KVUE (channel 24) is atelevision station inAustin, Texas, United States, affiliated withABC and owned byTegna Inc. The station's studios are located on Steck Avenue just east ofLoop 1 in northwest Austin, and its transmitter is located on the West Austin Antenna Farm northwest of downtown.
KVUE was the third television station established in Austin, going on the air in 1971 as an affiliate of ABC. Originally owned by a consortium of Texas investors including former governorAllan Shivers, it was purchased by the Evening News Association in 1978. Under Evening News andGannett, which first owned the station from 1986 to 1999, channel 24 became a force in the Austin news ratings, and in the 1990s its approach to crime coverage attracted national media attention. Gannett traded KVUE to theBelo Corporation in 1999 in exchange forKXTV inSacramento, California, and $55 million; the deal gave theDallas-based Belo a station in Austin and coverage of two-thirds of TV households in Texas. Gannett and Belo merged in 2013.
In the fall of 1961, theFederal Communications Commission (FCC) began to receive applications for channel 24 in Austin. Applicants included Dalton Homer Cobb, aMidland oilman who owned that city'sKDCD-TV (channel 18), and John R. Powley ofAltoona, Pennsylvania (whose Texas Longhorn Broadcasting Company sought channel 67).[2] They were soon followed by an Austin radio station in business for 15 years and also seeking channel 24:KVET (1300 AM), which filed on December 12, 1961,[3] in anticipation of a future day when a UHF station could be viable.[4] The Cobb and KVET bids were designated for hearing by the FCC in 1962, and KVET got the nod on March 13, 1963.[3]
While KVET manager Willard Deason announced the station would be built at "deliberate speed" and be on the air by early 1965,[5] Austinites would have to wait some time to see it. In 1965, KVET was sold to Butler Broadcasting, channel 24 construction permit included.[6] Butler announced a start date in February or March 1966,[7] then a fall 1967 launch was floated.[8]
KVET filed to sell the construction permit in 1968 to McAlister Television Enterprises, owner ofKSEL-TV inLubbock, for $44,000.[9] McAlister sold a majority stake to several other investors which included former governorAllan Shivers, resulting in the creation of the Channel Twenty-Four Corporation as the assignee. The FCC approved in June 1970;[10] the KVET-TV call letters were changed to KVUE, and a site in what was then far north Austin along Shoal Creek was selected for the studios.[11]
The station signed on the air on September 12, 1971, after winds fromHurricane Fern delayed the intended start-up.[12] KVUE was the market's first full-time ABC affiliate and finally gave the capital city the full program lineups from all three networks; prior to KVUE's sign-on, the network's programming had previously been limited to off-hours clearances onKTBC-TV andKHFI-TV.[13]
In 1978, the Evening News Association, publisher ofThe Detroit News and owner of several television stations, purchased KVUE; it was the last locally-owned TV station in the market to be sold.[14] Under Evening News, the station added 13,000 square feet (1,200 m2) to its studio facility, doubling its size, in an expansion begun in 1985.[15] The station also successfully repelled a 1984 attack by a gunman who wished to broadcast a political manifesto; employees tricked him into thinking his statement was broadcast on the air, and he was arrested after reading his statement.[16]
After a hostile takeover bid byNorman Lear andJerry Perenchio was rebuffed, ENA put itself up and sale and was purchased by theGannett Company in 1985,[17] a transaction that closed in February 1986.[18] A second expansion of the studios was conducted in 1991, this time adding another 9,400 square feet (870 m2) to house the newsroom.[19]
One of the state's most important owners of media properties wasBelo Corporation. It ownedThe Dallas Morning News and TV stations in most of the state's important cities:KHOU-TV inHouston,WFAA-TV inDallas, andKENS-TV inSan Antonio. However, it lacked an Austin property and coveted one, particularly given its impending launch ofTexas Cable News (TXCN). In February 1999, Gannett agreed to a trade with Belo: Belo received KVUE, while Gannett receivedKXTV inSacramento, and $55 million. With the addition of KVUE, TXCN could provide news and information from the four largest cities in Texas, and Belo gained coverage of two-thirds of Texas households.[20] The deal was particularly surprising from a monetary standpoint given that KXTV was in a much larger market than Austin.[21]
