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KFXA

KFXA (channel 28) is a television station licensed to Cedar Rapids, Iowa, United States, serving Eastern Iowa as a de facto owned-and-operated station of the digital multicast network Roar. It is owned by Second Generation of Iowa, Ltd., which maintains a local marketing agreement (LMA) with Sinclair Broadcast Group, owner of dual CBS/Fox affiliate KGAN (channel 2), for the provision of certain services. The two stations share studios at Broadcast Park on Old Marion Road Northeast (along IA 100) in Cedar Rapids; KFXA's transmitter is located in Van Horne, Iowa.

Channel 28 began broadcasting as KOCR in January 1988. The region's Fox affiliate for most of its history, the station started out on poor financial footing; its owner, Metro Program Network, was repeatedly sued for breaching various financial obligations. The station lacked the resources to build a transmitter facility adequate to broadcast beyond the Cedar Rapids and Iowa City area, which was highlighted when it allowed KGAN to broadcast the NFL on Fox in 1994 because it could not serve the entire market. In October 1994, the station's financial troubles culminated in an eviction from its studios in northeast Cedar Rapids. The station's founding owner later admitted he did not have the resources to properly run the station.

Second Generation acquired KOCR in 1995 and returned it to air that August as KFXA. Until 2004, it was paired with KFXB-TV (channel 40), a separately owned station in Dubuque, to provide regional coverage. Second Generation also built a new transmitter facility to increase KFXA's coverage area. KGAN owner Sinclair Broadcast Group assumed most of the station's operating functions in 2002 and bought its assets, other than the license, in 2008. Under Sinclair, KGAN added morning and late evening newscasts to KFXA's programming. On January 1, 2021, "Fox 28" became a subchannel of KGAN, leaving KFXA to broadcast national digital multicast television networks.

In January 1983, Stanley G. Emert Jr., an attorney from Knoxville, Tennessee, applied to the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) for a new television station on ultra high frequency (UHF) channel 28 in Cedar Rapids. A second application was filed by Metro Program Network, a company owned by Gerald Fitzgerald, on March 9. Fitzgerald was a former communications professor at the University of Northern Iowa. Both applications proposed the establishment of an independent station with movies and local programming. However, an FCC administrative law judge selected the Metro Program Network application in March 1985. By July, the company also had construction permits for stations at Ames and Dubuque.

Construction had accelerated by August 1987, when Fitzgerald announced he was negotiating to affiliate with Fox; studios on Boyson Road Northeast in Cedar Rapids were nearly complete. KOCR began broadcasting on January 10, 1988, for three hours a day. The first week contained unscheduled "previews" of the station's Fox and syndicated programming, as not all of the programs for which KOCR had paid had arrived.

However, the station was unable to remain on the air at the outset. Before broadcasting, Fitzgerald sought to modify the construction permit to again reflect a Cedar Rapids transmitter site instead of one in Garrison, where Benton County officials declined to approve the erection of a taller tower. In what Fitzgerald later called a "procedural problem", the Garrison site was still active in FCC records when the station began operating from the Cedar Rapids location. When the FCC learned KOCR was broadcasting from an unauthorized facility, and after a $150 payment check to the commission bounced—rendering the station without a license as the construction permit expired—it ordered KOCR off the air on March 25, 1988. The commission granted verbal approval on April 22 for the station to resume; the next year, the FCC levied a $20,000 fine against Metro Program Network for the construction of KOCR at the then-unauthorized location.

Within two weeks of being ordered off the air, Metro Program Network's financial problems began to become apparent. On April 8, while the station was off the air, Fitzgerald paid nearly $5,000 to settle a mechanic's lien on the property brought by a Cedar Rapids drywall firm; this nullified a public auction of the Boyson Road studio. In June, programming distributor Paramount Pictures sued Metro Program Network in federal court, alleging that the station violated copyright laws by playing series such as Happy Days and Mork and Mindy despite not paying the company. Paramount then amended its suit to seek more than $217,000 in damages. The case went to trial in November 1990; in April 1991, a federal judge ordered KOCR and Fitzgerald to pay more than $250,000 to Paramount in his ruling on the 1988 lawsuit, finding that the contract with the syndicator carried no pro rata provisions. Similar lawsuits by Orion Pictures and MTM Enterprises were settled out of court. Broadcast Music, Inc. won $60,000 after the station continued playing songs it represented without a license, while the Associated Press won a $140,000 judgment in 1992 over KOCR's failure to pay for news services it received under contract.

The decision to build a smaller tower in Cedar Rapids also had the consequence of limiting the station's over-the-air coverage outside of the Cedar Rapids and Iowa City area. This left Waterloo, located within the market, completely out of Fox broadcast coverage; the city's main cable provider TCI carried Foxnet instead of KOCR since it could not reliably receive the station's signal. KOCR leased a translator in Dubuque for four and a half months in 1991 before it was turned off because the owner was not being paid. When Fox outbid CBS for the rights to broadcast National Football League games beginning in 1994, viewers expressed concern about the lack of a local Fox signal to cable companies serving Waterloo and smaller communities in Eastern Iowa. Unable to broadcast to the entire region, KOCR permitted KGAN, the CBS affiliate based in Cedar Rapids, to negotiate with the Fox network to carry the NFL on Fox; this was intended as a stopgap measure until the station could finalize construction of a taller tower with better signal coverage (a process started in April) in time for the 1995 season.

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