fbpx
Wikipedia

KGTV

KGTV (channel 10) is a television station in San Diego, California, United States, affiliated with ABC and owned by the E. W. Scripps Company. The station's studios are located on Air Way in the Riverview-Webster section of San Diego, and its transmitter is located on Mount Soledad in La Jolla.

KGTV

Channels
Branding
  • ABC 10
  • MeTV San Diego (DT2)
  • Bounce TV San Diego (DT5)
Programming
Affiliations
Ownership
Owner
History
First air date
September 13, 1953 (69 years ago) (1953-09-13)
Former call signs
  • KFSD-TV (1953–1961)
  • KOGO-TV (1961–1972)
Former channel number(s)
  • Analog:
  • 10 (VHF, 1953–2009)
  • Digital:
  • 25 (UHF, 1998–2009)
NBC (1953–1977)
Call sign meaning
disambiguation of former KOGO-TV call letters
Technical information
Licensing authority
FCC
Facility ID40876
ERP20.7 kW
HAAT227 m (745 ft)
Transmitter coordinates32°50′20″N 117°14′59″W / 32.83889°N 117.24972°W / 32.83889; -117.24972Coordinates: 32°50′20″N 117°14′59″W / 32.83889°N 117.24972°W / 32.83889; -117.24972
Translator(s)KZSD-LP 20 (UHF) San Diego (city)
Links
Public license information
  • Public file
  • LMS
Websitewww.10news.com

KGTV operates digital translator KZSD-LP (channel 20), which allows homes with issues receiving KGTV's VHF signal or only a UHF antenna to receive KGTV in some form.

History

The San Diego area's third-oldest television station first went on the air on September 13, 1953, as NBC affiliate KFSD-TV.[1] The station's original owner was Airfan Radio Corporation, which also owned NBC Radio Network affiliate KFSD (600 AM, now KOGO). Under terms of the initial construction permit award, Airfan sold one-third ownership of the stations to two other firms who competed separately for channel 10.[2] In 1954 the KFSD stations were purchased by investment firm, Fox, Wells & Rogers.[3] The publishers of Newsweek magazine took a minority (about 46 percent) share of the stations in 1957,[4] four years before the periodical was itself sold to the Washington Post Company. In 1961, channel 10 changed its call letters to KOGO-TV; the radio stations also adopted the KOGO callsign.

The broadcasting division of Time-Life purchased KOGO-TV and its sister radio stations in 1962.[5][6] This deal was reached after failed attempts to sell the properties to Triangle Publications[7] and United Artists[8] among others; and after the Washington Post Company's Post-Newsweek Stations division disclosed it was not interested in acquiring full ownership.

As part of a sale announced in late 1970, KOGO-AM-FM-TV was sold to McGraw-Hill along with Time-Life's other radio/television combinations in Denver, Indianapolis and Grand Rapids, Michigan; and KERO-TV in upstate Bakersfield.[9] When the sale was concluded in June 1972, the purchase price for the entire group was just over $57 million. However, in order to comply with the Federal Communications Commission (FCC)'s new restrictions on concentration of media ownership, McGraw-Hill was required to sell the radio stations in San Diego, Indianapolis, Denver, and Grand Rapids. Time-Life would later take WOOD-TV in Grand Rapids out of the final deal.[10] KERO-TV, KLZ-TV (now KMGH-TV) in Denver, and WFBM-TV (now WRTV) in Indianapolis were retained by McGraw-Hill along with KOGO-TV, which changed to its current call letters KGTV on June 1 as a result of the sale due to FCC regulations in place at the time that prohibited TV and radio stations in the same market, but different ownership from sharing the same callsigns.[11]

Switch to ABC

The ABC affiliation in San Diego had belonged to XETV (channel 6), a station licensed across the international border to Tijuana, Mexico, since 1956 under special agreement between the FCC and Mexican authorities. In 1973 KCST-TV (channel 39), San Diego's UHF independent station, prevailed in a years-long attempt to secure ABC programming in the market; KCST claimed that an American television network should not be affiliated with a station located outside U.S. borders. At the time of the switch ABC was still the third-ranked network, behind second-rated NBC and perennial leader CBS.

