Satellite of WKLE, Lexington, Kentucky | |
---|---|
| |
Channels | |
Branding | KET |
Programming | |
Network | Kentucky Educational Television |
Affiliations |
|
Ownership | |
Owner | Kentucky Authority for Educational Television |
WKMJ-TV | |
History | |
First air date | September 5, 1958 |
Former call signs | WFPK-TV (1958–1969) |
Former channel number(s) |
|
NET (1958–1970) | |
Call sign meaning | No specific meaning [1] |
Technical information | |
Licensing authority | FCC |
Facility ID | 21432 |
ERP | 58 kW |
HAAT | 266.1 m (873.0 ft) |
Transmitter coordinates | 38°22′1″N85°49′54″W / 38.36694°N 85.83167°W |
Links | |
Public license information | |
Website | www |
WKPC-TV (channel 15) is a Public Broadcasting Service (PBS) member television station licensed to Louisville, Kentucky, United States. Owned by the Kentucky Authority for Educational Television, the station is operated as part of the statewide Kentucky Educational Television (KET) network. WKPC-TV's transmitter (like those belonging to several other Louisville stations, including sister WKMJ-TV) is located at the Kentuckiana Tower Farm at Floyds Knobs, in Floyd County, Indiana. WKPC and WKMJ are the only KET-owned stations whose transmitters are outside Kentucky's borders.
Prior to 1997, WKPC-TV was a free-standing public television station, Kentucky's first.
The Louisville Free Public Library, which had ventured into broadcasting in 1950 with the launch of FM radio station WFPL, followed by WFPK four years later, was granted a construction permit on January 3, 1958, for a noncommercial educational television station to operate on channel 15 in Louisville. [2] WFPK-TV began broadcasts on September 5, 1958, with a test program, followed the next Monday by the commencement of classes for more than 7,000 students in high schools in Louisville, Jefferson County, and two counties in southern Indiana. [3] [4] That first year, programs originated from the facilities of commercial station WAVE-TV. [3]
In 1967, the public library transferred the station, which by that time had joined National Educational Television, to the school system of Jefferson County. [2] Two years later, in 1969, as a condition of the sale and to avoid confusion with the library's radio stations, WFPK-TV changed its call letters to WKPC-TV. [1] That year also brought a major technical improvement for channel 15. In May, ground was broken on a new tower in Floyds Knobs, using land owned by WAVE-TV, as part of a power increase. [5] That new tower would also bring another television station to Kentuckiana, as the Kentucky Authority for Educational Television leased space to side-mount an antenna for its new KET transmitter, WKMJ-TV; Louisville had received poorer-than-expected service from the original statewide transmitter configuration. [6]
As the 1970s progressed, the Jefferson County school system cut back on its use of instructional television over WKPC-TV. In 1975, a regional chamber of commerce task force recommended that operation of the station be transferred to a nonprofit community group; [7] the next year, the school board contemplated selling the station but opted instead to keep it. [8] The board's decision not to sell prompted a competing applicant, Metropolitan Louisville Public Television, Inc. (MLPTV), to file for channel 15 as well, mutually exclusive with a renewal for WKPC-TV. [2]
In late 1980, a new corporation, Fifteen Telecommunications, Inc., was formed among three factions that had sought control of the station and with the blessing of MLPTV, which promised to drop its license challenge if the school board transferred the license to Fifteen. [9] The school board relinquished control of WKPC-TV in 1981.
