USA Broadcasting was an American television broadcasting company owned by the veteran entertainment industry executive Barry Diller. This company was the over-the-air broadcasting arm of USA Networks. Before founding USA Broadcasting, Diller was a helper in Gulf+Western's failed Paramount Television Service and News Corporation's new Fox Broadcasting Company that was launched on October 9, 1986.
Diller planned to remove shopping shows and infomercials from most of the stations' broadcast days and replace them with local and syndicated programs, including a few produced by sister production unit Studios USA Television that also aired nationally on USA Network. He wanted to tie each of the stations very closely to the communities they served, and to open up opportunities for locally produced programs. This format was dubbed "CityVision", and took heavy influence from the format used by CITY-DT in Toronto (and more prominently, that station's sister broadcast television properties that became charter stations of Citytv, when CHUM Limited expanded the format to other Canada markets as a television system in 2002, and similar to USA's sale of its stations to Univision, suffered a similar fate when CHUM agreed to merge with CTVglobemedia (now Bell Media), owner of the CTV Television Network).
By 2000, four stations were transformed into Diller's new model: WAMI-TV (WAMI "Whammy" 69) in Miami, WUVG ("Hotlanta 34") in Atlanta, WUTF ("Hub" 66) in Boston, and KSTR-TV ("K-Star" 49) in the Dallas-Fort Worth area. WAMI and KSTR aired local news, talk shows and sports. WHOT and WHUB broadcast syndicated programming as well as local sports. WAMI broadcast Miami Heat basketball and Florida Marlins baseball games. WHOT and KSTR also carried professional basketball games of, respectively, the Atlanta Hawks and Dallas Mavericks. WHUB acquired the rights to the annual Beanpot ice hockey tournament between four of Boston's colleges and also rights to Boston University's men's ice hockey games. HSC/America's Store continues to broadcast late at night and on weekends.
USA Networks eventually exited the television market by selling USA Network to Vivendi Universal Entertainment, a subsidiary of Vivendi that owns Universal Studios, also in 2001, which in May 2004, sold Vivendi Universal's entertainment assets (excluding Universal Music Group) to General Electric, which later transferred its NBC (including another Spanish-language network Telemundo) assets to Vivendi Universal Entertainment, and later renamed it NBCUniversal; this marked USA Networks' slight return to the broadcast industry as NBCU owns the flagship NBC network, and NBCU owns its own NBC and Telemundo stations. NBCUniversal is now owned by Comcast, after the latter half-acquired the percent of the company in 2011, and fully acquired it in 2013.
+ Stations owned by Silver King and/or USA Broadcasting ! scope="col" | Media market ! scope="col" | State ! scope="col" | Station ! scope="col" | Purchased ! scope="col" | Sold ! scope="col" class="unsortable" | Notes |
Alabama ! scope="row" | WALA-TV | |||||
California ! scope="row" | KFTR-DT | |||||
San Francisco–Oakland ! scope="row" | KFSF-DT | |||||
Florida ! scope="row" | WAMI-DT ** | |||||
Orlando ! scope="row" | WVEN-TV | |||||
Tampa–St. Petersburg ! scope="row" | WVEA-TV ** | |||||
Georgia ! scope="row" | WUVG-DT | |||||
Hawaii ! scope="row" | KHON-TV | |||||
Illinois ! scope="row" | WXFT-DT | |||||
Louisiana ! scope="row" | WVUE-DT | |||||
Maryland ! scope="row" | WUTB | |||||
Massachusetts ! scope="row" | WUNI | |||||
New York ! scope="row" | WFUT-DT | |||||
Ohio ! scope="row" | WQHS-DT | |||||
Pennsylvania ! scope="row" | WUVP-DT | |||||
Texas ! scope="row" | KSTR-DT | |||||
Houston ! scope="row" | KFTH-DT | |||||
Wisconsin ! scope="row" | WLUK-TV |
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