You ran the report at 25 feet, so I'm guessing you're anticipating an attic or rooftop installation. The good news is a modest UHF-only antenna will easily pick up all the stations listed in the green zone of the table coming in at around 235 degrees azimuth. The bad news is the two channels they are interested in are not in that group, are a good 20 to 30 dB weaker, and are shadowed by terrain. I can understand needing WGGB, as it is the only ABC affiliate. I wonder about WWLP, as WVIT is shown as an NBC affiliate also and is UHF. If they would be happy with WVIT, then you could go with a UHF-only solution.
The biggest challenge is the fact that WGGB is 90 degrees in azimuth away from the group of strong stations. Antennas that have useful gain in a given direction are practically blind (deaf?) at 90 degrees away either direction. For a roof-top solution, I would recommend an Winegard 7694P and a rotator that would aim the antenna as necessary (and would pull in WWLP from a third direction).
For an attic install, you would need two antennas. For WGGB, I'd go with an Antennacraft U-4000 and for the others, I'd stick with the 7694P. Aim the 7694 at about 250 degrees in order to get both WWLP and the host of very strong stations. If WWLP is not a priority, then you could save money by getting an Antennas Direct DB2 and aim it right at the strong stations. The last thing you would need for the attic install is a JoinTenna tuned for channel 40 that will combine the two antennas. You then have one cable down to the tuner box and no rotator to worry about.
Any other recommendations?
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