This North Coast DMA spans forestry, fisheries, tourism, tribal communities, and higher education. Broadcasters emphasize tsunamis, earthquakes, winter storms, wildfire smoke, and road safety for OTA, cable, and CTV audiences.
Network affiliates and subchannels operate with PBS North Coast/KEET and public radio; EAS partners coordinate for earthquakes, tsunamis, PSPS outages, floods, and heat advisories.
FCC translators serve mountainous terrain and coastal valleys; campuses and civic groups collaborate on public‑service and educational programming.
Simulcasts on apps/YouTube and FAST extend reach; push alerts and SMS support evacuations and closures.
Broadband projects extend along 101 corridor; libraries and schools bolster media literacy and device lending.
CTV and social video extend reach; push alerts support tsunami/earthquake readiness, road closures, and school schedules.
Agencies and campuses use Facebook/Instagram/YouTube for advisories and events.
OTA TV and radio remain essential for seismic/wildfire/winter coverage; drive‑time radio retains commuters.
Public media and weeklies sustain hyperlocal reporting across coastal and mountain communities.
| Indicator | Latest Figure | Source |
|---|---|---|
| DMA market rank | Small U.S. market (2024) | Nielsen DMA Rankings |
| Streaming share of TV usage | ~45% of viewing (US avg.) | Nielsen The Gauge, 2024 |
| Primary reception | OTA + cable/CTV mix | Industry analyses |
Meteorology, investigative units, and public media explainers rate highly; clear, accessible updates broaden reach.
Transparency and community engagement strengthen trust during emergencies and elections.
Weather, outdoor/parks, safety, and community services perform well; short‑form advisories drive engagement.
Streaming replays and newsletters complement linear schedules.