WJXT
WJXT, virtual channel 4, is an independent television station licensed to Jacksonville, Florida, United States.[1] Owned by Graham Media Group, a subsidiary of Graham Holdings Company, it shares studios with sister station and CW affiliate WCWJ on the south bank of the St. Johns River in downtown Jacksonville.[2] The station operates under the News4JAX brand, delivering local news, weather, and sports coverage to Northeast Florida and Southeast Georgia, and is recognized as the market's leading source for such programming.[1] WJXT traces its origins to September 15, 1949, when it signed on as WMBR-TV, becoming the first television station in Jacksonville and the second in Florida, initially affiliated with CBS.[3] In 1953, the Washington Post Company acquired the station, changing its call letters to WJXT while retaining the CBS affiliation.[3] Ownership evolved through Post-Newsweek Stations before transitioning to Graham Media Group, formerly known as Post-Newsweek Stations.[4] A pivotal shift occurred in 2002, when WJXT ended its CBS affiliation amid contract disputes with the network, opting instead for independent status and emphasizing syndicated content and local programming.[3] The station has earned distinction for its journalistic contributions, including multiple Edward R. Murrow Awards for overall excellence, Regional Edward R. Murrow honors, Emmys, Associated Press awards, and three Golden Batons from the Florida Associated Press Broadcasters.[3] It maintains top-rated newscasts in the Jacksonville market and pioneered milestones such as early adoption of high-definition broadcasting in 2009 and sustaining a long-tenured news team for 19 years.[3] WJXT's weather coverage, highlighted by meteorologist George Winterling's accurate forecasts for events like Hurricane Dora in 1964 and a rare snowy Christmas in 1989, underscores its role in community alerting.[3]
Ownership
Current ownership
WJXT is owned by Graham Media Group, a subsidiary of Graham Holdings Company, which operates the station from facilities in Jacksonville, Florida.[5] As part of this ownership, WJXT shares a duopoly with CW affiliate WCWJ (channel 17), allowing consolidated operations that enhance efficiency in news production and local content delivery.[6] This structure supports WJXT's independent status, free from national network programming mandates, thereby prioritizing hyper-local coverage over syndicated obligations.[7] The duopoly enables WJXT to extend local newscasts beyond typical affiliation limits, a flexibility not available to network-affiliated competitors in the market, as the absence of reverse compensation deals or primetime commitments permits more hours dedicated to Jacksonville-specific reporting. Graham Media Group's broader portfolio includes NBC affiliates in Detroit and Roanoke, an ABC station in San Antonio, and others in top-70 markets, but corporate oversight emphasizes decentralized decision-making to preserve each station's regional focus and operational independence.[2] Headquartered in Detroit, the group integrates back-office functions like digital tools across properties while deferring content strategy to local management, fostering WJXT's autonomy in serving North Florida and South Georgia audiences.[4]Ownership history
WJXT signed on the air as WMBR-TV on September 15, 1949, as Jacksonville's first television station and the second in Florida, established by the owners of local radio station WMBR, led by Glenn Marshall, amid the post-World War II surge in television broadcasting driven by technological advancements and FCC allocations of VHF channels.[8][9] In 1953, WMBR-TV and its co-owned radio stations were purchased by The Washington Post Company for an undisclosed sum, marking an early example of newspaper publishers expanding into television to leverage synergies in news content and audience reach during the medium's rapid growth phase.[10][11] The company divested the AM and FM radio outlets in 1958 while retaining the television license, prompting a call sign change to WJXT later that year to distinguish the property.[10] Ownership transitioned seamlessly within the corporate structure following the Washington Post Company's 1961 formation of its broadcast division, Post-Newsweek Stations, after acquiring Newsweek magazine, though the stations operated independently of print operations.[12] In 2013, the parent entity restructured and renamed to Graham Holdings Company after divesting The Washington Post newspaper; the following year, on July 28, 2014, Post-Newsweek Stations rebranded as Graham Media Group to reflect the evolved portfolio absent direct ties to former flagship publications.[13][14] This internal continuity, unmarred by external sales or divestitures of WJXT itself, preserved operational stability amid 1990s FCC deregulation like the Telecommunications Act of 1996, which loosened duopoly restrictions and facilitated related acquisitions such as the 2017 purchase of sister station WCWJ without introducing foreign or activist investors.[15]History
Launch and early years
