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KBYU-TV

KBYU-TV (channel 11) is a non-commercial educational independent television station licensed to Provo, Utah, United States, serving Salt Lake City and the state of Utah. The station is owned by Brigham Young University (BYU), an arm of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church). KBYU-TV's studios are located on the BYU campus in Provo, and its transmitter is located on Farnsworth Peak in the Oquirrh Mountains, southwest of Salt Lake City.

KBYU-TV
CityProvo, Utah
Channels
BrandingBYUtv
Programming
Affiliations
Ownership
OwnerBrigham Young University
History
FoundedDecember 17, 1958 (1958-12-17)
First air date
November 15, 1965 (58 years ago) (1965-11-15) (under BYU)
Former call signs
KLOR-TV (1958–1962)
Former channel number(s)
  • Analog: 11 (VHF, 1965–2009)
  • Digital: 44 (UHF, 2000–2018)
  • NET (1965–1970)
  • PBS (1970–2018)
Call sign meaning
Brigham Young University
Technical information[1]
Licensing authority
FCC
Facility ID6823
ERP298 kW
HAAT1,257 m (4,124 ft)
Transmitter coordinates40°39′33″N 112°12′10″W / 40.65917°N 112.20278°W / 40.65917; -112.20278
Translator(s)see § Translators
Links
Public license information
  • Public file
  • LMS
Websitewww.byutv.org/kbyu

KBYU-TV airs programming of interest to members of the LDS movement, including religious and instructional shows, as well as family-friendly entertainment programs, often with a moral lesson.

History edit

KLOR-TV edit

The channel 11 allocation in Provo was first intended to be built as a commercial station. In October 1955, the Beehive Telecasting Corporation, owned by Samuel B. Nissley, filed to build channel 11, with studios in Orem and a transmitter on Lake Mountain. The permit was granted in December 1957. Two months later, ground was broken on studio facilities for the station.[2] KLOR went on the air as Utah's first independent television station on December 17, 1958, with its call letters standing for the fact it launched full color television operations on its first day.[3]

Channel 11's commercial existence was short-lived. The independent station struggled against larger outlets in Salt Lake City, facing the burden of having to buy an additional 18 hours of programming per day. In December 1959, Nissley sued General Electric, which provided and installed the transmitter, for more than $1 million, claiming negligent transmitter installation impaired KLOR's signal in the market's most lucrative portion, the Salt Lake Valley. Nissley claimed that the station's signal was sent over a desert area west of Provo, rather than areas closer to Salt Lake City.[4] by this time, KLOR was also facing lawsuits from potential creditors, including program suppliers.[5] KLOR went silent March 12, 1960, when a power surge blew out a transformer.[6] Beehive went into bankruptcy on July 1, 1960.[7]

Acquisition and operation by BYU edit

In March 1962, BYU filed an application to buy KLOR's license, but not its Orem studio facilities.[8] The Federal Communications Commission (FCC) approved the sale on September 25, 1962, with the stipulation that channel 11 become non-commercial; the KBYU-TV callsign was instituted on October 15. In 1964, BYU filed to relocate the studio to the Fine Arts Center on the campus and the transmitter to Mount Vision in the Oquirrh Mountains. The KLOR-TV studios were sold to two local businessmen[7] and became other offices before being demolished.

The station returned to the air with regular programs on November 15, 1965, though the station was already on the air during the daytime for broadcasts to schools in association with the Utah State Department of Public Instruction.[9] Originally a member of National Educational Television (NET), it joined PBS when it largely replaced NET in 1970. For most of the next half-century, Salt Lake City was one of the smallest markets with two PBS member stations; its main competition was the University of Utah's KUED (channel 7). In 2010, KBYU-TV rebranded as "Eleven".

On July 2, 2018, the station ended its membership with PBS and began simulcasting BYU's co-owned specialty channel BYUtv on its primary subchannel. BYU Broadcasting managing director Michael Dunn noted that two-thirds of channel 11's schedule was identical to that of KUED, something that "makes no sense" in the current era of broadcasting.[10] This leaves KUED as the sole PBS station for the Salt Lake City market and the state of Utah.

