2024 in American television
Certain American television events in 2024 have been scheduled. Events listed include television show debuts, finales, and cancellations; channel launches, closures, and re-brandings; stations changing or adding their network affiliations; information on controversies, business transactions, and carriage disputes; and deaths of those who made various contributions to the medium.
Notable events
[edit]January
[edit]Date | Event | Ref. |
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4 | The NCAA and ESPN announce an eight-year deal, beginning September 1 and running through the 2031–32 academic year, that will see ESPN and its sister networks carry championship events in 21 women's and 19 men's sports across the three NCAA divisions, most notably continued coverage of the Division I women's basketball tournament. | [1] |
5 | Nigel Lythgoe announces he has stepped down from his role on So You Think You Can Dance in the wake of two sexual misconduct lawsuits filed against him. Lythgoe, who has denied the accusations, co-created the Fox reality competition series in 2005, and had served as its executive producer and lead judge. | [2] |
7 | Rather than stay with the network as a commentator and fill-in anchor, Medhi Hasan concludes the last episode of his self-titled MSNBC weekend show by stating he will depart the network entirely. The Mehdi Hasan Show's cancellation was announced in November 2023 by MSNBC as part of a revamp of its weekend schedule that took effect the weekend of January 13–14. | [3][4] |
The 81st Golden Globe Awards aired on CBS and Paramount+, with notable winners including Best Motion Pictures Poor Things (Musical or Comedy) and Oppenheimer (Drama, among its five wins) and TV series Succession (Best Drama Series, among four wins in a night-leading nine nominations), The Bear (Best Musical or Comedy Series, among its three wins), and Beef (Best Limited Series, Anthology, or Film, among its three wins). The ceremony was hosted by Jo Koy, whose opening monologue was poorly received by guests and critics; Koy defended himself by saying he was hired only ten days prior after several other comedians reportedly declined to host. It also marks the ceremony's return to CBS after a 42-year absence (it previously aired on the network from 1981 to 1982); NBC had televised the Globes since 1996, aside from a one-year absence in 2022. | [5][6] [7][8] [note 1] | |
9 | The Oklahoma City Thunder reach an agreement with Griffin Media to air eight Friday night games from its remaining 2023–24 regular schedule sublicensed from longtime cable partner Bally Sports Oklahoma (per a clause in parent Diamond Sports Group's 2023–24 NBA contract that allows teams to offer a selection of over-the-air telecasts to local stations within their broadcast territory). The regional sports network will produce and employ its on-air staff for the telecasts (beginning with a January 26 away game against the New Orleans Pelicans), which will air on Griffin-owned MyNetworkTV affiliate KSBI/Oklahoma City (which previously aired Thunder games from 2008 to 2011) and local news subchannel KOTV-DT3/Tulsa. | [9][10] [11][12] [note 2] |
10 | Two events featuring Republican Party hopefuls for president are concurrently telecast from Des Moines, Iowa: CNN hosts the fifth GOP debate of the campaign season featuring Florida Governor Ron DeSantis and former UN Ambassador Nikki Haley, while Fox News counterprograms with a town hall featuring nomination frontrunner Donald Trump, the former president's first live appearance on that network since 2022. | [13][14] |
13 | The Miami Dolphins play the Kansas City Chiefs in an NFL Wild Card game. Peacock broadcasts the contest nationally, the first NFL playoff game to be carried exclusively on a streaming service (though NBC's Miami and Kansas City affiliates carry it locally to satisfy the league's local broadcast requirements). | [15] |
14 | The 29th Critics' Choice Awards were held at the Barker Hangar in Santa Monica, California, with notable winners including films Oppenheimer and Barbie (with eight and six wins, respectively) and TV programs The Bear, Beef (with four wins each) and Succession (with three wins). Chelsea Handler hosted the ceremony on The CW, which used the broadcast to unveil a new brand identity that drops the "The" from its redefined logo (though "The CW" remains the network's name) and replaces its long-time green signature color with a red–orange "hot sauce" palette. | [16][17] |
15 | The 75th Primetime Emmy Awards aired on Fox from the Peacock Theater in Los Angeles with Anthony Anderson as host. Notable winners include The Bear and Succession (both with six major wins each, including Outstanding Comedy Series and Outstanding Drama Series, respectively), and Beef (with five awards, including Outstanding Limited or Anthology Series). The ceremony was rescheduled from its original date of September 18, 2023 due to the Hollywood labor disputes. | [18][19] |
17 | Diamond Sports Group, owner of the Bally Sports regional networks, announces a bankruptcy restructuring agreement—subject to court approval—that will see Amazon become a minority investor in the company (acquiring a 15% share, in exchange for a $115 million investment) and have Prime Video become its primary streaming partner. The Sinclair Broadcast Group subsidiary has been in Chapter 11 bankruptcy since March 2023, and the deal will also see Sinclair make a $495 million cash payment to settle a lawsuit (filed in July 2023) alleging that Sinclair received about $1.5 billion in transactions that were designed to benefit itself while damaging Diamond's finances. | [20] |
23 | World Wrestling Entertainment and Netflix announce a ten-year, $5 billion deal to carry WWE Raw in the United States and Canada beginning in January 2025, which will result in the end of the program's run on cable television after 31 years across two networks (USA Network from 1993 to 2000 and from 2005 to 2024, and Spike TV from 2000 to 2005). Under the same deal, Netflix will eventually gain global rights to Raw, and international rights to all other WWE programming, as existing contracts expire. | [21][22] |
The Dallas Mavericks reach an agreement with Tegna-owned WFAA/Dallas–Fort Worth to air ten games from its remaining 2023–24 regular schedule sublicensed from Bally Sports Southwest (per a clause in Diamond Sports' NBA contract for the season, see January 9 entry), which will produce and employ its on-air staff for the telecasts. The package of Bally-produced games (which will begin with a March 1 away game against the Boston Celtics) joins three national ABC-televised games that were already slated to air on WFAA through April (including a January 24 home game against the Phoenix Suns). The Mavericks last televised their games over-the-air on CBS-owned KTXA from 2000 to 2021, when longtime cable home Bally Sports Southwest became their exclusive regional TV partner. | [23][24] [note 3] | |
24 | Comedy Central announces that Jon Stewart will return to The Daily Show as an executive producer and, through the 2024 U.S. election cycle, host on Monday nights (beginning February 12), with members of the show's correspondents roster anchoring the rest of the week. Stewart had served as the show's host from 1999 to 2015. | [26] |
28 | The Milwaukee Bucks reach an agreement with Weigel Broadcasting to air a package of ten games from its remaining 2023–24 regular schedule on independent WMLW, along with regional simulcasts on stations throughout Wisconsin and in the Quad Cities, to be produced by Bally Sports Wisconsin under a sublicensing agreement. Two of the scheduled games will be simulcast on WMLW's Milwaukee-area sister stations: a February 23 away game against the Minnesota Timberwolves (the first of the slate) that will also air on co-owned CBS affiliate WDJT, and a March 4 home game against the Los Angeles Clippers that will be presented in Spanish on Telemundo affiliate WYTU. They will be the first local over-the-air Bucks telecasts since the team's 19-year relationship with WCGV ended in 2007. | [27][28] [note 4] |
February
[edit]Date | Event | Ref. |
---|---|---|
1 | Gray Television announces it reached an agreement to trade CBS/CW+ affiliate KGWN/Cheyenne, NBC/CW+ affiliate KCWY/Casper, Wyoming, and NBC affiliate KNEP/Scottsbluff, Nebraska (which concurrently shut down its news bureau, replaced in-house newscasts with simulcasts from KGWN/KCWY's Cheyenne-based Wyoming News Now operation, and laid off most of its Scottsbluff-based staff) to Marquee Broadcasting, in exchange for the latter group's construction permit for the proposed KCBU/Salt Lake City. Neither company will receive additional cash or other compensation as part of the transaction. | [32][33] [34] [note 5] |
2 | Twelve Cox Media Group-owned stations in nine markets are dropped from DirecTV and co-owned DirecTV Stream and U-verse in a contract renewal impasse, resulting in the complete loss of satellite distribution for the group's stations. (Cox has been in a dispute with Dish Network since November 2022, resulting in the removal of those 12 stations, out of 13 operated by the group.) The Cox-owned stations were restored on February 11, in turn, averting subscriber blackouts of CBS's Super Bowl LVIII coverage in the Seattle and Dayton markets. | [35][36] [37][38] [note 6] |
4 | The 66th Annual Grammy Awards aired on CBS and streamed on Paramount+ from the Crypto.com Arena, with Trevor Noah as host. Notable winners include Phoebe Bridgers (who received the most wins with four awards, including Best Pop Duo/Group Performance for "Ghost in the Machine" alongside SZA), Taylor Swift (whose Album of the Year win for Midnights made her the first artist to win in that category four times), Miley Cyrus (who won Record of the Year for "Flowers"), siblings Billie Eilish and Finneas (jointly earning Song of the Year for "What Was I Made For?" from the Barbie film soundtrack), and Victoria Monét (the Best New Artist winner). | [39][40] [41] |
6 | Actress Gina Carano sues The Walt Disney Company and co-owned Lucasfilm on claims she was wrongfully fired from The Mandalorian, seeking an order forcing the studio to rehire her or pay at least $75,000 in damages. Carano, who played Cara Dune during the Disney+ space Western's first two seasons, was fired in February 2021 after comparing the treatment of conservatives to the Nazi persecution of Jews in an Instagram post (one of several inflammatory social media posts of hers that were heavily criticized for their far-right viewpoints including remarks mocking COVID-19 masking mandates and the inclusion of gender pronouns in social media profiles, and falsely claiming voter fraud in the 2020 election). Carano, who received assistance from X/Twitter parent X Corp. to cover legal fees, claims Lucasfilm did not hold male co-stars to similar standards for controversial posts aimed at Republicans (including one by series lead Pedro Pascal from 2017, comparing then-President Donald Trump to Hitler), and subjected her to harassment and hurt her future work prospects. | [42][43] [note 7] |
Five years after rejoining PBS, KCET/Los Angeles rebrands as "PBS SoCal Plus" to further connect it with sister station KOCE/Huntington Beach, which replaced KCET as the market's primary PBS member (and first adopted the "PBS SoCal" brand) in January 2011. The callsign and the programming remains the same. | [46][47] | |
ESPN Inc., Fox Corporation and Warner Bros. Discovery announce plans to launch a sports-focused streaming service, later branded as Venu Sports in May, that would feature live feeds from their respective linear sports and broadcast networks (including ESPN, ABC and the former's sister networks such as ESPN2 and SEC Network; Fox and sister networks FS1, FS2 and Big Ten Network; and WBD-owned TNT, TBS and truTV), and streaming content from ESPN+, the major sports leagues (including the NBA, NHL, NFL and Major League Baseball) and college sports conferences. The service, which will also be optionally bundled with Disney+, Hulu or Max, will reportedly not impact ESPN's own plans to launch a full direct-to-consumer streaming service, which the company confirmed the following day would launch in the Fall of 2025. In response, FuboTV filed an antitrust lawsuit on February 20, claiming Venu would give the three broadcasters an unfair advantage over providers such as Fubo who are forced to carry less-desirable programming for access to sports. On August 16, a federal judge issued a preliminary injunction to block Venu's launch. On September 12, the lawsuit's trial date was set for October 2025. | [48][49] [50][51] [52][53] [54] | |
7 | Actress Arianne Zucker sues former Days of Our Lives co-executive producer/director Albert Alarr, executive producer Ken Corday and production company Corday Productions, alleging she was discriminated and wrongfully fired after filing a complaint accusing Alarr of making unwanted sexual advances and touching her nonconsensually while working on the Peacock soap opera. Zucker—who played Nicole Walker over three stints since she was cast on the then-NBC serial in 1998—claims that, as retaliation for her involvement in Days distributor Sony Pictures Television's investigation into Alarr's conduct (which led to his August 2023 dismissal), she was written out of storylines and given a "take it or leave it" offer to renew her contract (which lapsed in January without renewal, with Zucker contending Corday Productions refused to negotiate in good faith) despite her veteran cast member status, along with having had her salary and travel budget cut. | [55][56] |
The Federal Communications Commission issues a $720,000 fine against Nexstar Media Group in relation to a complaint filed in July 2023 by Hawaiian Telcom that the group violated FCC good faith carriage negotiation rules in their two-month dispute (which began the month prior) that blacked out Nexstar's KHON (Fox/CW)–KHII (MyNetworkTV)/Honolulu and NewsNation from the provider's systems. Hawaiian Telcom accused Nexstar of withholding consent by not responding to its request to extend negotiations by one week until immediately before the agreement expired, that Nexstar demanded an 80% increase in carriage fees, and that the group demanded Hawaiian Telcom rescind its FCC complaint and not file any against the company in the future. | [57][58] [59][60] [note 8] | |
11 | The NFL's Super Bowl LVIII, won by the Kansas City Chiefs (25–22, in overtime) over the San Francisco 49ers, airs on CBS from Allegiant Stadium in Paradise, Nevada. Univision airs Spanish-language coverage of the game (that network's first ever Super Bowl), while CBS sibling network Nickelodeon also airs a kid-oriented broadcast (the first alternate English-language telecast of a Super Bowl). The game becomes the most-watched television program in history, with an estimated 123.4 million viewers. | [61][62] [63][64] [65] |
12 | The Cleveland Cavaliers reach an agreement with Gray Television to air a package of five games from its remaining 2023–24 regular schedule locally on CW affiliate WUAB and in Cincinnati on Fox affiliate WXIX, along with regional simulcasts on stations throughout the rest of Ohio and West Virginia's northern panhandle. The package, which will be produced by Bally Sports Ohio under a sublicensing agreement, will begin with a March 5 away game against the Boston Celtics and marks the first time Cavs games have been televised over-the-air since their previous 24-year relationship with WUAB ended in 2018, in favor of an exclusive agreement with longtime cable home Fox Sports Ohio (renamed in 2021 under the Bally Sports banner). | [66][67] [note 9] |
During an appearance on Jimmy Kimmel Live!, Katy Perry announces that she would be leaving American Idol following its upcoming 22nd season (which premiered on February 18). Perry has been on the ABC talent competition's judge panel since its revival in 2018. | [69] | |
13 | NBC Sports California announces the hiring of Jenny Cavnar as primary play-by-play announcer for its Oakland Athletics telecasts, beginning with the upcoming 2024 Major League Baseball season. Cavnar, who spent the past 12 years as a pre- and post-game host and backup announcer for Colorado Rockies games, becomes the first woman in MLB history to call games on a regular basis. | [70] |
15 | During a viewer submission segment on its 7:00 p.m. newscast, KGW/Portland, Oregon airs a photo—captioned "Boy scouts in the 50s" by the submitter—showing a racist slur (“hit the nigger baby”) on a banner for a fairground ball-throwing attraction. The Tegna-owned NBC affiliate issues an apology during its newscasts the next day, acknowledging their "failure to uphold," and promising their reevaluation of, station standards regarding viewer-submitted content. | [71][72] [note 10] |
17 | Former U.S. Representative George Santos sues Jimmy Kimmel for $750,000 on charges of copyright infringement, fraud, breach of contract, and unjust enrichment after Kimmel purchased custom Cameo videos from Santos using fake names and aired them on his ABC late night show. | [73] |
18 | The 49th People's Choice Awards air on NBC, E! and Peacock from the Barker Hangar in Santa Monica, California, with Simu Liu as host. Among television nominees, The Kardashians (Reality Show of the Year, and Khloé Kardashian for Reality TV Star of the Year), The Last of Us (Drama Show of the Year, and Pedro Pascal for Male TV Star of the Year) and Only Murders in the Building (Comedy Show of the Year, and Selena Gomez for Female TV Star of the Year) tied for the most wins, with two awards each, while Grey's Anatomy won the Show of the Year. Barbie had the most wins among all categories with five awards (including Movie of the Year, and respective wins by Ryan Gosling and Margot Robbie for Male and Female Movie Star of the Year). Taylor Swift led the music categories with four awards (including Female Artist of the Year). Adam Sandler and Lenny Kravitz, respectively, were honored with the People's Icon Award and Music Icon Award. | [74][75] |
22 | Sam Waterston makes his final appearance on Law & Order as Jack McCoy, as the character resigns as New York City District Attorney rather than face the political wrath of the mayor (for subpoenaing the mayor's son in a murder case) in the episode "Last Dance." Waterston, who announced his departure from the series on February 2 (after appearing in over 400 episodes in 19 seasons across 30 years), will be succeeded by Tony Goldwyn as new DA Nicholas Baxter later in the current 23rd season. | [76][77] |
28 | Tom Skilling retires from WGN-TV/Chicago, after nearly 46 years as meteorologist for the Nexstar-owned independent station. His final evening newscasts that day capped off a month-long tribute to Skilling, who earned reverence in the Chicago broadcasting and national meteorological communities during his tenure (the latter resulting from his weathercasts being televised over WGN's former superstation feed (now NewsNation) from 1978 to 2014) for the in-depth analysis and striking accuracy of his forecasts. Demetrius Ivory, who joined the station in 2013, succeeded Skilling as chief meteorologist on February 29. | [78][79] |
Nexstar Media Group petitions the Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals to review changes to FCC broadcast ownership rules passed in December 2023 that closed loopholes allowing licensees to hold more than one Big Four affiliation in a market by placing certain networks on subchannels or low-power stations, and upheld a 1996 rule prohibiting broadcasters from owning stations that reach more than 39% of U.S. households in total. Nexstar asserts that the FCC overstepped its authority by tightening ownership rules despite competition to broadcast media by pay television and streaming, and claims the order had numerous procedural problems and faulty conclusions in violation of the Administrative Procedure Act and the 1996 Telecommunications Act. | [80][81] [note 11] |
