KCAL-TV
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KCAL-TV | |
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Los Angeles, California | |
Branding | K-CAL 9/K-CAL 9 News |
Slogan | Live, Local, Late Breaking |
Channels | 9 (VHF) analog, 43 (UHF) digital |
Affiliations | Independent CBS (secondary affiliation during Oakland Raiders preseason) |
Owner | CBS Corporation |
Founded | August 25, 1948 |
Call letters meaning | K CALifornia |
Former callsigns | KFI-TV (1948-51), KHJ-TV (1951-89) |
Former affiliations | NBC (August 1948–January 1949) DuMont (Feb 1949-1955) |
Transmitter Power | 141 kW/970 m (analog) 495 kW/950.9 m (digital) |
Website | www.cbs2/kcal9.com |
KCAL-TV (Channel 9) is an independent station in Los Angeles, California owned by CBS Corporation. CBS also owns KCBS-TV, another station in the Los Angeles media market. Its transmitter is located atop Mount Wilson.
Contents |
[edit] History
[edit] Early years
Channel 9 went on the air as KFI-TV on August 25, 1948, owned by Earle C. Anthony along with KFI-AM 640. Since KFI-AM had long been affiliated with NBC, KFI-TV served for a brief period as L.A.'s NBC television affiliate, until KNBH (now KNBC) went on the air several months later in 1949. The station then went independent, a status it has retained to this day (though it carried some DuMont programming).
Channel 9's engineers made noises about going on strike in 1951, leading Anthony to sell the station to RKO General. It had bought KHJ-AM-FM a few months earlier, so it changed the TV station's calls to KHJ-TV. KHJ radio had been the flagship of the Don Lee Broadcasting System, a regional West Coast radio network. The Don Lee name was so well respected in California broadcasting that KHJ-TV called itself "Don Lee Television" for a few years in the early 1950s, even though it had never been affiliated with KHJ radio until the 1951 deal. Most of Don Lee's television experiments had been conducted on what is now KCBS-TV--ironically, current sister station to channel 9.
[edit] RKO ownership, the licensing scandal, and sale to Disney
In 1965, RKO faced a challenge to its license for KHJ from a group called Fidelity Television. At first, Fidelity's challenge focused on KHJ's programming quality. Later, and more seriously, Fidelity claimed that KHJ was involved in reciprocal trade practices. Fidelity alleged that RKO's parent company, General Tire, forced its retailers to purchase advertising on KHJ and other RKO stations as a condition of their contracts with General Tire. An administrative law judge found in favor of Fidelity, but KHJ appealed. In 1972, the FCC allowed RKO to keep the license for KHJ, but two years later conditioned future renewals on the renewal of sister station WNAC (now WHDH-TV) in Boston. Six years later, the FCC stripped WNAC of its license for numerous reasons, but largely because RKO had misled the FCC about corporate misconduct at General Tire. The decision meant KHJ and sister station WOR-TV (now WWOR-TV) in New York lost their licenses as well. However, an appeals court ruled that the FCC had erred when it tied KHJ's renewal to that of WNAC and ordered new hearings for KHJ and WOR.
The hearings dragged on until 1987. That year, an administrative law judge found RKO unfit to be a broadcast licensee due to numerous cases of dishonesty by RKO, including fraudulent billing and lying about its ratings. The FCC advised RKO that it would almost certainly deny any appeals, and persuaded RKO to sell its stations to avoid the indignity of having their licenses taken away. Finally, in 1989, RKO agreed to sell KHJ to Fidelity Television, the group that originally challenged the license in 1965. Fidelity then sold the license to Disney.
Even though Channel 9's longtime radio cousins had changed their calls to KRTH-AM-FM some years before, Disney wanted to make a clean start. Accordingly, it changed the calls to KCAL-TV, and briefly branded the station as "California 9" before settling on "K-CAL 9."
In 1995, Disney purchased Capital Cities/ABC, which owned ABC's West Coast flagship, KABC-TV. Due to FCC regulations at the time, Disney was not allowed to keep both KABC and KCAL. Disney chose to divest KCAL, which was purchased by Young Broadcasting.
