KEMO-TV

For the station that previously used the KEMO-TV call sign, see KOFY-TV.
KEMO-TV
San Francisco Bay Area, California
United States
City Santa Rosa, California
Branding Azteca América 50 SF
Channels Digital: 32 (UHF)
Virtual: 50 (PSIP)
Translators K17CG-D 17 (UHF)
Ukiah/Mendocino County, California
Affiliations Azteca América
Owner Northstar Media, LLC
(Northstar San Francisco License, LLC)
First air date April 1981
Call letters' meaning Previous calls of KOFY-TV; named after one of the children of that station's founder, Daniel H. Overmyer
Former callsigns KFTY (1981–2011)
Former channel number(s) Analog:
50 (UHF, 1981–2009)
Former affiliations Independent (1981–2011)
Me-TV (2011)
Transmitter power 19.9 kW
Height 928 m
Facility ID 34440
Transmitter coordinates 38°40′8.5″N 122°37′53.5″W / 38.669028°N 122.631528°W / 38.669028; -122.631528Coordinates: 38°40′8.5″N 122°37′53.5″W / 38.669028°N 122.631528°W / 38.669028; -122.631528
Licensing authority FCC
Public license information: Profile
CDBS
Website Azteca San Francisco

KEMO-TV, virtual channel 50 (UHF digital channel 32), is an Azteca América-affiliated television station, licensed to Santa Rosa, California, USA and serving the San Francisco Bay Area. KEMO-TV is owned by Northstar Media, LLC, and maintains studios and offices in Emeryville, California. The station is available on cable via AT&T, Dish, & DirecTV channel 50 and Comcast channel 31, and 719 HD.

History

The station first went on the air in 1972 and quickly attracted eager young broadcasters who honed their craft and went on to bigger markets. Among the Channel 50 pioneers were Jon Miller, now the longtime play-by-play voice of the San Francisco Giants, and Stan Atkinson, who would become one of the Sacramento area's best-known TV reporters and anchors.

This much anticipated effort to establish a local North Bay TV station in Santa Rosa, led by Atkinson and partner Kit Spier, (formerly a KNBC-Los Angeles executive), was under-financed and lasted only a year. The station was off the air more than it was on, and after the novelty of a new TV station wore off, viewers had little confidence and the station went dark.

Nothing more happened until 1981, when Wishard Brown, who'd owned Marin County's Independent Journal newspaper and San Rafael radio station KTIM, revived Channel 50 with an eye to making it a local news authority.

The second incarnation of KFTY went live in a former furniture store on Mendocino Avenue in May 1981 with broadcaster Jim Johnson, (now an independent insurance and investment broker in Santa Rosa), as general manager.

A news department was formed with Bob Sherwood, formerly of KGO-TV, was the station's first News Director and Rod Sherry, then a veteran KPIX anchor, was the weekend anchor and later News Producer. Some of the news reporters included Deb Sherwood, Fred Wayne, Karen Clinton, Karen Provenza, Ed Beebout, and Diane Kaufman.

Through the 1980s, the local news operation expanded and became a training ground for more future big-market broadcasters such as Bill Martin, the veteran KTVU meteorologist, Manuel Gallegos went to CBS, Fred Wayne went to KCBS in San Francisco, and sportscaster Dale Julian who later went to the San Jose Mercury newspaper.

News 50 adopted the slogan, "We do it twice, every night," upon expanding its weeknight news reports to 7:30 and 10:30 p.m. The "North Bay News" was a very popular look at regional stories that the TV stations in the central SF Bay Area rarely covered; KFTY News also shared video tape of local news stories with other TV stations.

The third incarnation of KFTY took hold in the mid-1990s, when KFTY was sold to the television arm of Clear Channel Communications; that company, after being bought out by private equity firms, announced the sale of KFTY and its other television stations on November 16, 2006.[1]

On January 26th, 2007, station manager John Burgess was ordered to shut down the News Dept, much to the disappointment to viewers in Sonoma, Marin, Napa, and Mendocino counties. Some of the reporters went to other TV stations, some retired, and some moved into other careers. Anchor Ed Beebout is now a communications professor at Sonoma State University, and reporter Curtiss Kim, is now a co-anchor of the KSRO morning news in Santa Rosa.

