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City | Chico, California |
Channels | |
Branding |
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Programming | |
Affiliations |
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Ownership | |
Owner | Maxair Media,LLC |
Operator | Allen Media Group[1] (viaSSA) |
KHSL-TV | |
History | |
First air date | September 24, 1985 (39 years ago) (1985-09-24) |
Former call signs | KCPM (1985–1998) |
Former channel number(s) |
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Call sign meaning | North Valley News |
Technical information[2] | |
Licensing authority | FCC |
Facility ID | 33745 |
ERP | 300 kW |
HAAT | 566.7 m (1,859 ft) |
Transmitter coordinates | 40°15′30.6″N122°5′24.4″W / 40.258500°N 122.090111°W /40.258500; -122.090111 (KNVN) |
Translator(s) | K31ND-D 31 (UHF) 24.3Oroville |
Links | |
Public license information | |
Website | www |
KNVN (channel 24) is atelevision station licensed toChico, California, United States, serving the Chico–Reddingmarket as an affiliate ofNBC andTelemundo. It is owned by Maxair Media, which maintains ashared services agreement (SSA) withAllen Media Group, owner of dualCBS/CW+ affiliateKHSL-TV (channel 12, also licensed to Chico), for the provision of certain services. The two stations share studios at the McClung Broadcast Center at the intersection of Eaton Road and Silverbell Road on the northwest side of Chico; KNVN's transmitter is located northeast ofRed Bluff.
Channel 24 first hit the airwaves on September 24, 1985, as KCPM, making the northern Sacramento Valley one of the last regions of the country with full network service. The station was owned by the broadcasting unit of television production companyTelepictures (later renamedLorimar-Telepictures) It also brought a full NBC affiliate to the area for the first time sinceKRCR-TV (channel 7) switched from NBC toABC in 1978. In that interim period between 1978 and 1985, assorted NBC programs were available via off-hours clearances from both KHSL and KRCR. It originally broadcast from the former KHSL-TV and Radio studios located on East 4th Street and Wall Street in Chico. Lorimar-Telepictures sold the station along with two of its stations (KSPR inSpringfield, Missouri, andKMID inMidland, Texas) to Goltrin Communications in 1987; which in turn sold it to Davis-Goldfarb Communications in 1988.
KCPM signed on during a very prosperous time for NBC (as it rose to become the top rated network), and it did quite well for the first several years on the air. But by 1998, the station was sinking in debt and on the verge of closing down. At this point, KHSL stepped in, not wanting to see the loss of full network service in the area. Then-ownerGrapevine Communications sold the station to Evans Broadcasting, which changed the calls to the current KNVN on August 10, and turned the station's operations over to KHSL (owned by Catamount Broadcasting at the time) under ashared services agreement.
A report in theChico News & Review on January 3, 2013, said that there were rumors of a sale of KHSL and KNVN toNexstar Broadcasting Group.[3] However, on February 6, KNVN was instead sold to K4 Media Holdings. Operations of the station were taken over by GOCOM Media, LLC, which concurrently bought KHSL.[4][5] The FCC approved the sale on April 19;[6] it was consummated on May 6.[7] On July 14, 2015, it was announced that K4 would sell KNVN to Maxair Media. Concurrently, GOCOM sold KHSL-TV to Heartland Media, through its USA Television Holdingsjoint venture with MSouth Equity Partners, for $40 million; Heartland provided services to KNVN and sold up to 15 percent of channel 24's advertising time.[8] The sale was completed on December 1.[9]
KNVN-DT2, brandedTelemundo Chico-Redding, is theTelemundo-affiliated seconddigital subchannel of KNVN, broadcasting in720p high definition on channel 24.2. It is the first localSpanish-language station in the Northstate to broadcast a locally produced Spanish-language newscast calledAcción Noticiero Telemundo with Josh Navarro and Daniela Contreras as anchors. Spanish-language local news was discontinued on October 25, 2024.[10]
The subchannel's Telemundo affiliation originally started withKXVU-LP (channel 17) in 2006. It was founded byChester Smith ofSainte Partners II, L.P., joining sister stationKUCO-LP (theirUnivision affiliate) as the only two Spanish-language stations in the North Valley until they also foundedKKTF-LD (theUniMás affiliate). After the sale of Sainte's assets toBonten Media Group, the new owners sold the rights to Telemundo to K4 Media Holdings and moved the network from KXVU's channel 17 to channel 24.2. (KXVU has since become an affiliate ofAntenna TV).
KHSL and KNVN currently share a single news operation.
KCPM aired its own newscasts for a time after going on the air under the titles of24 Reports and24 Action News (the latter which is reused by both KHSL and KNVN today). After Grapevine sold the station, KNVN relaunched its own news department, this time targeted toward younger viewers. However, this attempt at local news failed to make much of an impact. Finally, the news departments of both stations formally merged into a single news department in February 2000.
On January 17, 2025, Allen Media Group announced plans to cut local meteorologist/weather forecaster positions from its stations, including KHSL/KNVN, and replacing them with a "weather hub" produced byThe Weather Channel, which AMG also owns.[11]
The station's signal ismultiplexed:
Channel | Res. | Aspect | Short name | Programming |
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24.1 | 1080i | 16:9 | KNVN-HD | NBC |
24.2 | 720p | Telemun | Telemundo | |
24.5 | 480i | StartTV | Start TV | |
24.6 | HITV | Heroes & Icons |
Channel | Programming |
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31.1 / 24.4 | Telemundo (KNVN-DT2) |
31.3 / 24.3 | KNVNSD |
31.4 / 12.3 | KHSL SD |
31.5 / 12.4 | The CW Plus |
KNVN shut down its analog signal, overUHF channel 24, on December 22, 2008. The station's digital signal relocated from its pre-transition UHF channel 36 to channel 24.[13]
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