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KXAS-TV

KXAS-TV, virtual Channel 5, is the NBC television station for the Dallas-Fort Worth Metroplex. The station was Texas' first TV station and made its debut on September 28, 1948. Its transmitter is located in Cedar Hill. KXAS broadcasts on digital channel 41, but uses PSIP to cause digital TV receivers to display channel 5. The station is owned by a joint venture of NBC Universal (76%) and LIN Television (24%) - its only other sister station under this co-ownership is KNSD in San Diego. However, because NBC has majority control of the station, KXAS is run as an NBC owned and operated station.

Contents

History

The station was launched on September 28, 1948, as WBAP-TV, the first television station in the state of Texas. It was owned by Amon G. Carter, publisher of the Fort Worth Star-Telegram, along with WBAP radio. A year later, the two stations were joined by WBAP-FM (96.3 FM, now KSCS).

Even though it was obvious that Dallas and Fort Worth would be a single television market, Carter didn't care whether people in Dallas could see channel 5; he had long been a booster for the Fort Worth area. The station moved to the 1,500-foot candelabra tower owned by WFAA-TV and KRLD-TV (channel 4, now KDFW) in Cedar Hill in 1957 along with its FM sister, reportedly only after NBC threatened to yank its affiliation. Before this, WFAA-TV served as the NBC affiliate for the eastern half of the market.

On November 24, 1963, a WBAP-TV remote unit set up at Dallas Police Headquarters fed the live images of accused Presidential assassin Lee Harvey Oswald being gunned down by Jack Ruby to the NBC network. It was the first time a murder had been witnessed live on network television in the United States. It was also notable that, during NBC's network coverage of the assassination of President John F. Kennedy, news reports from WBAP-TV's studios were transmitted in color, with NBC broadcasting the coverage in New York from a black and white studio (WBAP-TV was one of the earliest local stations to convert its local programming to color).

The station was owned by the Carter family trusts until 1974, when the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) barred common ownership of newspapers and TV stations in all but a few cases. The FCC grandfathered the Metroplex's other newspaper/radio/television combination--Belo's Dallas Morning News and WFAA-AM-FM-TV—but would not do the same for the Star-Telegram and WBAP-AM-FM-TV. Accordingly, the Carters decided to break up their media empire. WBAP-TV was then sold to LIN Broadcasting, the predecessor of today's LIN TV Corporation, for $35 million. LIN took control in the summer of 1974 and changed the calls to the current KXAS-TV (the Star-Telegram, WBAP-AM and KSCS were sold to Capital Cities Communications at that time; the newspaper is now owned by the McClatchy Company, while the two radio stations are now owned by Citadel Broadcasting as part of ABC Radio).

In 1987, the old Cedar Hill tower was severely damaged when an F-4 on approach to Dallas Naval Air Station clipped several guy wires. WFAA, KDFW and KXAS were knocked off the air for several days. KXAS opted to build its own tower to the east of the old tower.

LIN wholly owned the station until 1997, when it sold 76% of KXAS to NBC, in exchange for 24% of KNSD in San Diego (which NBC had recently purchased from New World Communications, who had also owned channel 5's rival KDFW until it and the other Fox affiliates owned by New World were sold to Fox) and cash. As part of the deal, NBC took control of KXAS' operations.

On November 19, 2009 a fire at the Fort Worth studios of KXAS and KXTX knocked both KXAS and its sister station KXTX off the air. The fire was located in the electrical room of the studio. Fire alarms went off at 9:30 PM, which lead to the studio being evacuated, disrupting the 10 o'clock news broadcast.[1]

Digital television

The station's digital channel is UHF 41, multiplexed:

Virtual channel Programming
5.1 Main KXAS-TV / NBC Programming
5.2 NBC Plus
5.3 Universal Sports

NBC Weather Plus was offered on the 2nd digital subchannel; the national NBC WX+ network is defunct as of December 1, 2008. On December 23, the channel was revamped as NBC Plus, featuring weather maps, radar and the L-bar, alongside audio from Fort Worth's NOAA Weather Radio station KEC55.[2] It also uses NOAA's KEC56 in Dallas as an alternate audio feed.

