| |
|---|---|
| City | Modesto, California |
| Channels | |
| Branding |
|
| Programming | |
| Affiliations |
|
| Ownership | |
| Owner |
|
| KTFK-DT,KEZT-CD | |
| History | |
First air date | August 26, 1966 (1966-08-26) |
Former call signs |
|
Former channel numbers | Analog: 19 (UHF, 1966–2009) |
| Independent (1966–1972) | |
Call sign meaning | "Univision Sacramento" |
| Technical information[1] | |
Licensing authority | FCC |
| Facility ID | 58609 |
| ERP | 500kW |
| HAAT | 555 m (1,821 ft) |
| Transmitter coordinates | 38°7′7″N120°43′31″W / 38.11861°N 120.72528°W /38.11861; -120.72528 |
| Translator(s) | |
| Links | |
Public license information | |
| Website | Univision 19 |
KUVS-DT (channel 19) is atelevision station licensed toModesto, California, United States, broadcasting the Spanish-languageUnivision network to theSacramento area. It isowned and operated byTelevisaUnivision alongsideStockton-licensedUniMás outletKTFK-DT (channel 64). The two stations share studios onArden Way nearCal Expo in Sacramento; KUVS-DT's transmitter is located nearValley Springs, California.
Channel 19 in Modesto was founded bycountry and western performerChester Smith and began broadcasting as KLOC-TV on August 26, 1966. It was an English-languageindependent station but struggled to obtain programming once distributors raised their rate. As a result, the station simulcast co-ownedKLOC radio during the day and began airing Spanish-language shows at night. By the 1970s, it was specializing in daytime Christian programming and evening Spanish-language programming. Its coverage area expanded to include Sacramento in 1975; the call sign changed to KCSO-TV in 1981 when Smith sold KLOC radio. Over the course of the 1980s, Smith built several additional television stations in central California and Nevada broadcasting Spanish-language programming.
Chester Smith sold KCSO to Univision in 1997; Smith retained the call sign, so the station was renamed KUVS-TV. The station moved most of its operations from Modesto to Sacramento after the sale. It produces local Spanish-language newscasts for the market as well as a weekly public affairs program seen on other Univision stations in California.
All of KUVS-DT's subchannels are rebroadcast in the immediate Sacramento area onKEZT-CD (channel 23), and KTFK-DT also rebroadcasts the Univision subchannel of KUVS-DT to provide improved coverage.
On March 3, 1964, Corbett Pierce andcountry and western performerChester Smith, owner ofKLOC (920 AM) inCeres, applied to theFederal Communications Commission (FCC) for permission to build a new television station on channel 17 in Modesto, one of two channels allocated to the city.[2][3] The FCC approved the application on November 12, 1964;[2] after a national overhaul ofultra high frequency (UHF) channel allocations finalized in early 1966 shifted Modesto's channel allocation to channel 19,[4] the station began broadcasting asindependent station KLOC-TV on August 26, 1966.[5]
Initially, KLOC maintained a general-entertainment format and was one of the stations that carried programming from theUnited Network during its one month of operation in May 1967.[6][7] About a year after its sign-on, the syndicators providing KLOC's programming raised their prices to the levels closer to a Sacramento-licensed station (the station's owners had been acquired programming at lower rates closer to that of an unrated television market); KLOC-TV alleged that Stockton'sKOVR had pressured syndicators not to do business with the Modesto station.[8] Smith resorted tosimulcasting KLOC radio's programming during the daytime hours, including a camera in the radio station's studios showing the disc jockeys live,[9] and ran Spanish-languagetelenovelas in the evening, when the radio stationsigned off. Advertising revenue from the radio station helped keep channel 19 afloat.[7] In 1972, the station joined the Spanish International Network (SIN), predecessor to Univision;[10] soon after came an affiliation with theChristian Broadcasting Network (CBN) to air religious programs.[11] SIN and CBN provided steady income and turned the struggling station's fortunes around.[7]
