fbpx
Wikipedia

WPXS

WPXS (channel 13) is a religious television station licensed to Mount Vernon, Illinois, United States (a city within the Paducah, KentuckyCape Girardeau, MissouriHarrisburg, Illinois television market), but primarily serving the St. Louis market. The station is owned and operated by the Daystar Television Network. WPXS' transmitter is located on Five Forks Road near New Athens, Illinois.

WPXS
CityMount Vernon, Illinois
Channels
Programming
Affiliations
Ownership
Owner
History
First air date
February 28, 1983 (40 years ago) (1983-02-28)
Former call signs
WCEE (1983–1998)
Former channel number(s)
  • Analog: 13 (VHF, 1983–2009)
  • Digital: 21 (UHF, until 2020)
Call sign meaning
  • Pax Southern Illinois
  • -or-
  • Pax St. Louis (after former owner and network affiliation)
Technical information[1]
Licensing authority
FCC
Facility ID40861
ERP160 kW
HAAT163 m (535 ft)
Transmitter coordinates38°21′53.6″N 89°53′23.5″W / 38.364889°N 89.889861°W / 38.364889; -89.889861
Translator(s)KUMO-LD 51 St. Louis
Links
Public license information
  • Public file
  • LMS

History edit

Southern Illinois's independent edit

Channel 13 at Mount Vernon—the last VHF television allocation in southern Illinois, added in 1970 after a years-long fight that depleted the resources of the aspiring station owners[2]—emerged as a bone of contention when the Southern Illinois Broadcasting Corporation, a subsidiary of Evans Broadcasting, was granted a construction permit in 1979. Southern Illinois Broadcasting had been one of three competing applicants for the channel, alongside a group of local businessmen and Bill Varecha, owner of Murphysboro radio station WTAO, under the name Pyramid Broadcasting Corporation. Evans fueled a prolonged legal fight that prompted Varecha to reach a settlement agreement. However, opposition arose because Evans Broadcasting owned St. Louis independent station KDNL-TV and intended for channel 13 to repeat it 95 percent of the time. A local landowner who owned a strategically located parcel that Evans considered for the transmitter refused to lease it.[2] The landowner and others formed the Citizens Committee for Independent Local Television in Southern Illinois to oppose the grant of the permit. Evans argued that Mount Vernon, a town with a population of 18,000, could not sustain the station, and that national advertising revenues would be poor since the station would be located in the St. Louis market without covering St. Louis.[2]

Evans pressed ahead despite the opposition. It had segments of a 1,000 ft (300 m) tower waiting at a site near Salem when the FCC, responding to the Citizens Committee's appeals, rescinded the grant of the permit. In early 1980, however, it sold KDNL-TV and announced it was pulling out of contention for channel 13, saying it wanted to avoid "years of litigation".[3] The Pyramid application was reinstated in 1981, and in June 1982, the FCC granted it a construction permit.[4]

WCEE, known on air as "C-13", began broadcasting February 28, 1983. Its program schedule heavily emphasized programming of interest to southern Illinois viewers that St. Louis stations did not offer; channel 13 aired the Chicago White Sox, Chicago Cubs, and Illinois high school and college sports, and it started a local news department.[5] After operating the station nearly three years, Pyramid sold WCEE to Sudbrink Broadcasting for $3.6 million in late 1985.[6] The sale of the station, which was struggling with cable carriage but financially successful, raised capital for Varecha to build television stations in Melbourne, Florida, and Paducah, Kentucky; it also marked Sudbrink's first television property.[7]

Under Sudbrink, the station remained an independent airing programming oriented to southern Illinois. In 1994, WCEE was purchased by McEntee Broadcasting for $1.475 million.[8]

Pax years edit

 
Earlier possible non-broadcast logo.

Christian Network, a company backed by Lowell Paxson, bought WCEE from McEntee in 1995 for $3.2 million, representing a doubling of the purchase price McEntee had paid just a year prior.[9] A year later, WCEE and three other Christian Network stations were sold to Paxson Communications—the forerunner of Ion Media Networks—for $18.3 million.[10]

As part of the launch of the Pax TV network in 1998, WCEE became the designated St. Louis station. It changed its call sign to the current WPXS and began simulcasting on a translator in St. Louis, KUMO-LP (channel 40, later 51). The WPXS transmitter, which was located north of Kell, Illinois, was close enough to St. Louis to cover most of the Illinois portion of the St. Louis market; St. Louis itself was served by KUMO-LP.