On June 13, 2013, Gannett announced that it would acquire Belo for $1.5 billion.[22] The sale was completed on December 23.[23] Gannett then split into print and broadcast companies in 2015, with the broadcast company taking on the nameTegna.[24]
On February 22, 2022, Tegna announced that it would be acquired byStandard General andApollo Global Management for $5.4 billion. As a part of the deal, KVUE, along with its Dallas sister stations WFAA andKMPX and Houston sister stations KHOU andKTBU, would be resold toCox Media Group.[25][26] The deal was canceled on May 22, 2023.[27]
KVUE reporters and camera personnel participating in an interview
KVUE was the first Austin-market television station to make a serious challenge in the local news race, which even after the introduction of two UHF competitors was dominated by KTBC. In May 1981, itsAction News edged out KTBC at 6 and 10 p.m.[28] The station remained a solid first place for the next several years,[17] but a spirited competition emerged between channels 7 and 24 in the ratings for the rest of the decade, with KVUE and KTBC leading at different times.[29][30] KVUE continued to dominate in the ratings after the 1995 switch of CBS and Fox affiliations, which caused KXAN to surge into second place and a slide for KTBC.[31]
Under news director Carole Kneeland, who guided the KVUE newsroom from 1989 until her death from breast cancer in 1998, the station scaled back its crime coverage to reduce the level of "mayhem" it reported—which resulted in national attention in such publications asColumbia Journalism Review[32] and even a feature on ABC'sNightline[33]—and introduced fact-checking of political advertising, a practice soon adopted by stations across the United States.[34] However, by the last years of Gannett ownership, KXAN had started to edge ahead of KVUE, replacing KTBC as channel 24's main competition.[33] The competition between channels 24 and 36 has generally defined Austin television news since; in May 2021, KVUE came second to KXAN in early and late evening news.[35]
In 2014, KVUE won aPeabody Award for adocumentary entitledThe Cost of Troubled Minds, about Texas's underinvestment in addressingmental health care; this was the first Peabody won by an Austin television station.[36]
KVUE was tricked in 2021 into promoting a fake sexual wellness product, "invented" by a team working for late-night political commentary showLast Week Tonight, called the "Venus Veil", which was actually just a blanket; the show's team paid KVUE $2,650 to feature the fake product and an interview with its "creator" as a way to illustrate how stations such as KVUE promotesponsored content without being upfront about the sponsorship, essentially passing off advertising as news.[37][38]
KVUE ended regular programming on its analog signal on February 17, 2009, as part of the FCC-mandatedtransition to digital television for full-power stations (which Congress had moved the previous month to June 12).[44] The station's digital signal remained on its pre-transition UHF channel 33, usingvirtual channel 24.[45]
^"Second TV Station Talk Heard Again".The Austin Statesman. Austin, Texas. October 13, 1961. p. 1.Archived from the original on December 8, 2021. RetrievedDecember 8, 2021 – via Newspapers.com.
^"KVET Files TV Station Application".The Austin Statesman. Austin, Texas. December 20, 1961. p. 1,12.Archived from the original on December 8, 2021. RetrievedDecember 8, 2021 – via Newspapers.com.
^"Permit on TV Is Announced".The Austin American. Austin, Texas. January 23, 1963. p. 17.Archived from the original on December 8, 2021. RetrievedDecember 8, 2021 – via Newspapers.com.
^"TV Permit Requested Sale Okay".The Austin American. Austin, Texas. Associated Press. April 10, 1965. p. 34.Archived from the original on December 8, 2021. RetrievedDecember 8, 2021 – via Newspapers.com.
^Weddell, Wray (October 21, 1965)."Wray Weddell's Austin".The Austin Statesman. Austin, Texas. p. 1.Archived from the original on December 8, 2021. RetrievedDecember 8, 2021 – via Newspapers.com.