WMBR-TV, the precursor to WJXT, signed on the air as Jacksonville's inaugural television station on September 15, 1949, broadcasting on VHF analog channel 4 from studios located adjacent to the Main Street Bridge along the St. Johns River in downtown Jacksonville.[3][16] Licensed to serve the Jacksonville area, the station was established by local radio owner Glenn Marshall, who extended his WMBR radio operations into television amid the nascent post-World War II expansion of broadcasting infrastructure.[8] As only the second television outlet in Florida—following Miami's WTVJ—it filled a pioneering role in northeast Florida, where no prior local TV service existed.[3] Initial programming consisted of a blend of live local content, such as variety shows and community events produced in the modest downtown facilities, supplemented by affiliated network feeds from CBS and ABC, reflecting the era's common practice of shared affiliations due to limited station availability.[11] The station's VHF allocation provided a propagation advantage over potential UHF competitors, capitalizing on the FCC's policy of prioritizing very high frequency channels in major markets to ensure reliable signal coverage amid spectrum scarcity.[3] By the mid-1950s, WMBR-TV had solidified as the market's primary CBS affiliate, delivering network primetime schedules alongside regional news and public affairs segments tailored to Jacksonville's growing urban audience.[11] Throughout the 1950s, the station maintained its monopoly-like position in the Jacksonville media landscape, with minimal competition from out-of-market signals or new entrants, fostering viewer loyalty through consistent local programming that included educational features and live sports coverage from the region.[17] Technical operations emphasized black-and-white analog transmission optimized for the sandy coastal terrain of northeast Florida, reaching households across Duval County and adjacent areas without significant interference.[16] This foundational period laid the groundwork for the station's enduring influence, culminating in its 1958 rebranding to WJXT following acquisition by the Washington Post Company, which retained the television asset while divesting radio holdings.[17]CBS affiliation period
WJXT signed on the air as WMBR-TV on September 15, 1949, marking it as Jacksonville's inaugural television station and Florida's second, operating primarily as a CBS affiliate from its inception. The affiliation delivered a steady stream of network programming, including prime-time dramas, variety shows, and national news broadcasts like the CBS Evening News, which anchored evening schedules and shaped viewer habits in the burgeoning Northeast Florida market. This long-term partnership, spanning 53 years, enabled WJXT to leverage CBS resources for high-profile event coverage, such as live reports on rocket launches from Cape Canaveral, capitalizing on the station's geographic proximity to the Space Coast for enhanced local and network-integrated broadcasts.[3][18][19] As the Jacksonville market expanded through the 1960s and 1970s, WJXT adapted to technological shifts by transitioning to color broadcasting, aligning with CBS's push toward full-color production and improving visual quality for local and network content alike. The station's programming remained heavily dependent on CBS feeds, which occupied prime evening slots and reduced opportunities for extended local fare, though WJXT balanced this with daily news segments introduced under anchors like Bill Grove. Facility enhancements supported operational growth, culminating in a major studio rebuild in the 1990s that overlaid the original structure near the St. Johns River, accommodating increased production demands amid rising viewership.[16][20] By the late 1990s and early 2000s, CBS's evolving affiliation strategies— including demands for greater schedule clearances in evenings and adjustments to compensation models—created friction with stations like WJXT, which prioritized robust local news over expanded network primetime encroachment. Operating under a one-year contract extension after the prior agreement expired, WJXT generated nearly $30 million in revenue in 2001 as the market's leading CBS outlet, underscoring its dominance despite these pressures. The network's push for affiliates to yield more airtime to national content clashed with WJXT's established emphasis on community-focused reporting, highlighting dependencies that constrained local autonomy.[21][22][23]Transition to independence
On July 15, 2002, WJXT discontinued its 53-year affiliation with CBS, transitioning to independent operation under Post-Newsweek Stations' ownership. The decision stemmed from failed contract negotiations, where CBS demanded full clearance of its primetime schedule without continued financial compensation to the affiliate, while WJXT sought to retain preemptions for high-rated local news programming that outperformed network offerings in the Jacksonville market. Post-Newsweek executive Alan Frank highlighted that CBS's evolving demands constrained local programming flexibility, prioritizing network expansion over affiliate autonomy amid rising cable and satellite fragmentation that favored viewer-specific content.[22][24] In response, WJXT immediately filled vacated network slots with syndicated programming, sports broadcasts such as Jacksonville Jaguars games, and expanded local news blocks, temporarily leveraging a partnership with NBC affiliate WTLV for select content access while avoiding reliance on any single network's terms. This shift eliminated affiliation compensation from CBS—previously standard but phased out as the network strengthened with hits like Survivor—but restored full control over scheduling to align with empirical viewer data showing preference for WJXT's news dominance, which had secured the station's market-leading status.[25][21] CBS CEO Les Moonves later claimed the split caused WJXT to plummet from first to fifth in the market, attributing it to the station's refusal to compensate the network; however, Post-Newsweek disputed this, and subsequent Nielsen data affirmed WJXT's sustained leadership in local news ratings and overall household reach, validating the causal logic that preempting network overreach preserved audience loyalty in a fragmenting media landscape.[26][27]Post-2002 developments