March
[edit]Date | Event | Ref. |
---|---|---|
7 | President Joe Biden delivers his third State of the Union address, airing along with associated coverage on all major broadcast and cable news networks. In the speech, Biden addressed issues such as the economy, democracy, abortion rights (directly addressing Supreme Court justices in an unscripted moment regarding the 2022 court decision that overturned Roe v. Wade), immigration (reiterating calls for House Republicans to pass bipartisan immigration legislation stalled under pressure from Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump and mentioning the February murder of Laken Riley in the context of border policy), the Russian invasion of Ukraine, and the Israel-Hamas War (advocating for a temporary ceasefire and two-state solution to the conflict, and demanding Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu allow in humanitarian aid to Gaza civilians). The Republican response delivered by Alabama U.S. Senator Katie Britt, which primarily touched on immigration, drew largely negative reviews (including from Republicans), and was criticized for its inaccuracy (including a misrepresentation of the story of Karla Jacinto Romero, who was sold into sex trafficking while in Mexico during George W. Bush's presidency) and for Britt's stylistic delivery (described as "dramatic", "creepy", "insincere" and "over-the-top", and questioning her decision to conduct the response in her kitchen). The address drew 32.2 million viewers across nine networks, with Fox News registering the highest viewership at 5.640 million. | [82][83] [84][85] [86][87] [88][89] [90] |
10 | The 96th Academy Awards air on ABC from the Dolby Theatre, with Jimmy Kimmel as host. Oppenheimer led all nominees in overall wins with seven awards, including Best Picture, Best Actor (Cillian Murphy), Best Supporting Actor (Robert Downey Jr.) and Best Director (Christopher Nolan). Other major winners included Poor Things with four awards, including Best Actress (Emma Stone); and The Zone of Interest with two, including Best International Feature Film. Billie Eilish and Finneas won Best Original Song (for "What Was I Made For?" from the Barbie film soundtrack), becoming the youngest two-time Oscar winners in history (at ages 22 and 26, respectively), having previously won the award in 2022. The telecast was watched by 19.5 million viewers, the highest viewership for any awards show since 2020. | [91][92] [93][94] [95] |
11 | TNT Sports launches a nightly sports block on TruTV that features a mix of live sports events (including “alterna-casts”—specialized simulcasts targeting various audiences—of NHL, MLB and NBA games shown on TBS and TNT, NCAA men's basketball tournament coverage and MotoGP races); sports news and ancillary original programs (including the half-hour TNT Sports Update, sports betting program The Line, social media conversation show Handles, and a weekly program based on the social media clip showcase House of Highlights); and sports-focused movies and documentaries. Reruns of its original unscripted programs (including its last remaining non-sports original program, Impractical Jokers, which will consequently move its first-run episodes to TBS in the summer) will continue to air in the morning and daytime hours following the addition of the “TNT Sports on TruTV" block. | [96][97] |
14 | In a 3–2 party-line vote (backed solely by its Democratic commissioners), the Federal Communications Commission, as part of a broader effort by the Biden administration to curb hidden "junk" fees charged to customers, passes new rules requiring cable and satellite providers to disclose the total cost of their programming packages—including any additional programming-related fees, such as surcharges for receiving local stations and regional sports networks—in billing and promotional materials. The NCTA asserts that the rules, as written, would create confusion for customers and that providers already offer “clear and accurate pricing information” about their programming tiers. | [98][99] |
17 | Three days after the FCC voted to require television providers to disclose "all-in" pricing (incorporating surcharges for receiving certain channels) and likely in response to recent carriage disputes with station operators, DirecTV introduces a "No Locals" option for its Entertainment, Choice, Ultimate and Premier programming tiers, allowing its satellite customers the ability to opt out of receiving local broadcast stations available in their home markets for a $12 monthly discount. (It joins rival satellite provider Dish Network, which has offered such opt-outs since 2017, in allowing customers to exclude local stations from their channel packages.) | [100][101] [note 12] |
18 | Former U.S. president and 2024 presumptive Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump sues ABC News and George Stephanopoulos for defamation, claiming the This Week moderator harmed his reputation by stating multiple times in a March 10 interview with Rep. Nancy Mace (R-S.C.) that Trump had been found civilly liable for raping former Vogue advice columnist E. Jean Carroll. The lawsuit, filed in the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of Florida, stems from Stephanopoulos' questioning of Mace, a rape survivor, about her continued support of Trump despite two recent jury verdicts in related civil battery and defamation suits that found he sexually abused Carroll, who has been awarded $88.3 million in damages, in 1995/96. (Mace accused Stephanopoulos of trying to “shame” her by probing why she endorsed Trump for president.) While the jury in the initial 2023 civil defamation case technically found Trump liable for sexually assaulting and defaming Carroll, Judge Lewis Kaplan later clarified that they found that Trump raped her by forcible digital penetration (defined as sexual assault under New York's penal code), concluding her allegation of rape was “substantially true" in the broader context beyond the state's legal definition. | [102][103] [104] |
19 | Bellator MMA announces a distribution deal with Warner Bros. Discovery that will see Max acquire streaming rights to the promotion's mixed martial arts events (including its eight 2024 Champions Series fights, starting with Bellator 302 on March 22), archival fight cards (dating to Bellator's 2008 inception) and original docuseries, along with additional fights and ancillary content on TruTV. The WBD deal replaces a previous agreement with former owner Paramount Global, which acquired the promotion in 2011 (as Viacom) and sold it to the Professional Fighters League in 2023. (Outside of a 2019–20 deal with DAZN, Bellator matches aired on multiple Paramount/Viacom-owned networks during that timeframe, last airing on Showtime from 2021 to 2023, with that deal ending as a result of Paramount shuttering the premium channel's sports division.) | [105][106] [note 13] |
20 | The College Football Playoff announces a six-year deal with ESPN (worth an estimated $7.8 billion overall) that will see the network retain broadcast rights to the College Football Playoff through the 2020–31 academic year, and will transfer the CFP National Championship game from ESPN to sister network ABC (which carried the predecessor BCS National Championship Game from 1999 to 2006) starting in 2026. The agreement also modifies terms of the remaining two years of ESPN's initial contract for the CFP television rights (a 12-year deal that was signed in 2014) to account for the tournament's expansion from four to 12 teams, starting with the 2024–25 college football season, and allows for ESPN to sublicense a select number of CFP games to other networks. | [107][108] |
21 | The FCC fines Nexstar Media Group and partner company Mission Broadcasting a combined $1.82 million, and orders the latter to sell WPIX/New York City, ruling that Nexstar unlawfully circumvented national broadcast ownership limits through a local marketing agreement it signed in December 2020, as part of an option that Mission exercised to buy the CW affiliate from the E. W. Scripps Company, that resulted in “an unauthorized transfer of control” of WPIX to Nexstar through certain attributable interests. (The FCC limits a single company from owning television stations that reach a combined 39% of American TV households, thus requiring Nexstar—which maintains similar operational arrangements with Mission in 26 other markets—to sell other stations in its portfolio in order to acquire WPIX while complying with the cap). Its first sale proposal to meet the cap would be disclosed on April 12, as it proposed to sell MyNetworkTV affiliate WJMN/Escanaba, Michigan (a former semi-satellite of co-owned WFRV/Green Bay that lost its CBS affiliation in 2022 in a chain-wide affiliation renewal dispute with the network) to a former Quincy Media executive who would enter into an LMA with Morgan Murphy Media, the new owners of ABC/CW affiliate WBUP/WBKP in the same market. | [109][110] [111] [note 14] |
22 | NBC News announces that Ronna McDaniel will join the network as a contributor for its political and Election Night coverage. The hiring of McDaniel—who, on March 8, ended her seven-year term as Republican National Committee chair, a role in which she frequently echoed Donald Trump's false claims that the 2020 presidential election was rigged in Joe Biden's favor and helped organize fake electors in key battleground states in an attempt to overturn the outcome—was met with furor within the news division including on-air denouncements from MSNBC's hosts and analysts. MSNBC president Rashida Jones, responding to staff backlash, announced on March 23 that McDaniel would not appear on its programs. McDaniel, for her part, used a March 24 appearance on NBC's Meet the Press (which was scheduled and recorded before her hiring by the network) to state that Biden won fairly and disagrees with Trump's desire to pardon the January 6 rioters. NBC parted ways with McDaniel on March 26, citing a lack of consensus in support of her hiring. | [112][113] [114][115] [116][117] |
25 | CBS announces a linear–streaming rights deal with Dick Clark Productions that extends its contract for the Golden Globe Awards (initially a one-year deal for the 2024 edition) through 2030, and grants it telecast rights to the American Music Awards for an unspecified term. (Both award shows will also be streamed live on Paramount+.) The deal ends the AMAs' 51-year broadcast relationship with ABC, for which Clark created the ceremony in 1973 following the expiration of the network's deal to televise the Grammy Awards, which moved to longtime broadcaster CBS that same year. (The AMAs were last awarded in 2022.) | [118][119] |
28 | The Detroit Pistons reach an agreement with the E. W. Scripps Company to air a package of five games (out of the team's eight remaining regular season games scheduled for April) from its 2023–24 schedule locally on CW affiliate WMYD. The package, which will be produced by longtime cable carrier Bally Sports Detroit (which will simulcast the games outside of the Detroit market) under a sublicensing agreement with Scripps Sports, will begin with an April 1 home game against the Memphis Grizzlies. It marks the first time that Pistons games have been televised over-the-air since their previous four-year relationship with WMYD and Graham-owned NBC affiliate WDIV ended in 2008, in favor of an exclusive deal with the network then known as Fox Sports Detroit. | [120][121] [note 15] |
29 | NFL Network's Good Morning Football broadcasts its final show from New York City before going on hiatus and relocating to the NFL Media facility in Inglewood, California before the 2024 NFL season. Plans are also in the works to offer a two-hour extension of the program in broadcast syndication via Sony Pictures Television upon its move. | [122] |
30 | The United Football League airs its inaugural game on Fox, a 27-14 win by the Birmingham Stallions over the host Arlington Renegades. The teams were champions of the leagues that merged to form the UFL on December 31, 2023, the USFL (of which the Stallions were two-time champs) and the XFL (the Renegades won that league's 2023 title). | [123][124] |
April
[edit]Date | Event | Ref. |
---|---|---|
1–7 | The final week of the 2024 NCAA Division I women's basketball tournament sees three viewership records for women's basketball being set: On April 1, ESPN's broadcast of a regional final between Iowa Hawkeyes over the LSU Tigers (a 94–87 win by the Hawkeyes propelled by a 41-point performance from Hawkeye star Caitlin Clark) attracts 12.3 million viewers, surpassing the 9.9 million who watched those two schools play in the 2023 national championship. On April 5, a 71–69 national semifinal win by the Hawkeyes over UConn attracts 14.2 million to ESPN, a record for any basketball game (college or pro, men or women) on the network. Then on April 7, the tournament's title game, an 87–75 win by undefeated South Carolina over the Hawkeyes, attracts 18.9 million total viewers on ABC and ESPN (the latter channel carried a Sue Bird/Diana Taurasi-hosted alternate telecast); it's the most-watched sporting event, outside of football and the Olympics, since 2019. | [125][126] [127][128] |
6–7 | WWE's WrestleMania XL takes place at Lincoln Financial Field in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, airing on Peacock and pay-per-view. | [129] |
7 | The 2024 CMT Music Awards, hosted by Kelsea Ballerini, aired on CBS and streamed on Paramount+ from the Moody Center in Austin, Texas. Notable winners include Jelly Roll (who received the most wins with three awards, Video of the Year, Male Video of the Year and Performance of the Year, for "Need a Favor"), Lainey Wilson (who won Female Video of the Year for "Watermelon Moonshine") and Dan + Shay (who won Duo/Group Video of the Year for "Save Me the Trouble"). Trisha Yearwood received the inaugural June Carter Cash Humanitarian Award, recognizing artists, duos/groups or industry veterans who "demonstrate an exceptional dedication to the community and their fellow artists." | [130][131] [132] |
8 | TBS' and TNT's simulcast of the NCAA Division I men's basketball championship game, a 75–60 win by the UConn Huskies over the Purdue Boilermakers, attracts 14.82 million viewers. When compared to the women's DI title game (see 4/1–4/7 entry), it is the first time the women's championship game draws a bigger TV audience than the men's. | [133] |
10 | A fire during a cooking segment on the set of Tamron Hall (which utilizes a temporary kitchen island with cooktop that is set up center stage for those segments) forces an evacuation of the show's studio at ABC's Broadcast Center in New York's Lincoln Square, with The View, which records in an adjacent studio, also seeing its studio evacuated as a precautionary measure. Although the New York Fire Department cleared The View to go live after the fire was put out, Tamron canceled the day's episode and substituted a rerun to its carrier stations. | [134] |
14 | As Billy Joel is performing his signature song "Piano Man" during a CBS broadcast of the 100th concert in his Madison Square Garden residency, affiliates in the Eastern and Central time zones cut away to begin their late local news. Responding to outrage from viewers, CBS blamed the abrupt ending on a "timing error" (the special had been delayed 30 minutes due to final round coverage of the Masters Tournament) and announced it would re-air the program in its entirety on April 19. | [135] |
19 | One day after the NHL Board of Governors announced the establishment of a Utah-based franchise in Salt Lake City (through the acquisition of assets from the deactivated Arizona Coyotes assigned to Utah Jazz owner Ryan Smith), the team reaches a multi-year agreement with Scripps Sports to air their regionally televised hockey games on independent KUPX/Provo once the team begins play in the 2024–25 season. The Coyotes had been airing on KUPX under a regional simulcast arrangement with Phoenix sister KASW—which will continue to air the team's games post-relocation in a flip of the arrangement—since that station replaced the defunct Bally Sports Arizona as the team's local television carrier at the start of the 2023–24 season. | [136][137] |
22 | One week after the moribund franchise selected former Iowa point guard Caitlin Clark as the first pick in the first round of the 2024 WNBA Draft, the Indiana Fever reach an agreement with Tegna to air a package of 17 regionally televised WNBA games on NBC affiliate WTHR and MeTV affiliate WALV-CD, beginning with the team's 2024 season. The deal begins with the team's home opener against the New York Liberty on May 16, and will see ten of the games being carried on WTHR, while seven others will air on WALV (which is simulcast on WTHR's DT3 subchannel). | [138] [note 16] |
25 | The Seattle Kraken reach a multi-year agreement with Tegna to air their regionally televised games on independent station KONG, along with simulcasts of selected games on sister NBC affiliate KING, beginning with the NHL team's 2024–25 season. The deal—which replaces the team's previous television partnership with regional sports network Root Sports Northwest, which has carried the Kraken since the expansion franchise began play in 2021—would also see fellow Tegna stations KGW/Portland and KREM/Spokane simulcast the games across the team's regional territory, and KING/KONG carry team-related programs. Additionally, all Kraken games will be streamed on Amazon Prime Video in the Krakens' home market. | [140] |
The CW announces a three-year deal with the Miss Universe Organization that extends its contract for the Miss USA pageant (initially a one-year deal for the 2023 edition), and grants it linear telecast rights to Miss Teen USA, starting with the 2024 ceremony. (Miss Teen USA—which will have its 42nd edition air on The CW on August 1, three days before the network's telecast of the 73rd Miss USA Pageant—had last aired on linear television in 2007, when the Miss Universe Organization ended a broadcast deal with NBC for the pageant separate from its contracts for Miss USA and Miss Universe, and was livestreamed on various platforms thereafter.) | [141] | |
29 | WBKB-TV, the only commercial broadcast station in Alpena, Michigan (the nation's third-smallest TV market) and carrier of four of the five major commercial TV networks, begins a news partnership with Sinclair's NBC affiliate, WPBN-TV/WTOM-TV in Traverse City, Michigan, to feature a full complement of newscasts and weather coverage blended with WBKB-TV's existing news operation, which will become a de facto bureau for WPBN/WTOM, known on-air as UpNorthLive News. WBKB, which had been acquired by Morgan Murphy Media in late 2023 after the death of its former owner, had struggled to maintain a full-time news and weather staff because of its market position and ownership in an era of media consolidation, mainly featuring a team staffed by recent college graduates, and also had issues maintaining full-time weather coverage, contracting short-term with freelance meteorologists and NewsNet to provide forecasts. WBKB will still produce some newscasts, with its NBC subchannel carrying all UpNorthLive newscasts, and its CBS and ABC channels carrying other simulcasts depending on their own schedules. WBKB's Fox schedule will continue to feature no news programming. | [142] |
May
[edit]Date | Event | Ref. |
---|---|---|