^"For the Record"(PDF).Broadcasting. November 4, 1968. p. 92.ProQuest1016850632.Archived(PDF) from the original on November 8, 2021. RetrievedDecember 8, 2021 – via World Radio History.
^Fairchild, Don (June 11, 1970)."Third TV Station Planned For Austin".The Austin American. Austin, Texas. p. A21.Archived from the original on December 8, 2021. RetrievedDecember 8, 2021 – via Newspapers.com.
^Weddell, Wray (October 3, 1970)."Wray Weddell's Austin".Austin American-Statesman. Austin, Texas. p. 1.Archived from the original on December 8, 2021. RetrievedDecember 8, 2021 – via Newspapers.com.
^"KVUE-TV On the Air After Delay".The Austin American. Austin, Texas. September 13, 1971. p. 18.Archived from the original on December 8, 2021. RetrievedDecember 8, 2021 – via Newspapers.com.
^Cox, Mike (July 19, 1984)."Gunman barges into TV station".Austin American-Statesman. p. A1.Archived from the original on April 24, 2023. RetrievedApril 23, 2023 – via Newspapers.com.
^"KVUE 24 expanding its newsroom".Austin American-Statesman. July 4, 1991. p. F1.Archived from the original on April 24, 2023. RetrievedApril 23, 2023 – via Newspapers.com.
^Tyson, Kim (February 26, 1999)."Belo adds KVUE to Texas TV holdings".Austin American-Statesman. Austin, Texas. p. A1,A7.Archived from the original on December 8, 2021. RetrievedDecember 8, 2021 – via Newspapers.com.
^Larson, Mark (February 26, 1999). "Belo swaps Channel 10, $55 mil for Austin station".Sacramento Business Journal.GaleA54168654.
^Holloway, Diane (March 20, 1989)."'Live-In' wears out crude humor fast".Austin American-Statesman. Austin, Texas. p. D8.Archived from the original on December 8, 2021. RetrievedDecember 8, 2021 – via Newspapers.com.
^Holloway, Diane (December 31, 1995)."TV twists through real-life dramas".Austin American-Statesman. Austin, Texas. p. Show World 5,6.Archived from the original on December 8, 2021. RetrievedDecember 8, 2021 – via Newspapers.com.
^abc"KVUE put to the test".Austin American-Statesman. Austin, Texas. June 1, 1998. p. E1,E8.Archived from the original on December 8, 2021. RetrievedDecember 8, 2021 – via Newspapers.com.
^Whittaker, Richard (April 29, 2015)."Film Flam: Linklater, Krisha, and Slackerwood".Austin Chronicle.Archived from the original on June 8, 2016. RetrievedOctober 1, 2016.The National Association of Broadcasters honored Andy Pierrotti, photojournalists Derek Rasor and Matt Olsen, president general manager Patti C. Smith, news director Frank Volpicella and assistant news director Michelle Chism for The Cost of Troubled Minds, a seven month investigation into the staggering and frightening underinvestment in mental health care in Texas.
^Dessem, Matthew (May 24, 2021)."John Oliver Tricked Local News Shows Into Promoting a Bogus "Sexual Wellness Blanket" He Invented".Slate. Archived fromthe original on May 24, 2021. RetrievedMay 24, 2021....Oliver tricked three local TV stations—KVUE in Austin, Texas, KMGH-TV (Denver7) in Denver, Colorado, and KTVX (ABC4), in Salt Lake City, Utah—into airing a promo for a completely worthless "sexual wellness blanket" ... all three stations will apparently ... hawk whatever kind of pseudoscience (if you) pay their extraordinarily low rates for sponsored content...
^Johnson, Allan (December 13, 1998)."Ex-Austinite comes full circle".Austin American-Statesman. Chicago Tribune. p. Show World 4.Archived from the original on April 24, 2023. RetrievedApril 23, 2023 – via Newspapers.com.