Following its transition to independent status in July 2002, WJXT substantially expanded local news production, committing to approximately 50 hours of weekly programming to fill the void left by network content. This shift emphasized original content, including extended newscasts such as a competitive 10 p.m. slot, while incorporating syndicated shows like The Oprah Winfrey Show to bolster daytime and evening schedules.[21] The station's news operation maintained market leadership, consistently topping ratings in key dayparts by the late 2010s.[3] In the 2010s, WJXT accelerated its digital strategy, building on the News4JAX.com platform rebranded in 2000 to deliver breaking news, video, and interactive features as a primary local resource.[28] The station upgraded to high-definition broadcasts in 2009, enhancing on-air and online presentation, and by 2017 introduced livestreaming for newscasts across platforms, including a new 4 p.m. show accessible via app and web.[3][29] Mobile app integrations followed, with the News4JAX Weather Authority app providing real-time data by the early 2020s.[30] Into the 2020s, WJXT has sustained its independent model amid rising streaming competition, prioritizing multi-platform delivery without reliance on Big Four network affiliations.[1] Leveraging its duopoly structure, the station has optimized resource allocation for robust local coverage, including the OTT streaming service News4JAX+ for live video on connected TVs.[31] Operating on VHF channel 4, WJXT retains strong over-the-air penetration in the Jacksonville market, supporting hybrid viewership across broadcast, app, and web amid cord-cutting trends.[32]Programming
Non-news programming
WJXT produces several original local programs emphasizing lifestyle, community engagement, and regional interests, particularly following its transition to independent status in July 2002, which necessitated filling former network time slots with homegrown content.[3] This shift allowed the station to prioritize unscripted local fare over syndicated imports, drawing on Jacksonville's cultural and civic landscape to foster viewer retention through targeted, event-driven segments.[27] The flagship non-news offering is The Morning Show, a weekday program airing from 7:00 a.m. to 9:30 a.m., with weekend extensions from 7:00 a.m. to 10:00 a.m. on Saturdays and 7:00 a.m. to 9:00 a.m. on Sundays.[33] Hosted by figures such as Bruce Hamilton, it features live discussions on community happenings, consumer tips, health topics, and light entertainment, often incorporating viewer call-ins and on-location reports from Jacksonville-area events like festivals or markets.[34] The program maintains a casual yet informative format, spotlighting practical local matters such as home improvement deals or seasonal activities without reliance on national feeds.[35] Complementing this is River City Live, a weekday lifestyle series that airs in daytime slots and covers Jacksonville-specific stories including fashion trends, bargain hunts, musical performances by local artists, and interactive contests.[36] It emphasizes accessible, everyday utility—such as highlighting steals on household goods or community spotlights—while avoiding broader national narratives to underscore regional relevance.[37] These originals, expanded post-2002, reflect WJXT's strategy of leveraging direct community ties for scheduling stability in a competitive market.[27]Syndicated and acquired content
WJXT relies on syndicated programming to fill daytime, early fringe, and access time slots, selecting cost-effective offerings that align with local viewer preferences for family-oriented content. Following the end of its CBS affiliation on July 1, 2002, the station expanded its acquisition of off-network sitcoms and talk shows to replace network programming, stockpiling titles amid rising syndication costs to sustain profitability.[21][27] Key acquisitions have included talk formats such as The Oprah Winfrey Show and Dr. Phil, which bolstered ratings during the early independent era by drawing broad audiences with daytime appeal.[3] More recently, the lineup features court shows like The People's Court and Couples Court with the Cutlers, alongside lifestyle talk programs including The Jennifer Hudson Show and Sherri.[38][39] In prime access, WJXT airs newsmagazines such as Inside Edition, while off-network sitcoms like The Big Bang Theory have emerged as top performers in the Jacksonville market according to Nielsen data, outperforming many network alternatives with their light, repeatable format suited to family viewing.[40][41] This data-driven approach prioritizes established, high-clearance shows over riskier or edgier fare, maximizing ad revenue in non-news blocks while minimizing reliance on network feeds, which were briefly used in the station's early duopoly phase but phased out to emphasize local content.[40]News operation
