KXAS-TV
KXAS-TV, branded as NBC 5, is an NBC owned-and-operated television station licensed to Fort Worth, Texas, United States, serving the Dallas–Fort Worth metroplex on virtual channel 5.[1][2] The station first signed on the air on September 27, 1948, as WBAP-TV, marking it as the inaugural television station in Texas.[3][4] Originally owned by the Fort Worth Star-Telegram, its call letters were changed to KXAS in 1974 following a sale to LIN Broadcasting, and it was acquired by NBC in 1998, becoming part of NBCUniversal's owned stations group under Comcast.[4][5] KXAS operates studios at 4805 Amon Carter Boulevard in Fort Worth and transmits from a tower in Cedar Hill.[1] The station has earned recognition for its journalism, including multiple national and regional Edward R. Murrow Awards for investigative reporting and overall excellence.[6][7] It provides comprehensive local news, weather, and sports coverage for North Texas, supplemented by a 24/7 streaming channel, NBC DFW 24/7.[8] KXAS maintains its affiliation with NBC, delivering network programming alongside regional content focused on the diverse communities of the metroplex.[8]
History
Founding as WBAP-TV and Early Operations (1948–1974)
WBAP-TV signed on the air on September 27, 1948, broadcasting President Harry S. Truman's visit to Fort Worth as its inaugural program, marking it as the first commercial television station in Texas and the Southern United States.[9][10] The station operated on VHF channel 5 from purpose-built studios on Barnett Street in Fort Worth, constructed by founder Amon G. Carter Sr. through his Carter Publications company, which also controlled WBAP-AM radio and the Fort Worth Star-Telegram.[11][12] As an NBC affiliate from launch—inheriting the network relationship from its radio counterpart—WBAP-TV's early schedule featured network-supplied content alongside limited local productions, reflecting the nascent state of television technology and viewership in the region.[13][14] Initial operations emphasized technical innovation, with the station's facilities designed specifically for television, including advanced equipment for the era that enabled reliable signal transmission across the Dallas-Fort Worth market.[15] Local news broadcasts commenced shortly after sign-on, pioneering electronic journalism in Texas by covering regional events and leveraging the station's proximity to Fort Worth's civic centers.[16] Programming expanded gradually, incorporating variety shows, agricultural reports tied to the area's ranching heritage, and community events, which helped cultivate a loyal audience amid competition from emerging Dallas-based outlets. By the mid-1950s, WBAP-TV advanced into color broadcasting, airing NBC's color programs starting in April 1954 and producing a three-hour local color telecast the following month, positioning it as a leader in visual technology adoption within Texas.[3][17] Under continued Carter family stewardship following Amon Carter's death in 1952, the station solidified its market dominance as the primary NBC outlet, investing in transmitter upgrades and talent to support growing viewership driven by post-war economic expansion and household TV penetration.[12] Operations remained stable through the late 1960s and early 1970s, with WBAP-TV focusing on network primetime schedules, syndicated fare, and expanded local news amid rising cable and UHF alternatives, until Carter Publications announced the sale to LIN Broadcasting in January 1973 for $35 million, finalized in mid-1974.[14][18] This transaction concluded the station's independent era as WBAP-TV, though day-to-day programming and affiliation persisted uninterrupted during the transition.LIN Broadcasting Ownership and Rebranding (1974–1996)
In January 1973, Carter Publications announced the sale of WBAP-TV to LIN Broadcasting Corporation for $35 million, with the transaction completing in 1974 following regulatory approval.[19][20] This acquisition marked LIN's entry into major-market television ownership, as the Providence, Rhode Island-based company had previously focused on smaller outlets and cellular operations.[19] Upon taking control, LIN rebranded the station as KXAS-TV, changing the call sign effective May 16, 1974, to evoke "TeXAS" and emphasize its service to the Dallas–Fort Worth metroplex.[21][22][9] The rebranding separated the television station from the retained radio properties (WBAP-AM and KSCS-FM), which were sold to Capital Cities Communications, allowing LIN to concentrate on TV operations while maintaining the NBC affiliation established since the station's 1948 launch.[19][11] Under LIN's stewardship from 1974 to 1996, KXAS-TV experienced revenue growth, with the station contributing to a 50% increase in LIN's overall broadcasting income in its first full year of 1975, driven by expanded local programming and advertising in the competitive North Texas market.[18] The period saw investments in facilities and news production, though specific expansions remained incremental compared to later NBC-era developments. LIN's ownership ended in 1996 when the company contributed KXAS-TV to Station Venture Holdings, a joint venture with NBC that effectively transitioned control toward network ownership amid LIN's corporate restructuring.[19]NBC Ownership and Expansion (1996–Present)