1 | Comcast removes 18 Bally Sports regional networks from Xfinity systems throughout their overlapping footprints, in a carriage dispute between the cable provider and Bally parent Diamond Sports Group, immediately affecting fans of 11 of the 12 Major League Baseball teams to which Bally Sports holds broadcast rights. The dispute injects uncertainty in Diamond's efforts to emerge from Chapter 11 bankruptcy before the end of the year, as it had hoped to secure a deal with Comcast ahead of a June confirmation hearing with the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the Southern District of Texas. Xfinity and Diamond Sports eventually came to an agreement on July 29, ending the dispute. | [143][144] |
2 | Allen Media Group announces the layoffs of up to around 300 employees across its various operating divisions (including The Weather Channel, TheGrio and the company's television stations), affecting 12% of its workforce, as part of a broader effort to reduce operational costs to drive growth. Among those affected was veteran Weather Channel correspondent Mike Seidel, who joined the network as an on-camera meteorologist in 1992 and transitioned exclusively to field reporting in 2012. | [145] |
5 | In a memo to ABC News staffers, Kim Godwin announces she will be leaving her role as president of the network's news division, a job she had held since 2021. Debra O'Connell, the president of News Group and Networks at ABC parent Disney Entertainment (and to whom Godwin had been reporting to since February), will lead ABC News on an interim basis until a successor for Godwin is hired. | [146][147] |
13 | Major League Baseball and Roku, Inc. announce an agreement to air the MLB Sunday Leadoff package of early Sunday afternoon games on The Roku Channel. The package had aired the past two seasons on Peacock. | [148] |
14 | The Pac-12 Conference announces an agreement with CW Sports and Fox Sports to air college football games involving the conference's two remaining schools, Oregon State and Washington State. Fox or FS1 will air one game for each school, while The CW will carry the rest. | [149] |
15 | Netflix announces it has secured broadcast rights to National Football League Christmas Day games in a three-year deal that will see the streamer carry two games in 2024 and at least one game in both 2025 and 2026. | [150] |
16 | The 59th Academy of Country Music Awards streams live on Amazon Prime Video from Ford Center at The Star with Reba McEntire as host. | [151] |
22 | Mission Broadcasting notifies Adell Broadcasting, owner of WADL/Mount Clemens, Michigan, that it will terminate its plan to purchase Detroit's MyNetworkTV affiliate. First announced in May 2023, the deal would have seen WADL operated by longtime Mission partner Nexstar Media Group and affiliate with Nexstar-owned The CW (which the station previously carried from September to October 2023, before Adell terminated the brokered affiliation agreement in an LMA dispute with Mission/Nexstar). Though the FCC approved Mission's purchase on April 24, Mission withdrew the plan citing FCC-imposed restrictions that would have prevented financial backing from Nexstar from going towards Mission's purchase of WADL, limiting the amount of Nexstar-distributed programming it carried each week (likely constraining the station from carrying the full CW schedule), and prohibiting any option for Nexstar to acquire the station from Mission outright. | [152][153] |
TNT Sports announces a five-year sublicensing agreement with ESPN that will see TNT, beginning in December, carry two first-round games in the expanded College Football Playoff (of which ESPN has the rights), with two quarterfinal games being added beginning in 2026. | [154] |
June
[edit]Date | Event | Ref. |
---|---|---|
1 | NewsNation formally adopts a 24/7 news format by expanding its weekend news coverage, replacing a three-hour block of Blue Bloods reruns with an extension of the daytime news program NewsNation Now. The Nexstar-owned cable channel that was once known as WGN America began weeknight news programming in September 2020 and expanded to a 24-hour all-news schedule on weekdays in April 2023, but while early-morning and prime-time news/analysis shows populated its weekend lineup, its weekend afternoon schedule had still featured entertainment programming acquired during the WGN era (notably off-network reruns like Blue Bloods). | [155][156] |
3 | In discussing the WNBA on his eponymous ESPN program, former National Football League punter Pat McAfee refers to Indiana Fever rookie Caitlin Clark as a "white bitch" who is ultimately responsible for the increased popularity in the league. After receiving criticism from sports commentators including ESPN colleagues like Kim Adams and Alexa Philippou, McAfee issued apologies to Clark personally as well as the public, stating "I have way too much respect for her and women to put that into the universe." | [157] |
6 | Fifty eight years to the day after he began his professional broadcasting career at the station, Don Alhart retires from WHAM-TV/Rochester, NY, signing off after having served as a reporter, main news anchor, and associate news director for the Deerfield Media-owned/Sinclair-operated ABC affiliate. | [158] |
7 | The 51st Daytime Emmy Awards airs on CBS and streamed on Paramount+ from the Westin Bonaventure Hotel. | [159] |
The last episode of Wheel of Fortune with Pat Sajak as host airs. Sajak had hosted the show since 1981, the longest tenured game show host in U.S. history. | [160] | |
11 | Confirming earlier reports, TNT Sports announces it has secured U.S. broadcast rights to the French Open tennis tournament for a 10-year period beginning in 2025, with matches being carried across TNT, TBS, TruTV, and the Max streaming service. The deal means NBC's relationship with the French Open ended with its broadcast of the men's singles championship on June 9; the network had broadcast the tournament each year since 1975 (save for a three-year period in the early 1980s when it aired on CBS). | [161][162] |
13 | Fox Sports announces it has reached a deal with IndyCar to become the open-wheel racing circuit's exclusive TV partner beginning in 2025, supplanting NBC Sports in the role. The deal will see the full IndyCar Series schedule (including its crown jewel, the Indianapolis 500) airing on Fox, with qualifying rounds (save for the Indy 500's, which Fox will also carry) and the second-tier Indy NXT races airing on FS1 or FS2. | [163] |
16 | The 77th Tony Awards airs on CBS and streams on Paramount+ from the David H. Koch Theater with Ariana DeBose as host, with its technical awards airing before the show on a Pluto TV pop-up channel. | [164][165] [166] |
27 | The National Football League is ordered to pay more than $4.7 billion in damages after a federal jury in Los Angeles found the league had violated antitrust law in setting the price on its NFL Sunday Ticket package for games not selected for broadcast in a television market. The lawsuit covers more than 2.4 million customers who subscribed to the service from 2011 to 2022 via DirecTV, which at the time had been the exclusive provider of NFL Sunday Ticket. The league indicated it would appeal the ruling if the judge does not set it aside. | [167] |
The first presidential debate occurs earlier than the three dates previously planned by the Commission on Presidential Debates. The event is hosted by CNN out of its studios in Atlanta, Georgia, without an audience present. | [168] |
July
[edit]Date | Event | Ref. |
---|---|---|
1 | Bally Sports Detroit indefinitely suspends Detroit Tigers color commentator Craig Monroe after it is announced he is being investigated for sex crimes in Charlotte County, Florida against a now 35-year-old woman starting when she was 12. | [169][170] |
7 | Paramount Global agrees to an $8 billion merger with Skydance Media, Kohlberg Kravis Roberts and RedBird Capital Partners in which the consortium will acquire National Amusements from the family of Sumner Redstone, who purchased Viacom in 1987 and later Paramount Pictures and CBS, but died in 2020. The new company intends to combine Skydance's technological advancements with Paramount's legacy intellectual property, with select portions of the Paramount portfolio remaining open to divestiture (BET Networks has several separate suitors). | [171] |
11 | The 2024 ESPY Awards airs on ABC at the Dolby Theatre in Hollywood, with Serena Williams as host. | [172] |
13 | The 37th Annual Nickelodeon Kids' Choice Awards airs on Nickelodeon and streams on Paramount+ from Pauley Pavilion in Los Angeles, with SpongeBob SquarePants and Patrick Star as hosts to celebrate the 25th anniversary of SpongeBob SquarePants. | [173][174] |
15 | In the wake of the attempted assassination of Donald Trump on July 13, MSNBC preempts this day's broadcast of Morning Joe in favor of general breaking news coverage. The absence was attributed to a desire by the network to prevent offensive content from reaching air. It returned to air the following morning. | [175] |
Comedy Central preempts this evening's broadcast of The Daily Show from its air in the wake of Trump's assassination attempt, and canceled its plans to air the show live from Milwaukee during the Republican National Convention. It returned to air the following evening in New York. | [176] | |
15–18 | The 2024 Republican National Convention takes place at Fiserv Forum in Milwaukee, along with associated coverage. | [177] |
24 | Eight days after its board of governors approved them, the NBA announces new 11-year deals, beginning with its 2025–2026 season, with ESPN/ABC, NBCUniversal, and Amazon Prime Video. The deals, which total $76 billion, feature a reduced NBA game package on ESPN/ABC (though ABC will keep the NBA Finals), prime time games and the All-Star Weekend on NBC (a reuniting of that network with the league it carried from 1990-2002), streaming-exclusive games on NBC's Peacock and Prime Video (with the latter carrying the in-season NBA Cup), and WNBA games from 2026 thru 2036 on the same networks. The Prime Video package would be matched by longtime NBA partner TNT Sports, who exercised an option in an existing deal that ends the 2024–2025 season; the league would formally rebuff TNT's match, stating that TNT parent Warner Bros. Discovery did not make a "true match"; barring successful legal action by WBD (who would file suit against the league on July 25), the deals will bring an end to TNT Sports' relationship with the league that dates back to 1984 on TBS (TNT has aired NBA games since 1989). | [178][179] [180][181] |
26–August 11 | The 2024 Summer Olympics, taking place in Paris, France, air in English on NBC, its cable sister networks (USA Network, CNBC, E!), and the Peacock streaming service, and in Spanish on Telemundo and Universo. | [182][183] |
30 | CBS News announces that Norah O'Donnell will step down from the anchor role at the CBS Evening News after the U.S. election cycle. O'Donnell, who has been Evening News' anchor and managing editor since July 2019, will remain with CBS as a contributor of long-form reports and interviews for various CBS News programs. On August 1, CBS would announce that the Evening News will adopt a new format after O'Donnell departs, including the use of multiple anchors and an ensemble team of correspondents. | [184][185] |
August
[edit]Date | Event | Ref. |
---|---|---|
2 | After weeks of speculation about his status at the network, Skip Bayless announces on social media that he would be immediately leaving Fox Sports 1, where he had co-hosted the weekday debate show Undisputed. | [186] |
14 | The team of Ike and Alan Barinholtz win the $1 million top prize for their charity, the ASL Program at Los Encinos School, on Who Wants to Be a Millionaire, becoming the second top prize winners on the primetime revival and the second celebrities to win the top prize after David Chang (who won that top prize money for his chosen charity, Southern Smoke Foundation on the November 29, 2020 episode), as well as marking the first time in the history of ABC game show's franchise that a team of two contestants win the top prize (Ike also previously won $125,000 for his charity, Uplift Family Services, in an episode which broadcast on April 22, 2020). | [187] |
19–22 | The 2024 Democratic National Convention takes place at the United Center in Chicago, along with associated coverage. | [188] |
22 | Fred Armisen and The 8G Band make their final on-air appearance on Late Night with Seth Meyers due to budget cuts imposed on the show by NBC, though they'll remain the show's house band via pre-recorded music. | [189][190] |
26 | The Big Ten Network is blacked out on Comcast/Xfinity systems in California, Oregon, and Washington after the cable provider reportedly declines to pay a higher "in-market" rate for the channel. The blackout comes the week that teams from USC, UCLA, and the universities of Oregon and Washington begin competition as Big Ten Conference members. Comcast and BTN would resolve their dispute on October 10, resulting in the channel being added to Comcast's basic tier. | [191][192] |
September
[edit]Date | Event | Ref. |
---|---|---|
1 | The Walt Disney Company pulls its networks from DirecTV after the two sides failed to reach a distribution deal. The removal, which includes ABC Owned Television Stations and ESPN, comes hours before a USC-LSU college football game on ABC (KABC-TV in USC's home market of Los Angeles is among the stations taken off the satellite provider), and also affects ESPN's coverage of the US Open tennis tournament, as well as the Monday Night Football season premiere between the New York Jets and San Francisco 49ers (the ABC stations representing both cities, WABC-TV and KGO-TV, were also impacted by the blackout). On September 7, DirecTV filed a complaint with the FCC, claiming Disney has violated the commission's good-faith mandates by predicating any licensing agreement on DirecTV's waiving any legal claims on Disney's "anti-competitive actions," including its ongoing packaging and minimum penetration demands. The blackout ended on September 14 when the sides reached "an agreement in principle". The companies are reportedly working to finalize a long-term deal. | [193][194] [195][196] |
9 | Jorge Ramos announces he will depart Noticias Univision at the end of the year after he and TelevisaUnivision announced a mutual agreement to not renew his contract and part ways. Ramos has been with Univision's news division for 40 years, and is noted for anchoring weeknight newscast Noticiero Univision and hosting the Sunday public affairs program Al Punto. | [197] |
In the finals of the sixteenth installment of American Ninja Warrior, Vance Walker became the first contestant to win a second $1 million grand prize for achieving Total Victory twice consecutively, after becoming the third contestant to win the $1 million grand prize last year. Similarly, another contestant, Caleb Bergstrom, also have completed the final stage, but at a slower time just like Daniel Gil did in a season prior, and thus did not win the grand prize. | [198] | |
The 42nd season in the long-running syndicated game show Wheel of Fortune premieres with talk show host Ryan Seacrest taking over Pat Sajak as the host, though Sajak would remain host for the upcoming fifth season of the Celebrity counterpart, due to air on October 14. | [199] | |
10 | The second presidential debate, the first between Vice President Kamala Harris and former President Donald Trump, takes place at the National Constitution Center's theater in Philadelphia, organized and originated by ABC News, with World News Tonight anchors David Muir and Linsey Davis moderating as part of a multi-network simulcast with ABC. | [200] |
11 | The 2024 MTV Video Music Awards airs on MTV, Paramount+ and other Paramount Global cable channels from UBS Arena in Elmont, New York. Originally scheduled for September 10, the date was moved up one day to accommodate conflicts with the presidential debate. | [201][202] |
12 | Metro Detroit businessman Kevin Adell announces he is attempting to sell locally owned and operated MyNetworkTV affiliate WADL as well as talk radio station WFDF and religious broadcaster The Word Network and plans to retire. | [203] |
15 | The 76th Primetime Emmy Awards airs on ABC from the Peacock Theater with the father/son duo of Eugene Levy and Dan Levy as hosts. | [204][205] |
23 | KFOR/Oklahoma City and civil liberties group Institute for Free Speech file a motion for a temporary restraining order and preliminary injunction against Public Instruction Superintendent Ryan Walters and Press Secretary Dan Isett, on grounds that journalists for the Nexstar-owned NBC affiliate had been denied access to the Oklahoma State Board of Education's public meetings and press conferences for several months. The claimants are seeking damages of $17.91, an amount symbolically referencing the year of the First Amendment's ratification. Oklahoma Western District Court Judge Bernard Jones would grant a 14-day restraining order against Walters and Isett on September 25, the day prior to the OSDE's next scheduled public meeting. | [206][207] [208] |
24 | The 17th Academy of Country Music Honors, hosted by Carly Pearce and Jordan Davis, airs on Merit Street. | [209] |
26 | Hoda Kotb announces that she will leave Today, which she has co-anchored with Savannah Guthrie and Jenna Bush Hager, after seventeen years on the air. Kotb's departure is scheduled for early 2025, though she reiterated that she will remain with NBC News in some capacity. | [210] |
The 2024 People's Choice Country Awards airs on NBC from the Grand Ole Opry House in Nashville, Tennessee with Shania Twain as host. | [211][212] | |
28 | Jeff Glor signs off as host of CBS Saturday Morning in the wake of his layoff, along with those of other Paramount Global employees, earlier in the week. Glor had been with CBS News since 2007, a tenure that in addition to correspondent work and hosting Saturday Morning also included anchoring the weeknight CBS Evening News for 2 years in the late 2010s. | [213] |
30 | DirecTV announces its plans to acquire rival satellite company Dish Network from EchoStar for only $1, which would merge the two companies and would both be owned by private equity firm TPG Inc. The deal comes hours after TPG announced it would fully acquire AT&T's 70% share in DirecTV in a $7.6 billion deal that marks AT&T's exit from the satellite TV business. The newly merged DirecTV-Dish entity will continue to support the Dish brand for the foreseeable future, meaning Dish subscribers would not be forced into using DirecTV as a result of the merger. EchoStar and DirecTV expect the deal to close in the fourth quarter of 2025, contingent on regulatory approval and bondholders writing off nearly $1.6 billion in Dish-related debt. | [214][215] [216] |
October
[edit]Date | Event | Ref. |
---|---|---|
1 | Disney Television Studios announces the immediate shuttering of its ABC Signature studio, whose history dates back to its origins as Touchstone Television in 1985. ABC Signature's remaining operations and programs will be folded into sister studio 20th Television. | [217] |
The vice presidential debate between Minnesota Governor Tim Walz and Ohio Senator JD Vance takes place with CBS News moderating. | [218] | |
8 | Major League Baseball announces that its media division will handle production and distribution of local broadcasts for the Cleveland Guardians, Milwaukee Brewers, and Minnesota Twins beginning in 2025; they'll join the Arizona Diamondbacks, Colorado Rockies, and San Diego Padres as having their broadcasts produced in-house by MLB. The Guardians', Brewers', and Twins' broadcasts had been respectively carried by Bally Sports' Great Lakes, Wisconsin and North networks, and the move comes as Bally's bankrupt parent, Diamond Sports Group, announced on October 2 that 11 of the 12 MLB teams it carried in 2024 are free to renegotiate terms or seek new partners (the Atlanta Braves being the exception). In a separate move, MLB also announces that the Texas Rangers will leave Bally Sports Southwest, with the team reportedly seeking to create its own regional sports network. | [219] [220] [221] [222] |