[edit] Recent years: CBS purchase
As a result of massive debt acquired from purchasing the former NBC affiliate in San Francisco, KRON-TV (which went independent, and now is affiliated with My Network TV), Young Broadcasting put KCAL up for sale in 2002, and the station was purchased by CBS Corporation. KCAL's operations were merged with those of KCBS, and KCAL moved from its longtime headquarters at the Paramount Studios (a Viacom property and former owner of rival KTLA) in Hollywood to the historic CBS Columbia Square, home to KCBS-FM-TV and KNX-AM, located one mile away. In 2004, CBS Corporation announced plans to relocate its Los Angeles television stations to a new office complex on the site of its CBS Studio Center in Studio City in 2006, located 5 miles away in the San Fernando Valley, for which groundbreaking took place on June 17, 2005.
[edit] "UPN/MY 9?"
When CBS Corporation bought KCAL, many in the broadcasting industry have speculated that they would move its UPN network affiliation from Fox-owned KCOP-TV to KCAL, making KCAL a UPN O&O. KCOP's previous owners, Chris-Craft Industries, had until 2000 owned a stake in UPN, and KCOP was considered a UPN O&O, which ended with Fox's buyout of Chris-Craft's TV stations division, United Television. However, CBS Corporation decided to leave KCAL as an independent, as Fox renewed its affiliation agreement for its UPN-affiliated stations. Some said the reason is that Fox used KCOP for leverage to keep UPN on WWOR in New York and WPWR-TV in Chicago because CBS Corporation did not have duopolies in those cities.
This issue became moot in January 2006 due to the announcement of The CW, a broadcast network created from a merger of UPN and The WB. The new network launched in September 2006, with KTLA affiliating with The CW and KCOP with My Network TV, a new network created by Fox (which itself is owned by News Corp). KCAL is still independent, at least for now. And in markets where the Tribune Company owned a WB affiliate through a 25% stake in the defunct network, KCAL is now among a series of independent stations owned by CBS as the original one. The other two stations include former UPN stations KTXA in Dallas-Fort Worth, and WSBK in Boston.
[edit] Programming history
For many years since the station's launch, the showing of motion pictures originally intended for theatrical release was a prime staple of KHJ's programming. Many of these movies were from RKO's film library; in fact, a major reason General Tire bought RKO in the first place was to give its stations a programming source. The quality of these showings was somewhat reduced by the necessity for editing in order to show paid advertising.
KHJ programmed a similar format as KTLA in the 1960s and 1970s. By the late 1960s, Channel 9 offered a blend of movies from the 1940s through '60s (and '70s by 1975). The station also ran a blend of drama shows, westerns, sitcoms, cartoons, professional sports, older movies, syndicated talk shows, game shows, public-affairs shows, locally produced talk shows, religious shows, and live local news.
By the mid 1970s, the cartoons were gone (moving to KTTV and KCOP), and the station ran far fewer off-network sitcoms. It focused more on talk shows, game shows, older movies, and dramas. It did have a weekday children's show called Froozles, which ran until the late 1980s. It also produced a local talk show called Mid Morning L.A., hosted over the years by Bob Hilton, Meredith MacRae, Geoff Edwards and Regis Philbin, which ran well into the 1980s. Edwards and MacRae won Emmy Awards for their hosting duties during the early-1980s. Some other locally produced public affairs shows included the investigate show "Camera 9", and "The Changing Family", a program about family and social issues during the 1980s.
The station abruptly changed formats in the late 1980s, in the wake of its ownership change to Disney. It added a number of cartoons, some of which were from the Walt Disney library. The station also ran other syndicated cartoons, as well as a lot of off-network family sitcoms. For a while it also aired a few first-run syndicated talk shows and movies, as well as dramas.
In the 1970s, KHJ had a 10 p.m. newscast. It was moved to 9 p.m. during the 1980s, and the station later added a half-hour 8 p.m. Newscast during the late 1980s. Some of its most notable personalities included Anchors George Putnam, Tom Lawrence, Nathan Roberts, Lonnie Lardner, Linda Edwards, and weathercaster Andrew Amador, who continues to work in Southern California television. Interestingly many of KHJ's former staff were let go by the time Disney purchased the station. By 1990, Disney implemented the concept of a prime time news block, with "Prime 9 News" between 8 and 11 p.m.. The 3-hour news block is still seen on KCAL to this day.
Cartoons continued to be a big part of KCAL's schedule in the 1990s, with blocks of children's programming on weekday mornings and afternoons, including the Disney Afternoon block, that lasted well into 1997. The afternoon kids block was gone by 1998, and the Disney kids block moved to UPN and KCOP in 1999. By 2000, the children's shows in the morning were gone as well. The family sitcoms, however, were gradually phased out, and KCAL added more first-run syndicated talk, reality, court, and newsmagazine shows, under the then-new ownership of Young Broadcasting, who bought KCAL in 1997. The station also added more weekday daytime newscasts at 2 and 3 p.m.
