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|---|---|
| City | Fort Smith, Arkansas |
| Channels | |
| Branding | Fox 24 |
| Programming | |
| Affiliations |
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| Ownership | |
| Owner |
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| KNWA-TV, KXNW | |
| History | |
First air date | November 12, 1978; 47 years ago (1978-11-12) |
Former call signs |
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Former channel number |
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Call sign meaning | Fort (Smith), Arkansas |
| Technical information[1] | |
Licensing authority | FCC |
| Facility ID | 29560 |
| ERP | 600kW |
| HAAT | 305 m (1,001 ft) |
| Transmitter coordinates | 35°42′36″N94°8′16″W / 35.71000°N 94.13778°W /35.71000; -94.13778 |
| Translator(s) | KNWA-TV 51.2Rogers |
| Links | |
Public license information | |
| Website | www |
KFTA-TV (channel 24) is atelevision station licensed toFort Smith, Arkansas, United States, serving as theFox affiliate for theArkansas River Valley andNorthwest Arkansas. It is owned byNexstar Media Group alongsideRogers–licensedNBC affiliateKNWA-TV (channel 51) andEureka Springs–licensedMyNetworkTV affiliateKXNW (channel 34). The stations share studios at the Underwood Building onDickson Street in downtownFayetteville. KFTA-TV's transmitter is located on Cartwright Mountain, south ofArtist Point; KFTA's programming is also broadcast from KNWA-TV's transmitter southeast ofGarfield, Arkansas, as one of its subchannels andvice versa.
Channel 24 was the third commercial station to be activated in Fort Smith. It began broadcasting on November 12, 1978, as KLMN and was aCBS affiliate with studios on Kelley Highway, changing affiliations to NBC in 1980. It was built by MCM Broadcasting, a company in whichJim andRob Walton were part-owners, and was sold to the Schindler family ofHouston in 1980. The station was renamed KPOM-TV in 1982. From 1986 to 2003, the station was owned and operated byGriffin TV. Griffin invested in the news department. To improve KPOM-TV's poor reception in fast-growing Northwest Arkansas, it acquired the construction permit for channel 51 in Rogers and built it as KFAA, asatellite station, in 1989. However, the station remained third in local news ratings. The original news department was disbanded in 1992, but Griffin relaunched news in 2000 in conjunction with opening a studio in downtown Fayetteville.
Nexstar took over management of KPOM–KFAA in 2004 before buying the stations outright from Griffin. It changed the stations' call signs to KFTA-TV and KNWA-TV, respectively, and concentrated its resources on the more populous, more affluent, and faster-growing Northwest Arkansas portion of the market. The Fort Smith operation was reopened from 2006 to 2011 in conjunction with KFTA splitting off as a Fox affiliate and a never-consummated sale toMission Broadcasting. KNWA-TV produces 7 a.m. and 5:30 and 9 p.m. local newscasts for air on KFTA-TV.
MCM Television received a construction permit from theFederal Communications Commission (FCC) to build a television station on channel 24 inFort Smith on March 14, 1975.[2] The station, bearing thecall sign KLMN, was still unbuilt in 1977, whenJim andRob Walton acquired a 20-percent stake.[3] The station was announced to be beginning construction that December,[4] and in May 1978, it received the primaryCBS affiliation for the market. The existing CBS affiliate in Northwest Arkansas, the combination ofKFPW-TV 40 and KTVP 29, had been negotiating withABC, of which the network became aware, prompting the move to the new KLMN.[5] As a result, while the station was still under construction, the full CBS schedule was not available in Fort Smith.[6] This completed Fort Smith's transition from a one-station market whereKFSM-TV (channel 5) had all network affiliates to a three-station market.[7]
KLMN began broadcasting on November 12, 1978.[8] It had studios on Kelley Highway and a tower on Cartwright Mountain, midway between Fort Smith andFayetteville,[7] where the station had a news bureau.[9] KLMN became anNBC affiliate in 1980 after KFSM-TV was purchased byThe New York Times Company, which accepted an offer by CBS to change its affiliation.[10] The Times owned two other CBS affiliates.[11] That year, MCM agreed to sell the station to Houston-based Schindler Broadcasting Company[12] for $950,000 and assumption of debts; in comparison, KFSM-TV had sold for $17.5 million.[13] The FCC approved the transfer in May 1981.[14] On September 22, 1982, the station changed its call sign to KPOM-TV.[1] The designation stood for "People on the Move" and came from a viewer contest.[8]