Programming edit

Prior to July 2, 2018, programming on KBYU-TV consisted of general PBS fare, with emphasis on children's, informational and entertainment programming. The station also airs special programs related to the LDS Church, and offered a nightly block of classic television programs, such as I Love Lucy, Perry Mason, My Three Sons, The Andy Griffith Show and Little House on the Prairie; as such, it was one of the few public television stations in the United States that broadcasts programming normally acquired for U.S. commercial syndication.

The only exception that KBYU-TV currently airs from the straight simulcast of BYU TV is the weekday student-produced half-hour newscast, Eleven News at Noon. As an educational station it does not carry advertising, and BYU TV itself does not carry advertising, instead carrying promotional spots for the network's programming during breaks (the national feed also carries KBYU-TV's hourly legal station identification).

KBYU-TV has produced some notable programs for national distribution. Ancestors, produced in conjunction with the LDS Church's Family History Library and PBS, was a highly successful series of videos on family genealogy. It was so well received that KBYU-TV produced a second series of videos, also entitled Ancestors, which proved to be even more successful.[11] Small Fortunes: Microcredit and the Future of Poverty, produced in 2005, explored the business of Microcredit through eleven providers of the service. Another show produced by KBYU was Hooked on Aerobics, which was on the air for many years.

Technical information edit

Subchannels edit

The station's digital signal is multiplexed:

Subchannels of KBYU-TV[12]
Channel Res. Aspect Short name Programming
11.1 720p 16:9 KBYU BYUtv
11.2 480i 4:3 BYURDIO BYU Radio
11.3 KBYUFM Classical 89

KBYU-TV also utilizes the alternate audio tracks that can be activated through the second audio program function, both carried on the third alternate audio track: the station's main channel features an audio simulcast of KBYU-FM (89.1). Digital subchannel 11.2 featured an alternate audio feed of BYU Radio (which is commonly found streamed over the Internet), but was taken off-the-air on June 30, 2018, when BYU TV International ceased operations.

Analog-to-digital conversion edit

In 1997, KBYU-TV was allotted UHF channel 39 for its digital signal, but in 1999, the station changed its digital allotment to UHF channel 44 as part of a digital channel realignment coordinated by DTV Utah, a consortium of eight Salt Lake City market television stations, of which KBYU is a member. KBYU-DT began broadcasting its digital signal on November 15, 2000, and it was licensed on January 23, 2003.

KBYU-TV shut down its analog signal, over VHF channel 11, on June 12, 2009, the official date on which full-power television stations in the United States transitioned from analog to digital broadcasts under federal mandate. The station's digital signal remained on its pre-transition UHF channel 44,[13][14][15] using virtual channel 11.

Since KBYU's former physical TV channel was in the 600 MHz band being sold off in the FCC's incentive auction, with channels 38 to 51 being eliminated, the station filed for a construction permit in September 2017 to move to physical channel 17 at the same location, power and height.[16]

Translators edit

KBYU-TV uses an extensive network of translator stations to extend its signal throughout Utah, plus parts of northern Arizona, western Colorado, southern Idaho, and eastern Nevada:

Other BYU Broadcasting divisions edit

BYU Broadcasting also operates classical music radio station KBYU-FM (89.1), BYU Radio, and other internet-exclusive radio services.

