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City | Rogers, Arkansas |
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Programming | |
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Ownership | |
Owner |
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KFTA-TV,KXNW | |
History | |
First air date | October 1, 1989; 35 years ago (1989-10-01) (assatellite of KPOM-TV) |
Former call signs | KFAA (1989–2004) |
Former channel number(s) |
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Call sign meaning | Northwest Arkansas |
Technical information[1] | |
Licensing authority | FCC |
Facility ID | 29557 |
ERP | 820 kW |
HAAT | 258.7 m (849 ft) |
Transmitter coordinates | 36°24′48″N93°57′17.4″W / 36.41333°N 93.954833°W /36.41333; -93.954833 |
Translator(s) | KFTA-TV 24.2 Fort Smith |
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Public license information | |
Website | www |
KNWA-TV (channel 51) is atelevision station licensed toRogers, Arkansas, United States, serving as theNBC affiliate forNorthwest Arkansas and theArkansas River Valley. It is owned byNexstar Media Group alongsideFort Smith–licensedFox affiliateKFTA-TV (channel 24) andEureka Springs–licensedMyNetworkTV affiliateKXNW (channel 34). The stations share studios onDickson Street in downtownFayetteville,[2] with a satellite studio in Rogers. KNWA-TV's transmitter is located southeast ofGarfield, Arkansas.
KFTA-TV broadcasts KNWA-TV's NBC programming from its transmitter inunincorporated northeasternCrawford County (south ofArtist Point) as one of its subchannels andvice versa.
The station began on October 1, 1989, as KFAA, asatellite of KPOM-TV in Fort Smith.[3] Both stations were owned byOklahoma City-basedGriffin Television. Its sign-on marked the first time that NBC had been seen over-the-air in much of the northern part of themarket sinceKFSM-TV (channel 5) lost the area's NBC affiliation to KPOM in 1983. KPOM only provided Grade B coverage of Fayetteville and could not be seen at all in Rogers and points north. Although Fort Smith and Fayetteville have been treated as a single market since the 1950s, the rugged terrain made it impossible to cover it from a single analog UHF transmitter.
In the early 2000s, KPOM and KFAA began a regional local newscast targeting the Fort Smith and Fayetteville areas,Arkansas NBC News. It was the station's second attempt at a newscast. The newscast was anchored by Don Elkins, Rhonda Justice and Donna Bragg, weather by Steve Gibbs and Rick Katzfey, and sports with Mike Nail. Justice, Bragg, Gibbs, and Nail were all formerly of rival stationKHBS/KHOG (channel 40/29). The newscast was unable to break into the market successfully however and in 2004, Griffin Television sold KPOM-TV and KFAA to Nexstar.[4] The stations changed their calls to KNWA-TV and KFTA-TV respectively on August 13, 2004, and KNWA became the main station. At the same time, the two stations' operations both were merged in a new studio located in the historic Campbell-Bell building on South Block Avenue in Downtown Fayetteville. KFTA's original studio on Kelley Highway in Fort Smith remained in use as KNWA's Arkansas River Valley bureau.
In April 2006, Nexstar announced that it would sell KFTA toMission Broadcasting, though it would continue to operate the station under a local marketing agreement with KNWA. Under the plan, KFTA would become the Fox affiliate for the area leaving KNWA as the sole NBC affiliate for Northwest Arkansas.Equity Broadcasting, owner of theClass A Fox-affiliateKPBI-CA, challenged the sale of KFTA to Mission with theFederal Communications Commission (FCC). Nonetheless, the separation occurred on August 28 while both were under Nexstar ownership. Until the sale of KFTA to Mission was approved, the stations continued to simulcast from 7 a.m. to 5 p.m. on weekdays. KFTA now runs a separate programming schedule from KNWA, even though Nexstar still owns both stations. KNWA-TV took its analog transmitter off-the-air for a few days in mid-August 2006 to relocate it to another site for improved coverage.[5]
The split did not pose as much of a problem as it may have seemed, given the high penetration ofcable andsatellite service in this area. During the analog era, KFSM andArkansas PBS satellite KAFT were the only stations that decently covered the market with a single transmitter. Cable and satellite are all but essential for acceptable television in Northwest Arkansas due to its rugged terrain. For example,Dish Network andDirecTV carried KPBI-CA while it was the Fox affiliate even though those carriers usually do not offer low-power stations. After the split, KPBI-CA was dropped in favor of KFTA. On the other hand, the split improved Fox's coverage and enables high definition Fox programming in this market as KPBI-CA was low-power and did not have a digital transmitter, unlike KNWA and KFTA. According to their FCC filings, both stations have digital transmitters licensed for one million watts each, equivalent to five million watts for an analog UHF transmitter. Thus, their digital coverage areas well exceed the analog coverage areas of both KFTA (2.5 millionwatts) and especially KNWA.