Ozark Broadcasting, under which Schindler reorganized, sold KPOM-TV toGriffin TV ofOklahoma City in a deal announced in August 1985.[15] and filed in November as a $6.24 million transaction.[16] Griffin overhauled the news department, relaunching the newscasts that had been known as24 Express News asNewsline 24.[17]
Shortly after taking control, Griffin agreed to acquire the construction permit forKFAA (channel 51) atRogers, to serve as asemi-satellite forNorthwest Arkansas.[18] KPOM-TV's penetration of the area—rapidly growing and affluent—was poor.[19] The permit had been held by Mike McCutcheon, whom Griffin hired to be the general sales manager and eventually general manager; McCutcheon had found no party willing to finance construction of the station on a standalone basis.[20] Over an objection fromKSNF-TV inJoplin, Missouri, which claimed the combination would have excessive overlap and signal loss issues, the FCC approved the transfer in December 1988.[21] KFAA began broadcasting on August 23, 1989, and the station's newscasts were retitledNewsline 24/51.[22] The 12-person Fayetteville bureau was replaced with a partially separate, 25- to 30-person operation in Rogers, and the station began presenting its newscasts in a dual-city format with an anchor in both cities, an approach already used by channels 40/29. Except for Mike Nail, the Fayetteville-based sports director who doubled as the voice ofArkansas Razorbacks athletics, most of the on-air news staff turned over.[19]
One thing that did not change was that KPOM–KFAA rated third in the full market, often by distant margins compared to KFSM and KHBS/KHOG. However, its ratings status was higher inBenton County, the county containing Rogers, which was reassigned to the Fort Smith–Fayetteville market fromJoplin, Missouri, in 1989.[19][20] In 1991, Griffin agreed to sell KPOM–KFAA to Newark Broadcasting; it had been attempting to sell the pair since late 1989.[23] In anticipation of the move, the station relaunched its newscasts asEyewitness News in September. The new format included a split segment of news for Northwest Arkansas viewers, though most of the program still originated from Fort Smith.[24] Citing a lack of demand for their news product, Griffin shuttered the KPOM–KFAA news operation effective June 12, 1992,[25] resulting in the dismissal of 22 employees in Fort Smith and Rogers.[26]
A proposed transfer of KPOM and KFAA to Northwest Arkansas Broadcasting was filed with the FCC in September 1992. The buyer's owners were beneficiaries of the Robert Hernreich family trust; Robert was the son of George Hernreich, primary owner of KHBS/KHOG. The New York Times Company objected, believing this created an ownership complication that gave the Hernreichs a then-illegalduopoly and control over both stations.[27] The application was never acted on by the FCC and was withdrawn in March 1993.[28]
After the Northwest Arkansas Broadcasting sale fell through, Griffin opted to retain KPOM and KFAA.[28] In December 1999, Griffin announced that it had agreed to lease space in the former Campbell-Bell department store in downtown Fayetteville, which was being renovated, and intended to restart local news production from the site.[29] Griffin saw the potential for higher revenue in the market than had been possible when the news department was dissolved in 1992.[30] Nail, who had worked at KHBS/KHOG after KPOM–KFAA ceased producing news, returned as sportscaster,[31] while two other KHBS/KHOG personalities—weatherman Steve Gibbs and reporter Rhonda Justice—moved over to the new news department,[32] which began offering newscasts on August 3, 2000.[33] In its return, the station again placed third in local news ratings.[34]
After the FCC relaxed limits on TV station ownership, Griffin received more inquiries from potential buyers of KPOM and KFAA.[35] In September 2003, it announced it was negotiating withNexstar Broadcasting Group.[36] The next month, the companies entered into a letter of intent, and Nexstar assumed management duties under atime brokerage agreement.[37]
