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Paramount Stations Group

Paramount Stations Group
Division
Industry Television
Fate Renamed Viacom Television Stations Group in 2001
Folded into CBS Television Stations in 2006
Predecessor TVX Broadcast Group
Founded 1991
Defunct 2001
Headquarters Hollywood, California USA
Owner National Amusements
Parent Paramount Pictures/Paramount Communications (1991-1995)
Viacom (1995-2006)
CBS Corporation (2006-present)

Paramount Stations Group (sometimes abbreviated as PSG) was a company that controlled a group of American broadcast television stations. The company existed from 1991 until 2001.

Paramount Communications, the then-parent company of Paramount Pictures, formed the Paramount Stations Group after buying out the remaining stake in TVX Broadcast Group that it did not already own. This gave the company control of six stations: Fox affiliates KRRT of Kerrville, Texas, WLFL-TV of The Triangle Region of North Carolina, and WTXF-TV of Philadelphia, and independent stations KTXA of Fort Worth, Texas, KTXH of Houston, Texas, and WDCA of Washington, D.C.. Shortly thereafter, the group began its expansion with its purchase of then-Detroit Fox affiliate WKBD from Cox Enterprises in 1993.

Viacom purchased Paramount in 1993, with the deal closing in March 1994, and thus, several Viacom-owned CBS and NBC stations were added to the PSG fold. Shortly afterward Viacom entered into a joint venture with Chris-Craft Industries, which owned several television stations as part of its United Television subsidiary, to launch the United Paramount Network (UPN). Five of PSG's original six stations, along with several acquisitions such as WSBK-TV in Boston, became charter affiliates of the network when UPN launched in January 1995. PSG sold off two of its original six stations as well; KRRT and WTXF were sold to other companies, with the latter becoming a Fox-owned station. To make up for the loss of its Philadelphia-owned station, PSG bought Philadelphia independent station WGBS-TV and renamed it to WPSG-TV, and moved the UPN affiliation there. The company eventually divested itself of the CBS and NBC stations it held and purchased more UPN affiliates as the 1990s continued.


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