On December 3, 2018, Nexstar announced it would acquireTribune Media—which had owned CBS affiliate KFSM-TV andMyNetworkTV affiliateKXNW (channel 34) since December 2013—in an all-cash deal valued at $6.4 billion, including the assumption of Tribune-held outstanding debt. Because KNWA and KFSM both ranked among the four highest-rated stations in the Fort Smith–Fayetteville market in total day viewership, and broadcasters are not currently allowed to legally own more than two full-power television stations in a single market, on March 20, 2019, it was announced that Nexstar would keep the KNWA/KFTA duopoly (through an existing satellite station waiver that predated KFTA's conversion into a separately programmed Fox affiliate in 2006) and sell KFSM toTegna Inc., as part of the company's sale of nineteen Nexstar- and Tribune-operated stations to Tegna and theE. W. Scripps Company in separate deals worth $1.32 billion. KXNW was retained by Nexstar, forming a de facto triopoly with KFTA and KNWA.[6][7][8][9][10][11][12][13][14][15][16][17] The sale was approved by the FCC on September 16 and was completed on September 19, 2019.
As of September 2017[update], KNWA-TV presently broadcasts19+1⁄2 hours of locally produced newscasts each week (with3+1⁄2 hours each weekday and one hour each on Saturdays and Sundays). Unlike most NBC-affiliated stations in theCentral Time Zone, it does not produce a midday newscast of its own; instead KNWA airs the statewide news programArkansas Today (which is simulcast on other Nexstar-owned or -managed stations serving Arkansas and border markets including portions of northernLouisiana).
In addition, KNWA produces13+1⁄2 hours of locally produced newscasts each week for Fox-affiliated sister station KFTA (with3+1⁄2 hours each weekday and a half-hour each on Saturdays and Sundays). KNWA may also simulcast long-form severe weather coverage on KFTA-TV in the event that atornado warning is issued for any county in its viewing area within northwest Arkansas and east-central Oklahoma.
KPOM and KFAA relaunched a local newscast in 1999. An earlier local broadcast had aired under various titles until 1992. In 2003 afterMorris Multimedia sold KARK inLittle Rock to Nexstar, the company eventually consolidated most sports operations from that station with KNWA. The two NBC affiliates share certain news resources with some reports filed by KARK personnel occasionally used during KNWA broadcasts. In 2007, the two stations began co-produced a daily newscast at Noon Monday through Friday,Arkansas at Noon, with news anchors in Little Rock and Fayetteville. Eventually, KARK began airing its own broadcast at that time. Since then, this station has not aired a midday newscast.
On April 2, 2012, KNWA debuted a half-hour weekday noon newscast titledArkansas Today, produced by Little Rock sister station KARK-TV (anchor Mallory Hardin and meteorologist/co-host Greg Dee also appear on KARK's weekday morning newscast); the statewide newscast features news stories filed by reporters from all four Nexstar-owned NBC stations serving Arkansas as well as a KNWA-produced sports segment focusing onUniversity of Arkansasathletics, calledRazorback Nation. KNWA also provides a weather insert for northwest Arkansas during the broadcast. In addition to airing on KARK and KNWA, the program is also simulcast onKTAL-TV/Shreveport–Texarkana andKTVE/Monroe–El Dorado (the coverage areas of KTVE and KTAL include several counties in southern Arkansas (ten in KTAL's viewing area, fourteen in KTVE's, though both stations primarily serve parts of northern Louisiana and KTAL also serves parts of northeast Texas).[18] On October 24, 2012, KNWA and KFTA started producing its newscast in high definition.[19]
KNWA-TV and KFTA-TV broadcast two shared channels (NBC on 51.1 and 24.2 and Fox on 51.2 and 24.1) and two uniquediginets each.
Channel | Res. | Aspect | Short name | Programming |
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51.1 | 1080i | 16:9 | KNWA-DT | NBC |
51.2 | 720p | KFTA-DT | Fox (KFTA-TV) | |
51.3 | 480p | Laff | Laff | |
51.4 | Grit | Grit |
KNWA-TV ended regular programming on its analog signal, overUHF channel 51, on June 12, 2009, the official date on which full-power television stations in the United Statestransitioned from analog to digital broadcasts under federal mandate. The station's digital signal remained on its pre-transition UHF channel 50,[21][22] usingvirtual channel 51.