News format and production
WJXT's news broadcasts employ an anchor-driven format, featuring dedicated teams for morning and evening newscasts to ensure consistent delivery across time slots. Morning programming, such as "The Morning Show," utilizes rotating anchors and meteorologists to cover early-hour updates, while evening slots emphasize in-depth reporting led by primary anchors handling multiple hourly broadcasts from 4 p.m. onward. This structure incorporates live shots from mobile units, enabling real-time field reporting integrated seamlessly into studio segments.[35][42] The station's production facilities are centralized at studios located at 4 Broadcast Place on the south bank of the St. Johns River in Jacksonville, supporting advanced integration of aerial and on-ground feeds. A major upgrade in 2018 introduced a modern news set designed by WrightSet, featuring a curved seamless LED video wall for dynamic graphics, color-changing elements for urgency cues like breaking news, and a flexible "news cube" with 90-degree LED panels to eliminate visual seams during multi-angle shots. These enhancements facilitate high-production-value segments without reliance on extensive on-set interviews, prioritizing efficient fact-based delivery.[43][44] Technological capabilities include the Sky 4 helicopter, reintroduced in 2016 after a decade-long hiatus, equipped with advanced systems like an Ikegami HDL-F3000 camera and Cineflex gimbal for stabilized aerial coverage of breaking events. Complementing this, WJXT deploys drones—branded under Sky 4 Drone—as of at least 2016, providing cost-effective, low-altitude perspectives that enhance helicopter footage for traffic, weather, and incident reporting, often yielding superior angles in constrained urban areas.[45][46][47] WJXT maintains a straight-news style, focusing on verifiable facts with minimal opinion or extended commentary, as evidenced by its high factual reporting rating and balanced selection devoid of editorializing. This approach aligns with the station's commitment to delivering complex information directly, avoiding prolonged studio discussions in favor of sourced, concise updates.[48][49]Investigative and special reporting
WJXT's investigative unit, known as the I-TEAM, has conducted in-depth probes into local government accountability, including coverage of state-led audits under Governor Ron DeSantis' Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE) that identified nearly $200 million in excessive spending within Jacksonville's general fund budget for fiscal year 2025-2026.[50] These reports emphasized empirical discrepancies, such as the city's budget growth outpacing population increases by highlighting specific line items like overtaxation claims exceeding $200 million, prompting public scrutiny without deference to municipal narratives.[51] The station's independence from network affiliations enabled unfiltered analysis of such fiscal data, avoiding pressures to soften critiques of local overreach as seen in affiliated outlets influenced by broader media alignments. In special reporting, WJXT has produced extended segments on hurricane preparedness and impacts, drawing on verifiable meteorological data and historical records to assess causal factors in regional vulnerabilities, such as infrastructure failures during past storms like Hurricane Matthew in 2016 and ongoing threats from systems like Hurricane Melissa in October 2025.[52] These efforts included data-driven breakdowns of evacuation efficacy and post-event recovery metrics, prioritizing quantitative outcomes over anecdotal accounts to inform viewer decision-making.[53] The I-TEAM has also exposed patterns in local crime and regulatory lapses through causal examinations, such as investigations into a funeral director's mishandling of remains and funds, which resulted in additional felony charges after station-led scrutiny of financial records and witness accounts.[54] Similarly, probes into code enforcement abuses, including a 2025 case where a city employee allegedly instructed residents to cease reporting problem properties, leveraged public records to reveal systemic disincentives for oversight, leading to internal city investigations.[55] This approach consistently favored primary data sources, such as official audits and incident reports, to debunk unsubstantiated efficiency claims by local entities.Notable on-air personnel
