The stations claim 54,000 TV viewers nightly and 37,000 radio listeners weekly in the south-central Alaska region.
Alaska Public Television is viewed statewide except in the Fairbanks area, which is served by KUAC-TV as a locally-focused PBS station.
KSKA, having lived on the APU campus in Grant Hall since it went on the air in 1978 had previously expressed interest in moving into this location but didn't put any major effort into its construction; it would be later in 1993 after the building had completed its construction that they moved forward with the merger.
[4] KAKM operated as a separate public television station until 2011 when AlaskaOne's board (Alaska Public Broadcasting Service) voted to move operations from KUAC in Fairbanks to KAKM in Anchorage.
[5] KTOO and KYUK later merged operations with KAKM to form Alaska Public Television.