Equity and Daystar edit

In 2004, the station affiliated with the Daystar religious broadcast network. The following year, Equity Broadcasting bought the station from Paxson; WPXS subsequently rejoined Pax (which rebranded as i: Independent Television that summer, and then to Ion Television in 2007).

In 2005, WPXS affiliated with the Retro Television Network, a network owned by Equity at the time. By this time, the bulk of the station's audience was located in St. Louis. In 2010, Daystar purchased WPXS outright; this resulted in the station switching back to the network on August 12 of that year. With that move, DirecTV pulled WPXS from its St. Louis local station lineup on September 11, 2010, as WPXS had become a straight simulcast of Daystar's national feed (unlike fellow religious network, TBN, Daystar's television stations do not produce any local programming). On Dish Network, the provider lists Daystar programming as airing on WPXS, though the provider continues to offer the Retro Television Network feed.

Technical information edit

The station's digital signal is multiplexed:

Subchannels of WPXS[11]
Channel Res. Aspect Short name Programming
13.1 1080i 16:9 Daystar Daystar
13.2 480i Retro-T Retro TV
13.3 4:3 WPXS-ES Daystar Español
13.4 16:9 WPXS-SD SD simulcast of 13.1
Subchannels of KUMO-LD[12]
Channel Res. Aspect Short name Programming
51.1 720p 16:9 KUMO Daystar
51.2 480i D-Latin Daystar Español
51.3 4:3 Retro Retro TV

Analog-to-digital conversion edit

WPXS opted to build its digital transmitter in Saint Rose, Illinois, which is part of the St. Louis market. The station shut down its analog signal, over VHF channel 13, on April 30, 2009. The station's digital signal continued to broadcast on its pre-transition UHF channel 21,[13] using virtual channel 13.

The station's signal now covers areas of the St. Louis market east of the Mississippi River, including Belleville, Edwardsville and Alton, Illinois. After the switchover, the broadcast radius of WPXS' digital signal covered a smaller area than the former analog signal, resulting in the loss of the station's reception to nearly 93,000 viewers in Effingham, Clay and Wayne counties and large portions of Franklin, Hamilton, Jefferson, Jasper, Richland and Shelby counties in Illinois. KUMO-LD flash-cut its digital signal into operation in June 2011, without an RTV subchannel. Although WPXS' digital transmitter creates redundancies with KUMO-LP on the Illinois side of the St. Louis market, the transmitter still provides only rimshot coverage of the Missouri side of the market, most likely due to the need to protect the transmitter of KRCG in Jefferson City on nearby digital channel 12.

References edit

  1. ^ "Facility Technical Data for WPXS". Licensing and Management System. Federal Communications Commission.
  2. ^ a b c Bean, Ed (August 19, 1979). "Will proposed area TV outlet be more than satellite?". The Southern Illinoisan. p. 27. Retrieved December 20, 2020.
  3. ^ Bean, Ed (February 24, 1980). "Independent TV Channel 13—A step nearer to reality?". The Southern Illinoisan. p. 28. Retrieved December 20, 2020.
  4. ^ Koplowitz, H.B. (June 18, 1982). "Carbondale man gets permit for TV channel". The Southern Illinoisan. p. 3. Retrieved December 20, 2020.
  5. ^ Monroe, Cathy A. (February 27, 1983). "WCEE: Newest TV station gets ready for airwaves". The Southern Illinoisan. pp. 1, 2. Retrieved December 20, 2020.
  6. ^ "Changing Hands" (PDF). Broadcasting. September 30, 1985. p. 109. Retrieved December 20, 2020.
  7. ^ DeWitte, Dave (October 20, 1985). "Varecha sells WCEE-TV". The Southern Illinoisan. p. 12. Retrieved December 20, 2020.
  8. ^ "Special Report: Station sales encore in '94" (PDF). Broadcasting & Cable. February 27, 1995. p. 45. Retrieved December 20, 2020.
  9. ^ "WCEE(TV) Mount Vernon, Ill./St. Louis" (PDF). Broadcasting & Cable. September 18, 1995. p. 35. Retrieved December 20, 2020.
  10. ^ "Changing Hands" (PDF). Broadcasting & Cable. p. 30. Retrieved December 20, 2020.
  11. ^ RabbitEars TV Query for WPXS
  12. ^ "Digital TV Market Listing for KUMO-LD". rabbitears.info. Retrieved December 15, 2022.
  13. ^ (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on August 29, 2013. Retrieved March 24, 2012.

