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City | Bismarck, North Dakota |
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First air date | March 31, 1985 (39 years ago) (1985-03-31) |
Former channel number(s) | Analog: 17 (UHF, 1985–2009) |
Call sign meaning | Bismarck–Mandan, disambiguation of last call letter for owner Forum's flagship stationWDAY |
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Licensing authority | FCC |
Facility ID | 22121 |
ERP | 75kW |
HAAT | 290 m (951 ft) |
Transmitter coordinates | 46°35′15″N100°48′21″W / 46.58750°N 100.80583°W /46.58750; -100.80583 (KBMY) |
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KMCY | |
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Programming | |
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History | |
First air date | June 1985 (39 years ago) (1985-06)[2] |
Former channel number(s) | Analog: 14 (UHF, 1985–2009) |
Call sign meaning | Magic City (nickname of Minot) |
Technical information[3] | |
Facility ID | 22127 |
ERP | 40 kW |
HAAT | 217 m (712 ft) |
Transmitter coordinates | 48°3′11″N101°23′7″W / 48.05306°N 101.38528°W /48.05306; -101.38528 (KMCY) |
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KBMY (channel 17) is atelevision station inBismarck, North Dakota, United States, affiliated withABC andMyNetworkTV. Owned byForum Communications Company, the station maintains anews bureau and advertising sales office on North 15th Street in Bismarck, and its transmitter is located nearSt. Anthony, North Dakota.
Although identifying as a separate station in its own right, KBMY is considered asemi-satellite ofsister station and companyflagshipWDAY-TV (channel 6) inFargo, which operates semi-satelliteWDAZ-TV (channel 8) inGrand Forks.[4] Internal operations are housed at WDAY-TV's studios on South 8th Street in Fargo. KBMY clears all network programming as provided through its parent WDAY-TV andsimulcasts WDAY-TV's newscasts, but airs a separate offering ofsyndicated programming; there are also separate commercial inserts and legalstation identifications.
KMCY (channel 14) inMinot operates as a semi-satellite of KBMY extending the ABC/MyNetworkTV signal into the northern half of the Bismarck–Minotmarket; this station's news bureau and advertising sales office are located on 2nd St SE in Minot, and its transmitter is located near South Prairie. KMCY simulcasts all network and syndicated programming as provided through KBMY but airs separate local commercial inserts and legal identifications.
KBMY signed on for the first time on March 31, 1985, and KMCY signed on for the first time in June 1985; bringing the full ABC schedule to central and western North Dakota and eastern Montana for the first time ever. Before 1985, this area had been one of the last in the United States without full network service. ABC was limited to off-hours clearances onKX Television (KXMC/KXMD/KXMB/KXMA) andMeyer Television (KFYR/KQCD/KMOT/KUMV). From the 1970s onward, some cable subscribers in western North Dakota received the full ABC schedule fromKULR-TV (nowNBC) fromBillings,KFBB-TV fromGreat Falls,KOTA-TV fromRapid City orKUSA inDenver. The eastern half of the market was served by Fargo's KTHI-TV (nowKVLY-TV) until it swapped affiliations with WDAY/WDAZ in 1983. From 1983 onward, cable systems in Bismarck piped in WDAY-TV, while cable systems in Minot piped in WDAZ.
On paper, western North Dakota had been large enough to support three full network affiliates since at least the late 1960s. However, this region is one of the largest geographic markets in the nation, spilling across large slices of North Dakota,Montana, andSouth Dakota. It is so vast that KX Television and Meyer Television both needed four full-power stations to adequately cover it. On paper, the FCC collapsed central and western North Dakota into one giant market in 1957. However, due to Dickinson being onMountain Time, the market was not fully realized until 1980, when Meyer upgraded its low-powered translator in Dickinson to full-powered KQCD, prompting Dickinson's original station, KDIX-TV (now KXMA) to become a separately-owned satellite of KX Television. Additionally, the only available commercial allocations were on the UHF band; UHF stations have never covered large areas very well. By the early 1980s, cable television—a must for acceptable television in much of this vast market—had gained enough penetration for a network affiliate on the UHF band to be viable.
In the early 2000s, KBMY signed on two low-poweredtranslators to serve the smaller cities in the market,K44HR in Williston andK42FY in Dickinson. Prior to K44HR's inception, cable systems in Williston, Dickinson and the western half of the market piped in Denver's ABC affiliate—KUSA prior to 1995 andKMGH-TV after 1995. The Dickinson station directly repeated KBMY, while the Williston station repeated KMCY.
From the 1990s until 2007, KBMY and KMCY were known collectively as "ABC West". That year, the stations changed their monikers in favor of the station identities for their area. From 2002 until 2008, KBMY/KMCY was operated by Prime Cities Broadcasting, owner of western North Dakota'sFox affiliate,KNDX/KXND, in alocal marketing agreement. The LMA allowed KBMY/KMCY to share the facilities, staff, and some equipment of KNDX/KXND.
The LMA with KNDX/KXND ended in 2008, with Forum opting to partner with Reiten Television in KBMY/KMCY's local operations via a joint sales agreement. While some local advertising staffers were based at KXMB-TV in Bismarck and KXMC-TV in Minot, most operations have been consolidated at WDAY-TV's studios in Fargo.