In 1998, NBC acquired KXAS-TV from LIN Television, establishing it as an owned-and-operated station and rebranding it as NBC 5.[3][5][23] This transition integrated the station into NBC Television Stations, enhancing its operational alignment with the network's national strategy. The acquisition followed a 1997 joint venture where NBC gained controlling interest, solidifying full ownership the subsequent year.[24] Under NBC ownership, KXAS-TV pursued significant infrastructural expansions to modernize facilities and support multimedia operations. In June 2012, the station announced plans for a new state-of-the-art media facility in Fort Worth's CentrePort Business Park, spanning 75,000 square feet and designed to accommodate advanced broadcasting capabilities.[25][26] Construction progressed rapidly, with the facility opening in October 2013, co-locating NBC 5 alongside sister station Telemundo 39 (KXTX-TV), an NBC News Dallas-Fort Worth bureau, and twelve other NBCUniversal businesses.[27][28] This move from the previous Broadcast Hill site represented a major upgrade, incorporating 24/7 operations, employee amenities, and enhanced production spaces.[29] Ownership evolved further in 2011 when Comcast Corporation acquired a controlling stake in NBCUniversal, incorporating KXAS-TV into the broader Comcast-NBCUniversal portfolio while maintaining its status under NBC Owned Television Stations.[30] The station has since marked milestones, including its 75th anniversary in 2023, underscoring sustained growth in digital and local content delivery amid stable corporate oversight.[3] No major ownership changes have occurred since, with operations focused on leveraging NBCUniversal resources for regional dominance in the Dallas-Fort Worth market.[15]Ownership and Affiliations
Corporate Ownership Timeline
KXAS-TV traces its origins to WBAP-TV, which signed on the air on September 28, 1948, as the first television station in Texas and the South, owned by Carter Publications, Inc., the holding company controlled by publisher Amon G. Carter Sr. and encompassing the Fort Worth Star-Telegram newspaper, WBAP radio, and related properties.[31][12] The Carter family retained control following Amon G. Carter Sr.'s death in 1955, with his son Amon G. Carter Jr. overseeing operations amid the company's media expansion in the Dallas–Fort Worth market.[32] In January 1973, Carter Publications announced the sale of WBAP-TV to LIN Broadcasting Corporation for $35 million, a transaction finalized in mid-1974 amid FCC-mandated divestitures to separate newspaper and broadcast holdings; the deal excluded the Star-Telegram and WBAP-AM/FM, which were sold separately to Capital Cities Communications.[32][18] LIN assumed operational control that summer, changing the call sign to KXAS-TV—deriving "XAS" from "Texas"—while retaining the NBC affiliation and continuing from the existing studios.[21] LIN held the station through its growth into a major market outlet until NBC's acquisition in 1998, establishing KXAS-TV as an NBC owned-and-operated (O&O) station and integrating it into the network's owned stations group.[3][33] Ownership has remained with NBCUniversal's NBC Owned Television Stations division since, supporting expansions in digital and local programming infrastructure.[14]| Period | Owner | Key Details |
|---|---|---|
| 1948–1974 | Carter Publications, Inc. | Operated as WBAP-TV; first TV station in Texas under Amon G. Carter Sr. and Jr.[31] |
| 1974–1998 | LIN Broadcasting Corporation | Rebranded as KXAS-TV; $35 million acquisition focused on broadcast expansion.[18] |
| 1998–present | NBCUniversal (NBC Owned Television Stations) | Became O&O station; enhanced network integration and facilities upgrades.[3] |
Network Affiliation Details
KXAS-TV has maintained a primary affiliation with the NBC television network since its inception as WBAP-TV, which signed on the air on September 27, 1948, as the first television station in Texas.[3][14] During its early years, the station carried a secondary affiliation with ABC from 1948 until 1957, supplementing NBC programming with select ABC content before ABC secured a full-time affiliate in the Dallas–Fort Worth market.[34] This dual arrangement reflected the limited number of affiliates available in the post-World War II era, when networks relied on primary stations to share secondary duties.[34] Following the call sign change to KXAS-TV in 1974, the station continued its exclusive NBC affiliation without interruption, distinguishing it as the only major broadcast outlet in the Dallas–Fort Worth designated market area to retain its original primary network partnership throughout its history.