The new licensee had a tall task ahead. The station had accrued enough problems that PBS, in an unusual occurrence, went so far as to convene a special task force in Louisville to sort them out; the task force recommended the station shed its "elitist and remote" image, increase its income to bolster its finances, and attract new viewers. [10] A new general manager, John-Robert Curtin, was hired in late 1982 from KYVE-TV in Yakima, Washington, which had similarly split from a school board to become a community-organized station; he succeeded the station's original manager, Jerry Weaver, who had served under three different license-holders. [11] Curtin cut more than half the staff and began to try and turn around the station, which had heavily borrowed funds to just stay in operation. [12]
The new leadership also attempted to resolve a problem that had been present for nearly 15 years in the form of the duplication of certain PBS programs with KET. [13] Despite an early deal, the two public television entities could not reach an arrangement, and the problem persisted. [14]
By the late 1980s, WKPC had turned itself around enough that it had outgrown the studio built for it nearly 20 years prior by the Jefferson County school board. [15] However, the mid-1990s saw a rapid reversal of fortunes, largely due to Fifteen Telecommunications' attempts to build on that momentum of success. The station moved into a former General Electric facility not far from its previous studios, borrowing $2.1 million to make the purchase; it also sprouted a string of for-profit subsidiaries, such as Team One, which provided production and teleconferencing services. [16] However, the new ventures, designed to brace for potential cuts to federal support of public broadcasting, caused expenses to soar, and the station was unable to attract tenants to fill the rest of the 103,000-square-foot (9,600 m2) building. [16] By late 1996, WKPC-TV had accrued $4 million in debts. [17] Tom Dorsey, television and radio writer for The Courier-Journal , noted that "it was always too busy paying the bills to do much local programming". [18]
The worsening financial situation prompted station leaders in April 1996 to begin pursuing a merger with KET, [16] a consolidation that would end all duplication between WKPC and KET in Louisville by turning WKPC into the primary KET service for the metropolitan area. [19] An agreement was reached in December 1996, [17] by which KET acquired certain technical assets, including the land to the Floyds Knobs tower it still shared with WKPC-TV, and the license. [20] The building was sold to WHAS radio and today houses that and iHeartMedia's other Louisville stations. [21]
On July 1, 1997, KET's main programming moved to WKPC-TV. WKMJ-TV simultaneously suspended operations for a transmitter overhaul; [18] it returned a month later at increased power, carrying a new service called KET2, which initially featured additional children's programs, adult education programming and local productions. [22] Outside of Louisville, KET2 was seen on cable systems statewide. [20] For viewers in the rest of Kentucky, the merger brought several schedule changes, as KET shuffled its lineup to accommodate some programs that it did not air but which channel 15 had broadcast before ceasing independent operations. [18]
WKPC-TV's digital signal, WKPC-DT, was the first KET transmitter to broadcast in digital and Kentucky's first digital television station. On August 19, 1999, the station's digital signal was activated by then-governor Paul E. Patton during the opening ceremonies of that year's Kentucky State Fair. [23] [24]
The station's digital signal is multiplexed:
Channel | Res. | Aspect | Short name | Programming |
---|---|---|---|---|
15.1 | 720p | 16:9 | KET | Main KET programming / PBS |
15.3 | 480i | 4:3 | KET KY | Kentucky Channel |
15.4 | KETKIDS | PBS Kids | ||
68.1 | 720p | 16:9 | KET2 | KET2 (WKMJ-TV) |
On April 16, 2009, WKPC-TV turned off its analog signal over UHF channel 15 as part of the mandatory analog-to-digital television transition of 2009. The station's digital signal remained on its pre-transition UHF channel 17. Through the use of PSIP, digital television receivers display the station's virtual channel as its former UHF analog channel 15.
WKPC-TV was repacked to channel 30 in phase 6 of the clearing of the 600 MHz band.
WDRB is a television station in Louisville, Kentucky, United States, affiliated with the Fox network. It is owned by Block Communications alongside Salem, Indiana–licensed dual CW/MyNetworkTV affiliate WBKI. Both stations share studios on West Muhammad Ali Boulevard in downtown Louisville, while WDRB's transmitter is located in rural northeastern Floyd County, Indiana.
WAVE is a television station in Louisville, Kentucky, United States, affiliated with NBC and owned by Gray Television. The station's studios are located on South Floyd Street in downtown Louisville, and its transmitter is located in Floyds Knobs, Indiana.
WHAS-TV is a television station in Louisville, Kentucky, United States, affiliated with ABC. Owned by Tegna Inc., the station maintains studios on West Chestnut Street in Downtown Louisville, and its transmitter is located in rural northeastern Floyd County, Indiana.
Kentucky Educational Television (KET) is a state network of PBS member television stations serving the U.S. Commonwealth of Kentucky. It is operated by the Kentucky Authority for Educational Television, an agency of the Kentucky state government, which provides more than half of its annual funding. KET is the dominant public broadcaster in the commonwealth, with transmitters covering the vast majority of the state as well as parts of adjacent states; the only other PBS member in Kentucky is WKYU-TV in Bowling Green. KET is the largest PBS state network in the United States; the broadcast signals of its sixteen stations cover almost all of the state, as well as parts of Illinois, Indiana, Missouri, Ohio, Tennessee, Virginia and West Virginia. The network's offices, network center and primary studio facilities are located at the O. Leonard Press Telecommunications Center on Cooper Drive in Lexington; KET also has production centers in Louisville and at the Kentucky State Capitol Annex in Frankfort.
WNPT, virtual channel 8, is a PBS member television station licensed to Nashville, Tennessee, United States. The station is owned by Nashville Public Television, Inc., a community-funded, non-profit organization. WNPT's studios are located on Rains Avenue in southeast Nashville, and its transmitter is located in the southern suburb of Forest Hills.