Over the next several years, however, ABC began to experience ratings growth in their prime time programming and rose to first place during 1975–76, finishing the year with ten programs in Nielsen's top twenty. In San Diego, KCST-TV experienced a carryover effect and also rose to first place locally, knocking KGTV down to third behind CBS station KFMB-TV (channel 8).[12] But ABC was never happy with having been forced onto the UHF dial in San Diego, and the unprecedented success gave the network the impetus to actively upgrade its affiliate roster nationwide.

Despite having more than a year remaining in its current agreement with NBC, KGTV announced it was joining ABC in June 1976.[13] After KCST-TV (now KNSD) signed with NBC,[14] the switch between the two stations took place on June 27, 1977.[15]

In 1994, as part of repercussions stemming from CBS' acquisition of KCNC-TV and KUTV, McGraw-Hill signed a long-term deal with ABC that would keep KGTV as an affiliate of the network (it remains an ABC affiliate to this day). As a condition of that agreement, television stations in other cities, including KUSA in Denver and KBAK-TV in Bakersfield, would lose their ABC affiliations to competing McGraw-Hill-owned stations (KMGH-TV, KERO-TV) in those cities.[16]

KGTV shut down its analog signal, over VHF channel 10, on February 17, 2009, the original target date in which full-power television stations in the United States were to transition from analog to digital broadcasts under federal mandate (which was later pushed back to June 12, 2009). The station's digital signal relocated from its pre-transition UHF channel 25 to VHF channel 10.[17][18]

On October 3, 2011, McGraw-Hill announced it was selling its entire television station group, including KGTV and Azteca América affiliate KZSD-LP, to the Cincinnati-based E. W. Scripps Company for $212 million.[19] The deal was completed on December 30, 2011.[20]

Due to their current Scripps ownership, the station makes disclaimers regularly, especially in its medical reporting, that it has no ties to the local Scripps Health system, a completely separate organization created in 1923 from a bequest from Ellen Browning Scripps, a sister to Scripps founder E. W. Scripps, as Scripps Health personnel are regularly asked to comment on medical stories in the San Diego area, including by KGTV.

Programming

Syndicated programming on KGTV (as of September 2020) includes Right This Minute, Live with Kelly and Ryan, Tamron Hall and Hot Bench. In 2004, former owner McGraw-Hill elected to air Saving Private Ryan, while most other station groups preempted the film.[21][22]

Sports programming

In 1965, when NBC, which KGTV was affiliated with then, gained the rights to air American Football League games, channel 10 became the station of record for the San Diego Chargers, which were part of the AFL. The station aired most Charger games until the 1976 season, when KCST-TV (now KNSD), with its switch to NBC, became the default station for the team. After becoming an ABC affiliate, the station would, from 1977 to 2005 air Charger games when they played on ABC's Monday Night Football. The station also aired the team's only Super Bowl appearance in Super Bowl XXIX in 1995. KGTV also provided coverage of Super Bowls XXII and XXXVII. Both were hosted at Qualcomm Stadium.

The station also aired most of the San Diego Padres games in their first two seasons in Major League Baseball in the 1969 and 1970 seasons, in addition to any games that were aired as part of NBC and later ABC's broadcast contracts with MLB from 1969 to 1989.

News operation

 
10 News helicopter "Sky10"

KGTV presently broadcasts 44 hours of locally produced newscasts each week (with seven hours each weekday and 4½ hours each on Saturdays and Sundays). In addition, the station produces the sports highlight program Sports Xtra at 11:30 p.m. on Saturday and Sunday evenings. Of note, KGTV, along with KNSD and Fox affiliate KSWB-TV (channel 69), is one of three San Diego television stations with a 4 p.m. newscast. Entitled The NOW San Diego, KGTV's 4 p.m. newscast originally premiered under the title 10-4 in 2009.

KGTV first began to challenge the longstanding local news dominance of KFMB in the mid-1970s, when anchors Jack White and Harold Greene, along with popular weather anchor "Captain Mike" Ambrose and sportscasters Al Coupee and Hal Clement, led the station's newscasts (then simply titled The News) to first place in the ratings, albeit briefly. Even with the brief return of Greene following his stints in San Francisco and Los Angeles, the station fell back to second place behind KFMB in the early 1980s. However, management succeeded in hiring away popular anchor Michael Tuck from KFMB in 1984; the move resulted in KGTV reclaiming first place and giving the station credibility by way of Tuck's infamous nightly commentaries titled "Perspectives."