External links edit

  • FCC Decision on WCEE must-carry in the St. Louis area

wpxs, channel, religious, television, station, licensed, mount, vernon, illinois, united, states, city, within, paducah, kentucky, cape, girardeau, missouri, harrisburg, illinois, television, market, primarily, serving, louis, market, station, owned, operated,. WPXS channel 13 is a religious television station licensed to Mount Vernon Illinois United States a city within the Paducah Kentucky Cape Girardeau Missouri Harrisburg Illinois television market but primarily serving the St Louis market The station is owned and operated by the Daystar Television Network WPXS transmitter is located on Five Forks Road near New Athens Illinois WPXSMount Vernon IllinoisSt Louis MissouriUnited StatesCityMount Vernon IllinoisChannelsDigital 13 VHF Virtual 13ProgrammingAffiliations13 1 Daystar13 2 Retro TVOwnershipOwnerDaystar Television Network Word of God Fellowship Inc HistoryFirst air dateFebruary 28 1983 40 years ago 1983 02 28 Former call signsWCEE 1983 1998 Former channel number s Analog 13 VHF 1983 2009 Digital 21 UHF until 2020 Former affiliationsIndependent 1983 1998 Pax i Ion 1998 2004 Daystar 2004 2005 Retro TV 2005 2010 Call sign meaningPax Southern Illinois or Pax St Louis after former owner and network affiliation Technical information 1 Licensing authorityFCCFacility ID40861ERP160 kWHAAT163 m 535 ft Transmitter coordinates38 21 53 6 N 89 53 23 5 W 38 364889 N 89 889861 W 38 364889 89 889861Translator s KUMO LD 51 St LouisLinksPublic license informationPublic fileLMS Contents 1 History 1 1 Southern Illinois s independent 1 2 Pax years 1 3 Equity and Daystar 2 Technical information 2 1 Analog to digital conversion 3 References 4 External linksHistory editSouthern Illinois s independent edit Channel 13 at Mount Vernon the last VHF television allocation in southern Illinois added in 1970 after a years long fight that depleted the resources of the aspiring station owners 2 emerged as a bone of contention when the Southern Illinois Broadcasting Corporation a subsidiary of Evans Broadcasting was granted a construction permit in 1979 Southern Illinois Broadcasting had been one of three competing applicants for the channel alongside a group of local businessmen and Bill Varecha owner of Murphysboro radio station WTAO under the name Pyramid Broadcasting Corporation Evans fueled a prolonged legal fight that prompted Varecha to reach a settlement agreement However opposition arose because Evans Broadcasting owned St Louis independent station KDNL TV and intended for channel 13 to repeat it 95 percent of the time A local landowner who owned a strategically located parcel that Evans considered for the transmitter refused to lease it 2 The landowner and others formed the Citizens Committee for Independent Local Television in Southern Illinois to oppose the grant of the permit Evans argued that Mount Vernon a town with a population of 18 000 could not sustain the station and that national advertising revenues would be poor since the station would be located in the St Louis market without covering St Louis 2 Evans pressed ahead despite the opposition It had segments of a 1 000 ft 300 m tower waiting at a site near Salem when the FCC responding to the Citizens Committee s appeals rescinded the grant of the permit In early 1980 however it sold KDNL TV and announced it was pulling out of contention for channel 13 saying it wanted to avoid years of litigation 3 The Pyramid application was reinstated in 1981 and in June 1982 the FCC granted it a construction permit 4 WCEE known on air as C 13 began broadcasting February 28 1983 Its program schedule heavily emphasized programming of interest to southern Illinois viewers that St Louis stations did not offer channel 13 aired the Chicago White Sox Chicago Cubs and Illinois high school and college sports and it started a local news department 5 After operating the station nearly three years Pyramid sold WCEE to Sudbrink Broadcasting for 3 6 million in late 1985 6 The sale of the station which was struggling with cable carriage but financially successful raised capital for Varecha to build television stations in Melbourne Florida and Paducah Kentucky it also marked Sudbrink s first television property 7 Under Sudbrink the station remained an independent airing programming oriented to southern Illinois In 1994 WCEE was purchased by McEntee Broadcasting for 1 475 million 8 Pax years edit nbsp Earlier possible non broadcast logo Christian Network a company backed by Lowell Paxson bought WCEE from McEntee in 1995 for 3 2 million representing a doubling of the purchase price McEntee had paid just a year prior 9 A year later WCEE and three other Christian