I have good luck with the Grey-Hoverman design. This was developed in the 50's and oddly it works very good. I spent 1 1/2 days researching tv antennas and after ordering one and then trying it out I got 4 channels. I believe it is "line of sight" transmission. I am a fan of Public Television, I am not a fan of the rest of the garbage however even some of the boring local stations on sat/sun can produce some amazing entertainment (sports).
I have built several of these antennas and some donated to retiree's that are strapped with that excessive "cable bill", and oddly enough many of the stations you watch on cable are free over the airwaves.
You must obtain a "balung" which can be found at Radio shack, its a resistor that allows you to attach two leads to your metal wire (thick coat hangar wire, copper grounding wire, etc) and the other side connects to coaxial. I mounted mine on a 2 by 4, yes crude but I get 39 channels with this. No other antenna has produced such results that I have come across. My signal is NOT amplified. The dimensions are critical. One TV works best (no splitters) however I have watched two at one time but degrades signal on one. I have attempted to improve this design with a reflector. At one time I mounted this inside my attic and used a shield mounted 2.5'' behind the antenna and covered it with tin foil and it helped. If you do not have a metal roof this is a preferred style of mount, you will have to align it with the local tv stations. There are apps or go online and google search for direction to/from your home. Use your iPhone app (compass). When I upgraded my roof (metal) I had to put my antenna outside, I changed from a cheap coat hangar to thick copper grounding wire, honestly I couldn't tell the difference but I had to elevate it higher because I didn't have a reflector, I tried different reflector like chicken wire but that did nothing to improve this basic design. It should not cost in materials more than $12.00
http://diecartumud44.soup.io/post/462490280/homemade-4-bay-grey-hoverman-ota-digital 