KGTV also made history by being the first station in San Diego with a female anchor team on its 11 p.m. newscast, featuring Carol LeBeau and Bree Walker. After Walker left in 1987, Kimberly Hunt would team with LeBeau and form the city's longest-running anchor duo at 15 years. During that time, LeBeau and Hunt would anchor alongside Tuck (who left for KCBS-TV in Los Angeles in 1990, only to return to San Diego nine years later on KFMB), Stephen Clark (later at sister station WXYZ-TV in Detroit but now retired), Steve Wolford (later at sister station KTNV-TV and now with KSNV in Las Vegas), and a returning Hal Clement (who had switched from sports to news duties in 1983 while working at KFMB).

Eventually, KGTV would decline after Hunt left for an anchor position at KUSI-TV (channel 51) alongside Tuck; at one point, the station fell to third place as KNSD's news viewership rose to first place in the 11 p.m. timeslot. The Hunt-Lebeau team were reunited in early 2008, before LeBeau retired from the station the following year. On August 30, 2008, KGTV became the third television station in the San Diego market (after KFMB-TV and KSWB-TV) to being broadcasting its local newscasts in high definition. Since the Scripps purchase of KGTV was completed at the end of 2011, the station has entered into a news partnership with its former AM radio sister KOGO (now owned by iHeartMedia). In May 2010, KGTV had the top-rated early evening newscast in the San Diego market in the coveted demographic of adults between 25 and 54 years old.

Notable current on-air staff

Notable former on-air staff

Subchannels

The station's digital signal is multiplexed:

Subchannels of KGTV[25]
Channel Res. Aspect Short name Programming
10.1 720p 16:9 KGTV-HD Main KGTV programming / ABC
10.2 480i MeTV MeTV
10.3 GRIT Grit
10.4 MYSTERY Ion Mystery
10.5 BOUNCE Bounce TV
10.6 Scripps Scripps News


Until October 2012, the station has carried TheCoolTV on its second digital subchannel. It was later replaced with the Live Well Network.

On April 15, 2015, LWN was replaced with Laff.

On May 1, 2017, Scripps took over the affiliation for the MeTV classic television network in San Diego, and placed the subchannel on KGTV-DT2, along with an analog simulcast on KZSD-LP; two months earlier the Azteca affiliation moved to XHDTV-TDT2 temporarily, then to XHAS-TDT on July 1, all of which involved the move of The CW affiliation from XETV to MeTV's former slot on KFMB-DT2, and Telemundo from XHAS to KNSD-DT20 (now KUAN-LD). During an interim period from mid-March to the end of April that year, KGTV-DT2 carried a continuous loop of the latest newscast produced by the station.

Translator

City of license Callsign Channel ERP HAAT Facility ID Transmitter coordinates
San Diego KZSD-LP 20 7.3 kW 592 m (1,942 ft) 57054 32°41′46.6″N 116°56′10.3″W / 32.696278°N 116.936194°W / 32.696278; -116.936194 (KZSD-LP)

