Channel 42 began broadcasting on December 4, 1983, as KBVO-TV. Owned by Austin Television, a consortium of three groups that sought the license, it was Austin's first new commercial TV station since 1971 and its first localindependent station. Originally emphasizing movies in its schedule, the station affiliated with the newFox network at its launch in October 1986.
In 1994, Fox announced it would move its local affiliation toKTBC, the previous CBS affiliate, in July 1995. Austin Television, by this point owned by Darrell Cannan ofWichita Falls and KBVO-TV general manager Steve Beard, sold the station toGranite Broadcasting; Granite in turn secured an affiliation with CBS. The affiliation switch in Austin took place on July 2, 1995. On that day, channel 42 became KEYE-TV and began broadcasting local newscasts, which typically have been in third- or fourth-place positions in local ratings. After Granite purchased two large-marketWB affiliates, it sold KEYE-TV to the CBS network in 1999.
CBS sold four of its smaller-market media properties, including KEYE-TV, toCerberus Capital Management in 2007; the stations were grouped under theFour Points Media Group name and later run under contract byNexstar Broadcasting Group. During this time, the station flipped one of itsdigital subchannels to an affiliate of Telemundo, complete with Spanish-language local newscasts produced by the KEYE-TV newsroom. Sinclair Broadcast Group acquired the Four Points stations in 2012.
Channel 42 in Austin had two prior users before KEYE-TV began broadcasting. It was first assigned toKHFI-TV, which began broadcasting as Austin's second television station on February 12, 1965.[2] The station, renamed KTVV, moved to channel 36 in January 1973.[3] TheSpanish International Network applied for a translator ofKWEX-TV fromSan Antonio using channel 42 in 1977;[4] this application remained pending by 1979,[5] but K42AB began broadcasting on January 24, 1982.[6]
By the time the Spanish International Network sought channel 42 for a translator, interest was beginning to build around the use of the channel for a full-service TV station. A Christian group and an Austin entrepreneur each analyzed filing, but neither did, and the first official application came from Texas Television, Inc.—the broadcasting business of the McKinnon family, which owned stations inBeaumont andCorpus Christi.[7][8] Four other applicants filed with the FCC to run the channel.[9] Austin Telecasting was led by Darrold Cannan Jr., aWichita Falls businessman and owner ofKAMR-TV inAmarillo. Mountain Laurel Broadcasting was owned by Timothy R. Brown. The other two had interests in stations elsewhere:Pappas Telecasting ofVisalia, California, andTelevision Corporation of Central Texas.[10]
Pappas dropped out, and the four other applicants reached a settlement agreement—announced in June 1982 but not approved until March 1983 by which Television Corporation of Central Texas would be a consultant to a merger of Austin Telecasting, Mountain Laurel, and Texas Television, known as Austin Television.[11][12] Steven Beard was hired as the general manager and led a search for studio space that delayed channel 42's launch.[13] For the newindependent station, he formulated a program schedule highly dependent on movies, with an estimated 25 feature films a week.[14] Occasional sports telecasts, syndicated shows, and religious and children's programs rounded out its offerings.[15] The Spanish International Network moved to channel 30.[16]
From its studios on Metric Boulevard, KBVO-TV (named forBevo, the live longhorn steer mascot of theUniversity of Texas' sports teams) began broadcasting on December 4, 1983.[17] It was profitable within five months of starting up.[18] On October 9, 1986, the station became a charter affiliate of the upstartFox network.[19] Beard attributed the station's success to good timing and its movie identity, which helped it weather a regional economic downturn later in the 1980s.[20][21]
In 1991, KBVO-TV became the first station outside of San Antonio to air a package ofSan Antonio Spurs basketball games.[22] By 1994, it was one of the ten highest-rated Fox affiliates in the country; the station was now exclusively owned by Cannan and Beard.[23]
In May 1994,New World Communications purchased longtime CBS affiliateKTBC, which was included later that month in agroupwide affiliation deal to switch most of New World's stations to Fox. Despite KBVO's strong ratings among younger demographics, its UHF signal was inferior to KTBC's VHF signal. The move came as a shock to Beard, a member of Fox's board of governors. He told theAustin American-Statesman that he would seriously consider pursuing the soon-to-be vacant CBS affiliation for KBVO.[23] In October 1994, Austin Television reached a deal to sell KBVO-TV for $54 million toGranite Broadcasting Corporation, which would affiliate KBVO-TV with CBS once the network was bumped from KTBC.[24] For Cannan and Beard, the sale represented an estate planning move.[25]
On July 2, 1995, KTBC and KBVO swapped affiliations, with Fox moving to KTBC and the CBS affiliation going to KBVO. Simultaneously with the affiliation switch, KBVO changed its call sign to KEYE-TV. Granite wanted to bolster channel 42's ties to its new network, whosemain symbol is an eye, and eliminate any confusion about where CBS programming could be found in Austin. Beard's successor as general manager, Dennis Upiah, said that with the new call letters, "CBS is literally our middle name". The new owners also wanted to shed KBVO's image as a station focused on children's programming.[26] The station began producing local newscasts that day and broke ground on a studio expansion to house its newsroom.[27]