13 | Kenny Albert calls Fox Sports' broadcast of a National Football League game between the Cleveland Browns and Philadelphia Eagles, and in doing so becomes the first broadcaster to call 500 NFL games for a single network. | [223] |
16 | Dennis Miller announces he will step down as president of The CW at the end of the month, with entertainment president Brad Schwartz expected to succeed him. Miller had joined The CW when Nexstar purchased a majority interest in the network in 2022, and during his tenure piloted it away from high-end, youth-appealing scripted dramas in favor of broader-appealing entertainment and sports programming. | [224] |
21 | Bally Sports rebrands as FanDuel Sports Network following Diamond Sports Group's exit from bankruptcy. | [225] |
27 | WNEP-TV/Scranton–Wilkes-Barre, Pennsylvania runs a dummy graphic showing Kamala Harris taking Pennsylvania's electoral votes in the upcoming election during ABC's coverage of a Formula One race. While social media users decried it as evidence of cheating, the Tegna Inc.-owned station explained it was running a test to ensure its computer system was operating properly. The results were not intended to be shown on air. | [226] |
28 | CNN announces it has banned Ryan Girdusky after the conservative commentator told Mehdi Hasan on the network's CNN NewsNight program "I hope your beeper doesn't go off," seeming to reference exploding pagers that killed members of Hezbollah in September. NewsNight anchor Abby Phillip denounced the remark as soon as it was made, while the network released a statement indicating it would not tolerate "racism or bigotry" during its presentation of current events. | [227] |
29 | Andrea Mitchell announces that she will be stepping down as anchor at MSNBC following the presidential inauguration in early 2025. However, she's expected to stay on as a reporter for MSNBC and NBC News, respectively. | [228] |
30 | The Recording Academy announces that its Grammy Awards ceremonies and related ancillary programming will move to Disney-owned ABC, Disney+, and Hulu in a 10-year deal beginning with the 2027 Grammys. The new deal will mean an end to the Academy's broadcast relationship with CBS, which has carried every Grammy ceremony since 1973 and will still carry the 2025 and 2026 ceremonies. | [229] |
The Los Angeles Dodgers defeat the New York Yankees to win Game 5 of the World Series. It is the 8th title in franchise's history and second since the shortened 2020 season. The Dodgers have become the first team in Major League history to beat both New York-based teams in postseason (they previously clinched the National League pennant over the New York Mets). As for the Yankees, they suffered a fifth inning meltdown by blowing a 5-run lead. This is the team's third World Series loss in the 21st century since 2001 and 2003 and first to lose at the current Yankee Stadium. Freddie Freeman was awarded the Willie Mays Most Valuable Player due to his grand slam walk-off during Game 1, a first in World Series history. | [230] [231] [232] |
November
[edit]Date | Event | Ref. |
---|---|---|
2 | Three days before the United States presidential election, Kamala Harris appears with her impersonator Maya Rudolph in the opening sketch on Saturday Night Live, a move Federal Communications Commission commissioner Brendan Carr claims is a violation of the equal-time rule stating that broadcasters must allow equal time to opposing political candidates. SNL creator and executive producer Lorne Michaels earlier said that neither Harris nor Donald Trump would be invited to appear during the show's landmark 50th season. NBC responded by filing a notice with the FCC and allowing Trump to address voters during the Xfinity 500 NASCAR race and during the Sunday Night Football matchup between the Indianapolis Colts and the Minnesota Vikings the following day. | [233][234] [235] |
5 | The 2024 presidential election and other federal and state races occur, along with associated coverage. | [236][237] [238][239] |
Future events
[edit]November
[edit]Date | Event | Ref. |
---|---|---|
20 | The 58th Annual Country Music Association Awards will air on ABC from the Bridgestone Arena in Nashville, Tennessee with Luke Bryan, Peyton Manning and Lainey Wilson as hosts. | [240][241] |
December
[edit]Date | Event | Ref. |
---|---|---|
5–6 | Two perennial animated holiday specials will move to new broadcast homes as Frosty the Snowman and Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer will air on NBC on December 5 and 6 respectively (the latter coinciding with the 60th anniversary date of its first airing). The specials, which were produced by Rankin/Bass Productions and whose rights are owned by Universal Studios, had aired on CBS for decades (Frosty since its premire airing in 1969, Rudolph since 1972 after 8 years on NBC). NBCUniversal had licensed both specials to CBS, and had denied CBS permission to stream them on its Paramount+ and virtual multichannel video program distributors (and will likewise block streaming of the specials on all streaming outlets for 2024). | [242][243] |
9 | The Monday Night Football game for Week 14 of the 2024 NFL season will feature an alternate broadcast in which Bart Simpson will lead the Cincinnati Bengals against his father Homer and the Dallas Cowboys. The remaining members of the Simpson family will act as production crew for the telecast, which airs on Disney+, ESPN+, and NFL+ while ABC and ESPN will carry the traditional broadcast with Joe Buck and Troy Aikman as commentators. | [244] |
Television shows
[edit]Shows debuting in 2024
[edit]Shows changing networks
[edit]Show | Moved from | Moved to | Source |
---|---|---|---|
Chad | TBS | The Roku Channel | [554] |
Impractical Jokers | truTV | TBS | [555][97] |
American Music Awards | ABC | CBS | [556] |
Golden Globe Awards | NBC | [5] | |
Law & Order: Organized Crime | Peacock | [557] | |
Big Nate | Nickelodeon / Paramount+ | Nicktoons | [citation needed] |
Rugrats | [citation needed] | ||
The Tourist | HBO Max | Netflix | [558] |
Star Trek: Prodigy | Paramount+ | [559] | |
Girls5eva | Peacock | [560] | |
Temptation Island | USA Network | [561] | |
WWE NXT | The CW | [562] | |
61st Street | AMC | [563] | |
Snowpiercer | TNT | AMC | [564] |
9-1-1 | Fox | ABC | [565] |
WWE SmackDown | USA Network | [566] | |
Leverage: Redemption | Amazon Freevee | Amazon Prime Video | [567] |
MLB Sunday Leadoff | Peacock | The Roku Channel | [148] |
Monsters at Work | Disney+ | Disney Channel | [568] |
Television films and specials
[edit]First aired | Title | Channel | Source |
---|---|---|---|
January 1 | M*A*S*H: The Comedy That Changed Television | Fox | [569] |
January 4 | The Golden Wedding | ABC | [570] |
General Hospital: 60 Years of Stars and Storytelling | [571] | ||
January 13 | Craig Before the Creek | Cartoon Network | [572] |
February 16 | Snoopy Presents: Welcome Home, Franklin | Apple TV+ | [573] |
March 6 | Erika Jayne: Bet It All on Blonde | Bravo | [574][575] |
March 7 | The Thundermans Return | Nickelodeon/Paramount+ | [576] |
March 9 | Hunting Housewives | Lifetime | [577] |
March 26 | The Truth vs. Alex Jones | HBO | [578] |
April 1 | Bray Wyatt: Becoming Immortal | Peacock | [579] |
April 14 | The 100th: Billy Joel at Madison Square Garden – The Greatest Arena Run of All Time | CBS | [580] |
May 1 | Dance Moms: The Reunion | Lifetime | [581][582] |
May 2 | The Contestant | Hulu | [583] |
May 14 | The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon: 10th Anniversary Special | NBC | [584] |
May 18 | The Bad Guardian | Lifetime | [585][586] |
May 24 | South Park: The End of Obesity | Paramount+ | [587][588][589] |
May 25 | Gaga Chromatica Ball | HBO | [590] |
May 31 | The Great Lillian Hall | [591] | |
June 22 | The Bad Orphan | Lifetime | [592] |
June 30 | Watch What Happens Live with Andy Cohen: 15th Anniversary Special | Bravo | [593] |
July 12 | Descendants: The Rise of Red | Disney+ | [594] |
August 9 | 13 Days in Ferguson | CBS | [595] |
August 28 | Toby Keith: American Icon | NBC | [596] |
September 7 | His & Hers | Hallmark Channel | [597][598] |
September 12 | AI and the Future of Us: An Oprah Winfrey Special | ABC | [599] |
October 3 | Velma: This Halloween Needs To Be More Special! | Max | [600] |
October 6 | American Music Awards 50th Anniversary Special | CBS | [601] |
October 9 | Secret Life of Diddy — A Special Edition of 20/20 | ABC | [602] |
October 11 | Latinos in Hollywood: Owning Our Destiny | [603] | |
October 14 | Family Guy: Peter, Peter, Pumpkin Cheater | Hulu | [604][605] |
October 24 | This Time Each Year | Hallmark Mystery | [606] |
One Direction: Liam Payne's Final Days | Hulu | [607] | |
October 26 | Mormon Mom Gone Wrong: The Ruby Franke Story | Lifetime | [608] |
Seth Meyers: Dad Man Walking | HBO | [609] | |
October 27 | Chris Brown: A History of Violence | Investigation Discovery | [610] |
October 30 | Love Is Blind: The Reunion | Netflix | [611] |
November 2 | United Way Benefit For Hurricane Relief | CBS/CMT | [612] |
November 3 | Holiday Mismatch | Hallmark Channel | [613] |
November 11 | SpongeBob SquarePants: Snow Yellow and the Seven Jellies | Nickelodeon | [614] |
November 12 | Larger Than Life: Reign of the Boybands | Paramount+ | [615] |
November 16 | Christmas in the Spotlight | Lifetime | [616] |
November 17 | Dr. Sanjay Gupta Reports: Is Ozempic Right For You? | CNN | [617] |
November 19 | Defying Gravity: The Curtain Rises on Wicked | NBC | [618] |
November 25 | Family Guy: Gift of the White Guy | Hulu | [604][619] |
November 30 | Holiday Touchdown: A Chiefs Love Story | Hallmark Channel | [620][621] |
December 4 | Jimmy Fallon's Holiday Seasoning Spectacular | NBC | [622] |
December 5 | Brewster's Millions: Christmas | BET+ | [623] |
December 7 | A Season to Remember | OWN | [624] |
December 9 | The Real Full Monty | Fox | [625][626] |
December 11 | A Motown Christmas | NBC | [627] |
December 14 | Mistletoe & Matrimony | OWN | [624] |
December 21 | 24-Karat Christmas | ||
December | SpongeBob & Sandy's Country Christmas | Nickelodeon/Paramount+ | [628] |
TBA | The Thanksgiving Text | Netflix | [629][630] |
Milestone episodes and anniversaries
[edit]Show | Network | Episode # | Episode title | Episode airdate | Source |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Late Night with Seth Meyers | NBC | 10th anniversary | Guests: Amy Poehler, U.S. President Joe Biden | February 26 | [631] |
The Rookie | ABC | 100th episode | "The Hammer" | February 27 | [632] |
Peppa Pig | Nickelodeon/Nick Jr. | 20th anniversary | "Mr. Bull is Getting Married/Getting Ready for the Wedding/Wedding Day" | March 25 | [633] |
9-1-1 | ABC | 100th episode | "Buck, Bothered and Bewildered" | April 4 | [634] |
The Conners | "Smash and Grab and Happy Death Day" | April 10 | [635][636] | ||
Station 19 | "My Way" | April 11 | [637] | ||
Grown-ish | Freeform | "California Love" | April 17 | [638] | |
Last Week Tonight with John Oliver | HBO | 300th episode | "Public Libraries" | May 5 | [639] |
Law & Order | NBC | 500th episode | "No Good Deed" | May 9 | [640] |
All American | The CW | 100th episode | "100%" | May 27 | [641] |
Watch What Happens Live with Andy Cohen | Bravo | 15th anniversary | "WWHL 15th Anniversary Special" | June 30 | [593] |
Who Wants to Be a Millionaire | ABC | 25th anniversary | — | July 10 – August 28 | [642] |
SpongeBob SquarePants | Nickelodeon | 300th episode | "PL-1413" | July 15 | [citation needed] |
"In the Mood to Feud" | July 16 | ||||
25th anniversary | "Mooned!" | July 17 | [citation needed] | ||
Teen Titans Go! | Cartoon Network | 400th episode | "Bookyman" | October 19 | [643][644] |
Dancing with the Stars | ABC | 500th episode | "500th Episode" | November 12 | [citation needed] |
Shows returning in 2024
[edit]Show | Last aired | Type of return | Previous channel | New/returning/same channel | Return date | Source |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Friday Night Vibes | 2022 | Revival | TBS | same | January 5 | [645] |
Cash Cab (as Cash Cab Music) |
2020 | Bravo | AXS TV | January 8 | [646] | |
Caillou | 2010 | PBS Kids | Peacock | February 15 | [647] | |
What Would You Do? | 2020 | ABC | same | February 18 | [648] | |
X-Men (as X-Men '97) |
1997 | Fox Kids | Disney+ | March 20 | [649][460][650] | |
American Rust | 2021 | New season | Showtime | Amazon Prime Video | March 28 | [651][652] |
Good Times (as Good Times: Black Again) |
1979 | Reboot | CBS | Netflix | April 12 | [653][654] |
Dora the Explorer (as Dora) |
2019 | Nickelodeon | Paramount+ | [655][656] | ||
The Jinx (as The Jinx – Part 2) |
2015 | Revival | HBO | same | April 21 | [657][658] |
The Joy of Painting (as The Joy of Painting with Nicholas Hankins: Bob Ross's Unfinished Season) |
1994 | PBS | May 3 | [659] | ||
Dinner with a Movie | 2011 | TBS | June 1 | [660] | ||
Who Wants to Be a Millionaire | 2021 | New season | ABC | July 10 | [642] | |
Dance Moms (as Dance Moms: A New Era) |
2019 | Reboot | Lifetime | Hulu | August 7 | [433] |
Yo Gabba Gabba! (as Yo Gabba Gabbaland!) |
2015 | Revival | Nickelodeon | Apple TV+ | August 9 | [661][662] |
Trivial Pursuit | 2009 | Reboot | First-run syndication | The CW | October 3 | [663][664][665][491] |
Scrabble | 2012 | The Hub | ||||
Scare Tactics | 2013 | Syfy | USA Network | October 4 | [666] | |
Matlock | 1995 | NBC/ABC | CBS | October 17 | [667][668][669][470] | |
The Joe Schmo Show | 2013 | Revival | Spike | TBS | TBA | [670] |
The Night Manager | 2016 | New season | AMC | Amazon Prime Video | [671] | |
Extreme Makeover: Home Edition | 2020 | Revival | HGTV | ABC | [672] |
Shows ending in 2024
[edit]End date | Show | Channel | First aired | Status | Source |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
January 3 | Magnum P.I. | NBC | 2018 | Ended | [673][674] |
January 4 | The Brothers Sun | Netflix | 2024 | Canceled | [675] |
January 7 | The Mehdi Hasan Show | MSNBC/Peacock | 2020 | Ended | [4] |
Symone | MSNBC | 2022 | |||
January 11 | Sonic Prime | Netflix | [676] | ||
January 13 | The Ghost and Molly McGee | Disney Channel | 2021 | [677] | |
January 19 | Chad | The Roku Channel | Canceled | [678] | |
February 1 | Clone High | Max | 2002 | [679] | |
February 13 | La Brea | NBC | 2021 | Ended | [680][681] |
February 16 | Life & Beth | Hulu | 2022 | Canceled | [682] |
February 20 | Quantum Leap | NBC | [683] | ||
February 21 | Danger Force | Nickelodeon | 2020 | Ended | [684] |
February 25 | CNN This Morning (original weekday run) | CNN | 2022 | Canceled | [685] |
March 5 | Good Trouble | Freeform | 2019 | [686][687] | |
Death and Other Details | Hulu | 2024 | [688] | ||
March 8 | Hightown | Starz | 2020 | Ended | [689] |
March 14 | The Tall Tales of Jim Bridger | INSP | 2024 | Canceled | [690] |
March 16 | SNL Vintage | NBC | 2014 | Ended | [691] |
March 20 | That Girl Lay Lay | Nickelodeon | 2021 | [692] | |
March 21 | Halo | Paramount+ | 2022 | Canceled | [693] |
March 22 | Buying Beverly Hills | Netflix | [694] | ||
March 26 | Extended Family | NBC | 2023 | [695] | |
March 27 | Constellation | Apple TV+ | 2024 | [696] | |
March 28 | American Rust | Amazon Prime Video | 2021 | [697] | |
April 4 | Tokyo Vice | Max | 2022 | [698] | |
April 7 | Curb Your Enthusiasm | HBO | 2000 | Ended | [699] |
April 8 | Spirit Rangers | Netflix | 2022 | [700] | |
April 10 | King Charles | CNN | 2023 | [701] | |
April 15 | Alice's Wonderland Bakery | Disney Jr. | 2022 | [702] | |
April 22 | Nature Cat | PBS Kids | 2015 | [703] | |
April 24 | Not Dead Yet | ABC | 2023 | Canceled | [704] |
April 25 | Dead Boy Detectives | Netflix | 2024 | [705] | |
May 1 | Star Wars: The Bad Batch | Disney+ | 2021 | Ended | [706] |
Chucky | Syfy/USA Network | Canceled | [707] | ||
May 5 | Parish | AMC | 2024 | [708] | |
May 6 | Bob Hearts Abishola | CBS | 2019 | Ended | [709] |
NCIS: Hawaiʻi | 2021 | Canceled | [710][711] | ||
May 9 | The Girls on the Bus | Max | 2024 | [712] | |
May 16 | Young Sheldon | CBS | 2017 | Ended | [713] |
So Help Me Todd | 2022 | Canceled | [714] | ||
Outer Range | Amazon Prime Video | [715] | |||
May 17 | NFL Total Access | NFL Network | 2003 | [716] | |
May 18 | Hailey's On It! | Disney Channel | 2023 | [717] | |
May 19 | CSI: Vegas | CBS | 2021 | [714] | |
May 21 | The Good Doctor | ABC | 2017 | Ended | [718][719] |
May 22 | Grown-ish | Freeform | 2018 | [720][721] | |
May 26 | Wicked Tuna | National Geographic | 2012 | Canceled | [722] |
Beacon 23 | MGM+ | 2023 | [723] | ||
May 30 | Star Trek: Discovery | Paramount+ | 2017 | Ended | [724] |
Station 19 | ABC | 2018 | [637][725] | ||
May 31 | We're Here | HBO | 2020 | Canceled | [726][727] |
Jessica's Big Little World | Cartoon Network | 2023 | [728][729] | ||
June 6 | Sweet Tooth | Netflix | 2021 | Ended | [730][731][732] |
June 9 | French Open on NBC | NBC/Peacock | 1983 | [733] | |
June 11 | NASCAR Race Hub | Fox Sports 1 | 2009 | Canceled | [734] |
June 12 | The Big Door Prize | Apple TV+ | 2023 | [735] | |
June 13 | Looney Tunes Cartoons | Max | 2020 | [736] | |
June 20 | Pretty Little Liars | 2022 | [737] | ||
June 26 | Walker | The CW | 2021 | [738] | |
June 27 | My Lady Jane | Amazon Prime Video | 2024 | [739] | |
July 1 | Star Trek: Prodigy | Netflix | 2021 | [740] | |
July 10 | Kamp Koral: SpongeBob's Under Years | Paramount+ | Ended | [741][742] | |
Reginald the Vampire | Syfy | 2022 | Canceled | [743] | |
July 11 | Vikings: Valhalla | Netflix | Ended | [744][745] | |
July 16 | The Acolyte | Disney+ | 2024 | Canceled | [746] |
July 17 | Unprisoned | Hulu | 2023 | [747] | |
August 1 | Unstable | Netflix | [748] | ||
August 2 | Bunk'd | Disney Channel | 2015 | Ended | [749] |
August 8 | The Umbrella Academy | Netflix | 2019 | [750][751][752] | |
August 21 | Time Bandits | Apple TV+ | 2024 | Canceled | [753] |
August 22 | Evil | Paramount+ | 2019 | Ended | [754][755] |
That '90s Show | Netflix | 2023 | Canceled | [756] | |
August 25 | Orphan Black: Echoes | AMC | 2024 | [757] | |
August 29 | Kaos | Netflix | [758] | ||
August 30 | The Serpent Queen | Starz | 2022 | [759] | |
September 15 | IndyCar Series on NBC | NBC | 2009 | Ended | [760] |
September 22 | Snowpiercer | AMC | 2020 | [564][761] | |
September 30 | All American: Homecoming | The CW | 2022 | Canceled | [762][763] |
October 3 | Velma | Max | 2023 | [764] | |
October 4 | Power Book II: Ghost | Starz | 2020 | Ended | [765] |
October 6 | SEAL Team | Paramount+ | 2017 | [766] | |
November 11 | My Brilliant Friend | HBO | 2018 | Ending | [767][768] |
November 23 | Arcane | Netflix | 2021 | [769][770] | |
December 2 | Superman & Lois | The CW | 2021 | [771] | |
December 6 | The Talk | CBS | 2010 | [772] | |
December 8 | Somebody Somewhere | HBO | 2022 | [773] | |
December 13 | Blue Bloods | CBS | 2010 | [774][775] | |
December 15 | Yellowstone | Paramount Network | 2018 | [776][546] | |
December 16 | What We Do in the Shadows | FX | 2019 | [777] | |
9-1-1: Lone Star | Fox | 2020 | [778] | ||
December 19 | Star Trek: Lower Decks | Paramount+ | [779][780] | ||
TBA | Craig of the Creek | Cartoon Network | 2018 | [781][782] | |
Upload | Amazon Prime Video | 2020 | [783] | ||
Mo | Netflix | 2022 | [784][464] |
Entering syndication in 2024
[edit]A list of programs (current or canceled) that have accumulated enough episodes (between 65 and 100) or seasons (three or more) to be eligible for off-network syndication and/or basic cable runs.