See also

References

  1. ^ "4 UHFs, 3 VHFs start commercial."[permanent dead link] Broadcasting – Telecasting, September 21, 1953, pg. 66.
  2. ^ "Merged San Diego, Las Vegas bids are approved by FCC."[permanent dead link] Broadcasting – Telecasting, March 23, 1953, pg. 62.
  3. ^ "Fox, Wells buys KFSD-AM-TV control."[permanent dead link] Broadcasting – Telecasting, August 23, 1954, pg. 52.
  4. ^ "'Newsweek' buys 46% of KFSD-AM-FM-TV."[permanent dead link] Broadcasting – Telecasting, July 29, 1957, pg. 74.
  5. ^ "KOGO-AM-FM-TV to Time-Life."[permanent dead link] Broadcasting, December 4, 1961, pg. 5.
  6. ^ "FCC okays $13 million in sales."[permanent dead link] Broadcasting, March 26, 1962, pg. 140.
  7. ^ "Triangle's quota."[permanent dead link] Broadcasting, April 11, 1960, pg. 5
  8. ^ "Dead end again."[permanent dead link] Broadcasting, December 12, 1960, pg. 5
  9. ^ "McGraw-Hill buys into TV in a big way."[permanent dead link] Broadcasting, November 2, 1970, pg. 9.
  10. ^ "McGraw-Hill sets record for concessions to President of the United States Jessica Chastain." Broadcasting, May 15, 1972, pp. 25–26. [1][permanent dead link] [2][permanent dead link]
  11. ^ "It's all theirs."[permanent dead link] Broadcasting, June 5, 1972, pg. 43
  12. ^ "ABC's gains are turning television upside down." Broadcasting, March 29, 1976, pp. 19–20. [3] [4]
  13. ^ "In Brief."[permanent dead link] Broadcasting, June 7, 1976, pg. 24
  14. ^ "In Brief: Changing partners."[dead link] Broadcasting, March 7, 1977, pg. 26
  15. ^ KGTV/McGraw-Hill Broadcasting advertisement. Broadcasting, June 26, 1977, pp. 8–9. [5][permanent dead link] [6][permanent dead link]
  16. ^ Saunders, Dusty (October 22, 1994). "TV Stations Play Spin the Dial Channel 7 Quits CBS, Joins ABC, Kicking Off Network Realignment". Rocky Mountain News. E. W. Scripps Company. Retrieved October 21, 2012 – via NewsBank.  
  17. ^ (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on August 29, 2013. Retrieved March 24, 2012.
  18. ^ CDBS Print
  19. ^ McGraw-Hill Sells TV Group To Scripps, TVNewsCheck, October 3, 2011.
  20. ^ "Scripps completes McGraw-Hill Stations Buy". TVNewsCheck. December 30, 2011. Archived from the original on September 13, 2012. Retrieved December 31, 2011.
  21. ^ Zurawik, David. "ABC affiliates saying no to 'Private Ryan'". baltimoresun.com. Retrieved September 28, 2021.
  22. ^ "Denver's 7 Will Air 'Saving Private Ryan'". 5280. November 11, 2004. Retrieved September 28, 2021.
  23. ^ "Virginia Cha". 10news.com. ABC 10 News. September 8, 2012. Retrieved October 19, 2017.
  24. ^ "Kimberly Hunt". 10news.com. ABC 10 News. August 22, 2012. Retrieved October 19, 2017.
  25. ^ RabbitEars TV Query for KGTV