At the start of 1999, Granite put KEYE up for sale to help debt obligations it incurred in acquiring two larger-market affiliates ofThe WB,KBWB inSan Francisco andWDWB inDetroit.[28] Several large broadcast companies, includingRaycom Media andHearst-Argyle Television, expressed interest in acquiring KEYE.[29] That April, CBS agreed to buy the station for $160 million.[30] The sale closed that August.[31] Under CBS, management turned over frequently, with six general managers in five years.[32]
On February 7, 2007, CBS agreed to sell seven of its smaller-market stations toCerberus Capital Management, L.P., for $185 million.[33] Cerberus formed a new holding company for the stations,Four Points Media Group, which took over the operations of the stations throughlocal marketing agreements in late June 2007; the sale to Four Points was consummated on January 10, 2008.[34] Four Points operated the stations outright until March 20, 2009, when it entered into a three-year management agreement with theIrving, Texas–basedNexstar Broadcasting Group.[35]
Sinclair Broadcast Group announced the acquisition of the Four Points stations for $200 million in September 2011.[36] The deal was completed on January 3, 2012,[37] at which time the Nexstar management agreement was terminated.[38] In August 2016, the station began referring to itself as "CBS Austin".[39]
In June 2008, KEYE began broadcasting a seconddigital subchannel offering programming from theRetro Television Network as well as a repeat of its morning newscast.[40] This was replaced on October 1, 2009, with the Spanish-language networkTelemundo. KEYE also debuted Spanish-language local newscasts at 5 and 10 p.m. weeknights.[41]
Before it switched to CBS, KBVO-TV had no newscasts with the exception of nightly updates aired during Foxprime time programming from a small closet studio.[42] After the affiliation swap, on July 3, 1995, KEYE immediately launched a full slate of newscasts, under the monikerK-EYEWitness News. Veteran anchorman Neal Spelce, formerly of KTBC, was hired as part of the new operation, and the station's Metric Boulevard studios were expanded to house the news department.[27]
In launching a news operation, station management hoped that the locally high ratings for CBS network news on KTBC would transfer to channel 42. This was not the case, and technical miscues in the weeks after opening alienated viewers. Early on, the station rated fourth of the four major TV news operations in town, but it soon surpassed KTBC, whose news ratings severely slumped after the switch.[43] Its news programs were faster-paced than the competition with a higher-than-average reliance on props and unconventional methods of storytelling.[44] Spelce retired in 2002, becoming "anchor emeritus" and a commentator with occasional contributions to KEYE's newscasts.[45] By that time, the station was struggling in the ratings, with sitcom reruns occasionally drawing more viewers than channel 42's newscasts; it canceled its noon newscast as a result.[46] It fired three anchors—including Cile Spelce, Neal's daughter—at the end of 2002 and hired Judy Maggio from KVUE several months later.[47] CBS also made investments in weather forecasting and anchor salaries[32] as well as $15 million to make KEYE the city's first TV station with high-definition local newscasts in 2007, with the Four Points sale in progress.[48]
The station canceled its 5 p.m. newscast in September 2009, replacing it withWe Are Austin Live, an hour-long 4 p.m. lifestyle show anchored by Michelle Valles and Jason Wheeler. A few weeks later, the weekday morning newscast was canceled and later replaced with a simulcast of theJ. B. and Sandy Morning Show fromKAMX (94.7 FM), leaving KEYE with its 6 and 10 p.m. newscasts and a 5:30 p.m. newscast on Sunday evenings.[49] On June 30, 2011, after the station was unable to renew its agreement with KAMX ownerEntercom, KEYE replaced the simulcast of theJ. B. and Sandy Morning Show with the in-house newscastWe Are Austin Mornings, a morning extension ofWe Are Austin LIVE similar in format to national network morning newscasts.[50]We Are Austin Mornings lasted less than a year before being replaced with a more conventional morning newscast.[51] The 2009 afternoon news changes were reversed in June 2012, whenWe Are Austin Live was canceled to make way for the reinstatement of a 5 p.m. newscast.[52] TheWe Are Austin name was revived in 2014 when the station reintroduced it for a 9 a.m. lifestyle show; simultaneously, KEYE extended its morning news to start at 4:30 a.m., giving it a weekday news output of five hours.[53] During this time, the station had a short-lived improvement in its ratings; in the May 2012 sweeps, it had the highest-rated 10 p.m. newscast in the market.[54]
In 2017, the station placed third or fourth in all of the time slots where it aired a newscast.[55] In March 2021, it tied KVUE for second place at 10 p.m. but had half as many viewers in the target demographic of viewers 25–54.[56]
KEYE-TV also provides weeknight weather updates for Sinclair-ownedWUCW inMinneapolis–Saint Paul, which are presented by KEYE's chief meteorologist Chikage Windler.[57]
KEYE-TV broadcasts two subchannels ofKBVO-CD as part of Austin'sATSC 3.0 (NextGen TV) deployment plan. KBVO-CD began 3.0 broadcasting in October 2020.[61]
KEYE-TV shut down its analog signal on February 17, 2009; it was the first Austin station to cease analog broadcasting.[62] The station's digital signal remained on its pre-transition UHF channel 43, usingvirtual channel 42.[63] KEYE-TV moved its digital signal from channel 43 to channel 34 on June 21, 2019, as a result of the2016 United States wireless spectrum auction.[64]
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** Owned by third parties and managed by Sinclair through various operating agreements. *** Owned by Sinclair and operated byMarquee Broadcasting. JV Joint venture.