KTXL

KTXL
SacramentoStocktonModesto, California
United States
City Sacramento
Branding Fox 40 (general)
Fox 40 News (newscasts)
Slogan News That Matters
Channels Digital: 40 (UHF)
Virtual: 40 (PSIP)
Subchannels 40.1 Fox
40.2 Antenna TV
40.3 This TV
Affiliations Fox
Owner Tribune Broadcasting
(KTXL, LLC)
First air date October 26, 1968 (1968-10-26)
Call letters' meaning Television and XL
(Roman numeral 40)
Sister station(s) KTLA & KSWB
Former channel number(s) Analog:
40 (UHF, 1968–2009)
Digital:
55 (UHF, 1997–2009)
Former affiliations Primary:
Independent (1968–1986)
DT2:
The Tube (2004–2007)
LATV (2007–2011)
Transmitter power 950 kW
Height 601 m
Facility ID 10205
Transmitter coordinates 38°16′18″N 121°30′18″W / 38.27167°N 121.50500°W / 38.27167; -121.50500
Licensing authority FCC
Public license information: Profile
CDBS
Website fox40.com

KTXL, virtual channel and UHF digital channel 40, is a Foxaffiliated television station located in Sacramento, California, United States. The station is owned by the Tribune Broadcasting subsidiary of the Tribune Media Company. KTXL maintains studio facilities located on Fruitridge Road on the southern side of Sacramento, and its transmitter is located near Walnut Grove.

History

Early history of channel 40

The UHF channel 40 frequency in Sacramento was first occupied by KCCC-TV, which signed on in September 1953. It was affiliated with all four television networks of the time: ABC, CBS, NBC and the DuMont Television Network. KCCC's first broadcast was the 1953 World Series between the New York Yankees and the Brooklyn Dodgers. The station became a primary ABC affiliate by 1955, after KCRA-TV (channel 3) and KBET-TV (channel 10, now KXTV) signed on, respectively taking over NBC and CBS full-time; and dropped DuMont after that network folded in 1956.[1] It was the Sacramento-StocktonModesto area's first television station. However, as a UHF station, it suffered in the ratings because television sets were not required to incorporate UHF tuning until the All-Channel Receiver Act went into effect in 1964. Although its fate was sealed when the first VHF stations signed on in the area, it managed to hang on until 1957. The ABC affiliation moved to KOVR (channel 13) after KCCC-TV and KOVR reached an agreement to merge operations and turn over the KCCC license to the Federal Communications Commission.

The former KCCC-TV studios and transmitting facilities were then sold to a group of broadcasters who applied for a new license, returning channel 40 to the air in 1959 as KVUE, broadcasting from studios near the old California state fairgrounds off Stockton Boulevard. The station operated for just under five months before also falling silent. The KVUE call letters now reside on the ABC affiliate in Austin, Texas.

As an independent station

In 1963, KVUE attempted to file for a license renewal even though the station had been off the air for more than three years; Camellia City Telecasters, a group headed by Jack Matranga, former owner and co-founder of radio station KGMS (now KTKZ), filed an application with the FCC to build a station on channel 40, as a challenge to the KVUE renewal, and was granted the license in early 1965. KTXL first signed on the air on October 26, 1968, operating as an independent station for nearly the first two decades of its existence. It was then branded as "TV 40". The station gained a huge advantage early on when its original owner won the local syndication rights to a massive number of movies, including classic and contemporary films. At one point, it had one of the largest film libraries in the Sacramento area. In addition, KTXL ventured into in-house productions, such as the children's program "Captain Mitch", horror movie host Bob Wilkins and "Big Time Wrestling".[2] The latter show aired until 1979, and was syndicated to several stations in California, Utah, Alaska and Hawaii. Channel 40 was one of the few stations to hold syndicated rights to the entire Merrie Melodies/Looney Tunes cartoon libraries (up until recently, different companies held different components of the cartoon output, all rights are now held by Warner Bros.).

In 1977, KTXL began a summer tradition by showcasing critically acclaimed classic feature films in annual "Summer Film Festival" presentations. Channel 40 made television history in 1981, by broadcasting the 1978 film The Deer Hunter (and later, many other movies) unedited with potentially objectionable material intact – this policy has been restricted somewhat in recent years. All of this made KTXL one of the leading independent stations in the western United States. It also attained regional superstation status via microwave relay to nearly every cable system in northern California, including the San Francisco Bay Area and Fresno, as well as several cable systems in Oregon, Nevada, Utah, Idaho and Montana.