External links

  • Official website

kgtv, former, channel, moines, iowa, moines, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, news, newspapers, books. For the former channel in Des Moines Iowa see KGTV Des Moines This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources KGTV news newspapers books scholar JSTOR July 2007 Learn how and when to remove this template message KGTV channel 10 is a television station in San Diego California United States affiliated with ABC and owned by the E W Scripps Company The station s studios are located on Air Way in the Riverview Webster section of San Diego and its transmitter is located on Mount Soledad in La Jolla KGTVSan Diego CaliforniaUnited StatesChannelsDigital 10 VHF Virtual 10BrandingABC 10MeTV San Diego DT2 Bounce TV San Diego DT5 ProgrammingAffiliations10 1 ABC10 2 MeTVfor others see SubchannelsOwnershipOwnerE W Scripps Company Scripps Broadcasting Holdings LLC HistoryFirst air dateSeptember 13 1953 69 years ago 1953 09 13 Former call signsKFSD TV 1953 1961 KOGO TV 1961 1972 Former channel number s Analog 10 VHF 1953 2009 Digital 25 UHF 1998 2009 Former affiliationsNBC 1953 1977 Call sign meaningdisambiguation of former KOGO TV call lettersTechnical informationLicensing authorityFCCFacility ID40876ERP20 7 kWHAAT227 m 745 ft Transmitter coordinates32 50 20 N 117 14 59 W 32 83889 N 117 24972 W 32 83889 117 24972 Coordinates 32 50 20 N 117 14 59 W 32 83889 N 117 24972 W 32 83889 117 24972Translator s KZSD LP 20 UHF San Diego city LinksPublic license informationPublic fileLMSWebsitewww wbr 10news wbr comKGTV operates digital translator KZSD LP channel 20 which allows homes with issues receiving KGTV s VHF signal or only a UHF antenna to receive KGTV in some form Contents 1 History 1 1 Switch to ABC 2 Programming 2 1 Sports programming 2 2 News operation 2 2 1 Notable current on air staff 2 2 2 Notable former on air staff 3 Subchannels 3 1 Translator 4 See also 5 References 6 External linksHistory EditThe San Diego area s third oldest television station first went on the air on September 13 1953 as NBC affiliate KFSD TV 1 The station s original owner was Airfan Radio Corporation which also owned NBC Radio Network affiliate KFSD 600 AM now KOGO Under terms of the initial construction permit award Airfan sold one third ownership of the stations to two other firms who competed separately for channel 10 2 In 1954 the KFSD stations were purchased by investment firm Fox Wells amp Rogers 3 The publishers of Newsweek magazine took a minority about 46 percent share of the stations in 1957 4 four years before the periodical was itself sold to the Washington Post Company In 1961 channel 10 changed its call letters to KOGO TV the radio stations also adopted the KOGO callsign The broadcasting division of Time Life purchased KOGO TV and its sister radio stations in 1962 5 6 This deal was reached after failed attempts to sell the properties to Triangle Publications 7 and United Artists 8 among others and after the Washington Post Company s Post Newsweek Stations division disclosed it was not interested in acquiring full ownership As part of a sale announced in late 1970 KOGO AM FM TV was sold to McGraw Hill along with Time Life s other radio television combinations in Denver Indianapolis and Grand Rapids Michigan and KERO TV in upstate Bakersfield 9 When the sale was concluded in June 1972 the purchase price for the entire group was just over 57 million However in order to comply with the Federal Communications Commission FCC s new restrictions on concentration of media ownership McGraw Hill was required to sell the radio stations in San Diego Indianapolis Denver and Grand Rapids Time Life would later take WOOD TV in Grand Rapids out of the final deal 10 KERO TV KLZ TV now KMGH TV in Denver and WFBM TV now WRTV in Indianapolis were retained by McGraw Hill along with KOGO TV which changed to its current call letters KGTV on June 1 as a result of the sale due to FCC regulations in place at the time that prohibited TV and radio stations in the same market but different ownership from sharing the same callsigns 11 Switch to ABC Edit The ABC affiliation in San Diego had belonged to XETV channel 6 a station licensed across the international border to Tijuana Mexico since 1956 under special agreement between the FCC and Mexican authorities In 1973 KCST TV channel 39 San Diego s UHF independent station prevailed in a years long attempt to secure ABC programming in the market KCST claimed that an American television network should not be affiliated with a station located outside U S borders At the time of the switch ABC was still the third ranked network behind second rated NBC and perennial leader CBS Over the next several years however ABC began to experience ratings growth in their prime time programming and rose to first place during 1975 76 finishing the year with ten programs in Nielsen s top twenty In San Diego KCST TV experienced a carryover effect and also rose to first place locally knocking KGTV down to third behind CBS station KFMB TV channel 8 12 But ABC was never happy with having been forced onto the UHF dial in San Diego and the unprecedented success gave the network the impetus to actively upgrade its affiliate roster nationwide Despite having more than