Analog-to-digital conversion

After the DTV transition period ended on June 12, 2009 [3], KXAS-DT continued on channel 41 [4] PSIP is used to display KXAS-TV's virtual channel as 5 on digital television receivers. At Noon that day, their analog signal transmitted a brief test pattern, followed by instructional programming about how to receive digital TV until June 26, 2009,[5] but the -DT suffix was replaced by a -TV suffix (formerly on its analog singal) when KXAS-TV's analog signal ended nightlight programming. KXAS-TV started High Definition newscasts on September 7, 2007 at 10 AM.

News operation

This section requires expansion.

KXAS broadcasts a total of 32 hours of local news a week (5½ hours on weekdays and 3½ hours each on Saturdays and Sundays).

In the late 1960s, Fort Worth native Bob Schieffer began his broadcast career at WBAP-TV as a reporter and anchor of the 10 p.m. news. Schieffer then went on to Washington, D.C. as a reporter for the now-defunct Metromedia news service and WTTG-TV, then embarked on a long career with CBS News.

KXAS is locally known for its weather coverage. It claims to be the first station to have hired only full-time meteorologists. One of its first, Harold Taft, broadcast for over 40 years. On March 28, 2000, while an F3 tornado was ripping through downtown Fort Worth, a tower camera caught the tornado on air live during the 6 p.m. newscast as KXAS chief meteorologist David Finfrock was explaining to the viewers at home as well as anchors Jane McGarry and Mike Snyder about the tornado warning for Tarrant County.

On January 16, 2009 KXAS began sharing its news helicopter with Fox owned-and-operated KDFW (channel 4).[6]