[35][14] No affiliation switches occurred during the significant 1994–1996 U.S. broadcast realignment, which saw other markets experience network shifts due to emerging competition from Fox and other entities. On its digital subchannel DT2, KXAS-TV briefly carried NBC Weather Plus from 2005 to 2008, providing localized weather and national feeds until the service's discontinuation amid the network's shift to digital multicast strategies.[34] The main channel has since focused solely on NBC network programming, including national news, primetime entertainment, and sports events such as Sunday Night Football, integrated with local insertions for Dallas–Fort Worth audiences.[14] As of 2025, KXAS-TV remains a core NBC owned-and-operated station, benefiting from direct network synergies in content distribution and promotional alignment.[15]Programming
Network and Syndicated Content
KXAS-TV, as the NBC owned-and-operated station serving the Dallas–Fort Worth metroplex, carries the complete NBC network schedule, including primetime scripted series, unscripted competitions, and specials. Primetime programming features shows such as The Voice, Law & Order franchise entries, Chicago series, and comedies like Lopez vs. Lopez, alongside live events including Saturday Night Live and NFL games on Sunday Night Football.[36] Daytime blocks include the morning news and lifestyle program Today, soap opera Days of Our Lives, and NBC News Daily, while national news consists of NBC Nightly News with Lester Holt and weekend editions. Late-night content encompasses The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon, Late Night with Seth Meyers, and Last Call with Carson Daly.[37][38] In syndicated slots outside the core NBC feed, KXAS airs entertainment-focused programs, notably the daily syndicated news magazine Access Hollywood, co-hosted by Mario Lopez, Kit Hoover, and Scott Evans, which provides celebrity interviews and Hollywood updates. Additional syndicated fare includes Extra, offering similar lifestyle and entertainment reporting, often positioned in access or early fringe time periods. Early morning infomercial-adjacent slots feature home renovation series like George to the Rescue. These selections align with standard practices for NBC O&Os, prioritizing viewer interest in celebrity and lifestyle content over game shows, which are cleared by competing affiliates in the market.[39][38][40]Local Original Programming
KXAS-TV produces limited original local programming outside of news, sports, and network/syndicated fare, emphasizing lifestyle and community-focused content targeted at the Dallas-Fort Worth audience. The station's flagship current offering is Texas Today, a weekday lifestyle program launched on June 16, 2020, airing Tuesdays and Thursdays at 11:30 a.m. following the noon newscast.[41] This half-hour show features segments on local fashion trends, health and wellness tips, culinary innovations blending regional flavors, and cultural spotlights, such as profiles on Dallas chefs fusing Thai and Texan cuisines or jewelry makers offering customizable accessories.[42][43] In its formative years as WBAP-TV, KXAS relied heavily on original local content to fill airtime, including dance and music programs like the Saturday night Barn Dance showcasing country performers, as well as children's entertainment series amid limited network feeds.[44] These efforts reflected the station's pioneering role as Texas's first television outlet, with in-house production capabilities designed for live events and specials from its Fort Worth studios starting in 1948.[45] From 2011 to approximately 2015, KXAS operated DFW Nonstop on digital subchannel 5.2 as a 24-hour lifestyle and informational service, producing original segments on regional people, places, and events, including DFW Today Nonstop for community features.[46][47] The subchannel later transitioned to syndicated Cozi TV, curtailing in-house lifestyle output until Texas Today's introduction. Specials and event coverage, such as holiday programming or civic telethons, supplement the schedule but remain sporadic rather than regular series.[3]Sports Broadcasting
KXAS-TV carries NBC's national sports programming, including Sunday Night Football broadcasts of Dallas Cowboys games when selected by the network, as well as coverage of the Olympics, Premier League soccer, and select NHL Stanley Cup Finals.[48][49] The station has aired NFL games since its affiliation with NBC, with notable Cowboys appearances during primetime slots, contributing to local viewership during high-profile matchups.[50] In local sports, KXAS-TV produces Inside High School Sports, a weekend program dedicated to regional high school athletics, featuring highlights, interviews, and analysis of football, basketball, and other competitions prominent in Texas.[51] This show airs Saturdays at 10:00 a.m. and Sundays, emphasizing Friday night football games that draw significant audiences in the Dallas-Fort Worth area.[52] The station's sports desk provides ongoing coverage of professional teams like the Cowboys, Mavericks, Stars, and Rangers through news segments and digital content under the "Sports Connection" banner, though primary game broadcasts for these franchises occur on regional sports networks.[49] A milestone in KXAS-TV's sports broadcasting was its first high-definition telecast on March 31, 1997, airing a Texas Rangers game against the Chicago White Sox, marking an early adoption of HD technology in the market ahead of full NBC network implementation.[3] This broadcast demonstrated the station's technical leadership in delivering enhanced viewing for baseball fans, aligning with its history of innovation since signing on as WBAP-TV in 1948.[15]News Operation