KCAL is notable for airing newscasts during unconventional time blocks. Along with newscasts at 10 p.m. (where it competes against KTLA and KTTV), noon, and 4 p.m., it also airs news at 2 p.m., 3 p.m., 8 p.m., and 9 p.m. Additionally, Channel 9 offers first-run syndicated programs such as talk shows (including one-week old repeats of Dr. Phil from KCBS), reality shows, newsmagazine shows (including Inside Edition, and late-night repeats of Entertainment Tonight and The Insider, both of which are previously seen the same day on KCBS), court shows, as well as the controversial hit cartoon series, South Park, which airs late nights after the news. KCAL's other syndicated fare on the weekends include 24, CSI: Miami, and Without A Trace. KCAL is the Southern California home of the annual Jerry Lewis Muscular Dystrophy Association Labor Day telethon, which it has carried since 1997.
In the Spring of 2007, KCAL and its sister station KCBS began moving from the old CBS Columbia Square on the corner of Sunset Boulevard and Gower Street to a new office complex at CBS Studio Center in the San Fernando Valley neighborhood of Studio City, five miles away from the old studio. Both stations will begin broadcasting from the new studios in the spring of 2007. With the move, KTLA and PBS affiliate KCET will be the only TV stations in the Los Angeles market to broadcast from Hollywood. Many other Los Angeles television stations (such as KNBC, KABC, KTTV, KCOP, and KWHY) have all abandoned their Hollywood studios in recent years (KNBC moved from Hollywood to Burbank in 1962), and re-located to other parts of the Los Angeles area. Additionally, KNX Radio and KCBS-FM left Columbia Square in the fall of 2005, to move to a newly-built CBS Radio studio complex in the Miracle Mile area, near West Los Angeles.
On February 2, 2007, KCAL premiered a High Definition channel, KCAL 9 HD on Time Warner Cable Channel 409 in the Los Angeles market and over-the-air digital channel 43 (virtual channel 9.1) with an NBA game between the Los Angeles Lakers and the Indiana Pacers. KCAL 9 HD is not yet available from DirecTV or Dish Network. All of KCAL's remaining 2006-07 regular season and playoff Lakers games will be produced in high definition. In addition, KCAL 9 HD plans to deliver all of its 2007 Los Angeles Dodgers game broadcasts (50 in all) in high definition beginning on Friday, March 30, 2007 with the Dodgers' Freeway Series game against the Angels. When KCAL and KCBS officially move their operation to their new studios in Studio City on April 23, 2007, they will produce all of their newscasts in High Definition, becoming the third and fourth stations in Los Angeles to produce news in HD, after KABC-TV (February 2006) and KTLA (January 2007). With the move, KCBS and KCAL will be the first CBS owned and operated stations to produce news in HD.
[edit] Sports Programming
For much of its history, sports have been a part of Channel 9's identity, even more so today. From 1961 to 1963, KHJ-TV was the television home of MLB's then Los Angeles Angels. The team moved to KTLA starting in 1964, when Angels team owner Gene Autry bought KTLA. Channel 9 has been the broadcast home of Los Angeles Lakers of the National Basketball Association since 1977, and it has the longest current consecutive station-team broadcast partnership in the NBA. The station began its 30th season of Lakers telecasts starting in the 2006-07 NBA season.
In 1996, KCAL once again became the broadcast TV home of the then-California Angels, now known as the Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim, and added more basketball coverage with the Los Angeles Clippers, in addition to its Lakers telecasts. The station and the Clippers parted ways in 2003. The Clippers eventually signed with KTLA. The Angels departed KCAL after the 2005 season, moving to KCOP.
In 1997, KCAL premiered the first fifteen-minute weekday sports report "Final Quarter." The show was an expansion of the typical five minute sports report seen towards the end of a newscast. Several years later the show was renamed "KCAL 9 Sports News" and with the purchase by CBS Corporation, joined sister-station KCBS-TV and was renamed "Sports Central." The show was recently expanded to a full half-hour on Saturday and Sunday nights. With the termination of the Southern California Sports Report on Fox Sports Net West/Prime Ticket, this is the only nightly detailed sports highlights show on local television.
KCAL recently became the new over-the-air television home of the Los Angeles Dodgers, televising at least 50 games a year. Also, KCAL recently signed a contract extension to continue to carry Lakers games through the end of the current decade, which would give them a 30-plus-year relationship with the NBA team. KCAL carries a minimum of 35 road games per season, with FSN West given the rights to home games. KCAL also carried selected games from the Los Angeles Galaxy of Major League Soccer until 2005, when the games became cable-exclusive to FSN West.