References edit

  1. ^ "Facility Technical Data for KBYU-TV". Licensing and Management System. Federal Communications Commission.
  2. ^ "Officers Turn Earth for TV at Provo". Salt Lake Tribune. February 16, 1958.
  3. ^ "Orem Greets TV Station". Salt Lake Tribune. December 17, 1958.
  4. ^ "Y. Files Bid for License Of Provo TV Outlet". Salt Lake Tribune. Associated Press. April 4, 1962.
  5. ^ "GE Sued For $1,000,000 By KLOR-TV". The Daily Herald. December 13, 1959.
  6. ^ "Repairs to Delay 'Return' of Channel 11". Salt Lake Tribune. March 16, 1960.
  7. ^ a b "Businessmen Buy Vacant KLOR Building". The Daily Herald. July 9, 1963.
  8. ^ "Provo Notes Interest in Y. TV Plan". Salt Lake Tribune. Associated Press. April 5, 1962.
  9. ^ "Y. Video Station On Air Tonight". Salt Lake Tribune. November 15, 1965.
  10. ^ Pierce, Scott D. (October 23, 2017). "KBYU-TV will no longer be a PBS station in 2018 — and KBYU-FM will abandon classical music". The Salt Lake Tribune. Retrieved October 23, 2017.
  11. ^ "AncestrySupport". Ancestry.com.
  12. ^ RabbitEars TV Query for KBYU
  13. ^ (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on August 29, 2013. Retrieved March 24, 2012.
  14. ^ Congress delays digital TV switch until June; Utah sticks to original cutoff, Vince Horiuchi February 6, 2009, at the Wayback Machine, Salt Lake Tribune, February 4, 2009.
  15. ^ "CDBS Print".
  16. ^ "Kbyu-Tv Provo, Ut".

