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KKTV

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Television station in Colorado Springs, Colorado

For the television station in Osaka, Japan, seeKansai Television. For the television station in Kumamoto, Japan, seeKumamoto Kenmin Television.
KKTV
A sans serif 11 in black surround by square outline in black.
Colorado Springs studio
CityColorado Springs, Colorado
Channels
Branding
  • KKTV 11;KKTV 11 Alert
  • MyKKTV (11.2)
Programming
Affiliations
Ownership
Owner
History
First air date
December 7, 1952 (72 years ago) (1952-12-07)
Former channel numbers
  • Analog: 11 (VHF, 1952–2009)
  • Digital: 10 (VHF, 2003–2011), 49 (UHF, 2011–2019)
  • All secondary:
  • NBC (1952–1953)
  • DuMont (1952–1956)
  • ABC (1952–1960)
Technical information[2]
Licensing authority
FCC
Facility ID35037
ERP350kW
HAAT719.7 m (2,361 ft)
Transmitter coordinates38°44′42″N104°51′45″W / 38.74500°N 104.86250°W /38.74500; -104.86250
Links
Public license information
Websitewww.kktv.com

KKTV (channel 11) is atelevision station inColorado Springs, Colorado, United States, affiliated withCBS. The station is owned byGray Media, and maintains studios on East Colorado Avenue in downtown Colorado Springs and a transmitter onCheyenne Mountain.

History

[edit]

KKTV signed on the air on December 7, 1952. It is the third-oldest station in Colorado—behindDenver'sKWGN-TV andKUSA-TV—and the oldest outside Denver.[3] The station's first studio located on Mill Street was too small from the beginning. It originally carried programming from CBS,NBC,ABC, andDuMont.[4] In 1953,KRDO-TV (channel 13) signed on and took the NBC affiliation. DuMont folded in 1956, leaving KKTV as a primary CBS affiliate and secondary ABC affiliate. That same year, the station moved its operations to a new building located on South Tejon Street in Colorado Springs.

By 1960, the formerly separate Colorado Springs andPueblo markets became one single market serving the Pikes Peak region and surrounding areas with each of the area's three TV stations becoming "exclusive" network affiliates. KKTV became a sole CBS affiliate with KRDO-TV becoming a full-time ABC affiliate and Pueblo's KCSJ-TV (channel 5, nowKOAA-TV), which had been a primary NBC affiliate since its inception in 1953, becoming the area's sole NBC affiliate. In 1963, KKTV's original owners, TV Colorado, sold the station to Willard W. Garvey, who held a minority stake in Stauffer Publications Stations. In December 1968, KKTV relocated to a new studio facility on North Nevada Avenue in Colorado Springs, which had previously functioned as a film stage.[5] By the time the move was complete, a deal had been reached to sell KKTV to the Capitol Broadcasting Company ofJackson, Mississippi,[a] which owned radio and television properties in that city.[6]

In late 1982, Capitol Broadcasting Company sold KKTV to the Seattle-basedAckerley Group (originally called Ackerley Communications), becoming one of that company's earliest acquisitions. Ackerley owned the station until early 1999 when it swapped KKTV toBenedek Broadcasting in exchange forKCOY inSanta Maria, California. Current ownerGray Media acquired KKTV when it bought most of Benedek's stations in April 2002 as part of Benedek's bankruptcy liquidation.

On October 17, 2009; KKTV became the second station in the Colorado Springs–Pueblo market to present its newscasts inhigh definition (HD) beginning with its 10 p.m. newscast.

On June 23, 2012, at around 2 p.m. MDT, KKTV began to provide live 24/7 continuous coverage of theWaldo Canyon fire in Colorado Springs. KKTV called in help fromKOLN inLincoln, Nebraska,WOWT inOmaha, Nebraska,KCNC-TV in Denver, andKOLO-TV inReno, Nevada (KOLN, WOWT, and KOLO are sister stations to KKTV, CBS-owned KCNC shares a helicopter with KKTV), to help out with the coverage of the fire. The nonstop coverage wrapped up at midnight on June 29, 130 hours after it started. KKTV's syndicated and CBS programming were shown on Channel 11.2 during its 24/7 fire coverage. The coverage was praised by various critics, and won theColorado Springs Independent's Best Local TV Newscast award for 2012,[7] ending a long streak in that category by KOAA. KKTV's news ratings have gone up considerably since their Waldo Canyon fire coverage, and as of January 2013, they are claiming their news ratings are "Southern Colorado's Most Watched", higher than KOAA or KRDO.