News/station presentation

Newscast titles

Station slogans

News team

Current on-air staff

(as of March 26, 2010) Anchors

NBC 5 Weather Plus Team

Sports Team

Reporters

KXAS alumni

A — L
  • James Aydelott - meteorologist (2005•2009; now at KOKI-TV in Tulsa)
  • Ward Andrews - anchor (1969•1977)
  • Mike Androvett - Dallas Bureau reporter/law expert (1992•1994)
  • Erin Allan Steed - reporter (2003•2005; now a PR President [1])
  • Russ Bloxom - anchor/reporter (1967•1979)
  • Stephanie Boswell - reporter (1992•1996; now a media consultant [2])
  • Jack Brown - anchor/reporter (1958•1980)
  • Gretchen Carlson - anchor/reporter (1998•2000; now at Fox News)
  • Angela Cain - anchor (1993•2000; now at WTHR-TV in Indianapolis)
  • Clif Caldwell - reporter (1992•1997; later at WFAA-TV, now at KTVT-TV)
  • Randall Carlisle - anchor (1990•1991; now at KTVX-TV in Salt Lake City)
  • Alyce Caron - anchor (1984•1990; now at HSN)
  • Derek Castillo - weekend sports anchor/reporter (2001•2008)
  • Scott Chesner - meteorologist (1981•2004; now at KETK-TV in Tyler, TX)
  • Jerry Desmond - sports anchor (late 1960s; died in 2003)
  • Jennifer Dodd - reporter (now at KSAT-TV ins San Antonio)
  • Jeff Eliasoph - anchor/reporter (1989•2002; now at WOIO-TV in Cleveland-Akron, OH)
  • Charles Ely - anchor/reporter (1979•1984; now at KTUL-TV in Tulsa)
  • Skip Ely - meteorologist (?-?; retired from NWS Fort Worth Office)
  • Larry Estepa - anchor/reporter (1986•1994; now at WJAR-TV in Providence)
  • John Garcia - reporter (1991•1993; now at WLS-TV in Chicago)
  • Ron Godbey - meteorologist (former USAF and retired)
  • Jay Gray - investigative reporter (1993•2005; now at NBC News)
  • Marty Griffin - Dallas Bureau reporter (1988•1996)
  • Pam Harris - weekend anchor/reporter (1996•2005; later at WFAA-TV and TXCN, now at KTVT)
  • Reggie Harris - anchor (1985•1987; deceased)
  • Brendan Higgins - weekday mornings "NBC 5 Today" (2003•2010)
  • Dennis Holly - anchor (1978•1985)
  • Calvin Hughes - weekend anchor/reporter (1995•1999; now at WPLG-TV in Miami)
  • Karen Hughes - reporter (mid 1980s)
  • Jane Jayroe - anchor (1980•1984; Miss America 1967)
  • Brian Jensen - sports anchor (1997•2000; currently radio voice for Texas Tech University football)
  • Brett Johnson - reporter (1996•2009; deceased) [7]
  • Bill Jones - sports anchor/Reporter (1992•1997; now at KTVT)
  • Clennon L. King - reporter (1991•1992; since at WSB-TV, WSVN-TV, WTLV-TV/WJXX-TV, freelance field producer at NBC and ABC, now at The Putney School, Putney, VT as a fundraiser)
  • Shelley Kofler - Dallas Bureau reporter (1985•1993; now at KERA-TV)
  • Bob Leder - Dallas Bureaus reporter (1979 - 198?, was PR Mgr at Bell Helicopter, now retired)
  • Shelli Lockhart - anchor (1995•2001; now at WDAF-TV in Kansas City)
  • Ramona Logan - anchor/reporter (1985•2006; now runs a consulting firm [3])
M — Z
  • Steve MacLaughlin - meteorologist (?-2010)
  • Ed Martelle - reporter, back-up Today anchor (1979•1985)
  • Boyd Matson - sports anchor (1970s)
  • Ken McCool - part-time meteorologist (?-?)
  • Kathleen McDonald - reporter (1992•1993)
  • Howard McNeil - meteorologist (1970s)
  • Rebecca Miller - meteorologist (1991•2008; now at KDAF-TV)
  • Willie Monroe - reporter (1972•1976; now at KGO-TV in San Francisco)
  • Chip Moody - anchor (1971•1980; deceased)
  • Pam Moore - anchor (1980•1983; now at KRON-TV in San Francisco)
  • Joyce Morgan - anchor
  • Scott Murray - sports anchor (1981•2003)
  • Larry Mullins - reporter/PA Host/Dallas Bureau chief (1987•2005; now a Hollywood producer)
  • Brian Mylar - anchor/reporter (1990•1996; now at KSAT-TV in San Antonio)
  • Melissa Newton - reporter (now at KTVT-TV)
  • Scott Pelley - reporter (1978•1981; now at CBS News)
  • L.P. Phillips - investigative reporter (1996•1998; now at KRLD (AM))
  • Rikki Ragland - Internet/Technology news anchor/reporter, Online with Rikki Ragland (2000•2005, now a Model & Actor with FORD Models; owner the preppy debutante co. [4])
  • John Rhadigan - weekend sports anchor/reporter (1990•2001; now at FSN Southwest)
  • George Riba - sports reporter (1974•1975; now at WFAA-TV)
  • Susan Risdon - reporter (2000•2006; now PR firm owner)
  • Charlie Rose - talk show host (1979•1981; returned to CBS News' 60 Minutes)
  • Bob Schieffer - anchor/reporter (1967•1969; now at CBS News)
  • Mark Schumacher - reporter (1986•1988)
  • Michael Scott - morning anchor (2000•2004; now at WAAY-TV in Huntsville, AL)
  • Barry Simms - reporter (1991•1995; now at WBAL-TV in Baltimore)
  • Bob Simon - Dallas Bureau reporter (1991•1992)
  • Mike Simon - meteorologist
  • Sabrina Smith - consumer reporter (1993•2006)
  • Mike Snyder - Anchor (1985-2010)
  • Ron Spain - sports anchor
  • Harold Taft - meteorologist (1948•1991; deceased)
  • Brenda Teele - morning anchor (2000•2006)
  • Ron Thulin - sports anchor/reporter (1982•1988; now at TBS)
  • Cynthia Tinsley - anchor (1991•1993)
  • Denise Valdez - weekend anchor/reporter (2001•2002; now at KLAS-TV in Las Vegas)
  • Jack Van Roy - meteorologist
  • Krista Villarreal - meteorologist (2000•2004)
  • Al Wallace - sports anchor/reporter (1982•1985; now at WDAF-TV in Kansas City)
  • Todd D. Wallace - weekend morning anchor (2004•2007; now at WRTV-TV Indianapolis)
  • Sherry Williams - reporter (1995•1997; now at KHOU-TV in Houston)
  • Sherry Woodward - Dallas Bureau reporter (1988•1991)
  • Brad Wright - anchor (1980•2000)
  • Bobbie Wygant - arts reporter/talk show host/anchor (1948-?)