Development of News Department
The news department of KXAS-TV originated with the station's debut as WBAP-TV on September 27, 1948, marking Texas's inaugural television broadcast and establishing early local news coverage focused on regional events such as politics, crime, and public interest stories.[3][13] In the early 1950s, programming featured concise daily 15-minute newsreels, which by 1951 formalized into The Texas News, a nightly segment comprising 5 to 8 short reports emphasizing high-quality, locally sourced content amid limited affiliate resources nationwide.[13] Technological advancements propelled further growth, with the station pioneering all-color news film in Texas on June 16, 1966—the first such implementation locally—and introducing the nation's initial monthly local news magazine format for in-depth documentary-style reporting.[53][45] The 1970s saw significant expansion, including the debut of the Texas 70s Series in 1970 as the area's first local television news magazine, airing through 1974, alongside a shift to multiple daily newscasts that reflected increasing viewer demand and operational capacity.[45][13] Following LIN Broadcasting's 1974 acquisition and the rebranding to KXAS-TV, the department sustained emphasis on innovative local journalism while integrating broader syndication elements, setting the stage for later digital and facility upgrades under NBCUniversal ownership starting in 1996.[21][18]Current Newscast Schedule and Format
KXAS-TV produces local newscasts under the NBC 5 News banner, emphasizing a mix of breaking news, weather updates, traffic reports, sports, and investigative segments tailored to the Dallas–Fort Worth metroplex. Weekday morning programming centers on NBC 5 Today, a multi-hour block anchored by teams including Laura Harris and others, focusing on live updates and community stories. Evening newscasts, led by anchors such as Brittney Johnson for the 10 p.m. slot, incorporate high-definition graphics, drone footage, and real-time data integration for comprehensive coverage.[54][55][51] The station's weekday schedule includes extended morning and early evening blocks to capture commuter audiences, with the flagship 10 p.m. newscast extending to 35 minutes to allow deeper analysis.[51]| Time Slot | Newscast Name | Duration |
|---|---|---|
| 4:30–5:00 a.m. | NBC DFW News at 4:30 a.m. | 30 minutes |
| 5:00–7:00 a.m. | NBC 5 Today (continuous) | 120 minutes |
| 11:00–11:30 a.m. | NBC DFW News at 11 a.m. | 30 minutes |
| 4:00–6:30 p.m. | NBC 5 News (4 p.m., 5 p.m., and 6 p.m. editions) | 150 minutes total |
| 10:00–10:35 p.m. | NBC 5 News at 10 p.m. | 35 minutes |
Investigative Journalism Efforts
NBC 5 Investigates, the dedicated investigative unit of KXAS-TV's news department, focuses on exposing government corruption, public safety failures, and accountability issues in the Dallas-Fort Worth area, often leading to policy changes and legal actions.[57] Led by senior investigative reporter Scott Friedman, the team has produced over 100 reports on the Dallas County Schools scandal between 2015 and 2017, uncovering widespread mismanagement, nepotism, and financial irregularities in the 172-year-old agency responsible for student transportation.[58] These investigations prompted federal probes, multiple indictments, and a voter-approved dissolution of the agency in November 2017.[59] Follow-up reporting in 2020 detailed additional guilty pleas obtained by federal authorities, highlighting ongoing repercussions from the exposés.[59] Other significant efforts include the 2015 series "Injured Heroes, Broken Promises," produced in partnership with The Dallas Morning News, which examined delays and inadequacies in veterans' healthcare and benefits processing in North Texas, earning a 2014 Lone Star Emmy for investigative reporting.[60] In 2022, the unit's "Paper Tag Nation" investigation revealed systemic abuse of temporary vehicle tags by used car dealers, evading sales taxes and safety inspections, which contributed to winning National Headliner Awards for its impact on local regulations.[61] The series "Big Buses, Bigger Problems: Taxpayers Taken for a Ride" scrutinized Dallas Area Rapid Transit (DART) procurement and maintenance practices, exposing cost overruns and safety lapses that burdened taxpayers.[62] The unit's work has garnered multiple prestigious awards, including the 2024 Alfred I. duPont-Columbia Award for the series "Against All Enemies," which probed national security threats and domestic extremism.[63] Additional honors include a Peabody Award for the DART investigation, the Al Neuharth Award for Excellence in Journalism for collaborative reporting on veterans' issues, and a 2023 Walter Cronkite Award for triggering state agency audits through consumer protection probes.[62][64][65] These recognitions underscore the unit's role in driving tangible reforms, such as enhanced oversight in public transportation and vehicle sales.[66]Notable Current and Former Personnel