Arkansas PBS is a state network of PBS member television stations serving the U.S. state of Arkansas. It is operated by the Arkansas Educational Television Commission, a statutory non-cabinet agency of the Arkansas government operated through the Arkansas Department of Elementary and Secondary Education, which holds the licenses for all of the public television stations based in the state. The commission is managed by an independent board of university and education officials, and gubernatorial appointees representing each of Arkansas's four congressional districts. Along with offering television programs supplied by PBS and various independent distributors, the network produces public affairs, cultural and documentary programming as well as sports events sanctioned by the Arkansas Activities Association (AAA).
WMYO-CD, virtual channel 24, is a low-powered, Class A Laff-affiliated television station licensed to Louisville, Kentucky, United States. The station is owned by New Albany Broadcasting Co., Inc. WMYO-CD's studios are located on Potters Lane in Clarksville, Indiana, and its transmitter is located in the Louisville tower farm in Floyd County.
WPTO is a public television station licensed to Oxford, Ohio, United States, and broadcasting to the Cincinnati area. It is owned by Public Media Connect alongside WCET in Cincinnati and WPTD in Dayton and is managed from the ThinkTV studios in Dayton. The transmitter is co-located with Cincinnati's WXIX-TV near the Western Hills Viaduct. WPTO serves as a secondary PBS station for the Cincinnati and Dayton areas.
WKYT-TV is a television station in Lexington, Kentucky, United States, affiliated with CBS and The CW. The station is owned by Gray Television, and maintains studios and transmitter facilities on Winchester Road near I-75 on the east side of Lexington. In addition to WKYT-TV, Gray owns WYMT-TV in Hazard, Kentucky, a separate CBS affiliate serving eastern Kentucky with its own syndicated programming inventory and local newscasts.
WBKO is a television station in Bowling Green, Kentucky, United States, affiliated with ABC, Fox, and The CW Plus. It is owned by Gray Television alongside Telemundo affiliate WBGS-LD. The two stations maintain studios on Russellville Road near its junction with Interstate 165 on the west side of Bowling Green. The transmitter facility is located along Kentucky Route 185 in unincorporated northern Warren County.
WKMJ-TV is a Public Broadcasting Service (PBS) member television station licensed to Louisville, Kentucky, United States. It is the flagship station for KET2, the second television service of Kentucky Educational Television (KET), which is owned by the Kentucky Authority for Educational Television.
WKPD is a PBS member television station licensed to Paducah, Kentucky, United States. Owned by the Kentucky Authority for Educational Television, the station is operated as part of the statewide Kentucky Educational Television (KET) network. WKPD's transmitter is located on Coleman Road off of KY 305 on the west side of Paducah, near the McCracken County Soccer Complex.
WKYU-TV is a secondary PBS member television station in Bowling Green, Kentucky, United States. Owned by Western Kentucky University as an arm of its Information Technology department, it is a sister station to NPR member network WKU Public Radio and its flagship station WKYU-FM. The two outlets share studios on College Heights Boulevard on the WKU campus; WKYU-TV's transmitter is located six miles (10 km) north of Bowling Green along KY 185, on a tower shared with ABC/Fox/CW+ affiliate WBKO and Telemundo affiliate WBGS-LD.
WGTK is a commercial AM radio station in Louisville, Kentucky. It is owned by Word Media Group and it airs a conservative talk radio format. Similar to many Salem Media Group talk stations, it calls itself "970 The Answer." Its studios and offices are on Corporate Campus Drive in Louisville, while its transmitter is on Hamburg Pike in Jeffersonville, Indiana.
WFPL is a 24-hour listener-supported, noncommercial FM radio station in Louisville, Kentucky. The station focuses on news and information, and is the primary National Public Radio network affiliate for the Louisville radio market. WFPL is now owned by Louisville Public Media and was originally owned by the Louisville Free Public Library. When the station came on the air in 1950, it was the first library-owned radio station in the country.
WFIA is an AM radio station on 900 kHz in Louisville, Kentucky. WFIA is owned by Word Media Group through its subsidiary Word Broadcasting Network, Inc. WFIA broadcasts with a daytime power of 930 watts and a nighttime power of 162 watts and carries Christian programming.
WKLO-TV was a UHF television station in Louisville, Kentucky, United States, that operated from October 18, 1953, to April 20, 1954.
KET ED, known as the Education Channel, was a digital television programming service operated by PBS member network Kentucky Educational Television. The service provided programming from the Annenberg/CPB project, along with encore presentations of some PBS programming, and much of KET's locally produced in-house instructional television (ITV) productions.
The Kentucky Channel, also known by its Program and System Information Protocol short name and on-screen logo bug as KET KY, is a full-time 24/7 statewide digital television programming service originating from PBS member state-network Kentucky Educational Television. The channel features programming related to the U.S. state of Kentucky, as well as coverage of Kentucky General Assembly when it is in session.