Logos

KXAS has used its "Star 5" logo since 1971—the longest-used numeric logo in the market and one of the longest-used numeric logos in the country. The use of a star in the numeric station logo has since spread to other television stations in Texas, including KTVT, KFWD and KTXA in Dallas-Fort Worth, WOAI-TV in San Antonio, KPRC in Houston and KWES-TV in Midland.

External links

Dallas-Fort Worth portal

References

  1. ^ http://www.nbcdfw.com/news/local-beat/Fire-Forces-NBC-5-Off-Air-70592727.html#comments
  2. ^ Radio-Info: "KXAS-DT 5.2 Fort Worth: NBC Plus?", 12/24/2008.
  3. ^ http://hraunfoss.fcc.gov/edocs_public/attachmatch/DA-06-1082A2.pdf
  4. ^ CDBS Print
  5. ^ List of Participants in the Analog Nightlight Program - FCC (accessed June 14, 2009)
  6. ^ "Fox, NBC Expand LNS Relationship". http://www.broadcastingcable.com/article/162330-Fox_NBC_Expand_LNS_Relationship.php?rssid=20068. Retrieved 2009-01-16.
  7. ^ http://ryansaylor.com/archives/79
vdBroadcast television serving the Dallas/Fort Worth area
English

KDFW (4.1 Fox) • KXAS (5.1 NBC, 5.2 NBC Plus, 5.3 USp) • WFAA (8.1 ABC, 8.2 Radar/News, 8.3 This TV) • KTVT (11.1 CBS) • KERA (13.1 PBS, 13.2 World) • KTXA (21.1 Ind) • KDFI (27.1 MNTV) • KDAF (33.1 CW, 33.2 LATV) • KFWD (52.1 Ind) • KPXD (68.1 ION, 68.2 Qubo, 68.3 ION Life)

Spanish

KUVN (23.1 UNI) • KODF (26.1 Mega TV, 26.2 Spanish Infomercials, 26.3 English Infomercials) • KMPX (29.1 Estrella, 29.2 Inmigrante TV) • KVFW (38.1 Almavision, 38.2 Test Card, 38.3 Test Card, 38.4 Test Card) • KXTX (39.1 TMD, 39.2 Inmigrante TV) • KLEG 44 (AZA) • KSTR (49.1 TFT, 49.2 Silent) • KATA (50.1 MTV3, 50.2 Reino, 50.3 AZA, 50.4 Silent)

Religious

KDTN (2.1 DayStar) • KZFW 6 (Ind/Religious) • K31GL-D (31.1 Genesis Spanish, 31.2 Mexicanal, 31.3 TeleRitmo, 31.4 Retro Television Network) • KJJM (34.1 UAN, 34.2 Infomercials, 34.3 Infomercials, 34.4 CTN) • KTAQ (47.1 Promise) • KDTX (58.1 TBN, 58.2 Church, 58.3 JCTV, 58.4 Enlace, 58.5 Smile) • KPFW (61.1 Ind/Religious, 61.2 Test Card, 61.3 Test Card, 61.4 Silent)

Shopping and infomercials

K25FW 25 (HSN) • KHPK 28 (3.1 Infomercials, 3.2 Gems TV) • KLDT (54.1 LC) • KSEX 57 (Infomercials)

Cable

Fox Sports SouthwestTXCN

Defunct

KFWT 21 (Ind) • KNAV 22 (Infomercials) • KRET 23 (Educ Ind) • KMEC 33 (Ind)

Texas Broadcast television areas by city:

Abilene/SweetwaterAmarillo (Texas Panhandle)AustinBeaumont/Port ArthurCorpus ChristiDallas-Fort WorthDel Rio, TXEl PasoHoustonLaredoLubbockMidland-Odessa (Permian Basin)Rio Grande ValleySan AngeloSan AntonioSherman/Ada, OKTexarkana/Shreveport, LATyler/Longview (East Texas)VictoriaWaco/Bryan (Brazos Valley)Wichita Falls/Lawton, OK

vdNBC Network Affiliates in the state of Texas

KPRC 2 (Houston) • KFDX 3 (Lawton / Wichita Falls) • KSAN 3 (San Angelo) • KAMR 4 (Amarillo) • WOAI 4 (San Antonio) • KXAS 5 (Fort Worth / Dallas) • KCEN 6 / KMAY-LP 23 (Temple / Bryan) • KRIS 6 (Corpus Christi) • KTAL 6 (Texarkana) • KGNS 8 (Laredo) • KRBC 9 (Abilene) • KTSM 9 (El Paso) • KWES 9 / KWAB 4 (Midland / Big Spring) • KCBD 11 (Lubbock) • KBMT-DT 12.2 (Beaumont) • KMOL-LP 17 (Victoria) • KVEO 23 (Brownsville) • KXAN 36 (Austin) • KETK 56 / KETK-LP 53 (Tyler / Jacksonville)