Harold Taft served as chief meteorologist at KXAS-TV from 1949 until his death on September 27, 1991, accumulating 42 years as the longest-serving weathercaster at a single station in the United States; he earned the nickname "The World's Greatest Weatherman" for his accurate forecasts and innovative presentations, including early radar use for tracking Santa Claus annually for 34 years.[67][68][69] Boyd Matson worked as a reporter and anchor in the 1970s, contributing to the station's early news teams alongside figures like Chip Moody and Ward Andrews; archival photographs from the era document his role in on-air segments.[21][70] Deborah Ferguson has co-anchored NBC 5 Today weekday mornings from 5 to 7 a.m. since joining the station in 1991, marking over three decades of tenure focused on local morning news coverage.[71] Brian Curtis co-anchors NBC 5 News at 6 p.m. and 10 p.m. weekdays, bringing more than 25 years of experience in local television news to the role.[72] Vince Sims, a three-time Emmy Award and Edward R. Murrow award-winning journalist, has reported for the station with over 25 years in television news, emphasizing investigative and general assignment stories.[73] Laura Harris serves as co-anchor for NBC 5 Today and handles reporting duties, recognized for her work in local journalism including TEDx speaking engagements.[55] Alanna Quillen reports for NBC 5 Today mornings, specializing in live shots, breaking news, and enterprise pieces while occasionally filling in as anchor.[74][75] Cleo Greene joined as co-host of Texas Today in March 2025, expanding the station's lifestyle and local programming team.[76]Controversies and Criticisms
Journalistic Integrity Incidents
In October 1996, KXAS-TV aired a hidden-camera investigation titled "Tarnished Star," featuring secretly recorded footage of Dallas Cowboys wide receiver Michael Irvin allegedly participating in a cocaine-fueled party at a rented house.[77] The station paid $6,000 to Patrick Pedini, a Cowboys associate who provided the video, for licensing and assignment rights to broadcast it, prompting ethical scrutiny over whether compensating sources for exclusive material compromises journalistic independence and risks incentivizing sensationalism or fabrication.[78] Critics, including media ethicists, argued that such payments blurred the line between reporting and purchasing content, potentially undermining source credibility, though KXAS defended the practice as necessary for obtaining verifiable evidence in a competitive investigative context.[79] The report contributed to Irvin's four-game NFL suspension but highlighted broader debates in local television news about financial incentives in undercover journalism.[80] On October 20, 2019, during a Dallas Cowboys game against the Philadelphia Eagles, KXAS-TV delayed interrupting its broadcast for a tornado warning issued at 7:28 p.m. CDT affecting Dallas County, waiting approximately six minutes before issuing the alert, despite National Weather Service protocols urging immediate public notification for life-threatening severe weather.[81] The station prioritized completing a key play in the game, drawing widespread public criticism for endangering viewers in a tornado-prone region where timely warnings have historically mitigated casualties.[82] KXAS issued an apology the following day, acknowledging the error: "We made a mistake by not immediately interrupting the football game with a tornado warning," and committed to procedural reviews to prevent recurrence, underscoring tensions between entertainment programming and public safety mandates in local broadcasting.[83] No injuries were directly attributed to the delay, but the incident amplified calls for stricter emergency override policies at affiliates.[84]Bias and Coverage Disputes
Media Bias/Fact Check evaluates NBC 5 Dallas-Fort Worth (KXAS-TV) as exhibiting a left-center bias, characterized by slight favoritism toward liberal causes in political story selection and wording, such as referring to Saudi Arabia as a "pariah" state in coverage of President Biden's 2022 foreign policy itinerary.[30] This assessment stems from analysis of national political reporting, where phrasing and emphasis occasionally align with progressive viewpoints, though local coverage remains more neutral. Biasly, another monitoring service, rates the station closer to center overall, based on algorithmic review of content balance.[85] Despite these ratings, KXAS-TV has faced no major documented disputes over biased coverage, failed fact checks, or partisan controversies in the past five years, maintaining a record of high factual reliability through sourcing from Associated Press wires and on-site reporting.[30] Criticisms, when raised, typically echo broader perceptions of NBC network affiliates' leanings rather than station-specific incidents, with no lawsuits, regulatory complaints, or public retractions tied to ideological slant. Local reporting on contentious issues, such as the 2021 Southlake school district racism debates, has drawn scrutiny for framing but not accusations of fabrication or undue advocacy.[86]Technical and Operational Failures