Show | Seasons | In Production | Notes | Source |
---|---|---|---|---|
Suits | 9 | No | Broadcast syndication in local markets and on MyNetworkTV. | [785] |
The Conners | 6 | Yes | Broadcast syndication in local markets. The CW has aired primetime repeats of the show since January 4. | [786][787] |
Judy Justice | 2 | Broadcast syndication in local markets. | [788] | |
Good Morning Football Overtime | 8 | Two-hour extension of the NFL Network program in local broadcast syndication. | [789] | |
Bob Hearts Abishola | 5 | No | Broadcast syndication in local markets. | [790] |
Networks and services
[edit]Launches
[edit]Network/ service |
Type | Launch date | Notes | Sources |
---|---|---|---|---|
The365 | OTA multicast and OTT streaming | January 1 | On November 7, 2023, Katz Broadcasting founder Jonathan Katz and his new firm, Free TV Networks, unveiled two new OTA and FAST networks. The365, which is aimed at African-American viewers, and Outlaw, which consists mainly of classic western films, respectively competes with the similarly-themed Bounce TV and Grit, two multicast networks Katz's previous company founded and later sold in 2017 to the E. W. Scripps Company. Content for The365 and Outlaw initially comes from the libraries of Warner Bros. Discovery and Lionsgate, while Gray Television was the primary launch group for over-the-air distribution of the two networks (all three companies jointly operate Free TV Networks). | [791] |
Outlaw | ||||
Merit Street | OTA multicast, OTT streaming, and cable/satellite | April 2 [note 17] |
On November 6, 2023, Dr. Phil McGraw announced plans to a new "news and entertainment" network named Merit Street Media (later shortened to Merit Street to differentiate from its parent company) in early 2024, which will be headquartered from an office and production facility based in the Dallas-Fort Worth metroplex. The network maintains a general entertainment format (featuring a mix of news, talk shows, unscripted series and weekend evening movie presentations), with programs that include a nightly show hosted by McGraw himself focused around the advice format he provided on his 2002–23 syndicated talk show. Joel Cheatwood, a former news director known for driving the local news operations he oversaw in the 1990s and 2000s towards sensationalism (most notably, Sunbeam Television stations WSVN/Miami and WHDH/Boston), serves as the network's CEO. Distribution of the network is handled by the Trinity Broadcasting Network, and is available on the religious broadcaster's owned-and-operated stations (on the DT2 subchannel previously occupied by TBN Inspire), on cable, satellite, and free AVOD streaming platforms. TBN also contracted with full-power stations in New York City (WMBC) and Los Angeles (KVMD) to carry Merit Street on their primary channels in order to assure must-carry coverage of the network on pay television providers in those markets. | [793][794] [note 18] |
The Network | AVOD OTT streaming | April 30 | On March 19, The Network, an ad-supported premium streaming platform founded by film director Aram Rappaport (founder of creative advertising agency The Boathouse) with financial backing from BH Media Holdings, announced plans to launch on April 30. The Network's content strategy—premised on seeking to “declutter the streaming experience, eliminating audiences’ endless scrolling to find appealing series and films”—will expand its content gradually, releasing two original series at a time, with dramas debuting on Tuesdays and comedies debuting on Thursdays; the service's slate will initially launch with the thriller/sci-fi drama The Green Veil and British comedy Chivalry (the latter acquired from Channel 4). | [795][796] |
ZipWave TV | OTT streaming | June | On March 24, ZipWave LLC, a Wyoming-based technology company, announced the launch of its live OTT service ZipWave TV. Its lineup will consist of live news, entertainment and religious programming. Some of the networks it plans to offer at launch include Newsmax and FETV. | [797][798] |
MeTV Toons | OTA multicast | June 25 | On May 1, Weigel Broadcasting announced the pending launch of MeTV Toons, an expansion of its existing programming deal with Warner Bros. Discovery to carry select animated programming from that company's library on its main channel MeTV. The new channel, which will combine Warner Bros. Discovery archival cartoons with licensed programming from other providers, will air primarily on digital subchannels, with a free ad-supported streaming version with limited programming also being made available for Internet viewing. The programming would effectively replicate the format which Warner Bros. Discovery and its predecessors had offered on the Boomerang cable network for the previous 24 years. | [799] |
Defy (Free TV Networks version) | OTA multicast and OTT streaming | July 1 | On April 3, Free TV Networks announced the pending launch of Dare, an over-the-air subchannel and AVOD streaming network focusing on unscripted reality and documentary programming (including series such as American Pickers, Storage Wars, Pawn Stars, Alone, Swamp People, Counting Cars and Ax Men, among others). The network draws from the same A+E Networks reality library as Scripps Networks's Defy TV (both were developed by Free TV CEO Jonathan Katz, with Defy being created during his 2017–22 executive tenure at Scripps). Free TV Networks announced on July 1 that it had acquired the existing Defy TV trademarks from Scripps, allowing the network to launch on that date under the existing branding (although excising “TV” from the name), accompanied by much of the original network's programming lineup, under new ownership. | [800][801] [802] |
Roku Sports Channel | OTT streaming | August 12 | On August 7, 2024, Roku, Inc. announced plans to launch a new 24/7 free ad-supported streaming television (FAST) sports channel which is available exclusively on The Roku Channel. At launch, the channel will show live events from MLB Sunday Leadoff, Formula E and the NBA G League and live studio programming from The Rich Eisen Show and GMFB: Overtime. | [803] |
Victory+ | September 11 | On July 7, 2024, the Dallas Stars of the National Hockey League signed a 7-year contract with Calgary-based A Parent Media Co., Inc. to create a free ad-supported streaming television service to become the exclusive in-market home of the Stars. On August 27, 2024, the Anaheim Ducks announced they had signed a 2-year contract to join the Stars on the service. It officially launched on September 11. | [804] |
Conversions and rebrandings
[edit]Old network name |
New network name |
Type | Conversion date | Notes | Source |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Showtime (main linear channel) | Paramount+ with Showtime | Cable/satellite | January 8 | On January 30, 2023, Paramount Global announced plans to rebrand the linear Showtime service and fully integrate its direct-to-consumer streaming service with the premium tier of co-owned Paramount+; the combined service would be branded as Paramount+ with Showtime, which had already been in use for a streaming bundle that launched in August 2022. Paramount began directing prospective Showtime streaming customers to subscribe to the ad-free Paramount+ tier on June 27, 2023; it would later discontinue the Showtime Anytime TV Everywhere app (offered to subscribers of the linear Showtime service) on December 14, and the standalone Showtime streaming service on December 31; the primary Showtime channel was renamed Paramount+ with Showtime on January 8, 2024, although the standalone Showtime nameplate remains in use as the branding for its seven multiplex channels and as a marketing imprint for the network's original programming. Paramount Global initially stated it had no plans to offer complimentary provider login access to Paramount+'s Showtime tier to subscribers of the premium channel's linear package (in contrast to the arrangement involving Warner Bros. Discovery-owned Max, which has been available free to linear HBO subscribers—replacing the HBO Go TV Everywhere platform—since the service launched in May 2020); however it would change course beginning on January 9, reaching deals with DirecTV (including co-owned DirecTV Stream and U-verse), Hulu and Charter Spectrum to offer the network's linear/VOD subscribers complimentary access to the namesake Paramount+ tier starting later in the year. | [805][806] [807][808] [809] |
Hallmark Drama | Hallmark Family | Cable/satellite | February 28 | On February 5, during the Television Critics Association Winter Press Tour, Hallmark Media announced plans to rebrand Hallmark Drama as Hallmark Family on February 28, and Hallmark Movies & Mysteries as Hallmark Mystery on March 6. The changes effectively serve to clarify both networks' existing programming formats—the former centering around family- and faith-oriented programming, and the latter centering around mystery programs—both of which offer acquired series, and original (in the case of Hallmark Movies & Mysteries/Hallmark Mystery) and library (primarily sourced from Hallmark Channel) movies and mini-series. | [810][811] |
Hallmark Movies & Mysteries | Hallmark Mystery | March 6 | |||
CBS News (streaming) | CBS News 24/7 | OTT streaming | April 22 | On April 9, Variety reported streaming offerings in recent that the CBS News streaming network would rebrand on April 22 as CBS News 24/7, as part of a broader expansion of its programming to include a new eponymous “whip-around” news program that will rely on reports sourced from the national CBS News division and local CBS stations, expansions of the political news show America Decides (from 30 minutes to an hour) and Primetime with John Dickerson (from one hour to 90 minutes, along with a name change to The Daily Report with John Dickerson), and the addition of the late night newscast CBS News Roundup. | [812] |
Defy TV (Scripps version) | Ion Plus (resumption of over-the-air multicast distribution) | OTA multicast and OTT streaming | July 1 | On June 17, Scripps Networks disclosed on the social media profiles of Defy TV and Ion Plus that the latter network, which had transitioned an over-the-air multicast network to a free ad-supported streaming channel in February 2021 after Scripps's acquisition of Ion Media, would resume over-the-air clearance on Ion's stations (and other third-party affiliates) over the channel space occupied by Defy TV, which struggled to attain any long-term viewer sustainability with its 2010s-era reality/unscripted format mainly drawn from the A&E Networks library (this same issue had earlier resulted in Scripps merging the programming of female-targeted sister network TrueReal—which had its channel space subsequently leased over to Jewelry Television—into the male-focused Defy's schedule in March 2023). Ion Plus's existing schedule of procedural dramas will continue over-the-air with newer and higher-profile acquisitions (along with Canadian series and selected 1990s–2000s first-run syndicated dramas) airing as part of its schedule, and its existing AVOD availability wholly unaffected. Defy was then relaunched under the auspices of Free TV Networks at the same time (as detailed above, in the "Launches" section). | [813] |
Hallmark Movies Now | Hallmark+ | OTT streaming | September 10 | On July 11, it was announced that Hallmark Movies Now would relaunch as Hallmark+, serving as an auxiliary counterpart to Hallmart's suite of channels and as a loyalty program for Hallmark Gold Crown greeting card stores. | [814][815] [816] |
Bally Sports | FanDuel Sports Network | Regional sports networks | October 21 | On October 18, a federal judge presiding over the ongoing bankruptcy of Diamond Sports Group approved a new naming rights agreement between Diamond and FanDuel, allowing the sports betting company to apply its name to Diamond's 16 remaining RSNs that had worn the name of casino operator Bally's Corporation since 2021. The name change will go into effect one day before the start of the 2024–25 NBA season. | [817][818] |
Closures
[edit]Network/ service |
Type | End date | Notes | Source |
---|---|---|---|---|
Viaplay (U.S. service) | OTT streaming | February 29 | On July 20, 2023, Viaplay Group announced that it would discontinue its Viaplay streaming services in the U.S., Canada and the United Kingdom (the former having launched just six months prior on February 22), and immediately ceased marketing to new subscribers in those regions. The move was part of a refocusing on its core markets of Scandinavia and the Netherlands, centering on its sports offering and the sale of non-sports content through its Viaplay Select business; about 25% of the company's staff were laid off as a result. On January 18, Viaplay confirmed that its U.S. service would shut down on February 29, and would refund monthly and annual subscribers for the remaining time of their subscription. Viaplay content will remain available in the U.S. through The Roku Channel, Xfinity (via its X1 and Flex tiers) and Xumo. | [819][820] [821] |
MotorTrend+ | March 28 | On February 23, Warner Bros. Discovery announced that it would be shutting down MotorTrend+ at the end of March. Subscribers will be migrated to the ad-free tier of Discovery+, while its programming library will be moved over to both Discovery+ and Max in stages until the service's closure. | [822] | |
TV Japan | Cable/satellite | March 31 | On February 17, TV Japan announced on its website that the NHK Cosmomedia America-owned network (which aired news and entertainment programs sourced from various broadcasters based in Japan, primarily from public broadcaster NHK as well as commercial networks such as Tokyo Broadcasting System Television, Nippon TV, TV Tokyo, Fuji Television and TV Asahi) would cease distribution on cable and satellite providers on March 31; much of its programming migrated to NHK's new streaming service Jme , which soft-launched ten days before and features a broader selection of programming than the schedule-limited wireline TV Japan channel and is priced comparably at $25/month. | [823] |
Funimation | OTT streaming | April 2 | On February 7, Sony announced that the Funimation app and website would shut down on April 2, and that users would be able to migrate their account data to Crunchyroll until then. | [824][825] |
Showtime (streaming service) | April 30 | On January 30, 2023, Paramount announced plans to fully integrate the Showtime direct-to-consumer streaming service with the premium tier of the Paramount+ streaming service; the streaming tier rebrand replaces a bundle of the same name that launched in mid-2022. The cable-specific Showtime Anytime app was shut down by the end of the year. On April 11, 2024, Paramount announced that the standalone app would shut down on April 30. | [826][827] [828] | |
Bally Sports San Diego | Regional sports network | April | On May 20, 2023, Bally Sports San Diego ended its television contract with the San Diego Padres as part of the ongoing bankruptcy of Bally Sports' parent company. In April 2024, the network was liquidated following a settlement with the Padres. | [829] |
Longhorn Network | Cable/satellite | June 30 | With the Texas Longhorns joining the Southeastern Conference, the standalone Longhorn Network, a channel devoted to the athletics program of the University of Texas at Austin, was discontinued as its programming was merged into the SEC Network. A free ad-supported streaming television version of the Longhorn Network was launched July 1, in partnership with Learfield Sports instead of previous partner ESPN. | [830] |
Pac-12 Network | With the departure of all but two of the Pac-12 Conference's teams to other conferences for the 2024–25 season, the Pac-12 Network was discontinued. The conference's production division continues to produce events for remaining members Washington State and Oregon State, including its home football and basketball games for the CW Sports division under a one-year contract, and the conference's FAST platform Pac-12 Insider continues to operate unaffected. | [831] | ||
Noggin | OTT streaming | July 2 | On February 15, as part of a series of layoffs affecting 800 employees (or about 3% of its workforce), Paramount Global announced that it would shut down the Noggin subscription streaming service (which was launched in 2015 and is marketed to children ages two to seven), resulting in the termination of its entire staff. Much of the long-form and short-form content featured on the service will be shifted over to Paramount+'s Nick Jr. section (which already carries much of Nick Jr.'s library of preschool programming). Noggin would subsequently stop accepting new subscribers, while existing subscribers would be transitioned over to Paramount+ prior to the former's shutdown. This marks the second discontinuation of the Noggin edutainment brand by Paramount: it originally launched in February 1999 as a linear cable spinoff of Nickelodeon, aimed at preteens and teenagers, under a joint venture between predecessor company Viacom and Sesame Workshop; the Noggin network shifted its target audience to preschoolers in 2007 (after the teen-targeted nighttime block The N was spun off as a separate network, since renamed TeenNick, occupying Nickelodeon GaS's former channel space), and was later relaunched as Nick Jr. Channel in September 2009. | [832][833] |
NewsNet | OTA multicast | August 2 | On the morning of August 2, 2024, NewsNet abruptly laid off its staff and ceased operations of both its main channel and its Sports News Highlights companion service, with owner Manoj Bhargava stating the networks had no measurable viewership. The networks, which largely served as direct-to-consumer platforms for Bhargava to advertise his 5-hour Energy brand of energy shots and drinks, were also embroiled in legal disputes with the owners of Sports Illustrated, which Bhargava had planned to cross-brand and integrate with the television networks before the brand was relicensed to another company. | [834][835] |
Sports News Highlights | ||||
KOOL TV | OTA broadcast, OTT streaming | August 8 | The regional network airing on low-power stations in Minnesota ceased local programming July 1 after over nine years in operation, citing a lack of advertising revenue; the service shut down entirely a month later. | [836] |
Boomerang (streaming service) | OTT streaming | September 30 | On August 2, Warner Bros. Discovery announced that it would be shutting down Boomerang's streaming service and some of its content would be migrated to Max. | [837] |
NBC Sports Chicago | Regional sports network | Following the announcement that the Chicago Blackhawks, Chicago Bulls, and Chicago White Sox would move their television rights to the new Chicago Sports Network, it was revealed that NBC Sports Chicago would shut down after the last game of the White Sox's season. | [838] | |
Bally Sports New Orleans | Regional sports network | October 21 | On October 16, 2024, Diamond revealed in a court filing it had reached a sponsorship agreement with FanDuel Group and intended to rebrand the Bally Sports networks as the FanDuel Sports Network; on October 18, Diamond officially announced the rebranding would take effect three days later.[839][840] However, on October 21, the New Orleans network shut down instead of transitioning to the FanDuel Sports Network, due to the channel having lost their airing rights to the New Orleans Pelicans and Texas Rangers whenever their games were scheduled to play. | |
Scripps News | Over-the-air multicast | November 15 | On September 27, The E. W. Scripps Company announced they would suspend over-the-air broadcasting of their 24-hour linear news network, cutting more than 200 jobs in the process. Scripps claims that advertising revenue never materialized for the network due to a market largely hostile to buying airtime on news and politically oriented programming. Originally known as Newsy, Scripps purchased the network in 2014, and relaunched it with its current name in 2023. About 50 Scripps News staff will remain, providing news coverage for the company's local newsrooms and the network remaining on streaming and connected TV devices. | [841] |
Television stations
[edit]Station launches
[edit]Date | Market | Station | Channel | Affiliation | Notes | Source |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
June 24 | Green Bay, Wisconsin (Shawano) |
WMEI | 31.1 | MeTV | Weigel Broadcasting launches WMEI on this date to serve the Green Bay–Fox Cities market with its suite of networks, and to expand its owned station reach northward along the western shore of Lake Michigan without the need for affiliation agreements with the area's existing stations. WBAY-TV continues to carry three of its other networks as subchannels for the time being, though the launch of WMEI returned access to MeTV over-the-air two years after its former carrier, NBC affiliate WGBA-TV, discontinued carriage of its channels to carry the networks of station parent Scripps. The signal is nulled to the north to avoid interference with Milwaukee's WITI on the same physical channel.