See also: ABC, CBS, CW, Fox, ION, MyNetworkTV, NBC, PBS and Other stations in Texas
vdNBC Universal, Inc. (a joint venture of General Electric 80% and Vivendi 20%)
Universal Studios Focus FeaturesUnited International Pictures[nu 1]Illumination EntertainmentUniversal Animation StudiosUniversal Studios Home EntertainmentUniversal PlaybackGeneon Universal (80.1%)[nu 2]Universal Pictures
Universal Parks & Resorts Islands of AdventureUniversal Orlando ResortUniversal Studios HollywoodUniversal Studios FloridaUniversal Studios JapanUniversal Studios SingaporeUniversal Studios DubailandUniversal Studios South KoreaUniversal CityWalk
Broadcast TV assets NBCTelemundoNBC NewsNBC SportsUniversal Sports (50%)[nu 3]
NBC Universal Cable A&E Television Networks (15%) • BravoChillerCNBCMSNBC[nu 4]Mun2OxygenSyfyShopNBC (30%) • SleuthTelemundo Puerto RicoThe Weather Channel[nu 5]Universal HDUSA NetworkUniversal Sports (50%) • Weatherscan[nu 5]
CNBC global channels CNBC (US)CNBC WorldCNBC Latin AmericaCNBC EuropeCNBC AsiaCNBC Africa
CNBC Europe branches Class CNBC (20%) • CNBC-eCNBC Arabiya (according to CNBC Europe) • CNBC NordicCNBC AfricaTVN CNBC Biznes
CNBC Asia branches Nikkei CNBCCNBC-TV18CNBC AwaazCNBC PakistanCNBC AustraliaCNBC Hong KongCNBC SingaporeSBS-CNBC
NBC Universal global networks Syfy13th StreetUniversal ChannelHallmark ChannelMovies 24KidsCo[nu 6]Diva TVSteel[nu 7] • Das Vierte • Studio Universal
Syfy global channels USUKGermanyFranceAustraliaSpainBeneluxPhilippinesPolandPortugalRomaniaRussiaLatin AmericaAsiaJapan
NBC Universal Television Group NBC StudiosNBC Universal Television DistributionTelemundo Television Studios • RTI Production • Telemundo of Puerto Rico StudiosUniversal Media Studios
NBC O&Os KNBCKNSD[nu 8]KNTVKXAS[nu 8]WCAUWMAQWNBC (New York Nonstop) • WRCWTVJWVIT
Telemundo O&Os KBLRKEJT-LPKHRRKDENKNSO[nu 9]KTAZKTMDKVDA[nu 9]KSTSKVEAKXTXWKAQWNEU[nu 9]WNJUWSCVWSNS
ShopNBC O&Os WWDP
Spanish independent TV stations KWHY
Internet ventures: msnbc.com[nu 4]iVillageTelevision Without Pity • OUTzoneTV.com • getTRIO.com • BrilliantButCancelled.com • calamitygame.com • Hulu[nu 10]
Other assets: qubo[nu 11]EMKA, Ltd. • WSI Corporation[nu 5]
Defunct properties: NBC Weather Plus (2004-2008) • Trio (1997-2005)
  1. ^ 50%, with Viacom's Paramount Pictures.
  2. ^ Co-owned with Dentsu.
  3. ^ Combined operation with InterMedia Partners.
  4. ^ a b Co-owned with Microsoft in a joint venture (82% owned by NBC, 18% owned by Microsoft).
  5. ^ a b c Co-owned with Blackstone Group and Bain Capital.
  6. ^ Co-owned with Mediaset.
  7. ^ a b The stations are co-owned with LIN TV in a joint venture (76% owned by NBC, 24% owned by LIN).
  8. ^ a b c The stations are owned by NBC Universal, but are controlled by ZGS Broadcast Holdings.
  9. ^ Co-owned with News Corporation and The Walt Disney Company.
  10. ^ Co-owned with Corus Entertainment, Classic Media, Scholastic Books and ION Media Networks.
v LIN TV Corporation
Management Team Vincent L. Sadusky (President & Chief Executive Officer) • Scott Blumenthal (Executive Vice President Television) • Richard Schmaeling (Senior Vice President and Chief Financial Officer) • Robert S. Richter (Senior Vice President New Media ) • Denise M. Parent(Vice President General Counsel and Secretary)
ABC Network Affiliates WOTVWTNH
CBS Network Affiliates KRQE / KBIM / KREZWANE-TVWISHWIVB-TVWLFI-TVWPRI-TVWTHI-TV
CW Network Affiliates KNVA2WBDT4WFNAWIWB4WNLOWWHO
Fox Network Affiliates KASA-TVWALA-TVWLUK-TVWNAC-TV2WUPWWVBT
MyNetworkTV Affiliates KBVOWCTXWNAC-TV2WNDY-TVWXSP-CA
NBC Network Affiliates KNSD1KXAN-TVKXAS-TV1WAVY-TVWDTNWOOD-TVWWLP
Other stations WFXQ-CA3WIIH-CA (Weather)