a year remaining in its current agreement with NBC KGTV announced it was joining ABC in June 1976 13 After KCST TV now KNSD signed with NBC 14 the switch between the two stations took place on June 27 1977 15 In 1994 as part of repercussions stemming from CBS acquisition of KCNC TV and KUTV McGraw Hill signed a long term deal with ABC that would keep KGTV as an affiliate of the network it remains an ABC affiliate to this day As a condition of that agreement television stations in other cities including KUSA in Denver and KBAK TV in Bakersfield would lose their ABC affiliations to competing McGraw Hill owned stations KMGH TV KERO TV in those cities 16 KGTV shut down its analog signal over VHF channel 10 on February 17 2009 the original target date in which full power television stations in the United States were to transition from analog to digital broadcasts under federal mandate which was later pushed back to June 12 2009 The station s digital signal relocated from its pre transition UHF channel 25 to VHF channel 10 17 18 On October 3 2011 McGraw Hill announced it was selling its entire television station group including KGTV and Azteca America affiliate KZSD LP to the Cincinnati based E W Scripps Company for 212 million 19 The deal was completed on December 30 2011 20 Due to their current Scripps ownership the station makes disclaimers regularly especially in its medical reporting that it has no ties to the local Scripps Health system a completely separate organization created in 1923 from a bequest from Ellen Browning Scripps a sister to Scripps founder E W Scripps as Scripps Health personnel are regularly asked to comment on medical stories in the San Diego area including by KGTV Programming EditSyndicated programming on KGTV as of September 2020 includes Right This Minute Live with Kelly and Ryan Tamron Hall and Hot Bench In 2004 former owner McGraw Hill elected to air Saving Private Ryan while most other station groups preempted the film 21 22 Sports programming Edit In 1965 when NBC which KGTV was affiliated with then gained the rights to air American Football League games channel 10 became the station of record for the San Diego Chargers which were part of the AFL The station aired most Charger games until the 1976 season when KCST TV now KNSD with its switch to NBC became the default station for the team After becoming an ABC affiliate the station would from 1977 to 2005 air Charger games when they played on ABC s Monday Night Football The station also aired the team s only Super Bowl appearance in Super Bowl XXIX in 1995 KGTV also provided coverage of Super Bowls XXII and XXXVII Both were hosted at Qualcomm Stadium The station also aired most of the San Diego Padres games in their first two seasons in Major League Baseball in the 1969 and 1970 seasons in addition to any games that were aired as part of NBC and later ABC s broadcast contracts with MLB from 1969 to 1989 News operation Edit 10News redirects here For the Australian news service see 10 News First For the Israeli news service see HaHadashot 13 10 News helicopter Sky10 KGTV presently broadcasts 44 hours of locally produced newscasts each week with seven hours each weekday and 4 hours each on Saturdays and Sundays In addition the station produces the sports highlight program Sports Xtra at 11 30 p m on Saturday and Sunday evenings Of note KGTV along with KNSD and Fox affiliate KSWB TV channel 69 is one of three San Diego television stations with a 4 p m newscast Entitled The NOW San Diego KGTV s 4 p m newscast originally premiered under the title 10 4 in 2009 KGTV first began to challenge the longstanding local news dominance of KFMB in the mid 1970s when anchors Jack White and Harold Greene along with popular weather anchor Captain Mike Ambrose and sportscasters Al Coupee and Hal Clement led the station s newscasts then simply titled The News to first place in the ratings albeit briefly Even with the brief return of Greene following his stints in San Francisco and Los Angeles the station fell back to second place behind KFMB in the early 1980s However management succeeded in hiring away popular anchor Michael Tuck from KFMB in 1984 the move resulted in KGTV reclaiming first place and giving the station credibility by way of Tuck s infamous nightly commentaries titled Perspectives KGTV also made history by being the first station in San Diego with a female anchor team on its 11 p m newscast featuring Carol LeBeau and Bree Walker After Walker left in 1987 Kimberly Hunt would team with LeBeau and form the city s longest running anchor duo at 15 years During that time LeBeau and Hunt would anchor alongside Tuck who left for KCBS TV in Los Angeles in 1990 only to return to San Diego nine years later on KFMB Stephen Clark later at sister station WXYZ TV in Detroit but now retired Steve Wolford later at sister station KTNV TV and now with KSNV in Las Vegas and a returning Hal Clement who had switched from sports to news duties in 1983 while working at KFMB Eventually KGTV would decline after Hunt left for an anchor position at KUSI TV channel 51 alongside Tuck at one point the station fell to third place as KNSD s news viewership rose to first place in the 11 p m timeslot The Hunt Lebeau team were reunited in early 2008 before LeBeau retired