The channel 31 allocation in the area formerly served as the post-digital transition home of WFXS-DT (channel 55), the Fox affiliate in Wausau from December 1, 1999 until July 1, 2015 when the station was wound down, after its intellectual property and programming was acquired by Gray Television (owner of CBS affiliate WSAW-TV) and the station was relaunched by Gray on a new low-power station as WZAW-LD (with the main Fox channel being rebroadcast as a WSAW subchannel to serve the entire market), and WFXS's owners turning in the channel 31 full-power license for cancellation on July 23, 2015 (WZAW-LD subsequently took the channel 33 virtual channel). The allocation was auctioned by the FCC in 2022, with Weigel the winner. As the allocation was licensed to Wittenberg in Shawano County (in the Green Bay market), Weigel asked the FCC to re-allocate the station to the county seat of Shawano instead, along with a move of the transmitter site to the Scray Hill site southwest of Green Bay to fully serve the market before launching the station. |
[842][843] [844] |
31.2 | MeTV Toons | |||||
31.3 | Story Television | |||||
31.4 | MeTV+ | |||||
31.5 | Movies! |
Subchannel launches
[edit]Stations changing network affiliations
[edit]Date | Market | Station | Channel | Prior affiliation | New affiliation | Notes | Source |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
January 1 | Bellingham–Bellevue–Seattle–Tacoma, Washington | KUNS-TV | 51.1 | Univision | The CW | On September 28, 2023, it was announced that KUNS-TV would become the Seattle market's new CW affiliate on January 1, 2024, setting aside a temporary arrangement for the last quarter of 2023 on Sinclair sister station KOMO-DT2 (otherwise carrying Comet without any other local deviation) after CBS-owned KSTW's disaffiliation from the network on August 31. TelevisaUnivision was offered a KUNS subchannel by Sinclair in exchange, but outright refused the offer (as KUNS is the market's ATSC 3.0 lighthouse, it would have had lowered picture quality on any station that would host its ATSC 1.0 formatted subchannel in lieu of KUNS) to search for better carriage options. The removal of a major Spanish network (and the associated termination of its local news operation as part of KOMO-TV's staff) for a lower-profile English network attracted immediate outcry from the Puget Sound region's Latino and Hispanic community, which otherwise only has a Telemundo subchannel on KIRO-TV with no local news even in brief, and five minor Spanish Christian network on subchannels carried over-the-air, along with three Spanish-language radio stations (two of them Christian and other programs being brokered on other stations). | [847] |
KVOS-TV | 12.1 | Heroes & Icons | Univision | Over the 2023 holiday season, KVOS's owner, Weigel Broadcasting, quietly updated their station's website to reflect Univision would move to KVOS's main channel on the same date; Weigel-owned H&I moved to its new channel position at subchannel 12.8. As the station serves as a border blaster serving the northern portion of the market (though not having any pay-TV coverage in Canada, which is served by Univision Canada), Univision's domestic schedule will also be available over-the-air in Vancouver, Victoria, and southwest British Columbia for the first time, and the deal settles an acrimony existing between Weigel and Univision since its flagship station, WCIU-TV in Chicago, lost Univision in that market in 1994 after the network purchased WGBO-TV over analog-era schedule limitations. | [848] | ||
February 1 | Midland–Odessa, Texas | KMDF-LD | 22.1 | Antenna TV | The365 | See January 1 entry in subchannel launches | [845] |
Prescott–Phoenix, Arizona | KAZT-TV | 7.1 | Independent | The CW | On January 8, 2024, Nexstar announced that it had reached an agreement with the owners of KAZT-TV to provide technical services and programming for the network beginning February 1. As part of this agreement, KAZT becomes an affiliate of The CW. | [849] | |
February 2 | Tupelo–Columbus–West Point, Mississippi | WLOV-TV | 27.1 | Fox | The CW+ | On February 1, Morris Multimedia (owner of CBS affiliate WCBI-TV) announced that it would assume the rights to a shared services agreement involving Coastal Television-owned WLOV, taking over operational responsibilities from Allen Media Group (owner of rival NBC affiliate WTVA, which had managed WLOV since 1992 under the former's previous locally based ownership). Consequently, the deal prompted a series of affiliation switches between WLOV and two WCBI subchannels on February 2: Fox moved from WLOV (which had been affiliated with the network since 1995) to WCBI-DT2, while The CW Plus moved to WLOV from WCBI-DT3, which assumed the MyNetworkTV affiliation previously carried on that station's 4.2 subchannel. The move of Fox programming to WCBI-DT2 occurred despite the FCC's 2018 Quadrennial Media Ownership Review—approved by a 3–2 vote following a six-year delay on December 22, 2023—closing a loophole that allowed station operators to maintain multiple Big Four network affiliations using digital subchannels or low-power stations, including through the acquisition of another station's primary affiliation. | [850][851] [note 19] |
April 2 | Columbus, Georgia | WGBP-TV | 66.1 | NBC LX Home | Merit Street | See Merit Street entry in launches | [793][794] |
Dallas–Fort Worth, Texas | KTXD-TV | 47.1 | TBD | ||||
Los Angeles, California | KVMD | 31.1 | Infomercials | ||||
New York City | WMBC-TV | 63.1 | Independent | ||||
San Francisco, California | KOFY-TV | 20.1 | Grit | ||||
May 5 | Canton, Ohio | WDLI-TV | 17.1 | Bounce TV | Scripps News | ||
May 18 | Sacramento, California | KBTV-CD | 8.1 | Visión Latina | Buzzr | ||
May 29 | KAHC-LD | 43.1 | RVTV | LATV | |||
June 25 | Los Angeles, California | KSFV-CD | 27.1 | Jewelry Television | MeTV Toons | ||
Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania | WOSC-CD | 61.1 | Rewind TV | ||||
WPTG-CD | 69.1 | This TV | Rewind TV | ||||
August 5 | Indianapolis, Indiana | WHMB-TV | 40.1 | Religious independent | Univision | Indianapolis’ WHMB and South Bend's WHME switched their primary channels to Univision. | [852] |
South Bend, Indiana | WHME-TV | 46.1 | |||||
August 21 | Silver Spring, Maryland (Washington, D.C.) | WJAL | 68.1 | ShopHQ | Merit Street | [853] | |
September 1 | Chicago, Illinois | WGN-TV | 9.1 | Independent | The CW | On May 1, 2024, Nexstar announced that WGN-TV would become a CW affiliate once again as well as WVBT and KLFY-TV adding the network to their digital subchannels. | [854] |
WCIU-TV | 26.1 | The CW | Independent | ||||
Detroit, Michigan | WMYD | 20.1 | On April 19, 2024, The Desk reported that the E. W. Scripps Company was planning to drop its CW affiliations from seven stations. These stations will become independent, with a focus on expanded local news and sports coverage. WMYD returns to independence after a short-term affiliation contract, due to the Mission/Nexstar's issues with acquiring WADL-TV to retain CW programming in the market and its later nullification. Later, on July 30 of that same year, Nexstar signed a new affiliation deal with Paramount's CBS News and Stations that not only renews the agreements with the 40 CBS affiliates Nexstar owns, but makes Paramount-owned stations WBFS and WKBD affiliates of The CW (WKBD returns to the network after departing the network for a year due to the WADL issues mentioned above). The next day, Nexstar announced that Sinclair-owned KSCC in Corpus Christi, News-Press & Gazette Company-operated KCOY-TV Santa Barbara and Tegna-owned KTTU Tucson would add CW programming, all effective September 1. | [855] | |||
WKBD-TV | 50.1 | Independent | The CW | [856] | |||
Miami, Florida | WBFS-TV | 33.1 | |||||
WSFL-TV | 39.1 | The CW | Independent | [855] | |||
Portsmouth, Virginia | WGNT | 27.1 | |||||
Tucson, Arizona | KWBA-TV | 58.1 | |||||
KTTU-TV | 18.1 | MyNetworkTV | The CW | [857] | |||
September 16 | Escanaba–Marquette, Michigan | WJMN-TV | 3.1 | ABC (via WBUP) | [858] | ||
September 17 | San Francisco, California (San Jose) |
KRON-TV | 4.1 | The CW (primary) / MyNetworkTV (secondary) | The CW (full-time) |
With the end of KRON's affiliation agreement for Fox-owned MyNetworkTV (which had been carried after KRON's late newscasts through the last year), the service moves in the Bay Area to Fox-owned KTVU's sister station KICU (known on air as KTVU Plus), though it de facto remains an independent station otherwise as the service's programming airs at the latest broadcast day time possible in the graveyard slot, from 3 a.m.–5 a.m. on early Tuesday–Saturday mornings, with KICU retaining its prime time newscasts from KTVU unchanged. | |
KICU-TV | 36.1 | Independent | MyNetworkTV |
Subchannels changing network affiliations
[edit]Date | Market | Station | Channel | Prior affiliation | New affiliation | Notes | Source |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
January 1 | Amarillo, Texas | KEYU | 31.3 | Circle | Outlaw | See January 1 entry in subchannel launches | [845][846] |
Baltimore, Maryland | WQAW-LD | 69.4 | Infomercials | the365 | |||
69.7 | Outlaw | ||||||
Baton Rouge, Louisiana | WAFB | 9.3 | Circle | the365 | |||
Boston, Massachusetts | WWDP | 46.2 | Quest | ||||
Charleston, South Carolina | WCSC-TV | 5.3 | Circle | ||||
Cleveland, Ohio | WOIO | 19.4 | Rewind TV | Outlaw | |||
WUAB | 43.2 | Circle | the365 | ||||
Columbus, Georgia | WTVM | 9.3 | |||||
Dallas–Fort Worth, Texas | KPFW-LD | 18.5 | Infomercials | Outlaw | |||
KHPK-LD | 28.5 | ||||||
KJJM-LD | 34.7 | Magnificent Movies Network | |||||
Dover, Delaware–Salisbury, Maryland | WMDE | 36.5 | Arirang TV | the365 | |||
36.7 | OnTV4U | Arirang TV | |||||
Detroit, Michigan | WUDL-LD | 19.5 | Magnificent Movies Network | the365 | |||
19.6 | beIN Sports Xtra | Outlaw | |||||
Green Bay, Wisconsin | WBAY-TV | 2.3 | Circle (primary) / MyNetworkTV (secondary) | the365 (primary) / MyNetworkTV (secondary) | |||
Greenville, South Carolina | WHNS | 21.6 | Circle | the365 | |||
Kansas City, Missouri | KCTV | 5.2 | |||||
5.5 | Shop LC | Outlaw | |||||
Lansing, Michigan | WILX-TV | 10.3 | Circle | Heroes & Icons | |||
10.5 | Antenna TV | the365 | |||||
10.7 | Heroes & Icons | Outlaw | |||||
Los Angeles, California | KSKJ-CD | 45.2 | beIN Sports Xtra en Español | the365 | |||
45.7 | Novelisima | Outlaw | |||||
Mankato, Minnesota | KMNF-LD | 7.3 | Circle | the365 | |||
Memphis, Tennessee | WMC-TV | 5.3 | Circle (primary) / The CW Sports (secondary) | the365 (primary) / The CW Sports (secondary) | |||
New York City | WRNN-TV | 48.2 | Shop LC | Charge! | |||
48.3 | Charge! | the365 | |||||
48.4 | QVC2 | Outlaw | |||||
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania | WMCN-TV | 44.2 | Shop LC | the365 | |||
44.3 | QVC2 | Outlaw | |||||
Rockford, Illinois | WIFR-LD | 23.3 | Circle | ||||
Sacramento, California | KBTV-CD | 8.4 | Timeless TV | the365 | |||
8.7 | OnTV4U | Outlaw | |||||
KAHC-LD | 43.5 | RVTV | the365 | ||||
43.7 | Magnificent Movies Network | Outlaw | |||||
KFMS-LD | 47.4 | RVTV | the365 | ||||
47.7 | Binge TV | Outlaw | |||||
San Diego, California | KSKT-CD | 43.7 | Novelisima | the365 | |||
San Francisco, California | KQRO-LD | 45.5 | Binge TV | ||||
45.6 | Timeless TV | Outlaw | |||||
Sarasota–Tampa–St. Petersburg, Florida | WWSB | 40.2 | Circle | the365 | |||
Savannah, Georgia | WTOC-TV | 11.3 | |||||
Seattle–Tacoma, Washington | KOMO-TV | 4.2 | Comet (primary) / The CW (secondary) | Comet (full-time) |
See January 1 entry in stations changing network affiliations | [847] | |
Sherman, Texas | KXII | 12.6 | Circle | Outlaw | See January 1 entry in subchannel launches | [845][846] | |
Sioux City, Iowa | KTIV | 4.6 | |||||
Grand Rapids, Michigan | WWMT | 3.2 | The CW | Independent | On December 18, 2023, Nexstar announced that WOTV, KELO-TV and WMBB will become CW affiliates via their digital subchannels on January 1, 2024. | [859] | |
WOTV | 41.2 | Dabl | The CW | ||||
Sioux Falls, South Dakota | KELO-TV | 11.4 | Ion Mystery | The CW Plus | |||
KSFY-TV | 13.2 | The CW Plus | Outlaw | ||||
KDLT-TV | 46.3 | Antenna TV | the365 | ||||
Panama City, Florida | WJHG-TV | 7.2 | The CW Plus | MeTV | |||
7.6 | Circle | the365 | |||||
WMBB | 13.2 | Antenna TV | The CW Plus | ||||
January 31 | Sacramento–Stockton–Modesto, California | KMAX-TV | 31.3 | Comet | QVC | ||
31.4 | Charge! | QVC2 | |||||
February 1 | Phoenix, Arizona | KNXV-TV | 15.2 | Antenna TV (primary) / The CW (secondary) | Antenna TV (full-time) |
See February 1 entry in stations changing network affiliations | [849] |
February 2 | Tupelo–Columbus–West Point, Mississippi | WCBI-TV | 4.2 | MyNetworkTV | Fox | See February 2 entry in stations changing network affiliations | [850][851] [note 19] |
4.3 | The CW+ | MyNetworkTV | |||||
February 5 | Topeka, Kansas | KTKA-TV | 49.2 | Dabl | Rewind TV | ||
February 21 | Sacramento–Stockton–Modesto, California | KXTV | 10.6 | Quest | The Nest | Quest switched to subchannel 10.5 in December 2023 when Twist ceased operations, leaving the subchannel dark for over 1+1⁄2 months. | |
KAHC-LD | 43.2 | Timeless TV | GoldenTV | ||||
April 1 | Chicago, Illinois | WBBM-TV | 2.5 | Charge! | Comet | [860] | |
WLS-TV | 7.3 | This TV | Charge! | ||||
Durham–Raleigh, North Carolina | WTVD | 11.3 | |||||
Fresno, California | KFSN-TV | 30.3 | |||||
Houston, Texas | KTRK-TV | 13.3 | |||||
Los Angeles, California | KABC-TV | 7.3 | |||||
KCAL-TV | 9.3 | Charge! | Comet | ||||
New York City | WABC-TV | 7.3 | This TV | Charge! | |||
WJLP | 33.6 | TBD | The Nest | ||||
WRNN-TV | 48.2 | Charge! | TBD | ||||
WMBC-TV | 63.2 | Independent | Scripps News | ||||
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania | WPVI-TV | 6.3 | This TV | Charge! | |||
Phoenix, Arizona | KAZT-TV | 7.5 | Independent | Rewind TV | |||
San Angelo, Texas | KSAN-TV | 3.2 | Bounce TV | Laff | |||
3.3 | Laff | Bounce TV | |||||
San Francisco, California | KGO-TV | 7.3 | This TV | Charge! | |||
April 2 | Albuquerque, New Mexico | KNAT-TV | 23.2 | TBN Inspire | Merit Street | See Merit Street entry in launches | [793][794] |
23.3 | Smile | TBN Inspire | |||||
23.4 | Enlace | Smile | |||||
Altoona–Johnstown–State College, Pennsylvania | WATM-TV | 23.4 | This TV | Merit Street | |||
Atlanta, Georgia | WHSG-TV | 63.2 | TBN Inspire | ||||
63.3 | Smile | TBN Inspire | |||||
63.4 | Enlace | Smile | |||||
Bartlesville–Tulsa, Oklahoma | KDOR-TV | 17.2 | TBN Inspire | Merit Street | |||
17.3 | Smile | TBN Inspire | |||||
17.4 | Enlace | Smile | |||||
Birmingham, Alabama | WTJP-TV | 60.2 | TBN Inspire | Merit Street | |||
60.3 | Smile | TBN Inspire | |||||
60.4 | Enlace | Smile | |||||
Bloomington–Normal–Peoria, Illinois | WYZZ-TV | 43.2 | This TV | Merit Street | |||
Chattanooga, Tennessee | WELF-TV | 23.2 | TBN Inspire | ||||
23.3 | Smile | TBN Inspire | |||||
23.4 | Enlace | Smile | |||||
Chicago, Illinois | WWTO-TV | 35.2 | Smile | Merit Street | |||
35.3 | Enlace | Smile | |||||
Cocoa–Orlando, Florida | WHLV-TV | 52.2 | TBN Inspire | Merit Street | |||
52.3 | Smile | TBN Inspire | |||||
52.4 | Enlace | Smile | |||||
Dallas–Fort Worth, Texas | KDTX-TV | 58.2 | TBN Inspire | Merit Street | |||
58.3 | Smile | TBN Inspire | |||||
58.4 | Enlace | Smile | |||||
Davenport, Iowa | WMWC-TV | 53.2 | TBN Inspire | Merit Street | |||
53.3 | Smile | TBN Inspire | |||||
53.4 | Enlace | Smile | |||||
Denver, Colorado | KPJR-TV | 38.2 | TBN Inspire | Merit Street | |||
38.3 | Smile | TBN Inspire | |||||
38.4 | Enlace | Smile | |||||
Hendersonville–Nashville, Tennessee | WPGD-TV | 50.2 | TBN Inspire | Merit Street | |||
50.3 | Smile | TBN Inspire | |||||
50.4 | Enlace | Smile | |||||
Holly Springs, Mississippi–Memphis, Tennessee | WBUY-TV | 40.2 | TBN Inspire | Merit Street | |||
40.3 | Smile | TBN Inspire | |||||
40.4 | Enlace | Smile | |||||
Honolulu, Hawaii | KAAH-TV | 26.2 | TBN Inspire | Merit Street | |||
26.3 | Smile | TBN Inspire | |||||
26.4 | Enlace | Smile | |||||
Jackson, Mississippi | WRBJ-TV | 34.2 | TBN Inspire | Merit Street | |||
34.3 | Smile | TBN Inspire | |||||
34.4 | Enlace | Smile | |||||
Jersey City, New Jersey–New York, New York | WTBY-TV | 54.2 | Smile | Merit Street | |||
54.3 | Enlace | Smile | |||||
Kansas City–St. Joseph, Missouri | KTAJ-TV | 16.2 | TBN Inspire | Merit Street | |||
16.3 | Smile | TBN Inspire | |||||
16.4 | Enlace | Smile | |||||
Los Angeles, California | KTBN-TV | 40.2 | TBN Inspire | Merit Street | |||
40.3 | Smile | TBN Inspire | |||||
40.4 | Enlace | Smile | |||||
Mayville–Milwaukee, Wisconsin | WWRS-TV | 52.2 | TBN Inspire | Merit Street | |||
52.3 | Smile | TBN Inspire | |||||
52.4 | Enlace | Smile | |||||
Miami, Florida | WHFT-TV | 45.2 | TBN Inspire | Merit Street | |||
45.3 | Smile | TBN Inspire | |||||
45.4 | Enlace | Smile | |||||
Millville, New Jersey–Philadelphia, Pennsylvania | WGTW-TV | 48.2 | TBN Inspire | Merit Street | |||
48.3 | Smile | TBN Inspire | |||||
48.4 | Enlace | Smile | |||||
Mobile, Alabama–Pensacola, Florida | WMPV-TV | 21.2 | TBN Inspire | Merit Street | |||
21.3 | Smile | TBN Inspire | |||||
21.4 | Enlace | Smile | |||||
Montgomery, Alabama | WMCF-TV | 45.2 | TBN Inspire | Merit Street | |||
45.3 | Smile | TBN Inspire | |||||
45.4 | Enlace | Smile | |||||
Norfolk, Virginia | WTPC-TV | 21.2 | TBN Inspire | Merit Street | |||
21.3 | Smile | TBN Inspire | |||||
21.4 | Enlace | Smile | |||||
Oklahoma City, Oklahoma | KTBO-TV | 14.2 | TBN Inspire | Merit Street | |||
14.3 | Smile | TBN Inspire | |||||
14.4 | Enlace | Smile | |||||
Phoenix, Arizona | KPAZ-TV | 21.2 | TBN Inspire | Merit Street | |||
21.3 | Smile | TBN Inspire | |||||