Network stations were sold to Paxson Communications the forerunner of Ion Media Networks for 18 3 million 10 As part of the launch of the Pax TV network in 1998 WCEE became the designated St Louis station It changed its call sign to the current WPXS and began simulcasting on a translator in St Louis KUMO LP channel 40 later 51 The WPXS transmitter which was located north of Kell Illinois was close enough to St Louis to cover most of the Illinois portion of the St Louis market St Louis itself was served by KUMO LP Equity and Daystar edit In 2004 the station affiliated with the Daystar religious broadcast network The following year Equity Broadcasting bought the station from Paxson WPXS subsequently rejoined Pax which rebranded as i Independent Television that summer and then to Ion Television in 2007 In 2005 WPXS affiliated with the Retro Television Network a network owned by Equity at the time By this time the bulk of the station s audience was located in St Louis In 2010 Daystar purchased WPXS outright this resulted in the station switching back to the network on August 12 of that year With that move DirecTV pulled WPXS from its St Louis local station lineup on September 11 2010 as WPXS had become a straight simulcast of Daystar s national feed unlike fellow religious network TBN Daystar s television stations do not produce any local programming On Dish Network the provider lists Daystar programming as airing on WPXS though the provider continues to offer the Retro Television Network feed Technical information editThe station s digital signal is multiplexed Subchannels of WPXS 11 Channel Res Aspect Short name Programming13 1 1080i 16 9 Daystar Daystar13 2 480i Retro T Retro TV13 3 4 3 WPXS ES Daystar Espanol13 4 16 9 WPXS SD SD simulcast of 13 1Subchannels of KUMO LD 12 Channel Res Aspect Short name Programming51 1 720p 16 9 KUMO Daystar51 2 480i D Latin Daystar Espanol51 3 4 3 Retro Retro TVAnalog to digital conversion edit WPXS opted to build its digital transmitter in Saint Rose Illinois which is part of the St Louis market The station shut down its analog signal over VHF channel 13 on April 30 2009 The station s digital signal continued to broadcast on its pre transition UHF channel 21 13 using virtual channel 13 The station s signal now covers areas of the St Louis market east of the Mississippi River including Belleville Edwardsville and Alton Illinois After the switchover the broadcast radius of WPXS digital signal covered a smaller area than the former analog signal resulting in the loss of the station s reception to nearly 93 000 viewers in Effingham Clay and Wayne counties and large portions of Franklin Hamilton Jefferson Jasper Richland and Shelby counties in Illinois KUMO LD flash cut its digital signal into operation in June 2011 without an RTV subchannel Although WPXS digital transmitter creates redundancies with KUMO LP on the Illinois side of the St Louis market the transmitter still provides only rimshot coverage of the Missouri side of the market most likely due to the need to protect the transmitter of KRCG in Jefferson City on nearby digital channel 12 References edit Facility Technical Data for WPXS Licensing and Management System Federal Communications Commission a b c Bean Ed August 19 1979 Will proposed area TV outlet be more than satellite The Southern Illinoisan p 27 Retrieved December 20 2020 Bean Ed February 24 1980 Independent TV Channel 13 A step nearer to reality The Southern Illinoisan p 28 Retrieved December 20 2020 Koplowitz H B June 18 1982 Carbondale man gets permit for TV channel The Southern Illinoisan p 3 Retrieved December 20 2020 Monroe Cathy A February 27 1983 WCEE Newest TV station gets ready for airwaves The Southern Illinoisan pp 1 2 Retrieved December 20 2020 Changing Hands PDF Broadcasting September 30 1985 p 109 Retrieved December 20 2020 DeWitte Dave October 20 1985 Varecha sells WCEE TV The Southern Illinoisan p 12 Retrieved December 20 2020 Special Report Station sales encore in 94 PDF Broadcasting amp Cable February 27 1995 p 45 Retrieved December 20 2020 WCEE TV Mount Vernon Ill St Louis PDF Broadcasting amp Cable September 18 1995 p 35 Retrieved December 20 2020 Changing Hands PDF Broadcasting amp Cable p 30 Retrieved December 20 2020 RabbitEars TV Query for WPXS Digital TV Market Listing for KUMO LD rabbitears info Retrieved December 15 2022 DTV Tentative Channel Designations for the First and Second Rounds PDF Archived from the original PDF on August 29 2013 Retrieved March 24 2012 External links editFCC Decision on WCEE must carry in the St Louis area Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title WPXS amp oldid 1182798606, 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.