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City | Nampa, Idaho |
Channels | |
Branding | Idaho News 6 |
Programming | |
Affiliations |
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Ownership | |
Owner |
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KSAW-LD | |
History | |
First air date | February 1, 1974 (51 years ago) (1974-02-01) |
Former call signs |
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Former channel number(s) | Analog: 6 (VHF, 1974–2009) |
Call sign meaning | Idaho and VI for theRoman numeral 6[1] |
Technical information[2] | |
Licensing authority | FCC |
Facility ID | 59255 |
ERP | 736kW |
HAAT | 858.1 m (2,815 ft) |
Transmitter coordinates | 43°45′20.8″N116°5′57″W / 43.755778°N 116.09917°W /43.755778; -116.09917 |
Translator(s) | see§ Translators |
Links | |
Public license information | |
Website | www |
KIVI-TV (channel 6) is atelevision station licensed toNampa, Idaho, United States, serving theBoise area as an affiliate ofABC. Owned by theE. W. Scripps Company, the station maintains studios on East Chisholm Drive in Nampa (alongI-84/US 30/SH-55), while its transmitter is located at theBogus Basinski area summit inunincorporatedBoise County.
KIVI-TV operatesKSAW-LD inTwin Falls, asemi-satellite of KIVI for theMagic Valley. It airs KIVI's ABC programs and some of its newscasts, alongside local commercials, separate evening newscasts produced from Nampa covering the Twin Falls area, and separatesyndicated programming. KSAW-LD also maintains a small advertising sales office in the Blue Lakes Office Park on Falls Avenue in Twin Falls.
Prior to KIVI-TV's establishment, there had been two failed attempts to establish a station on the Nampa channel 6 allocation.
The first of these earned the distinction of being Idaho's first television station.KFXD-TV broadcast from June 18 to August 11, 1953. However, it was unable to obtain a network affiliation.[3] KIDO-TV (channel 7, nowKTVB), which signed on in July 1953, primarily carriedNBC shows but also had a secondary affiliation with ABC.KBOI-TV (channel 2), which signed on in November 1953, primarily carriedCBS shows but also aired some ABC programs. KFXD-TV struggled to find programming and was a two-man operation, resulting in its prompt closure. It was the first VHF television station in the United States to godark altogether.
KCIX-TV had a longer run on the air, from November 1958 to January 1960. However, it too failed to secure an ABC affiliation, and the station went silent awaiting the completion of a merger deal with a radio and television station inPocatello that fell apart.
In 1968, two parties filed to make a third attempt at channel 6 in Nampa, both of them seeking a hookup with ABC. ActorRobert Taylor was the headline name in one bidder, Snake River Valley Television,[4] while James Lavenstein ofSalt Lake City backed the bid of the Idaho Television Corporation. A construction permit was granted to Idaho Television Corporation on May 26, 1971.[5]
The station signed on February 1, 1974, as KITC, representing its ownership. It was delayed a month by the collapse of the tower for Pocatello sister station KPTO (changed before launch toKPVI) during construction.[6] For the first time, Boise had full network service from all three stations.[7] On April 15,[5] KITC changed its call sign to KIVI. At that time, the station opened its Nampa studios, after having begun broadcasting from two mobile homes, and began producing local news programming on April 27, the same day that KPVI launched.[1]
Idaho Television Company sold KIVI, along with KPVI in Pocatello, to Futura Titanium Corporation in 1977.[8] Futura, in turn, sold the station to theEvening Post Publishing Company in 1981,[9] and Evening Post struck a deal to sell KIVI toMilwaukee-basedJournal Communications in 2001,[10] with the deal closing in 2002.
While KIVI had operated a translator in the Magic Valley since 1985—despite the later existence of KKVI, a full-power ABC affiliate and satellite of KPVI established in 1989—an affiliation shuffle in January 1996, in which KPVI became an NBC affiliate but KKVI instead switched to Fox, led to the upgrading of translator K68CO to semi-satellite KSAW-LP, airing its own commercials.
