(Reuters) - Sinclair Broadcast Group Inc (>> Sinclair Broadcast Group, Inc.) said it will acquire eight television stations from the Allbritton family for $985 million (641.7 million pounds), the latest deal in a flurry of activity to buy local broadcasters.

Allbritton, which is also the publisher of Politico, has 9 ABC affiliated broadcast TV stations, including those that simulcast in markets throughout the United States, including Birmingham, Alabama, and Tulsa, Oklahoma. It also operates a 24-hour cable news network in Washington, D.C., considered the jewel of the portfolio.

"To buy a full-blown news operation in our nation's capital and an infrastructure that allows us to be connected to our branches of government and be at the pulse of national issues is a once-in-a lifetime event," Sinclair President David Smith said in a statement.

Sinclair's stock was up 1.5 percent at $30.27 in midday trading.

The transaction, announced on Monday, follows Tribune Co's (>> Tribune Company) acquisition of Local TV and Gannett Co Inc's (>> Gannett Co., Inc.) purchase of Belo Corp (>> Belo Corp).

One of the reasons for the renewed interest in TV stations is because of multi-revenue streams from advertising and from cable operators, who pay the stations to carry the channel, known as retransmission fees.

"There is a continuing shift of ad spending from print newspapers into local TV and retransmission fees," said Ed Atorino an analyst with Benchmark Co about the buying spree involving local TV stations.

"I think Allbritton was one of the last meaningfully sized groups around and David Smith grabbed it."

Baltimore-based Sinclair is the largest U.S. TV broadcasting group, with stations in Minneapolis, Salt Lake City and Austin, Texas, according to the company.

Including the Allbritton deal, Sinclair's net revenue would have been $1.8 billion in 2012.

Moelis & Co served as financial adviser to Allbritton.

(Reporting by Jennifer Saba in New York; Editing by Kenneth Barry and Andre Grenon)

By Jennifer Saba