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| City | Las Cruces, New Mexico |
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| History | |
First air date | November 18, 1984 (41 years ago) (1984-11-18)[1] |
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Call sign meaning | Telemundo |
| Technical information[2] | |
Licensing authority | FCC |
| Facility ID | 36916 |
| ERP | 132kW |
| HAAT | 553 m (1,814 ft) |
| Transmitter coordinates | 31°48′18.9″N106°29′0.7″W / 31.805250°N 106.483528°W /31.805250; -106.483528 |
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| Website | www |
KTDO (channel 48) is atelevision station licensed toLas Cruces, New Mexico, United States, broadcasting the Spanish-languageTelemundo network to theEl Paso, Texas, area.Owned and operated byNBCUniversal'sTelemundo Station Group, the station has studios on Carnegie Avenue in El Paso, and its transmitter is located atop theFranklin Mountains on the El Paso city limits.
The station first signed on the air November 18, 1984, as KASK-TV; it originally operated as anEnglish-languageindependent station. The TV station was an outgrowth ofKASK-FM (103.1).[1]
KASK-TV went off the air in October 1987 when it was bought by Bayport Communications. Bayport was approved to relocate the tower to a new site nearAnthony, New Mexico, and increase power from 74,000 watts to the maximum 5 million.[3] Channel 48 was sold to Robert Muñoz and reemerged on June 13, 1990,[4] as KZIA.[5] The station was added to the El Paso cable system in 1991.[6]Lee Enterprises bought the station in 1993[4] for $440,000, after a separate $900,000 sale fell through the year prior.[7] "Z48" became a charter affiliate of the United Paramount Network (UPN) upon the network's launch on January 16, 1995.
In 1997, the station's calls were changed to KMAZ ahead of a January 16, 1998, change to Telemundo and Spanish-language programming.[8] The change was made to improve the station's financial position and because management felt the market was ready for a secondSpanish-language station on the United States side of the border.[9]In 2001, the station's call letters were changed to KTYO. In 2004, the station was purchased by theArlington, Virginia–basedZGS Group for $11.8 million;[10] ZGS subsequently converted the station into a Spanish-language outlet as the market's Telemundo affiliate and changed its call letters to KTDO. As a result of the switch, UPN (which ceased operations in September 2006 and merged its programming with competing networkThe WB as part of ajoint venture betweenCBS Corporation andTime Warner to formThe CW) did not have a full-time affiliate in the El Paso market for the remainder of the network's run, with its programming being relegated to a secondary affiliation on KKWB (channel 65, nowKTFN) until it switched toTeleFutura in January 2002.
On December 4, 2017,NBCUniversal'sTelemundo Station Group announced its purchase of ZGS' television stations, including KTDO.[11] The sale was completed on February 1, 2018.[12]
KTDO presently broadcasts 12 hours of locally produced newscasts each week (with two hours each weekday and one hour each on Saturdays and Sundays).
On November 16, 2010, KTDO launched a news department, with half-hour Spanish-language newscasts airing at 5 and 10 p.m., under the titleTelenoticias El Paso; with the launch, it became the first Spanish-language television station in the El Paso market to broadcast its local newscasts inhigh definition.
On June 11, 2018, the station launched newscasts at 4 and 4:30 p.m., adding to the already established 5 p.m. newscast. With this expansion, KTDO has more hours of local news than any other Spanish-language station in El Paso.[13]
KASK-TV had launched with a local news operation, airing a five-minute news brief at 7 p.m. and a main newscast at 10 p.m.[1]
As KZIA-TV, the station carried a 9 p.m. local newscast,Newswatch 48, hosted by formerKDBC-TV anchor Bill Mitchell,[14] and a replay of KDBC's 6 p.m. newscast at 9:30 p.m.[15] In 1991, channel 48 began carrying by microwave link all ofKOB-TV's local newscasts live fromAlbuquerque in a first-of-its-kind arrangement.[16] When Lee Enterprises—owner of KRQE-TV—bought the station in 1993, the station shifted to carrying that station's news, though Lee planned to begin local newscasts in Las Cruces.[4]
The station's signal ismultiplexed:
| Channel | Res. | Aspect | Short name | Programming |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 48.1 | 1080i | 16:9 | KTDO-HD | Telemundo |
| 48.2 | 480i | TELEXIT | TeleXitos | |
| 48.3 | CRIMES | NBC True CRMZ | ||
| 48.4 | COZI | Cozi TV | ||
| 48.5 | OXYGEN | Oxygen | ||
| 14.2 | 480i | 16:9 | COMET | Comet (KFOX-TV) |
| 14.3 | CHARGE! | Charge! (KFOX-TV) |
KTDO shut down its analog signal, overUHF channel 48, 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 UHF channel 47,[18] usingvirtual channel 48.
KTDO's main channel was also seen inanalog in El Paso proper vialow-powertranslatorKTDO-LP on channel 48, mainly to allow viewers in El Paso and on the Mexican side of the market to continue to watch the station over-the-air. With the sale to NBCUniversal and Mexico's digital transition having been completed, the license for KTDO-LP was returned to theFederal Communications Commission (FCC) on November 30, 2018, and was formally canceled on December 21.