21.4 | Enlace | Smile | |||||
Portland, Oregon | KNMT | 24.2 | TBN Inspire | Merit Street | |||
24.3 | Smile | TBN Inspire | |||||
24.4 | Enlace | Smile | |||||
Seattle, Washington | KTBW-TV | 20.2 | TBN Inspire | Merit Street | |||
20.3 | Smile | TBN Inspire | |||||
20.4 | Enlace | Smile | |||||
April 3 | Fresno, California | KGPE-TV | 47.3 | TheGrio | Antenna TV | ||
April 20 | Wichita, Kansas | KAGW-CD | 26.2 | Rewind TV | Merit Street | ||
26.3 | AMGTV | Rewind TV | |||||
May 1 | Hartford, Connecticut | WCTX | 59.2 | Comet | Charge! | ||
Las Vegas, Nevada | KLAS-TV | 8.2 | Rewind TV | Antenna TV | |||
8.3 | Get | Rewind TV | |||||
May 2 | Phoenix, Arizona | KMOH-TV | 6.2 | MeTV+ | Heroes & Icons | ||
May 10 | Palm Springs, California | KRET-CD | 45.4 | Heroes & Icons | Catchy Comedy | ||
45.5 | Catchy Comedy | Antenna TV | |||||
May 13 | Sacramento, California | KFMS-LD | 47.6 | Novelisima | Outdoor America | Novelisima was dropped in March 2024. In the interim, informercials were aired until Outdoor America began airing. | |
May 17 | Belmont–Charlotte, North Carolina | WJZY | 46.5 | TheGrio | Shop LC | ||
May 31 | Belton–Waco, Texas | KNCT | 46.6 | This TV | Weather radar | ||
Dallas–Fort Worth, Texas | KTXA | 21.3 | |||||
Davenport, Iowa | KLJB | 18.3 | Rewind TV | HSN | |||
KGCW | 26.2 | This TV | Rewind TV | ||||
Huntsville, Alabama | WAAY-TV | 31.6 | TheGrio | ||||
Phoenix, Arizona | KTVK | 3.4 | Infomercials | ||||
June 13 | Eugene, Oregon | KHWB-LD | 38.2 | Cornerstone Television | Antenna TV | ||
June 25 | Fresno, California | KGMC | 43.5 | Antenna TV | MeTV Toons | See MeTV Toons entry in launches | |
Honolulu, Hawaii | KIKU | 20.2 | Infomercials | ||||
Houston, Texas | KPRC-TV | 2.5 | Get TV | ||||
Lake Dallas, Texas | KAZD | 55.3 | MeTV+ | ||||
Louisville, Kentucky | WBNA | 21.7 | Ion Mystery | ||||
Lubbock, Texas | KMYL-LD | 14.5 | Jewelry Television | ||||
Macon, Georgia | WPGA-TV | 58.5 | Grit | ||||
Middletown Township, New Jersey–New York, New York | WJLP | 33.2 | |||||
Milwaukee, Wisconsin | WMLW-TV | 49.5 | MeTV+ | ||||
Monterey, California | KMBY-LD | 27.5 | SonLife | ||||
Myrtle Beach, South Carolina | WFXB | 43.9 | Weather radar | ||||
St. Louis, Missouri | KNLC | 24.2 | NLEC TV | ||||
Tulsa, Oklahoma | KMYT-TV | 41.5 | This TV | ||||
June 27 | Sacramento–Stockton–Modesto, California | KXTV | 10.7 | HSN | Confess by Nosey | HSN was dropped in June 2023, leaving the subchannel dark for a year | |
July 1 | Phoenix, Arizona | KPHE-LD | 44.3 | Rewind TV | Defy | ||
Sacramento, California | KBTV-CD | 8.5 | Law&Crime | ||||
KAHC-LD | 43.4 | Shop LC | |||||
KFMS-LD | 47.2 | OnTV4U | Shop LC | ||||
47.3 | Timeless TV | Defy | |||||
September 1 | Corpus Christi, Texas | KRIS-TV | 6.2 | The CW Plus | Laff | On April 19, 2024, The Desk reported that the E. W. Scripps Company was planning to drop its CW affiliations from seven stations. These stations will become independent, with a focus on expanded local news and sports coverage. Twelve days later, Nexstar announced that WGN-TV would become a CW affiliate once again as well as WVBT and KLFY-TV adding the network to their digital subchannels. On August 22, 2024, Nexstar Media Group has announced five new affiliates for its CW Network, and all of them are owned by the company. | [855][861][862] |
KORO | 28.3 | Laff | Ion Plus | ||||
KSCC | 38.3 | MyNetworkTV (retained as secondary) | The CW Plus (primary) | ||||
Norfolk, Virginia | WVBT | 43.2 | Cozi TV | The CW | |||
Utica, New York | WKTV | 2.3 | The CW Plus | Independent | |||
WFXV | 33.2 | Ion Mystery | The CW Plus | ||||
Terre Haute, Indiana | WTWO | 2.2 | Laff | ||||
2.3 | Ion Mystery | Laff | |||||
WTHI-TV | 10.3 | The CW Plus | MeTV | ||||
Roanoke, Virginia | WFXR | 27.4 | Quest | Antenna TV | |||
San Luis Obispo–Santa Maria–Santa Barbara, California | KSBY | 6.2 | The CW Plus | Laff | |||
KCOY-TV | 12.3 | Laff | The CW Plus | ||||
KPMR | 38.5 | Grit | |||||
Tucson, Arizona | KTTU-TV | 18.2 | The Nest | MyNetworkTV | |||
18.3 | Heroes & Icons | The Nest | |||||
18.7 | Quest | Confess by Nosey | |||||
Wichita Falls, Texas–Lawton, Oklahoma | KAUZ-TV | 6.2 | The CW Plus | Independent | |||
KFDX-TV | 3.3 | Laff | The CW Plus | ||||
September 7 | Phoenix, Arizona | KAZT-TV | 7.3 | HSN | Merit Street | ||
September 20 | Wichita, Kansas | KAGW-CD | 26.2 | Merit Street | AWE Plus | ||
26.3 | Rewind TV | All Sports TV Network | |||||
26.4 | Timeless TV | Quest | |||||
26.7 | Ace TV | Newsmax 2 | |||||
26.8 | Quest | One America News Network | |||||
26.9 | Newsmax 2 | America's Voice | |||||
26.10 | One America News Network | WeatherNation TV | |||||
September 23 | Lafayette, Louisiana | KATC-TV | 3.2 | The CW Plus | Laff | ||
KLFY-TV | 10.2 | Dabl | The CW Plus | ||||
10.4 | Laff | Ion Mystery | |||||
October 1 | Monroe, Louisiana | KNOE-TV | 8.3 | The CW Plus (primary) / MyNetworkTV (secondary) | Gulf Coast SEN | ||
KARD | 14.2 | Bounce TV | The CW Plus | ||||
Augusta, Georgia | WJBF | 6.3 | Ion Television | ||||
WRDW-TV | 12.2 | NBC (via WAGT-CD) | MyNetworkTV | ||||
12.3 | MyNetworkTV | Peachtree Sports Network | |||||
WAGT-CD | 26.2 | The CW Plus | |||||
Chicago/Hammond, Indiana | WJYS | 62.2 | Jewelry TV | Chicago Sports Network | On September 15, 2024, Chicago Sports Network, the new home of the Chicago Blackhawks, the Chicago Bulls, and the Chicago White Sox, announced it would be available over-the-air in Chicago beginning on October 1. | [863] | |
62.3 | QVC | ||||||
Rockford, Illinois | WSLN | 19.3 | Antenna TV | ||||
South Bend, Indiana | WNDU-TV | 16.2 | |||||
16.3 | The365 | Antenna TV | |||||
16.4 | Outlaw | Chicago Sports Network Plus | |||||
October 4 | Davenport, Iowa | KLJB | 18.3 | HSN | Defy | ||
November 1 | Indianapolis, Indiana | WXIN | 59.3 | Rewind TV | |||
Salt Lake City, Utah | KTVX | 4.4 | The Nest | Outlaw | |||
November 4 | Houston, Texas | KIAH | 39.5 | Court TV | Rewind TV | ||
November 15 | Davenport, Iowa | WQAD-TV | 8.7 | Scripps News | Ion Television | ||
Little Rock, Arkansas | KTHV | 11.7 |
Deaths
[edit]January
[edit]Date | Name | Age | Notes | Sources |
---|---|---|---|---|
January 1 | Mickey Cottrell | 79 | Actor (Star Trek: The Next Generation, Star Trek: Voyager) | [864] |
January 2 | Peter Berkos | 101 | Sound editor (Battlestar Galactica, Buck Rogers in the 25th Century) | [865] |
January 3 | Bridget Dobson | 85 | Television writer (General Hospital, Guiding Light) and producer (Santa Barbara) | [866] |
January 4 | Glynis Johns | 100 | British actress, dancer, musician, and singer (Batman, Cheers, The Love Boat) | [867] |
Christian Oliver | 51 | German actor best known as Brian Keller on Saved by the Bell: The New Class | [868] | |
David Soul | 80 | American-British actor and singer best known as Kenneth "Hutch" Hutchinson on Starsky & Hutch | [869] | |
Tracy Tormé | 64 | Television writer (Sliders, Star Trek: The Next Generation) | [870] | |
January 5 | Brian McConnachie | 81 | Actor and television writer (Saturday Night Live, Shining Time Station, Noddy) | [871] |
January 8 | Adan Canto | 42 | Mexican actor (The Following, Designated Survivor, The Cleaning Lady) | [872] |
January 10 | Peter Crombie | 71 | Actor best known as "Crazy" Joe Davola on Seinfeld | [873] |
Conrad Palmisano | 75 | Stuntman and director (The Young Rebels) | [874] | |
January 11 | April Ferry | 91 | Costume designer (Rome, My Name Is Bill W., Game of Thrones) | [875] |
Lynne Marta | 78 | Actress and singer (Gidget, Love, American Style, Starsky & Hutch) | [876] | |
Ruth Ashton Taylor | 101 | Newscaster for Los Angeles' KCBS-TV | [877] | |
January 12 | Bill Hayes | 98 | Actor and singer best known as Doug Williams on Days of Our Lives | [878] |
Alec Musser | 50 | Actor and fitness model best known as Del Henry on All My Children | [879] | |
January 13 | Joyce Randolph | 99 | Actress best known as Trixie Norton on The Honeymooners | [880] |
Tom Shales | 79 | Author and television critic for The Washington Post | [881] | |
January 15 | William O'Connell | 94 | Actor (Star Trek, Rawhide, Petticoat Junction, Quincy, M.E.) | [882] |
Reid Harrison | 65 | Television writer and producer (The Simpsons). | [883] | |
January 16 | David Gail | 58 | Actor best known as Stuart Carson on Beverly Hills, 90210 and Dr. Joe Scanlon on Port Charles | [884] |
January 20 | Francisco Ciatso | 48 | Professional wrestler (WWE and TNA) | [885] |
January 22 | Gary Graham | 73 | Actor best known as Detective Matthew Sikes on Alien Nation and Ambassador Soval on Star Trek: Enterprise | [886] |
Dexter King | 62 | Civil and animal rights activist (portrayed his father, Martin Luther King Jr., in the TV movie The Rosa Parks Story) | [887] | |
January 23 | Charles Osgood | 91 | Journalist and host of CBS News Sunday Morning | [888] |
Margaret Riley | 58 | Film and television producer who served as the executive producer of Ratched | [889] | |
Melanie Safka | 76 | Singer-songwriter. She wrote the lyrics to the Beauty and the Beast theme song, "The First Time I Loved Forever". | [890] | |
Ice Train | 56 | Professional wrestler (WCW) | [891] | |
January 24 | Rod Holcomb | 80 | Director (several TV movies and series, most notably the pilot and final episodes of ER) | [892] |
Jesse Jane | 43 | Pornographic actress. She made appearances as herself on Entourage, Bad Girls Club, and Gene Simmons Family Jewels. She also had an uncredited role in the TV movie Baywatch: Hawaiian Wedding. | [893] | |
January 29 | Amanda Davies | 42 | Actress best known for playing a younger version of Victoria Lord in flashback scenes of One Life to Live | [894] |
January 30 | Hinton Battle | 67 | Actor (Quantum Leap, Touched by an Angel, Buffy the Vampire Slayer) | [895] |
Chita Rivera | 91 | Actress best known as Connie Richardson on The New Dick Van Dyke Show | [896] |
February
[edit]March
[edit]April
[edit]Date | Name | Age | Notes | Sources |
---|---|---|---|---|
April 1 | Joe Flaherty | 82 | Actor best known as "Count" Floyd Robertson on SCTV and The Completely Mental Misadventures of Ed Grimley and Harold Weir on Freaks and Geeks | [957] |
Michael Ward | 57 | Guitarist. Guest spots on Live with Kelly and Mark and Total Request Live. | [958] | |
April 2 | Christopher Durang | 75 | Playwright and actor (Frasier, Kristin). He made guest appearances in Tales from the Crypt and a few others. | [959] |
Larry Lucchino | 78 | Baseball executive. Appeared himself in 60 Minutes and Mike & Mike. | [960] | |
April 4 | Bruce Kessler | 88 | Racing driver and television director (Renegade, The Commish). | [961] |
April 5 | Cole Brings Plenty | 27 | Actor best known as Pete Plenty Clouds on 1923. | [962] |
April 7 | Jerry Grote | 81 | Baseball catcher. Appeared as himself in What's My Line? and Everybody Loves Raymond. | [963] |
Lori and George Schappell | 62 | Conjoined twins. They appeared as themselves on episodes of shows like Maury and The Jerry Springer Show. They also played a pair of conjoined twins in an episode of Nip/Tuck. | [964] | |
April 8 | Bob Ellison | 91 | Writer, producer, and script consultant (several series, among them The Mary Tyler Moore Show, Cheers, Dear John, and Becker) | [965] |
April 10 | Mister Cee | 57 | DJ record executive. Appeared as himself in Luke Cage, Unsung and others. | [966] |
Trina Robbins | 85 | Artwork (Independent Lens) | [967] | |
O. J. Simpson | 76 | Actor (1st & Ten, Goldie and the Boxer, A Killing Affair, Juice on the Loose), football player (Buffalo Bills, San Francisco 49ers), and broadcaster (Monday Night Football, NFL on NBC); his trial and acquittal on two murder charges for the killing of his ex-wife Nicole Brown Simpson and her friend Ron Goldman was a major television event dubbed the "Trial of the century". | [968] | |
Dan Wallin | 97 | Sound engineer (The Muppets' Wizard of Oz, Fringe). | [969] | |
April 11 | Meg Bennett | 75 | Soap opera actress (Julia Newman on The Young and the Restless) and writer (most notably on Y&R, Santa Barbara and General Hospital) | [970] |
April 12 | Roberto Cavalli | 83 | Italian designer. Appeared as himself in The Girls Next Door, Project Runway and others. | [971] |
Eleanor Coppola | 87 | Filmmaker. Appeared as herself in Celebrity Page and Made in Hollywood. | [972] | |
Robert MacNeil | 93 | Canadian-American journalist (PBS NewsHour). | [973] | |
April 13 | Faith Ringgold | 93 | Painter and art department (5th Ward). Appeared as herself in Makers: Women Who Make America and CBS News Sunday Morning. | [974] |
Ron Thompson | 83 | Actor (Beretta). He made guest appearances in The Rebels and others. | [975] | |
April 15 | Jerry Savelle | 77 | Author and televangelist. Appeared as himself in Praise. | [976] |
Whitey Herzog | 92 | Baseball player. Appeared as himself in Jim Rome Is Burning. | [977] | |
April 16 | Carl Erskine | 97 | Baseball pitcher (Brooklyn Dodgers: Ghosts of Flatbush). Appeared as himself in The Ed Sullivan Show and others. | [978] |
Barbara O. Jones | 82 | Actress (Freedom Road). She made guest appearances in The Quest, Laverne & Shirley and others. | [979] | |
April 18 | Dickey Betts | 80 | Guitarist and member of The Allman Brothers Band. Appeared as himself in The History of Rock 'n' Roll and others. | [980] |
Mandisa | 47 | Christian singer. Appeared as herself in American Idol and others. | [981] | |
Spencer Milligan | 86 | Actor best known as Rick Marshall on Land of the Lost | [982] | |
April 19 | Daniel Dennett | 82 | Philosopher and writer. Appeared as himself in Closer to Truth and others. | [983] |
April 20 | Howie Schwab | 63 | Sports trivia expert (Sports Jeopardy!, Stump the Schwab) | [984] |
Roman Gabriel | 83 | Football player. He made guest appearances in Perry Mason and more. | [985] | |
Michael Cuscuna | 75 | Jazz record producer. Appeared as himself in Jazz. | [986] | |
April 21 | Alex Hassilev | 91 | Musician and band member of The Limeliters. He made guest appearances in Get Smart and several others. | [987] |
April 23 | Terry Carter | 95 | Actor (McCloud, Battlestar Galactica) and filmmaker. | [988] |
April 24 | Ray Chan | 56 | Art director. Appeared as himself in Marvel Studios: Assembled. | [989] |
Harry Pappas | 78 | Television broadcasting entrepreneur, co-founder of Pappas Telecasting Companies. | [990] | |
April 25 | Marla Adams | 85 | American actress (The Secret Storm, The Young and the Restless, Generations, The President's Man, Walker, Texas Ranger). She made guest appearances in Emergency!, Capitol, The Bold and the Beautiful, Days of Our Lives, and Bewitched. | [991] |
April 28 | Brian McCardie | 59 | Scottish actor (Outlander, Snatch). | [992] |
Zack Norman | 83 | Actor (The Nanny). He made guest appearances in Baywatch and a few others. | [993] |
May
[edit]June
[edit]July
[edit]Date | Name | Age | Notes | Sources |
---|---|---|---|---|
July 1 | Robert Towne | 89 | Screenwriter and director (The Lloyd Bridges Show, Breaking Point, The Outer Limits). | [1054] |
July 7 | Bill Klages | 97 | Lighting designer (Your Show of Shows, Playwrights '56, Great Performances) | [1055] |
July 11 | Shelley Duvall | 75 | Actress (Faerie Tale Theatre, Tall Tales & Legends, Shelley Duvall's Bedtime Stories) | [1056] |
July 12 | Ruth Westheimer | 96 | Sex therapist and television host (The Dr. Ruth Show and What's Up, Dr. Ruth?). She also made guest appearances on shows like Late Night with David Letterman, The Arsenio Hall Show, One Life to Live, and Quantum Leap. | [1057] |
Evan Wright | 59 | Writer (Generation Kill and its television adaptation) and journalist | [1058] | |
July 13 | Shannen Doherty | 53 | Actress best known as Brenda Walsh on Beverly Hills, 90210 and Prue Halliwell on Charmed | [1059] |
Naomi Pomeroy | 49 | Chef and Top Chef Masters contestant | [1060] | |
James B. Sikking | 90 | Actor best known as Lt. Howard Hunter on Hill Street Blues and Dr. David Howser on Doogie Howser, M.D. | [1061] | |
Richard Simmons | 76 | Fitness personality. Television roles includes guest appearances on The Roseanne Show and General Hospital. Also appeared on informercials for his Sweating to the Oldies tapes and Deal-a-Meal. | [1062] | |
Bob Tischler | 78 | Television writer and producer best known for his work on Saturday Night Live | [1063] | |
July 15 | Whitney Rydbeck | 79 | Actor (Far Out Space Nuts, Scrubs, 7th Heaven). He also played a crash test dummy in public service announcements for seat belt safety. | [1064] |
July 16 | Tom Fenton | 94 | CBS News correspondent | [1065] |
July 18 | Lou Dobbs | 78 | Television host on CNN and Fox Business (Lou Dobbs Tonight) | [1066] |
Bob Newhart | 94 | Actor and comedian best known as the star of The Bob Newhart Show and Newhart. Also hosted a variety show and starred in the short lived shows Bob and George and Leo, and won a Primetime Emmy Award for his recurring role on The Big Bang Theory. | [1067][1068] | |
July 19 | Esta TerBlanche | 51 | South African actress best known as Gillian Andrassy on All My Children. | [1069] |
July 22 | Duke Fakir | 88 | Founding member of Motown group Four Tops. He and his groupmates were featured on the NBC special Motown 25: Yesterday, Today, Forever. | [1070] |
July 28 | Erica Ash | 46 | Actress best known as Mary Charles "M-Chuck" Calloway on Survivor's Remorse and as a cast member on The Big Gay Sketch Show and MADtv. | [1071] |
Chino XL | 50 | Actor (The Young and the Restless, Reno 911!, CSI: Miami) and rapper. | [1072] | |
July 29 | Robert Banas | 90 | Actor and dancer. He made numerous television appearances, including on The Judy Garland Show and Get Smart. | [1073] |
August
[edit]Date | Name | Age | Notes | Sources |
---|---|---|---|---|