External links edit

  • KBYU-TV official website
  • Small Fortunes website

kbyu, channel, commercial, educational, independent, television, station, licensed, provo, utah, united, states, serving, salt, lake, city, state, utah, station, owned, brigham, young, university, church, jesus, christ, latter, saints, church, studios, located. KBYU TV channel 11 is a non commercial educational independent television station licensed to Provo Utah United States serving Salt Lake City and the state of Utah The station is owned by Brigham Young University BYU an arm of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter day Saints LDS Church KBYU TV s studios are located on the BYU campus in Provo and its transmitter is located on Farnsworth Peak in the Oquirrh Mountains southwest of Salt Lake City KBYU TVProvo Salt Lake City UtahUnited StatesCityProvo UtahChannelsDigital 17 UHF Virtual 11BrandingBYUtvProgrammingAffiliations11 1 BYUtv11 2 BYU Radio11 3 Simulcast of KBYU FMOwnershipOwnerBrigham Young UniversitySister stationsTV KSL TVRadio KBYU FM KSL KSFI KSL FM KUMTHistoryFoundedDecember 17 1958 1958 12 17 First air dateNovember 15 1965 58 years ago 1965 11 15 under BYU Former call signsKLOR TV 1958 1962 Former channel number s Analog 11 VHF 1965 2009 Digital 44 UHF 2000 2018 Former affiliationsNET 1965 1970 PBS 1970 2018 Call sign meaningBrigham Young UniversityTechnical information 1 Licensing authorityFCCFacility ID6823ERP298 kWHAAT1 257 m 4 124 ft Transmitter coordinates40 39 33 N 112 12 10 W 40 65917 N 112 20278 W 40 65917 112 20278Translator s see TranslatorsLinksPublic license informationPublic fileLMSWebsitewww wbr byutv wbr org wbr kbyu KBYU TV airs programming of interest to members of the LDS movement including religious and instructional shows as well as family friendly entertainment programs often with a moral lesson Contents 1 History 1 1 KLOR TV 1 2 Acquisition and operation by BYU 2 Programming 3 Technical information 3 1 Subchannels 3 2 Analog to digital conversion 3 3 Translators 4 Other BYU Broadcasting divisions 5 References 6 External linksHistory editKLOR TV edit The channel 11 allocation in Provo was first intended to be built as a commercial station In October 1955 the Beehive Telecasting Corporation owned by Samuel B Nissley filed to build channel 11 with studios in Orem and a transmitter on Lake Mountain The permit was granted in December 1957 Two months later ground was broken on studio facilities for the station 2 KLOR went on the air as Utah s first independent television station on December 17 1958 with its call letters standing for the fact it launched full color television operations on its first day 3 Channel 11 s commercial existence was short lived The independent station struggled against larger outlets in Salt Lake City facing the burden of having to buy an additional 18 hours of programming per day In December 1959 Nissley sued General Electric which provided and installed the transmitter for more than 1 million claiming negligent transmitter installation impaired KLOR s signal in the market s most lucrative portion the Salt Lake Valley Nissley claimed that the station s signal was sent over a desert area west of Provo rather than areas closer to Salt Lake City 4 by this time KLOR was also facing lawsuits from potential creditors including program suppliers 5 KLOR went silent March 12 1960 when a power surge blew out a transformer 6 Beehive went into bankruptcy on July 1 1960 7 Acquisition and operation by BYU edit In March 1962 BYU filed an application to buy KLOR s license but not its Orem studio facilities 8 The Federal Communications Commission FCC approved the sale on September 25 1962 with the stipulation that channel 11 become non commercial the KBYU TV callsign was instituted on October 15 In 1964 BYU filed to relocate the studio to the Fine Arts Center on the campus and the transmitter to Mount Vision in the Oquirrh Mountains The KLOR TV studios were sold to two local businessmen 7 and became other offices before being demolished The station returned to the air with regular programs on November 15 1965 though the station was already on the air during the daytime for broadcasts to schools in association with the Utah State Department of Public Instruction 9 Originally a member of National Educational Television NET it joined PBS when it largely replaced NET in 1970 For most of the next half century Salt Lake City was one of the smallest markets with two PBS member stations its main competition was the University of Utah s KUED channel 7 In 2010 KBYU TV rebranded as Eleven On July 2 2018 the station ended its membership with PBS and began simulcasting BYU s co owned specialty channel BYUtv on its primary subchannel BYU Broadcasting managing director Michael Dunn noted that two thirds of channel 11 s schedule was identical to that of KUED something that makes no sense in the current era of broadcasting 10 This leaves KUED as the sole PBS station for the Salt Lake City market and the state of Utah Programming editPrior to July 2 2018 programming on KBYU TV consisted of general PBS fare with emphasis on children s informational and entertainment programming The station also airs special programs related to the LDS Church and offered a nightly block of classic television programs such as I Love Lucy Perry Mason My Three Sons The Andy Griffith Show and Little House on the Prairie as such it was one of the few public television stations in the United States that broadcasts programming normally acquired for U S commercial syndication The only exception that KBYU TV currently airs from the straight simulcast of BYU TV is the weekday student produced half hour newscast Eleven News at Noon As an educational station it does not carry advertising and BYU TV itself does not carry advertising instead carrying