Under this arrangement, KBMY and KMCY's programming was transported from WDAY-TV's studios to Bismarck via leased microwave relay bandwidth furnished byPrairie Public Broadcasting's statewide digital terrestrial microwave network (the only permanent full-time video link from Fargo to Bismarck for television broadcasting). The signal was then sent to KXMB from Prairie Public viafiber-optic line, where it then is exported via astudio to transmitter link (STL) from KXMB's studios to KBMY and KMCY's transmitters.
As part of the JSA with Reiten, KBMY/KMCY were picked up on the digital subchannels of KX Television satellites KXMA-TV in Dickinson and KXMD-TV in Williston starting in May 2009, and the translators serving Dickinson and Williston were shut down. The JSA was terminated following the acquisition of the KX stations byNexstar Broadcasting Group on February 2, 2016. At the same time, the ABC subchannels of KXMA and KXMD were replaced withThe CW Plus.[5][6][7] Due to the high penetration of cable and satellite in this market, however, few viewers in the western part of the market lost access to ABC programming.
WDAY X is adigital subchannel carried on WDAY 6.3, WDAZ 8.3, KBMY 17.3, and KMCY 14.3, airing as a primary affiliate ofMyNetworkTV on KBMY and KMCY and as anindependent station on WDAY-TV and WDAZ-TV.[8] This subchannel airssyndicated programming, North Dakota and Minnesota high school sports, North Dakota high school state tournaments,Minnesota State University Moorhead athletics, and selectNorth Dakota State University athletic events.[9] It airsDoppler weather radar and "Storm Tracker" weather loop with easy listening music during overnights.
WDAY X (as WDAY Xtra) became available inHD in 2014, and in 2016, MyNetworkTV programming began airing (in prime time), although on KBMY and KMCY only (in Bismarck and Minot respectively) but not on WDAY-TV in Fargo or WDAZ-TV inDevils Lake–Grand Forks (the most likely reason being that both of those stations broadcast to a viewing area that is currently being serviced by MyNetworkTV affiliateKRDK-TV fromValley City–Fargo).[10]
Starting on August 29, 2016, WDAY Xtra and theJustice Network airedWDAY Xtra News during weekdays at 9 p.m. It is offered on Midco cable channel 594. KBMY and KMCY began carrying this subchannel in 2013.
When KBMY/KMCY signed on in 1985, the stations originated and aired a local newscast at 10 p.m. with on-locationENG and studio news coverage for the Bismarck and Minot areas. With fewer reporters than KX Television and Meyer Television, as well as a smaller footprint (only two transmitters to four apiece for their competitors), KBMY concentrated on in-depth reporting. However, despite Forum's resources and legacy in North Dakota (sister stations WDAY/WDAZ are among the strongest ABC affiliates in the nation), KBMY/KMCY made almost no headway against Meyer Television and KX Television. Forum shelved this first attempt at a local newscast in March 1989 due to concerns about costs; a new reporter was to have moved from California before the shutdown. The nationally syndicatedUSA Today: The Television Show took over the newscast's former timeslot in KBMY/KMCY's schedule.[11]
For the next quarter-century, the stations were among the few Big Three affiliates in the nation with no long form newscasts. From the mid-1990s to 2014, the closest thing to a newscast on the stations wasGood Morning West Dakota, a 30-minute morning show produced by Bismarck radio stationKBMR. Even then, there were no local cut-ins duringGood Morning America.
Starting in 2014, WDAY-TV began reorienting its newscasts to a statewide focus, and gradually began simulcasting them on KBMY/KMCY. The Sunday 5:30 p.m. (Central Time) newscast was the first rolled out to Bismarck, in February 2014.[12]First News broadcasts during weekday mornings from 5 a.m. to 7 a.m. (Central Time) debuted in April 2014, and the stations began airing WDAY's 5 p.m. (Central Time) weekday newscast in August 2014. Local cut-ins duringGood Morning America are broadcast from WDAY-TV's studios. WDAY's 6 p.m. newscast debuted on September 14, 2015, with the 10 p.m. news starting on December 5, 2016.
The stations do not produce much local content, mostly serving as "pass-throughs" for automated programming from ABC and WDAY/WDAZ.
KBMY and KMCY sign off on Monday mornings at 4:30 a.m., returning to the air just minutes later.
The stations' signals aremultiplexed:
Channel | Res. | Aspect | Short name | Programming | ||
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KBMY | KMCY | KBMY | KMCY | |||
17.1 | 14.1 | 720p | 16:9 | KBMYABC | KMCYABC | ABC |
17.2 | 14.2 | 480i | CRIME | True Crime Network | ||
17.3 | 14.3 | 720p | XTRA | MyNetworkTV / WDAY X | ||
17.4 | 14.4 | 480i | ION | Ion Television | ||
17.5 | 14.5 | Defy | Ion Plus | |||
17.6 | 14.6 | CourtTV | Court TV |
KBMY shut down its analog signal, overUHF channel 17, 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 "flash-cut" its digital signal into operation on UHF channel 17.[15][16]
KMCY shut down its analog signal, over UHF channel 14, on February 10, 2009, and "flash-cut" its digital signal into operation on UHF channel 14.