1Co-owned with NBC Universal in a joint venture (76% owned by NBC, 24% owned by LIN). 2LIN operates these stations under a local marketing agreement. 3Is currently a repeater for NBC affiliate WWLP. Future is uncertain at this time. 4To be operated by LIN TV through SSA/JSA

Annual Revenue: $443.5 million USDEmployees: 2,414 (full time) • Stock Symbol: NYSE: TVLWebsite: www.linmedia.com
vdOwned-and-operated stations of the major television networks of the United States
ABC (10): KABCKFSNKGOKTRKWABCWJRTWLSWPVIWTVDWTVG
CBS (14): KCBSKCNCKDKAKOVRKPIXKTVTKYWWBBMWBZWCBSWCCOWFORWJZWWJ
Fox1 (17): KDFWKMSPKRIVKSAZKTBCKTTVWAGAWFLDWFXTWHBQWJBKWNYWWOFL2WOGX2WTTGWTVTWTXF
MyNetworkTV1 (10): KCOPKDFIKTXHKUTPWDCAWFTCWPWRWRBWWUTBWWOR
NBC3 (10): KNBCKNSD4KNTVKXAS4WCAUWMAQWNBCWRCWTVJWVIT
Telefutura5 (21): KFPHKFSFKTFBKTFD6KTFFKFTHKTFKKTFQ6KFTRKFTUKNICKSTRWAMIWFPAWFTT6WFTYWFUTWOTF6WTNCWUTF6WXFT
Telemundo3 (16): KBLRKEJTKHRRKDENKNSOKTAZKTMDKVDAKSTSKVEAKXTXWKAQWNEU7WNJUWSCVWSNS
The CW (9): KBCWKMAXKSTWWGNTWKBDWPCWWPSGWTOGWUPA
Univision5 (21): KABEKAKWKDTVKFTVKMEXKTVWKUTHKUVEKUVNKUVSKWEXKXLNWGBOWLII / WSURWLTVWQHSWUVCWUVGWUVPWXTV
  1. Both Fox and MyNetworkTV are owned by Rupert Murdoch's News Corporation.
  2. WOGX is a semi-satellite of WOFL.
  3. Both NBC and Telemundo are owned by NBC Universal, a joint venture between General Electric (80%) and Vivendi SA (20%).
  4. Both stations are jointly owned in a joint venture between NBC Universal (76%) and LIN Television (24%).
  5. Both Univision and Telefutura are privately owned by Broadcasting Media Partners, Inc., a venture which includes Madison Dearborn Partners, LLC, Providence Equity Partners, Inc., TPG Capital, L.P., Thomas H. Lee Partners, L.P., and Saban Capital Group, Inc.
  6. Univision owns the licenses to these stations but the stations themselves are operated by Entravision Communications under Local Marketing Agreements.
  7. NBC Universal owns the license but the station is operated by ZGS Communications.

Categories: NBC network affiliates | LIN TV | Channel 5 TV stations in the United States | Television channels and stations established in 1948 | Television stations in Texas | NBC Universal television stations | Television stations in the Dallas • Fort Worth Metroplex

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