August 1 | Leonard Engelman | 83 | Makeup artist (Cagney & Lacey, The Shield). | [1074] |
August 3 | George Schenck | 82 | Television writer and producer (NCIS) | [1075] |
August 4 | Charles Cyphers | 85 | Actor (The Betty White Show, Wonder Woman, The Dukes of Hazzard) | [1076] |
August 5 | John Aprea | 83 | Actor (Matt Houston, Full House, Another World) | [1077] |
Patti Yasutake | 70 | Actress best known as Alyssa Ogawa on Star Trek: The Next Generation | [1078] | |
August 6 | Billy Bean | 60 | Baseball player and executive (I've Got a Secret) | [1079] |
August 8 | Mitzi McCall | 93 | Actress (Silk Stalkings, Alright Already) | [1080] |
August 9 | Jim Riswold | 66 | Advertising artist for Wieden+Kennedy (most notably developed the Mars Blackmon and Bo Knows campaigns for Nike) | [1081] |
Kevin Sullivan | 75 | Professional wrestler (WCW, NWA, GCW) | [1082] | |
August 10 | Rachael Lillis | 55 | Voice actress (Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles, Chaotic) | [1083] |
August 11 | Ofra Bikel | 94 | Israeli-American filmmaker, most notably on documentaries for PBS' Frontline | [1084] |
Ángel Salazar | 68 | Cuban-American actor and comedian (In Living Color, Last Comic Standing) | [1085] | |
August 12 | Kim Kahana | 94 | Actor, stunt performer, and action choreographer best known as Chongo on Danger Island. | [1086] |
August 13 | Wally Amos | 88 | Television personality, entrepreneur, and author. Appeared as himself on shows like The Jeffersons, Taxi, and The Office. Hosted the adult reading program Learn to Read. | [1087] |
August 14 | Gena Rowlands | 94 | Actress (Robert Montgomery Presents, Laramie, Johnny Staccato) | [1088] |
August 15 | Peter Marshall | 98 | Entertainer and game show host, most notably of Hollywood Squares | [1089] |
August 16 | Afa Anoaʻi | 80 | WWE Hall of Fame professional wrestler | [1090] |
August 18 | Phil Donahue | 88 | Creator and host of The Phil Donahue Show | [1091] |
August 21 | John Amos | 84 | Actor (Maude, Good Times, The Mary Tyler Moore Show, Roots, Hunter, 704 Hauser, In the House, The West Wing, The District, All About the Andersons, Men in Trees) | [1092] |
Roger Cook | 70 | Landscaper (appeared on This Old House) | [1093] | |
August 26 | Sid Eudy | 63 | Professional wrestler (Sid Vicious in World Championship Wrestling; Sid Justice and Sycho Sid in World Wrestling Federation) | [1094] |
August 27 | Ron Hale | 78 | Actor best known as Roger Coleridge on Ryan's Hope and Mike Corbin on General Hospital | [1095] |
August 28 | Rusty Shoop | 76 | Meteorologist for KERO-TV/Bakersfield, California | [1096] |
August 29 | Johnny Gaudreau | 31 | NHL ice hockey player (Calgary Flames, Columbus Blue Jackets) | [1097] |
August 30 | Fatman Scoop | 53 | Rapper, hype man, and radio personality. He did voice work as himself on two episodes of The Boondocks. | [1098] |
August 31 | Sonny King | 79 | American professional wrestler | [1099] |
Obi Ndefo | 51 | Actor best known as Bodie Wells on Dawson's Creek | [1100] |
September
[edit]Date | Name | Age | Notes | Sources |
---|---|---|---|---|
September 1 | Eric Gilliland | 62 | Writer/producer (several series, most notably Roseanne) | [1101] |
September 2 | James Darren | 88 | Actor (The Time Tunnel, T. J. Hooker, Star Trek: Deep Space Nine) | [1102] |
September 5 | Screamin' Scott Simon | 75 | Singer (Sha Na Na). He and his groupmates hosted a syndicated variety show in the late '70s. | [1103] |
September 8 | Peter Renaday | 89 | Voice actor best known as Splinter and Vernon Fenwick on the original Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles series | [1104] |
September 9 | John Cassaday | 52 | Comic book artist. He directed an episode of Dollhouse. | [1105] |
James Earl Jones | 93 | Actor (Roots: The Next Generations, Gabriel's Fire, The Simpsons); longtime commercial spokesman for Bell Atlantic | [1106] | |
September 13 | Michaela DePrince | 29 | Sierra Leonean-born ballet dancer. Appeared as herself on Dancing with the Stars. | [1107] |
September 17 | JD Souther | 78 | Singer-songwriter and actor (Thirtysomething, Purgatory, Nashville). | [1108] |
September 19 | Florence Warner | 77 | Singer (voice of the "Hello News" local station campaigns created by Gari Communications) | [1109] |
September 20 | Kathryn Crosby | 90 | Actress (The Bing Crosby Show, Great Performances, The Initiation of Sarah) | [1110] |
David Graham | 99 | British actor ("Big Brother" in the "1984" Super Bowl commercial introducing the Apple Macintosh computer) and voice artist (Doctor Who, Fireball XL5, Peppa Pig) | [1111] | |
Eduardo Xol | 58 | Actor and designer. Appeared as himself on Extreme Makeover: Home Edition. | [1112] | |
September 21 | Benny Golson | 95 | Musician and composer (Mannix, Ironside, M*A*S*H) | [1113] |
September 26 | John Ashton | 76 | Actor (M*A*S*H, Starsky & Hutch, Dallas) | [1114] |
September 27 | Maggie Smith | 89 | British actress (The Carol Burnett Show, Great Performances, My House in Umbria) | [1115] |
September 28 | Drake Hogestyn | 70 | Actor best known as John Black on Days of Our Lives | [1116] |
Kris Kristofferson | 88 | Singer-songwriter and actor (Freedom Road, The Last Days of Frank and Jesse James, Amerika) | [1117] | |
September 29 | Ron Ely | 86 | Actor best known as Tarzan on the 1960s TV series of the same name | [1118] |
September 30 | Gavin Creel | 48 | Actor (Eloise at the Plaza, Eloise at Christmastime, American Horror Stories). He also did voice work for Rapunzel's Tangled Adventure and Central Park. | [1119] |
Frank Fritz | 60 | Antique picker (co-host of American Pickers) | [1120] | |
Dikembe Mutombo | 58 | Congolese-American basketball player. He appeared in commercials for GEICO and Mobil 1. | [1121] | |
Ken Page | 70 | Actor (Gimme a Break!, Sable, Family Matters). He also did voice work for Duckman and All Grown Up!. | [1122] |
October
[edit]Date | Name | Age | Notes | Sources |
---|---|---|---|---|
October 4 | Allan Blye | 87 | Actor and writer best known as Captain Blye on Mister Rogers' Neighborhood. | [1123] |
Christopher Ciccone | 63 | Artist, interior decorator, and designer. He made an appearance in The Janice Dickinson Modeling Agency. | [1124] | |
Yukio Hattori | 78 | Japanese television personality and food critic. He made an appearance in Season 2 of The Next Iron Chef. | [1125] | |
John Lasell | 95 | Actor best known as Peter Guthrie on Dark Shadows | [1126] | |
October 6 | Dan Coughlin | 86 | Sportscaster (WJW) and journalist. | [1127] |
October 7 | Cissy Houston | 91 | Singer. She made guest appearances on shows like The Tonight Show Starring Johnny Carson, Late Show with David Letterman, and Oprah Prime. | [1128] |
Nicholas Pryor | 89 | Actor best known as A. Milton Arnold on Beverly Hills, 90210 | [1129] | |
October 10 | Ethel Kennedy | 96 | Human rights advocate. She made a cameo in an episode of Cheers along with her son Michael. | [1130] |
October 16 | Sherry Coben | 71 | Writer (Ryan's Hope, Kate & Allie, Bailey Kipper's P.O.V.) | [1131] |
Liam Payne | 31 | English singer and member of One Direction. He made guest appearances as himself on shows like iCarly, Dancing with the Stars, Family Guy, and Drop the Mic. | [1132] | |
October 17 | Mitzi Gaynor | 93 | Actress, dancer, and entertainer. She appeared on The Ed Sullivan Show and starred in several television specials throughout the 1960s and 1970s. | [1133] |
October 19 | Mel Showers | 78 | News anchor (WKRG-TV) | [1134] |
October 21 | Mimi Hines | 91 | Canadian actress, singer, and comedian. She made guest appearances on shows like The Ed Sullivan Show, The Tonight Show, Frasier, and The Rosie O'Donnell Show. | [1135] |
October 22 | Lynda Obst | 74 | Film and television producer (Hot in Cleveland, The Soul Man, Helix) | [1136] |
Alan Sacks | 81 | Writer-producer, most notably on Welcome Back, Kotter | [1137] | |
October 23 | Jack Jones | 86 | Singer (theme from The Love Boat) and actor (The Rat Patrol, Police Woman, McMillan & Wife) | [1138] |
October 24 | Tom Jarriel | 89 | KPRC-TV and ABC News anchor/reporter | [1139] |
Jeri Taylor | 86 | Writer (Star Trek: The Next Generation, Star Trek: Voyager) and producer (Quincy, M.E.). | [1140] | |
October 25 | David Harris | 75 | Actor (Kojak, The White Shadow, Hill Street Blues) | [1141] |
October 26 | Jim Donovan | 68 | Sportscaster and news anchor (WKYC/Cleveland) | [1142] |
October 29 | Teri Garr | 79 | Actress best known as Phoebe Abbott on Friends; appeared in TV commercials for Fruit of the Loom panties | [1143] |
October 30 | Wally Kennedy | 76 | Television personality (WPVI-TV/Philadelphia) | [1144][1145] |
November
[edit]Date | Name | Age | Notes | Sources |
---|---|---|---|---|
November 2 | Alan Rachins | 82 | Actor best known as Douglas Brackman Jr. on L.A. Law and Larry Finkelstein on Dharma & Greg | [1146] |
November 3 | Quincy Jones | 91 | Composer (The Bill Cosby Show, Ironside, Sanford and Son) and record producer. He also made guest appearances on The Boondocks and Last Call with Carson Daly; hosted an episode of Saturday Night Live during its 15th season in 1990; and was an executive producer for MADtv and The Fresh Prince of Bel-Air. | [1147] |
November 5 | Elwood Edwards | 74 | Voice actor. He made guest appearances on The Simpsons and The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon; worked at various local television stations, including WKYC; and appeared in a television commercial for Shopify. | [1148] |
November 6 | Tony Todd | 69 | Actor (21 Jump Street, Night Court, Matlock). He also did voice work for shows like Batman: The Brave and the Bold, Sym-Bionic Titan, and Young Justice. | [1149] |
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Notes
[edit]- ^ NBC declined to air the 79th Golden Globe Awards in 2022, amid industry boycotts surrounding the Hollywood Foreign Press Association's inaction to address the lack of diversity among the organization's members.
- ^ Bally Sports Oklahoma has served as the Oklahoma City Thunder's regional cable broadcaster since the network launched in 2008 (as the Fox Sports Southwest spinoff Fox Sports Oklahoma), following the team's relocation from Seattle. The ten-game package will also be regionally simulcast on stations owned by Gray Television (KSWO-DT3/Lawton and KSCW/Wichita) and Morgan Murphy Media (KOAM–KFJX-DT1/DT3/Joplin–Pittsburg).
- ^ Bally Sports Southwest has served as the Dallas Mavericks' regional cable broadcaster since the network launched in 1983 (as Home Sports Entertainment). The ten-game package will also be regionally simulcast on Gray Television-owned stations KXII-DT2/DT3/Sherman, Texas–Ada, Oklahoma and KLCW–KMYL/Lubbock.[25]
- ^ Bally Sports Wisconsin has served as the Milwaukee Bucks' regional cable broadcaster since the network launched in 2007 as Fox Sports Wisconsin, a spinoff of Fox Sports North (which itself had held the team's cable rights since that network, then known as Midwest Sports Channel, merged with the Wisconsin Sports Network in 1996. The ten-game package will also be regionally simulcast on stations owned by Morgan Murphy Media (WISC-DT1/DT3/Madison), Gray Television (WBAY-DT1/DT3)/Green Bay, WEAU–WECX/Eau Claire–La Crosse, and WSAW–WYOW/Wausau), and Tegna (WQAD-DT3/Davenport, Iowa).[29][30][31]
- ^ The KCBU call letters were previously assigned to a television station licensed to Price, Utah, which operated from October 2003 to June 2009. Equity Media Holdings sold the station at auction to religious broadcaster Daystar in April 2009, three months before the station ceased analog operations. (KCBU's digital transmission facilities were never built.) Daystar cancelled the station's FCC license in July 2010, refocusing on returning sister KUTF/Logan to the air instead.
- ^ In the Jacksonville DMA, CBS affiliate WJAX—which Cox operates under a joint sales agreement with owner Hoffman Communications—was not involved in either the DirecTV or Dish Network disputes as it is covered by a separate carriage contracts from that of Fox-affiliated virtual duopoly partner WFOX.
- ^ X Corp. owner/CEO Elon Musk stated in an August 2023 X post that the company would provide unlimited legal fee services for users considering discrimination lawsuits relating to their activity on the platform.[44][45]
- ^ The dispute also affected four stations licensed to Hilo and Wailuku that operate as satellites of KHON and KHII: KHON repeaters KHAW and KAII, and KHII repeaters KGMD and KGMV, respectively.
- ^ WUAB previously aired live Cavaliers games off-and-on from 1972 to 2018, with interruptions in coverage from 1975–79 (the team did not provide local telecasts for 1975–76, before assigning local broadcast rights to WJW for the following three seasons) and 1989–94 (the team's over-the-air telecasts aired during that period on present-day sister station WOIO, before returning to WUAB as a result of the former's September 1994 switch from Fox to CBS). Bally Sports Ohio has served as the Cleveland Cavaliers' regional cable broadcaster since 1990, when the network was known as SportsChannel Ohio. The five-game package will also be regionally simulcast on stations owned and/or operated by Tegna (WBNS-DT1/DT2/Columbus), Cox Media Group (WHIO-DT2/Dayton), and Nexstar Media Group (WBDT/Dayton, WTRF-DT2/Wheeling–Steubenville and WYTV-DT2/Youngstown). (In the Dayton market, three games will air on WBDT while the remainder will air on WHIO-DT2.)[68]
- ^ The submitter did not capitalize "scouts" in the photo caption.
- ^ The FCC typically reviews its media ownership regulations every four years; however, administrative delays to its 2018 quadrennial review effort prompted a September 2023 lawsuit by the National Association of Broadcasters to force the agency—which was given a 90-day notice to issue its changes—to finalize the review. Nexstar Media Group has long employed outsourcing agreements with various third-party licensees to control stations it cannot own directly under FCC rules; in addition to owning 197 stations outright as of 2024, Nexstar controls 40 additional stations owned by third parties (such as Mission Broadcasting, Vaughan Media and White Knight Broadcasting) under such agreements.
- ^ Customers could still receive local stations for free using an optional antenna.
- ^ The Bellator agreement is separate from the Professional Fighters League's existing media rights deal with ESPN Inc., which includes MMA events broadcast on ESPN's linear networks and the ESPN+ streaming service.
- ^ The FCC respectively levied fines of $1.2 million against Nexstar Media Group and $620,000 against Mission Broadcasting for the violations.
- ^ Bally Sports Detroit has served as the Pistons' regional cable broadcaster since the network's founding in 1997, when the network was known as Fox Sports Detroit, which assumed the local cable rights from the defunct PASS Sports. The simulcast arrangement with Bally Sports Detroit differs from other recent NBA sublicensing deals forged by parent Diamond Sports Group during the 2023–24 NBA season that saw over-the-air games simulcast on several stations within the team's territory to supplement arrangements with stations in each team's home market; incidentally, in addition to WMYD and ABC-affiliated sister WXYZ in the Detroit market, Scripps also owns stations in two nearby markets, WXMI/Grand Rapids, Michigan (Fox) and WSYM/Lansing (Fox/MyNetworkTV).
- ^ The package of Fever games will also be regionally simulcast on stations owned and/or operated by Tegna (WQAD-DT1 and DT3/Davenport, Iowa, WOI–KCWI/Des Moines and WHAS-DT1 and DT2/Louisville), Nexstar Media Group (WCIA–WCIX/Champaign, Illinois–Springfield, Illinois), Gray Television (WXIX-DT3/Cincinnati, WFIE-DT2/Evansville, WPTA-DT3/Fort Wayne, WKYT-DT2/Lexington, Kentucky and WNDU-DT2/South Bend), Sinclair Broadcast Group (WKEF-DT3/Dayton, Ohio), Weigel Broadcasting (WCWW–WMYS/South Bend), and Coastal Television Broadcasting Group (WPBY-LD1/LD2/Lafayette, Indiana).[139]
- ^ Merit Street was originally scheduled to launch on February 26, however on February 20, Merit Street Media announced the network's debut would be pushed back to April 2.[792]
- ^ On February 12, two weeks prior to the network's originally scheduled launch date, TBN shuffled the default subchannel placements of two of its in-house networks, TBN Inspire (moved from DT2 to DT3) and Smile (moved from DT3 to DT4), on its owned-and-operated stations to make room for Merit Street on their DT2 subchannels. Spanish-language sister network Enlace ceased distribution as a multicast offering on the TBN O&Os, although it remains available on select low-power affiliates, cable and satellite providers, and as a live feed on the parent ministry's TBN+ streaming service.
- ^ a b The Tupelo–Columbus–West Point market has never been large enough to support three independently-run network affiliates, and has long been dominated by the longer-established WTVA and WCBI; for this reason, in order to maintain any sustainable major network competition in the market, WTVA managed the operations of WLOV (which had struggled financially since signing on as ABC affiliate WVSB in 1983) and now-defunct WKDH (an ABC affiliate, owned by a company run by the son of then-WTVA owner Frank K. Spain, that operated from June 2001 to August 2012) under local marketing agreements. Three of the Big Four network affiliations in the market—NBC (WTVA, main channel), ABC (WKDH until its shutdown and WTVA-DT2 thereafter) and Fox (WLOV, main channel)—were under the control of WTVA's various owners (WTVA, Inc., Heartland Media and Allen Media) as a result from WKDH's sign-on until the LMA rights for WLOV transferred from Allen to Morris.