A sans serif 11 with a circle cut out of it to accommodate the CBS eye. The word "NEWS" is written next to 11. Beneath both elements is the slogan "Your Breaking News Leader".
Logo of KKTV from 2022 to 2025

KKTV announced plans to move into a new location at 520 East Colorado Avenue in downtown Colorado Springs. The move was completed in mid-2013.[8]

On July 7, 2025, it was announced that, in an exchange of several stations between Gray Media and theE. W. Scripps Company, KKTV would be traded to Scripps, forming aduopoly with KOAA.[1] The swap requires deregulatory action at theFCC because existing rules would not permit the common ownership of KKTV and KOAA without a waiver.[9]

News operation

[edit]

KKTV currently broadcasts 35 hours of locally produced newscasts (with six hours each weekday, two hours on Saturdays, and three hours on Sundays). KKTV was the last station in the Colorado Springs–Pueblo market to produce morning newscasts on the weekends, which began on the weekend of November 13–14, 2021. However, KKTV was the second TV station in the Colorado Springs–Pueblo market to broadcast an early morning newscast beginning in late 1992 originally running a full hour, while rival KRDO-TV continued to stick with a 15-minute length morning newscast (and would eventually extend the program's length beginning in early 1996).

Technical information

[edit]

Subchannels

[edit]

The station's signal ismultiplexed:

Subchannels of KKTV[10]
ChannelRes.AspectShort nameProgramming
11.11080i16:9KKTV-HDCBS
11.2480iMETV-KKMeTV &MyNetworkTV
11.3OutlawOutlaw

KKTV began broadcasting a digital signal on channel 10 in 2003.

On September 5, 2006, KKTV launched a subchannel carryingMyNetworkTV programming, under the brandingMyKKTV.[11] KKTV-DT2 is carried on cable channel 41 in Colorado Springs and cable channel 246 in Pueblo. When the channel first launched it carried replays and extra runs of KKTV's syndicated programming (such asJeopardy! andWheel of Fortune) and some exclusive syndicated shows such asFuturama and30 Rock. At one point, KKTV produced a 9 p.m. newscast for the subchannel. Around September 8, 2015, KKTV-DT2 began airing select programming fromMeTV alongside syndicated programming. By October 2019, MeTV took up a bulk of the schedule outside of MyNetworkTV programming, with the service moving to the graveyard slot, airing from 2 to 4 a.m. on Tuesdays through Saturdays,[12] an increasingly common fate for the service.

From October 2007 to January 2010, KKTV broadcast a 24-hour weather channel called "KKTV No Wait Weather" on digital channel 11.3 and area cable providers. The channel began as a time filler service on KKTV digital channel 11.2. No Wait Weather was also seen on 11.2 overnights but this was discontinued in June 2009. OnJanuary 1, 2010, this service was discontinued and KKTV-DT3 was removed from Cable 140.

Analog-to-digital conversion

[edit]

KKTV shut down its analog signal, overVHF channel 11, on June 12, 2009, the official date on which full-power television stations in the United Statestransitioned from analog to digital broadcasts under federal mandate. The station's digital signal remained on its pre-transition VHF channel 10, usingvirtual channel 11.[13]

On January 21, 2011, KKTV began broadcasting on UHF channel 49 and discontinued its broadcast on VHF channel 10 at noon on January 24.[14] Moving to the UHF dial was deemed necessary because of viewer reception (all other Springs area commercial stations were on UHF by 2009) and interference issues with the VHF broadcast.[15]

On June 6, 2019, KKTV switched frequencies from RF channel 49 to RF channel 26 due to the FCC spectrum repack.

Translators

[edit]

Notes

[edit]
  1. ^Not related to theCapitol Broadcasting Company of Raleigh, North Carolina.