On April 20, 2007, Clear Channel entered into an agreement to sell its entire television station group to Providence Equity Partners's Newport Television.[2] Providence initially announced that it would not keep KFTY or its Bellingham, Washington sister station KVOS-TV; instead, those stations were to be turned over to LK Station Group.

Because LK could not obtain financing for the purchase, KFTY was instead sold to High Plains Broadcasting (Providence could not keep KFTY as it holds a 19 percent ownership stake in Univision Communications, which already owns two stations in the Bay Area market, KDTV-DT channel 14 and KFSF-DT channel 66). Newport Television began managing KFTY through a joint sales agreement (JSA), though High Plains controlled KFTY's programming.[3]

On April 25, 2011, KFTY affiliated with the classic television network Me-TV, as part of an affiliation agreement between the network and Newport. Branded as "Me-TV Bay Area," KFTY predominately aired Me-TV programming from 10 a.m. to 11 p.m. on weekdays. In addition to Me-TV programming, KFTY also carried syndicated and locally-produced programming, including the weekday morning talk show Armstrong & Getty (a radio simulcast from KNEW, which aired from 6-10 a.m.), news and weather segments known as "Headlines and Weather on the Hour" that aired throughout the day (in addition to news segments anchored by Elisha Rivers that ran every half-hour during Armstrong & Getty), the Sunday evening discussion program YSN365 Sports Show hosted by Dave Cox, the community affairs program Your Turn, and the "pay-to-play" program TV 50 Marketplace initially hosted by Nazy Javid and, then, by Angela Young.

The forth incarnation of KFTY started on July 28, 2011, when High Plains Broadcasting announced plans to sell KFTY to Una Vez Más Holdings, LLC, with plans to affiliate KFTY with Azteca América;[4] The new owners changed the station's callsign to KEMO-TV, which was previously used as the callsign of KOFY-TV (channel 20) prior to 1986.[5]

On September 29, 2011, KFTY switched its affiliation to Azteca América, becoming one of two affiliates of the Spanish-language network in the Bay Area – alongside KOFY, which carried Azteca América on its 20.4 subchannel; KOFY dropped Azteca América programming shortly afterward. The Me-TV affiliation moved to KOFY digital subchannel 20.2 on October 17, 2011.[6]

Digital television

Digital channels

The station's digital channel is multiplexed:

Channel Video Aspect PSIP Short Name Programming[7]
50.1 1080i 16:9 KEMO-HD Main KEMO-TV programming / Azteca América
50.2 480i 4:3 KEMO-DT Standard definition simulcast of channel 50.1

Analog-to-digital conversion

KEMO-TV (as KFTY) shut down its analog signal, over UHF channel 50, on June 12, 2009, as part of the federally mandated transition from analog to digital television.[8] The station's digital signal remained on its pre-transition UHF channel 54, which was among the high band UHF channels (52-69) that were removed from broadcasting use as a result of the transition, to UHF channel 32, using PSIP to display the KEMO-TV's virtual channel as 50 on digital television receivers. Their final program to air on KFTY analog was Law & Order: Criminal Intent on February 17, 2009.

News operation

KFTY formed a news department in the late 1980s, and began producing two half-hour local newscasts, airing at 7:00 and 10:00 p.m. each weeknight (these were promoted under the slogan, "We do it twice, every night.")[9] KFTY cancelled these newscasts on January 26, 2007, citing insufficient revenue to support their continuation. Management denied the move was related to Clear Channel's intent to divest the station,[10] despite a similar incident at another Clear Channel station (WUTR in Utica, New York) in which all local newscasts on that station were cancelled in August 2003, followed by the sale of WUTR in early 2004. After its news department was shut down, KFTY only produced hourly local news updates between regular programs.

References

External links

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