promotional spots for the network s programming during breaks the national feed also carries KBYU TV s hourly legal station identification KBYU TV has produced some notable programs for national distribution Ancestors produced in conjunction with the LDS Church s Family History Library and PBS was a highly successful series of videos on family genealogy It was so well received that KBYU TV produced a second series of videos also entitled Ancestors which proved to be even more successful 11 Small Fortunes Microcredit and the Future of Poverty produced in 2005 explored the business of Microcredit through eleven providers of the service Another show produced by KBYU was Hooked on Aerobics which was on the air for many years Technical information editSubchannels edit The station s digital signal is multiplexed Subchannels of KBYU TV 12 Channel Res Aspect Short name Programming 11 1 720p 16 9 KBYU BYUtv 11 2 480i 4 3 BYURDIO BYU Radio 11 3 KBYUFM Classical 89 KBYU TV also utilizes the alternate audio tracks that can be activated through the second audio program function both carried on the third alternate audio track the station s main channel features an audio simulcast of KBYU FM 89 1 Digital subchannel 11 2 featured an alternate audio feed of BYU Radio which is commonly found streamed over the Internet but was taken off the air on June 30 2018 when BYU TV International ceased operations Analog to digital conversion edit In 1997 KBYU TV was allotted UHF channel 39 for its digital signal but in 1999 the station changed its digital allotment to UHF channel 44 as part of a digital channel realignment coordinated by DTV Utah a consortium of eight Salt Lake City market television stations of which KBYU is a member KBYU DT began broadcasting its digital signal on November 15 2000 and it was licensed on January 23 2003 KBYU TV shut down its analog signal over VHF channel 11 on June 12 2009 the official date on which full power television stations in the United States transitioned from analog to digital broadcasts under federal mandate The station s digital signal remained on its pre transition UHF channel 44 13 14 15 using virtual channel 11 Since KBYU s former physical TV channel was in the 600 MHz band being sold off in the FCC s incentive auction with channels 38 to 51 being eliminated the station filed for a construction permit in September 2017 to move to physical channel 17 at the same location power and height 16 Translators edit KBYU TV uses an extensive network of translator stations to extend its signal throughout Utah plus parts of northern Arizona western Colorado southern Idaho and eastern Nevada K31OA D Antimony K36FM D Beaver etc K11XH D Blanding Monticello K19HE D Bluff K29MA D Boulder K29IX D Caineville K16MM D Circleville K31OT D Clear Creek K29IN D Coalville K34PV D Cortez CO K26OC D Delta K35IK D Duchesne K29MR D Emery K35NG D Escalante K31OS D Ferron K35NX D Fillmore etc K27JR D Fishlake Resort K28OO D Fountain Green K34NZ D Fremont K20MR D Garfield etc K36OE D Garfield County K13AAM D Garrison etc K20JZ D Green River K31OO D Green River K33OI D Hanksville K36IL D Hanna amp Tabiona K18MK D Hatch K32MY D Heber Midway K11XK D Helper K30PC D Henefer amp Echo K19LL D Henrieville K31OU D Huntington K31OF D Kanab K19LF D Koosharem K16MK D Laketown etc K10QR D Leamington K11XG D Logan K11XB D Long Valley Junction K21HV D Malad ID K36LE D Manila etc K31FN D Manti amp Ephraim K25OW D Marysvale K20MZ D Mayfield K16HK D Mexican Hat K33JE D Modena Beryl etc K15HM D Montezuma Creek Aneth K14QZ D Mount Pleasant K16MX D Myton K16HI D Navajo Mountain K18MJ D Nephi K16HJ D Oljeto K20NQ D Orangeville K17JC D Orderville K20JV D Overton NV K19LK D Panguitch K25HG D Preston ID K12XH D Price K28PU D Randolph K18ME D Richfield etc K12XG D Roosevelt K25PB D Rural Iron etc K19LO D Rural Sevier County K12XC D Salina amp Redmond K29IM D Samak K36FT D Santa Clara K17NM D Scipio K30PO D Scofield K21MR D Soda Springs ID K23IV D Spring Glen K29MV D Spring Glen K17DG D Rural Summit County K19LH D Teasdale K28OJ D Tropic amp Cannonville K34JB D Vernal etc K23JN D Virgin K32IU D Wanship K11XF D WoodlandOther BYU Broadcasting divisions editBYU Broadcasting also operates classical music radio station KBYU FM 89 1 BYU Radio and other internet exclusive radio services References edit Facility Technical Data for KBYU TV Licensing and Management System Federal Communications Commission Officers Turn Earth for TV at Provo Salt Lake Tribune February 16 1958 Orem Greets TV Station Salt Lake Tribune December 17 1958 Y Files Bid for License Of Provo TV Outlet Salt Lake Tribune Associated Press April 4 1962 GE Sued For 1 000 000 By KLOR TV The Daily Herald December 13 1959 Repairs to Delay Return of Channel 11 Salt Lake Tribune March 16 1960 a b Businessmen Buy Vacant KLOR Building The Daily Herald July 9 1963 Provo Notes Interest in Y TV Plan Salt Lake Tribune Associated Press April 5 1962 Y Video Station On Air Tonight Salt Lake Tribune November 15 1965 Pierce Scott D October 23 2017 KBYU TV will no longer be a PBS station in 2018 and KBYU FM will abandon classical music The Salt Lake Tribune Retrieved October 23 2017 AncestrySupport Ancestry com RabbitEars TV Query for KBYU DTV Tentative Channel Designations for the First and Second Rounds PDF Archived from the original PDF on August 29 2013 Retrieved March 24 2012 Congress delays digital TV switch until June Utah sticks to original cutoff Vince Horiuchi Archived February 6 2009 at the Wayback Machine Salt Lake Tribune February 4 2009 CDBS Print Kbyu Tv Provo Ut External links editKBYU TV official website Small Fortunes website Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title KBYU TV amp oldid 1212842052, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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