KTXL began transmitting its signal from a 2,000-foot "Monster Tower", near Walnut Grove in October 1985, significantly increasing its signal strength and adding stereo capability. Initially, the station would only turn on the stereo feed during programming broadcast in the audio format. This sometimes resulted in the staff forgetting to turn it on right at the beginning of a stereo program.

Fox affiliation

On October 9, 1986, KTXL became a charter affiliate of the upstart Fox network, and eventually started branding as "Fox 40" on-air. The following year, Camellia City Telecasters sold KTXL to Renaissance Broadcasting. While most Fox affiliates since the mid-1990s have shifted away from running classic sitcoms and cartoons, to run syndicated talk shows on their daytime schedules; until recently, KTXL was among a few stations to be an exception to this status: the daytime lineup continued to feature sitcoms well into the 2000s, even still holding syndication rights to The Andy Griffith Show after many decades. Though many shows from the 1980s and 1990s were featured on the schedule, a few talk show, reality series and court shows also populated the lineup.

In place of the station's own children's lineup after Captain Mitch's retirement, the station aired programming from Fox Kids until the network eliminated the weekday afternoon block in September 2002; the Saturday morning lineup (which by that time, became known as 4Kids TV) was retained as it began being programmed by 4Kids Entertainment that year until Fox dropped children's programming from its schedule in November 2008.

KTXL, along with NBC affiliate KCRA-TV, are the only Sacramento television stations to have never changed their network affiliations, as they were unaffected by affiliation swaps in 1995 (when KXTV acquired the ABC affiliation from KOVR, which in turn, switched to CBS) and 1998 (when KMAX-TV – channel 31 – took the UPN from KQCA – channel 58, which switched from UPN to The WB).

KTXL was acquired by Tribune Broadcasting following the company's purchase of Renaissance Broadcasting in 1996.[3]

Digital television

Digital channels

Channel Video Aspect PSIP Short Name Programming[4]
40.1720p16:9KTXL-TVMain KTXL programming / Fox
40.2480i4:3Ant TVAntenna TV
40.3ThisTVThis TV

On January 1, 2011, KTXL became a charter affiliate of Tribune-owned classic television network Antenna TV upon its launch; it is carried on digital subchannel 40.2.[5]

Analog-to-digital conversion

In November 1999, KTXL installed the first full-powered digital television transmitter in the Sacramento market operating on UHF channel 55. KTXL shut down its analog signal, over UHF channel 40, on June 12, 2009, as part of the federally mandated transition from analog to digital television.[6] The station's digital signal relocated from its pre-transition UHF channel 55, which was among the high band UHF channels (52-69) that were removed from broadcasting use as a result of the transition, to its analog-era UHF channel 40 for post-transition operations. With the transition, the height of the station's transmitter tower was increased to 2,030 feet.

News operation

In 1974, KTXL became the first station in the Sacramento market to carry a primetime newscast, titled The Ten O'Clock News. Originally airing only five days a week, before later expanding to a nightly newscast; the program's original anchor team consisted of news anchor Dave Preston, weather and news anchor Jan Jeffries, and sports anchor Ken Gimblin. After Preston left for unknown reasons, Jeffries was named primary anchor with weather anchors substituting. Other news and sports anchors continued the format until 1979, when the newscast was revived by Pete Wilson as NewsPlus, in a format that went beyond regular newscasts (hence the "Plus" in the show's title). Such anchor teams as Andy Asher and Regina Cambell, and later Lauraine Woodward and Ted Mullins helmed the now hour-long newscast until KTXL joined Fox in 1986, and evolved into the current format of what is now Fox 40 News at 10.

KTXL's main newscast competition at 10:00 p.m. includes an in-house newscast on CBS-owned KOVR (which airs one hour earlier than the late newscasts on other "Big Three" stations) and a KCRA-produced half-hour news program on KQCA. Channel 40 ranks #1 in the ratings among the 18–49 adult demographic, and often comes in first or second in overall viewership at 10 p.m. In the summer of 2005, KTXL debuted a weekday morning newscast, which originally ran for two hours from 6 to 8 a.m., and primarily competes opposite KMAX's Good Day Sacramento and the first hour of KQCA's morning newscast. On September 8, 2008, the newscast was reformatted to Fox 40 Live and was expanded to 4½ hours from 4:30 to 9 a.m. The station hired well-known former Sacramento morning radio personality Paul Robins as anchor, and introduced a new news set adorned with flat-screens and an accompanying kitchen set.