Tom Wills served as the primary evening news anchor at WJXT for 49 years, from 1975 until his retirement on May 31, 2024, helping maintain the station's dominance in local ratings through consistent, viewer-preferred delivery of news.[56][57] Mary Baer co-anchored alongside Wills for over 30 years until retiring on May 31, 2023, contributing to the stability of WJXT's news team during a period when the station consistently led in key demographics like adults 25-54.[58][40] In weather reporting, George Winterling held the role of chief meteorologist for 47 years, from 1962 to 2009, establishing a legacy of reliable forecasting that anchored viewer trust in WJXT's coverage of Jacksonville's variable climate.[59] His successor, John Gaughan, served as chief meteorologist for over 30 years until retiring on May 31, 2023, ensuring continuity in factual, data-driven weather segments amid the station's top-rated performance.[58][60] Vic Micolucci, an investigative reporter and anchor, worked at WJXT for more than a decade until departing on April 3, 2024, to join the Jacksonville Sheriff's Office, where his reporting had driven community accountability through in-depth local stories.[61][62] Current staff like Jenese Harris, an Emmy-winning anchor and meteorologist who became the first African American woman to deliver a weathercast on WJXT in August 2022, exemplify the station's merit-based retention, with her contributions aligning with sustained high ratings rather than demographic quotas.[63][64][65]Awards and recognition
Industry accolades
WJXT has received multiple Regional Emmy Awards from the Suncoast Chapter of the National Academy of Television Arts and Sciences for excellence in local television production. In 2023, the station earned seven awards, recognizing projects in categories such as news reporting and programming.[66] In 2024, WJXT secured two Emmy wins out of ten nominations, highlighting specific stories in investigative and general news.[67] Earlier accolades include three Emmys in 2018 for outstanding coverage and production quality.[68] The station has also garnered recognition from the Florida Associated Press Broadcasters Association for spot news coverage, particularly during severe weather events. In 2018, WJXT's morning newscast "After Hurricane Irma" took first place in the Television Newscast Morning/Midday category, acknowledging timely reporting on the storm's impact.[69] Additional Florida AP honors in the 2020s have included awards for hurricane-related spot news, such as coverage of subsequent storms like Matthew and Ian, though specific placements vary by year and emphasize rapid, on-scene journalism.[69] On the national level, WJXT received a 2021 EPPY Award from Editor & Publisher for its "Positively Jax" community initiative, praising innovative digital content delivery and engagement.[70] Individual staff achievements include reporter Jenese Harris winning a 2025 Gracie Award from the Alliance for Women in Media for outstanding on-air reporting, underscoring contributions to broadcast excellence.[71] These awards reflect peer-evaluated standards from journalism organizations, focusing on technical proficiency, factual accuracy, and impactful storytelling rather than internal or local commendations.Local impact awards
WJXT's "Positively Jax" initiative, launched to spotlight individuals and organizations driving positive change in Jacksonville through viewer nominations and on-air features, has earned recognition for enhancing local community ties. In 2021, the program received the Community Service Station of the Year award from the Florida Association of Broadcast Journalists (FABJ), honoring its efforts to promote volunteerism, education, and civic involvement amid challenges like post-pandemic recovery.[72][73] The initiative repeated this achievement in 2022, with FABJ citing "Positively Jax" for galvanizing community action, including fundraising for homeless services and highlighting local heroes, which correlated with increased viewer participation in reported events.[74] By 2024, WJXT again secured the Community Service Station of the Year from FABJ on April 20, recognizing sustained impact through stories that spurred donations exceeding $100,000 for Duval County programs in the prior year.[73] These awards underscore WJXT's role in building public trust during local crises, such as hurricane preparedness coverage, where post-event polls by independent civic groups like the Jacksonville Community Foundation noted elevated viewer reliance on the station for actionable community resources over competitors.[73]Reception and criticisms
Ratings and market performance
WJXT has demonstrated consistent dominance in local news ratings within the Jacksonville designated market area (DMA), ranked as the 43rd largest television market in the United States with approximately 840,000 television households as of the 2024-2025 season.[75] In Nielsen Media Research sweeps, the station frequently outperforms network affiliates, particularly in key time slots like mornings and late evenings, attributing its success to an emphasis on extended local programming following its 2002 transition to independence. For instance, during the 2020-2021 television season, WJXT led all stations in household ratings and the adults 25-54 demographic across the full broadcast day, including marquee newscasts at 5:30 a.m. and 6 a.m., where it captured 9,000 and 11,000 viewers in that demo, respectively.[40] This performance has persisted in subsequent periods, with WJXT securing top household ratings in the 2018-2019 season across all major local news dayparts and maintaining leads in 11 p.m. newscasts as recently as 2023, averaging a 2.4 share compared to competitors' 1.5 or lower.[76][65] The station's strategy of filling primetime and other slots with local content, rather than network programming, has enabled it to capture audience share from affiliates, resulting in measurable gains in sweeps data post-2002. In the 25-54 demo, critical for advertisers, WJXT's morning shows in 2017 achieved ratings more than double those of combined competitors at 5:30 a.m.[77] Complementing its linear television strength, WJXT's digital extension, News4JAX, supports audience retention through integrated online and app platforms, though specific metrics emphasize its role in extending reach beyond traditional viewership. The station's independence allows flexibility in scheduling, contributing to its outsized market performance relative to the DMA's mid-tier ranking.[40]Viewer and critic feedback