On July 1, 2008, it was reported Banks Broadcasting had agreed to sellKNIN-TV (channel 9) to Journal Communications, which would create Boise's first televisionduopoly.[11][12] On November 10, theFederal Communications Commission (FCC) initially rejected the application.[13] Shortly afterward, Banks Broadcasting filed an appeal. The FCC reversed its decision to reject the deal on January 16, 2009.[14] The purchase closed on April 24, at which point KNIN vacated its longtime studios on West Bannock Street in downtown Boise and was integrated into KIVI's facilities in Nampa.[15]
On July 30, 2014, it was announced that theE. W. Scripps Company would acquire Journal Communications in an all-stock transaction. The combined firm retained the companies' broadcast holdings and spun off their print assets as Journal Media Group.[16] Originally, KIVI-TV, KNIN-TV and five radio stations were not included in the merger; in September, Journal filed to transfer these stations to Journal/Scripps Divestiture Trust (with Kiel Media Group as trustee).[17][18] The merger was completed on April 1, 2015.[19][20] Scripps retained KIVI and the five radio stations, but not KNIN.[21] However, KIVI continued to provide services and facilities to KNIN, which was sold toRaycom Media and thenGray Television,[22][23] until Gray sold the station toMarquee Broadcasting in 2023.[24]
KIVI's second subchannel became "Boise 6" in October 2023, as Scripps acquired local rights to air theVegas Golden Knights.[25]
The station currently ranks at a distant second place to KTVB (and sometimes third behind KBOI) inNielsen ratings for all newscast periods.[26] Until July 2010, KIVI aired an hour-long broadcast weeknights at 6 along with KBOI. The 6:30 portion was eventually dropped as a result of low viewership in the comparative time slot.[27] Following Journal's acquisition of KNIN, KIVI began producing a weeknight prime time newscast on that station. Known asToday's 6 News on K9, the show was seen for thirty minutes and competed with a nightly half-hour newscast on thenRTV affiliate KYUU-LP (which was produced by KBOI).
In January 2011, KIVI upgraded its local newscasts to 16:9enhanced definitionwidescreen with the KNIN show being included in the change. Although not true high definition level, broadcasts match the aspect ratio of HD television screens. Corresponding with KNIN's affiliation switch to Fox in September 2011, its prime time show became known asFox 9 News at 9 and initially featured separate news anchors but shared other personnel with KIVI.
The prime time show was also expanded to an hour on weeknights and added a weekend edition. Around the same time, the station's logo coloring was changed from gold, maroon and silver to red, white and blue; this was to allow the station to utilize the same standardized Renderon graphics package used by Journal's Milwaukee flagshipWTMJ-TV and other company-owned stations.
Although most semi-satellites of another station provide some coverage of their home territory (in this case, the state of Idaho), until 2020, KSAW did not produce any local inserts for the Magic Valley during KIVI's newscasts since there were no news-related personnel locally based out of their Twin Falls offices. On April 13, 2020, following the hiring of three Twin Falls-based reporters, KSAW launched separate evening newscasts, which are produced and anchored out of KIVI; morning and weekend newscasts continue to be simulcast on both stations. Concurrently, KIVI and KSAW rebranded from6 On Your Side toIdaho News 6.[28]
In 2023, after cutting ties with KIVI-TV, KNIN-TV dropped the newscasts from channel 6 and began broadcasting newscasts produced by KBOI-TV.[24]
The station's signal ismultiplexed:
Channel | Res. | Aspect | Short name | Programming |
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6.1 | 720p | 16:9 | KIVI-DT | Main KIVI-TV programming /ABC |
6.2 | Boise6 | Independent /Vegas Golden Knights games | ||
6.3 | 480i | MYSTERY | Ion Mystery | |
6.4 | BOUNCE | Bounce TV | ||
6.5 | LAFF | Laff | ||
6.6 | GET | Get |
KIVI shut down its analog signal, over VHF channel 6, on June 19, 2009, one week later. All of Journal's television stations (including KIVI) added or regained the "-TV" suffix. The station's digital signal remained on its pre-transition UHF channel 24,[30] usingvirtual channel 6.