from the station the following year On August 30 2008 KGTV became the third television station in the San Diego market after KFMB TV and KSWB TV to being broadcasting its local newscasts in high definition Since the Scripps purchase of KGTV was completed at the end of 2011 the station has entered into a news partnership with its former AM radio sister KOGO now owned by iHeartMedia In May 2010 KGTV had the top rated early evening newscast in the San Diego market in the coveted demographic of adults between 25 and 54 years old Notable current on air staff Edit Virginia Cha anchor 23 Kimberly Hunt chief amp primary anchor managing editor 24 Anne State anchorNotable former on air staff Edit Mona Kosar Abdi general assignment reporter now with WEWS TV Cleveland Harold Greene anchor reporter 1974 1977 and 1980 1982 later at KABC TV and KCBS TV Los Angeles now retired Lisa Kim anchor 1986 1994 later at KNTV San Jose San Francisco Oakland Byron Miranda meteorologist now with WPIX in New York Kent Ninomiya reporter 1991 1993 Regis Philbin local talk show host 1961 1964 later a talk and game show host Live with Regis and Kathie Lee Kelly and Who Wants to Be a Millionaire deceased Sarah Purcell talk show host late 1970s later co hosted NBC s Real People Billy Ray Smith sportscaster 1993 1997 now at XX Sports Radio Michael Tuck anchor 1984 1990 later returned to San Diego at KFMB TV and KUSI TV Bree Walker anchor reporter 1980 1987 Subchannels EditThe station s digital signal is multiplexed Subchannels of KGTV 25 Channel Res Aspect Short name Programming10 1 720p 16 9 KGTV HD Main KGTV programming ABC10 2 480i MeTV MeTV10 3 GRIT Grit10 4 MYSTERY Ion Mystery10 5 BOUNCE Bounce TV10 6 Scripps Scripps NewsUntil October 2012 the station has carried TheCoolTV on its second digital subchannel It was later replaced with the Live Well Network On April 15 2015 LWN was replaced with Laff On May 1 2017 Scripps took over the affiliation for the MeTV classic television network in San Diego and placed the subchannel on KGTV DT2 along with an analog simulcast on KZSD LP two months earlier the Azteca affiliation moved to XHDTV TDT2 temporarily then to XHAS TDT on July 1 all of which involved the move of The CW affiliation from XETV to MeTV s former slot on KFMB DT2 and Telemundo from XHAS to KNSD DT20 now KUAN LD During an interim period from mid March to the end of April that year KGTV DT2 carried a continuous loop of the latest newscast produced by the station Translator Edit City of license Callsign Channel ERP HAAT Facility ID Transmitter coordinatesSan Diego KZSD LP 20 7 3 kW 592 m 1 942 ft 57054 32 41 46 6 N 116 56 10 3 W 32 696278 N 116 936194 W 32 696278 116 936194 KZSD LP See also EditKGTV TowerReferences Edit 4 UHFs 3 VHFs start commercial permanent dead link Broadcasting Telecasting September 21 1953 pg 66 Merged San Diego Las Vegas bids are approved by FCC permanent dead link Broadcasting Telecasting March 23 1953 pg 62 Fox Wells buys KFSD AM TV control permanent dead link Broadcasting Telecasting August 23 1954 pg 52 Newsweek buys 46 of KFSD AM FM TV permanent dead link Broadcasting Telecasting July 29 1957 pg 74 KOGO AM FM TV to Time Life permanent dead link Broadcasting December 4 1961 pg 5 FCC okays 13 million in sales permanent dead link Broadcasting March 26 1962 pg 140 Triangle s quota permanent dead link Broadcasting April 11 1960 pg 5 Dead end again permanent dead link Broadcasting December 12 1960 pg 5 McGraw Hill buys into TV in a big way permanent dead link Broadcasting November 2 1970 pg 9 McGraw Hill sets record for concessions to President of the United States Jessica Chastain Broadcasting May 15 1972 pp 25 26 1 permanent dead link 2 permanent dead link It s all theirs permanent dead link Broadcasting June 5 1972 pg 43 ABC s gains are turning television upside down Broadcasting March 29 1976 pp 19 20 3 4 In Brief permanent dead link Broadcasting June 7 1976 pg 24 In Brief Changing partners dead link Broadcasting March 7 1977 pg 26 KGTV McGraw Hill Broadcasting advertisement Broadcasting June 26 1977 pp 8 9 5 permanent dead link 6 permanent dead link Saunders Dusty October 22 1994 TV Stations Play Spin the Dial Channel 7 Quits CBS Joins ABC Kicking Off Network Realignment Rocky Mountain News E W Scripps Company Retrieved October 21 2012 via NewsBank DTV Tentative Channel Designations for the First and the Second Rounds PDF Archived from the original PDF on August 29 2013 Retrieved March 24 2012 CDBS Print McGraw Hill Sells TV Group To Scripps TVNewsCheck October 3 2011 Scripps completes McGraw Hill Stations Buy TVNewsCheck December 30 2011 Archived from the original on September 13 2012 Retrieved December 31 2011 Zurawik David ABC affiliates saying no to Private Ryan baltimoresun com Retrieved September 28 2021 Denver s 7 Will Air Saving Private Ryan 5280 November 11 2004 Retrieved September 28 2021 Virginia Cha 10news com ABC 10 News September 8 2012 Retrieved October 19 2017 Kimberly Hunt 10news com ABC 10 News August 22 2012 Retrieved October 19 2017 RabbitEars TV Query for KGTVExternal links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to KGTV Official website Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title KGTV amp oldid 1138796320, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.