", and simulcasts on
WYFX-LD2. At its sign-on, it originally aired eighteen hours of original local programming each week and another 30½ hours of programming that was not original. The station carries taped high school football and basketball "Game of the Week" match-ups as well as tape delayed
Youngstown State University football along with men's and women's basketball home games. It also aired
Mahoning Valley Thunder arena football games and currently show select
Mahoning Valley Scrappers baseball games. For a period as a separate station, WYTV produced a prime time newscast at 10 on this MyNetworkTV second digital subchannel. This competed with another broadcast airing at the same time on Fox affiliate WYFX that is still produced today by WKBN. WYTV-DT2 currently repeats the main channel's weekday morning show from 7 to 9 that is known as
33 News at Daybreak. This broadcast features news anchor Len Rome (who is also a health reporter, "Good Question" segment producer, and feature reporter),
weather caster Jim Loboy, and news reporter Greta Mittereder (who also produces the "Greta On The Go" segment). ==Programming==