References

[edit]
  1. ^ab"Gray Media and Scripps Agree to Swap Television Stations".E. W. Scripps Company. July 7, 2025. RetrievedJuly 7, 2025 – viaPR Newswire.
  2. ^"Facility Technical Data for KKTV".Licensing and Management System.Federal Communications Commission.
  3. ^"KKTV Dedication At 7 p.m. Today".The Pueblo Star-Journal and Sunday Chieftain. Pueblo, Colorado. December 7, 1952. p. 2A. RetrievedOctober 22, 2025 – via Newspapers.com.
  4. ^[1]Archived January 17, 2006, at theWayback Machine
  5. ^"KKTV Slated to Complete Move to AFCO Stage".Colorado Springs Gazette-Telegraph. Colorado Springs, Colorado. December 8, 1968. p. 3-E. RetrievedJune 26, 2022 – via Newspapers.com.
  6. ^"Capitol Broadcasting Buys KKTV Television Station".Colorado Springs Gazette-Telegraph. Colorado Springs, Colorado. October 23, 1968. p. 2-F. RetrievedJune 26, 2022 – via Newspapers.com.
  7. ^"Best of 2012: Personalities | Best of 2012 Vol. II | Colorado Springs Independent". Csindy.com. Archived fromthe original on May 10, 2013. RetrievedApril 26, 2013.
  8. ^Wineke, Andrew (August 23, 2012)."KKTV plans to move station downtown".Colorado Springs Gazette. Archived fromthe original on October 2, 2012. RetrievedApril 26, 2013.
  9. ^Depp, Michael (July 7, 2025)."Scripps CEO: Station Swap Is An Early Test Of FCC's Dereg Resolve".TVNewsCheck. RetrievedJuly 8, 2025.
  10. ^"RabbitEars TV Query for KKTV".RabbitEars. RetrievedJuly 7, 2025.
  11. ^[2]Archived February 4, 2012, at theWayback Machine
  12. ^"TitanTV Query for KKTV". Archived fromthe original on October 14, 2019. RetrievedOctober 14, 2019.
  13. ^"DTV Tentative Channel Designations for the First and the Second Rounds"(PDF). Archived fromthe original(PDF) on August 29, 2013. RetrievedMarch 24, 2012.
  14. ^KKTV Launches New Transmitter
  15. ^http://licensing.fcc.gov/prod/cdbs/pubacc/Auth_Files/1333027.pdf. RetrievedMay 29, 2010.{{cite web}}:Missing or empty|title= (help)[dead link]

External links

[edit]
Full power
Low-power
Defunct
Broadcast television stations by affiliation in the state ofColorado
Includes stations in out-of-state TV markets, but reaching a portion of Colorado
ABC
CBS
Fox
NBC
The CW
Ion Television
Independent
PBS
Rocky Mountain PBS
KRMA-TV
KRMJ
KRMU
KRMZ
KTSC
Spanish
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CTN
KQCK
KQDK-LD
KWHS-LD
Daystar
KPXH-LD
KRMT
TBN
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Other
ATSC 3.0
  • 1 Also has secondary affiliation with MyNetworkTV.
See also
Arizona TV (English/Spanish)
Kansas TV
Nebraska TV
New Mexico TV (English/Spanish)
Oklahoma TV
Utah TV
Wyoming TV
ABC
CBS
Fox
NBC
The CW
MyNetworkTV
Telemundo
Other
Arizona's Family Sports
KPHE-LD
KAZF
KAZS
Heartland
WBXC-CD
Independent
K17DL-D****
KFVE
KTVK
WANF
WWAX-LD
Matrix Midwest
KDTL-LD
MeTV
KHME
KQME
WPGA-TV
Peachtree Sports Network
WPGA-LD
Rock Entertainment Sports Network
WOHZ-CD
WTCL-LD
WXIX-TV .3
WZCD-LD
Unknown
KCBU
News
Sports
Other assets
Acquisitions
** Owned by a third party and operated by Gray under various operating agreements.
*** Owned byTougaloo College and operated by American Spirit Media; Gray provides limited engineering support.
**** Owned by Branson Visitors TV; Gray holds a 50.1% interest in this company.
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