In 1975, the station increased its power and finally began broadcasting incolor; the technical improvements also resulted in Sacramento being able to receive the station for the first time.[12] Smith sought to expand the reach of his station's programming. In 1976, he proposed to build a satellite station on channel 42 inConcord, which had lay fallow for a decade following the short-lived existence ofKCFT-TV a decade prior, with a transmitter to be built atopMount Diablo.[13] The move was roundly opposed by citizens' groups that felt that Concord's channel 42 would be better used by a station that proposed more local programming. Two television stations that broadcast Spanish-language programming,KEMO-TV (channel 20) in San Francisco andKMUV-TV (channel 31) in Sacramento, also objected.[14][15] As a result, KLOC abandoned the Concord proposal in December 1976.[16] In 1979, KLOC won the rights to build channel 35 inSalinas, to repeat much of its Modesto programming to theMonterey Bay area; as a result, the KLOC radio station was sold off as a condition of obtaining the construction permit, and the television station changed its call sign to KCSO ("Chester Smith Organization"[17]) in 1981.[18][19]KCBA started broadcasting on November 1, 1981, becoming an English-language independent station several years later.[20] In 1986,KREN-TV went on the air as an SIN-affiliated sister station inReno, Nevada.[21] Later in the decade, K07TA and K09UF, predecessors to today'sKTAS (channel 33), went on air in theSanta Barbara andSan Luis Obispo area, and in 1991, plans were revealed for further stations inMerced andEureka.[22]
KCSO's primary local program was its 6 p.m. local newscast, which was produced on a "dental floss budget", in the words of Xóchitl Arellano, who worked at the station when it was still located in Modesto.[23] However, the number of news personnel slowly increased throughout the 1990s.[23]
In late 1996, Smith announced the sale of KCSO to Univision for $40 million (equivalent to $73.6 million in 2024 dollars); once the sale closed, the station's morning Christian programs would be discontinued to make way for broadcasting all of Univision's Spanish-language output.[24] (The KCSO call letters were retained by Smith, who startedKCSO-LP, aTelemundo affiliate, in 1999.[17]) Smith was paid in Univision stock, which quadrupled in value between 1997 and 1999.[25]

Univision changed the call letters to KUVS, relocated operations from Modesto to Sacramento, and added an 11 p.m. local newscast to the station's longstanding 6 p.m. local news,[26] which also began to cover news in Sacramento. It was the first time a network had placed an owned-and-operated TV station in Sacramento.[27][28] Univision purchased a former bank building across from theArden Fair Mall to house its Sacramento operation, leaving only sales and news personnel in Modesto.[29][30]
The KUVS newsroom in Sacramento airs half-hour local early and late evening newscasts seven days a week andA Primera Hora ("First Thing in the Morning"), a one-hour-long morning newscast at 6 a.m. In 2017, Univision debuted a statewideEdición Digital (Digital Edition) newscast, aired at 12:30 p.m.[31] The station began producing local newscasts in the early 1970s, though the station's resources were limited. The news set consisted of a table and chairs until anchor Xóchitl Arellano persuaded San Francisco'sKGO-TV to sell its previous news set to KCSO for $2,000.[32]
KUVS also producesVoz y Voto, a weekly political roundtable program distributed to Univision's California stations. When it debuted in 1999, the program was co-produced withKMEX-TV in Los Angeles and was originally hosted by Rosa Maria Villalpando; Armando Botello, state political columnist for Los Angeles newspaperLa Opinión; and Arellano, among others.[33][34][35] In 2005, the program featured an exclusive interview with governorArnold Schwarzenegger.[36] Arellano continued to serve as one of the program's anchors until she left the station in 2007.[37]
KUVS-DT's transmitter is located nearValley Springs, California.[1]
| Channel | Res. | Aspect | Short name | Programming | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| KUVS-DT | KEZT-CD | ||||
| 19.1 | 23.1 | 720p | 16:9 | KUVS-DT | Univision |
| 19.4 | 23.4 | 480i | Mystery | Ion Mystery | |
| 64.2 | 23.2 | 720p | KTFK-HD | UniMás (KTFK-DT) | |
There is no 19.2 on the KUVS multiplex, as it is broadcast from KTFK-DT.KEZT-CD broadcasts the subchannels on this multiplex using major channel 23.[39]
KUVS-DT is part of Sacramento'sATSC 3.0 (NextGen TV) deployment onKQCA, which began operating in July 2021.[40]
KUVS-TV shut down its analog signal, overUHF channel 19, on June 12, 2009, as part of thefederally mandated transition from analog to digital television. The station's digital signal remained on its pre-transition UHF channel 18.[41]