In January 1987, a deal was made to cut back the runs of the shows the stations owned and pay reduced prices.
The station also owns a music shop in the front of the studio premises.
Some stations even owned syndication rights to "a few they consider[ed] racially stereotypical," but never ran them.
In that sense, the stations own the network, rather than the network owning stations.
The station was the first commercially operated television station owned by a university in the country.
The board readily approved the proposal, and by the start of the 1966-67 season, the stations owned their network.
The station is independently owned and operated, governed by a volunteer board of directors.
For a while, all stations owned by the quoted group, except Fire Radio, broadcast under a contemporary music format known as Music:fun:life.
The more stations a company owns, the more audience it can guarantee to its advertisers for its own shows.
The station owns and utilizes the tradename "The Soul of the Caribbean."