WJXT has been commended by independent media evaluators for its commitment to factual, balanced local reporting, particularly during crises like hurricanes, where its on-the-ground coverage has informed Northeast Florida residents on evacuation routes, storm impacts, and recovery efforts. For example, during Hurricane Dorian in 2019, station reporter Vic Micolucci embedded for 96 hours in the hardest-hit Bahamian areas, delivering firsthand accounts that aided regional preparedness.[78] Similarly, post-Hurricane Ian coverage in 2022 highlighted election officials' contingency planning amid disruptions, underscoring the station's role in civic continuity.[79] Critics and viewers have occasionally accused WJXT of sensationalism and selective framing, as seen in user-generated reviews on platforms like Yelp, where it holds a 2.2 out of 5 rating from 27 assessments as of October 2025, with detractors labeling it "fake news" for alleged comment censorship and inconsistent weather accuracy.[43] A 2020 controversy over beach crowd photos during COVID-19 lockdowns drew charges of misleading visuals to exaggerate overcrowding, prompting public backlash and defenses from station personnel emphasizing contextual transparency to counter bias perceptions.[80][81] Online forums reflect divided sentiments, with Reddit discussions portraying WJXT as comparatively less biased than rivals yet prone to hype-driven narratives that prioritize viewer retention over nuance.[82] Despite such anecdotal grievances, verifiable formal complaints remain sparse, and no significant ethical scandals have tarnished its operations; however, broader shifts toward cable and digital fragmentation have diluted traditional audience allegiance, amplifying isolated dissatisfactions in an era of niche media alternatives. Media Bias/Fact Check, an independent assessor, rates the station Least Biased overall, citing minimal editorializing and high sourcing standards as empirical counters to slant claims.[48]Technical information
Broadcast facilities
WJXT maintains its primary studios and production facilities at 4 Broadcast Place, Jacksonville, Florida 32207, situated on the south bank of the St. Johns River adjacent to Prudential Drive and Kings Avenue. This complex supports news gathering, program production, and master control operations, with the station deploying mobile production units equipped for live field reporting across its coverage region.[83][84] The station's transmitter tower is positioned on Anders Boulevard in Jacksonville's Killarney Shores section. WJXT broadcasts its digital signal on physical RF channel 18 (virtual channel 4) at an effective radiated power of 670 kW, with the antenna mounted at a height above average terrain of 303.9 meters (997 feet).[85][86] This configuration enables city-grade signal coverage throughout the Jacksonville metropolitan area, extending grade B service to northeastern Florida counties including Duval, Nassau, St. Johns, Clay, and Baker, as well as portions of southeastern Georgia such as Camden and Glynn counties. Fringe reception reaches further into southeast Georgia, including areas near Brunswick, though signal strength diminishes with distance and terrain.[85][87]Subchannels and multicast
WJXT operates three subchannels via digital multicast using ATSC 1.0 standards, which permit the division of its 6 MHz channel bandwidth—approximately 19.4 Mbps total—into multiple streams without significantly degrading the primary high-definition feed.[88] The main subchannel, 4.1, broadcasts the station's independent programming in 1080i HD, consuming the bulk of the multiplex capacity to maintain broadcast quality.[89] Subchannel 4.2 carries DABL, a Warner Bros. Discovery-owned network focused on lifestyle programming and reruns. Subchannel 4.3 airs Start TV, Weigel Broadcasting's multicast service featuring classic crime dramas and shows targeted at female audiences. These secondary streams typically run at reduced bitrates and resolutions, such as 480i or 720p, enabling supplementary content delivery.[89][90] Over-the-air reception occurs on virtual channel 4 via antennas, with subchannels accessible to equipped TVs after scanning. Cable and satellite carriage mirrors this structure, often mapping to consecutive positions (e.g., 4.1–4.3), leveraging WJXT's independent affiliation for agile subchannel affiliations unbound by network mandates.[89]| Virtual Channel | Affiliation/Programming | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| 4.1 | WJXT (Independent, HD) | Primary feed; news, syndication, local content |
| 4.2 | DABL | Lifestyle, entertainment reruns |
| 4.3 | Start TV | Classic TV dramas |