Nexstar immediately moved to shift station operations from Fort Smith to Fayetteville, as Northwest Arkansas now represented the majority of the media market's population. In February 2004, the Fayetteville facility became the main studio, and two public affairs programs produced in Fort Smith—one of which had been on the air on channel 24 since 1978—were canceled.[37] In August, the reporter and photographer assigned to cover news in Fort Smith were moved to Fayetteville, though the station promised to cover news in Fort Smith on an as-needed basis.[38] On August 13, 2004, both stations changed call signs, KPOM-TV to KFTA-TV and KFAA to KNWA-TV.[34] The result of the changes was to make viewers in theArkansas River Valley feel like the station had left them behind, even though it had introduced Fort Smith–specific weather forecasts shortly after making the change.[34] The mayor of Fort Smith, Ray Baker, called the move "a mistake" that would lead to less coverage of what was then the second-largest city in Arkansas.[39] Some business operations were consolidated atLittle Rock, where Nexstar ownsKARK-TV.[40]
On April 19, 2006, Nexstar Broadcasting Group announced it would sell KFTA-TV toBrecksville, Ohio–basedMission Broadcasting, a group which maintained joint sales and shared services agreements with Nexstar-operated outlets in other cities, for $5.6 million. Under the terms of the agreement, KFTA would continue to be operated by Nexstar under agreement but would split from KNWA to broadcastFox on a full-power signal as well as a prime time local newscast.[41] Mission leased the Kelley Highway offices and renovated them to house its operation.[42] The area's existing Fox affiliate was a low-power station,KPBI-CA (channel 46). KPBI-CA's affiliation agreement let Fox move its programming to a full-power station, such as KFTA-TV, on 90 days' notice.[43] Its owner,Equity Broadcasting, challenged the sale of KFTA with the FCC, claiming the move would result in an unauthorized duopoly. Even while the challenge was pending, KFTA became a Fox affiliate on August 28. Until the license challenge was to be settled, KFTA continued to simulcast KNWA from 7 a.m. to 5 p.m. KFTA was only available in Fayetteville and KNWA in Fort Smith usingdigital subchannels.[44] Coinciding with the switch to Fox, KFTA began airing a 9 p.m. newscast on weeknights concentrating on Fort Smith–area news.[45] Even though the FCC approved the transaction in 2008 (admonishing Nexstar for making false claims and barring them from simulcasting each other's digital signals),[46] Mission never acquired KFTA, and in 2019, Nexstar acquired another Northwest Arkansas–market station,KXNW (channel 34). It was able to do so because the FCC recognizes KNWA-TV as operating as a satellite of KFTA-TV under a waiver.[47]
KFTA shut its Fort Smith office in 2011 and moved all operations to Fayetteville.[48] In October 2012, KNWA–KFTA relocated its operations into its current facility at The Dickson condominium complex on West Dickson Street, occupying approximately 12,000 square feet (1,100 m2) of studio space on the third floor of the building.[49] After moving into The Dickson, Nexstar expanded news production on KFTA to include a 7 a.m. morning news extension, a 5:30 p.m. newscast, and primetime newscasts on weekends.[50]
KFTA-TV's transmitter is located on Cartwright Mountain nearArtist Point;[1] KNWA-TV's transmitter is southeast ofGarfield.[51] KFTA-TV[52] and KNWA-TV[53] broadcast two shared channels (Fox on 24.1 and 51.2 and NBC on 24.2 and 51.1) and two uniquediginets each. Also broadcast on the KFTA-TV multiplex is a simulcast of KXNW, whose own signal does not reach the Fort Smith area.
| Channel | Res. | Aspect | Short name | Programming |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 24.1 | 720p | 16:9 | KFTA-DT | Fox |
| 24.2 | 1080i | KNWA-DT | NBC (KNWA-TV) | |
| 24.3 | 480p | Mystery | Ion Mystery | |
| 24.4 | CourtTV | Court TV | ||
| 34.1 | 720p | KXNW-DT | MyNetworkTV (KXNW) |
KFTA-TV discontinued regular programming on its analog signal (overUHF channel 24) in November 2008, due to the failure of its analog transmitter.[54] The station's digital signal remained on its pre-transition UHF channel 27, usingvirtual channel 24.[55]