On September 14, 2009, KTXL debuted both a midday newscast at 11:00 a.m. weekdays (which competes against KXTV's midday newscast in that time period) and an early evening newscast at 5:30 p.m. on weeknights to its schedule; this was later followed by the addition of a half-hour 6 p.m. newscast in September 2012. For over a decade, Fox (which has no network newscasts aside from Fox News Sunday) has motivated its affiliates and stations to increase local news programming; KTXL and Tribune's other Fox stations did not follow this request until September 2009, when most of the stations (except for KCPQ in Seattle, which would not add early evening newscasts for another year) expanded their newscasts into midday and early evening timeslots.

On January 7, 2010, beginning with its 10:00 p.m. newscast, KTXL became the fourth station in the Sacramento market to begin broadcasting its local newscasts in high definition. It was the first (and presently, the only) television station in the market to provide news video from the field in true high definition, as KTXL upgraded its ENG vehicles, satellite truck, studio and field cameras and other equipment in order to broadcast news footage from the field in high definition, in addition to segments broadcast from the main studio. This is in contrast to KCRA and KXTV, both of whom broadcast their field reports in widescreen standard definition (KOVR also shoots field reports in high definition but downconverts much of the footage to widescreen standard definition). On November 4, 2013, KTXL expanded its weekday evening news block to 90 minutes with the addition of a half-hour 5 p.m. newscast.[7]

Notable former on-air staff

Controversy

Nodar Kumaritashvili crash video

On February 12, 2010, KTXL was one of the first media outlets to obtain a video copy of a luge accident that occurred during the 2010 Winter Olympics, which resulted in the death of luger Nodar Kumaritashvili.[8] KTXL made the editorial decision to post the video on its website, ahead of several major national and international outlets. The video clip raised some debate among journalism critics and editorial boards at several news organizations as to whether the footage should have been broadcast or posted online at all (the footage was briefly available on YouTube, but was removed several times due to copyright takedown notices filed by the International Olympic Committee).

In an interview with the Seattle Post-Intelligencer, a KTXL staff member cited fair use as the decision to post the clip on the website after questions arose about the safety of the luge track.[9] The station also ran the complete footage (though with occasional pauses) during its 5:30 p.m. newscast that evening. The video was later distributed by KTXL to several other Tribune-owned websites.[10]

Miss Universe 2015

During KTXL's broadcast of Miss Universe 2015 (in which host Steve Harvey accidentally announced the wrong winner of the pageant), the show was cut off at 10pm in order to start FOX40 News at 10 (the live Fox broadcast ended 2 minutes longer than scheduled due to Harvey's mistake). This meant viewers in the Sacramento market were unable to see the apology and crowning of the winner. In addition, the newscast that followed made no mention of the incident at the pageant.[11]

References

  1. "WebCite query result". Retrieved 2013-07-12.
  2. Berry, Viktor (13 May 2008). "Illustrated History of Pro Wrestling in Northern California". Archived from the original on January 12, 2012. Retrieved 28 March 2012.
  3. Tribune Co. Looks to Boost Role in TV with Offer for Six Stations, Los Angeles Daily News, July 2, 1996. Retrieved July 20, 2013 from HighBeam Research.
  4. "RabbitEars TV Query for KTXL". Rabbitears.info. Retrieved 2014-03-08.
  5. Archived November 27, 2010, at the Wayback Machine.
  6. List of Digital Full-Power Stations
  7. KTXL Set to Expand Early Evening Newscasts TVSpy, October 10, 2013.
  8. Video Shows Death Of Olympic Luger On Historic Track Archived July 24, 2011, at the Wayback Machine.
  9. "Seattle Pi: Nodar Kumaritashvili luge crash video online, with difficulty". Blog.seattlepi.com. 2010-02-12. Retrieved 2013-07-12.
  10. Olympians Slide With Heavy Hearts After Tragic Accident Archived February 19, 2012, at the Wayback Machine.
  11. Joyella, Mark (21 December 2015). "Viewers Slam Sacramento Station for Cutting Awkward End of Miss Universe Pageant". TV Spy. Adweek Blog Network. Retrieved 24 December 2015.

External links

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