On January 14, 2024, during NBC's broadcast of the NFL wild card playoff game between the Los Angeles Rams and Detroit Lions, KXAS-TV prematurely cut away from the live telecast to local programming before the game's final plays, missing a game-winning field goal by the Lions that advanced them to the divisional round. This operational error, reminiscent of the infamous 1968 "Heidi Game" where NBC cut away from an AFL game prematurely, drew widespread viewer complaints and social media backlash for disrupting the conclusion of a high-stakes matchup. Station management issued a post-game apology, attributing the cutaway to a scheduling mistake but acknowledging the frustration it caused audiences relying on the broadcast for complete coverage.[87] The incident highlighted vulnerabilities in coordinated network-local affiliate operations during live sports events, where precise timing is critical to maintain viewer trust and fulfill broadcasting obligations. No technical malfunction was cited as the direct cause; instead, it stemmed from human oversight in transitioning from national feed to local content, underscoring the challenges of real-time decision-making in 24/7 news environments. Similar production lapses have occasionally plagued affiliates, but this event stood out due to its timing at the playoffs' outset and the Lions' dramatic victory sealed in the omitted moments. In July 19, 2024, KXAS-TV experienced significant disruptions from the global CrowdStrike software update outage, which crippled access to essential production tools including video editing systems, interview feeds, live cameras, and graphics overlays. Newscasts were forced to operate in a degraded mode, relying on manual workarounds and pre-recorded segments, which compromised the depth and immediacy of reporting on the outage's local impacts across North Texas. The station's reliance on affected cloud-based and Windows-dependent infrastructure mirrored broader vulnerabilities in modern broadcast operations, where third-party software failures can cascade into on-air limitations without redundant isolated systems.[88] Historical archives indicate intermittent technical difficulties, such as signal interruptions or equipment glitches prompting on-air apologies and "technical difficulties" slides, though specific dates and causes beyond routine maintenance issues remain sparsely documented in public records. No major FCC fines for technical violations have been imposed on KXAS-TV in recent decades, suggesting operational resilience relative to peers, but the 2024 incidents exposed dependencies on external vendors and the need for enhanced failover protocols in an era of interconnected digital workflows.Technical Information
Broadcast Facilities and Signal
KXAS-TV operates from studios located at 4805 Amon Carter Boulevard in the CentrePort Business Park in eastern Fort Worth, Texas, near Dallas/Fort Worth International Airport.[89] The facility, shared with sister station KXTX-TV, supports news production, broadcasting, and administrative functions.[14] This modern complex replaced the station's previous studios at 3900 Barnett Street, which had been in use since the 1950s and were situated on "Broadcast Hill" overlooking Interstate 30.[90][28] The station's analog signal transmits on VHF channel 5, while its digital signal operates on UHF RF channel 24 (mapping to virtual channel 5.1).[91] The transmitter tower is situated in Cedar Hill, Texas, south of Dallas, enabling coverage of the entire Dallas–Fort Worth metroplex.[92] In May 2016, KXAS-TV upgraded to a new transmitter featuring 72 amplifiers, doubling the previous power output to improve signal strength and reception quality across the region.[93]Subchannels and Digital Services
KXAS-TV broadcasts on virtual channel 5 via UHF digital channel 24, with its primary feed on subchannel 5.1 carrying NBC network programming.[91] The station's digital subchannels include 5.2, which airs Cozi TV, a multicast network featuring classic television series and movies owned by NBCUniversal, and 5.3, which carries NBC LX Home, an over-the-air extension of NBCUniversal's lifestyle and entertainment programming targeted at younger urban audiences.[14][34]| Virtual Channel | Physical Channel | Programming |
|---|---|---|
| 5.1 | 24.1 | NBC |
| 5.2 | 24.2 | Cozi TV |
| 5.3 | 24.3 | NBC LX Home[14][91] |