In addition, KCAL broadcasted selected weekend Anaheim Ducks games since the team's first season in 1993. The Ducks moved their over-the-air broadcasts to KDOC in 2005-06. KCAL was also home to the Los Angeles Kings from 1989-1999 until the Kings moved to STAPLES Center and had their games become cable-exclusive to FSN West and FSN Prime Ticket.
In the summer of 2006, KCBS and KCAL switched local coverage of National Football League preseason games of the San Diego Chargers and the Oakland Raiders. After the previous eight seasons on KCBS, Raiders preseason games moved to KCAL (which originally carried Raiders preseason games in the mid-1990s), while the Chargers games (which aired on KCAL in 2005) went to KCBS. Both teams' telecasts use production staff and graphics from CBS Sports, although the announcers used for each broadcast are employed by their respective teams. (It is interesting to note also that KCAL simulcast the ESPN and TNT feeds of Sunday night football games in which the Raiders and then-Los Angeles Rams [now St. Louis Rams] played from 1990 to 1993. Such simulcasts are required by the NFL because cable and satellite television do not reach all TV households.)
[edit] Logos
KCAL-TV logo from 2003 to the present. It is modeled after its sister KCBS' logo: KCAL Circle is in place of the CBS Eye logo, and the "9" in place of the "2." |
[edit] Previous owners of Channel 9
- 1948–1951: Earle C. Anthony, Inc.
- 1951–1989: RKO General Inc.
- 1989–1995: Walt Disney Company
- 1995–2002: Young Broadcasting
[edit] Newscasts
KCAL's newscasts run the gamut in tone. Its 8 p.m. newscast is generally an update on the day's news, which are much of the stories devoted to California and local news, and was previously branded California Report. Its 9 p.m. newscast is generally the most serious newscast and was branded in previous years as the Prime 9 News World Report. The 9 p.m. newscast prominently features political, business, and international news. The noon newscast, on the other hand, features lighter stories, including features on food, health, and entertainment news. The 4 p.m. newscast is essentially a repurposed KCBS newscast and is done with KCBS anchors Harold Greene and Ann Martin, who did not appear recently elsewhere on KCAL.
The 4 p.m. newscast was moved to KCAL from KCBS to make room for Dr. Phil, which by contract is not allowed to air opposite The Oprah Winfrey Show, which in Los Angeles airs on KABC-TV at 3 p.m.. Its 10 p.m. newscast is simply more of an update of the 8 p.m. news, as it competes with KTTV and KTLA, and in the past KCOP, though in recent years, it has been shortened to 30 minutes, in order to make way for Sports Central, the only comprehensive local sports news program in Southern California (since the demise of the Southern California Sports Report on Fox Sports Net).
Because of the amount of news on the station, KCAL is known as the station showing the most police chases. Often regular news programming is dropped to cover a police chase, and programming following the news is sometimes pre-empted to show the chase's conclusion.
The first story on the new Prime 9 News, on March 5, 1990, was the death of college basketball superstar Hank Gathers. Gathers collapsed on the court at Loyola Marymount University during a game and died about 90 minutes later at a nearby hospital.
[edit] Personalities
[edit] Current
ANCHORS
- Laura Diaz - 5PM & 11PM Anchor
- David Gonzales - Anchor
- Harold Greene - 6PM Anchor
- Pat Harvey - Anchor
- Mia Lee - Anchor
- Sylvia Lopez - Anchor
- Paul Magers - 5PM & 11PM Anchor
- Ann Martin - 6PM Anchor
- Suzanne Rico - Morning Anchor
- Kent Shocknek - Morning and 11AM Anchor
- Linda Alvarez - Weekend Anchor / Reporter
- Dave Clark - Anchor / Reporter
- Sandra Mitchell - 11AM Anchor / Reporter
- Leyna Nguyen - Anchor / Reporter
- Glen Walker - Weekend Anchor / Reporter
WEATHER
- Henry DiCarlo - 11AM Meteorologist
- Jackie Johnson - Weather
- Johnny Mountain - Weather
- Josh Rubenstein - Weather
SPORTS
- Eric Dickerson - NFL This Morning analyst
- Steve Hartman - Weekend Sports Anchor and Sports Central Co-Host
- Jim Hill - Sports director and Sports Central Co-Host
- John Ireland - Sports
- Eric Karros - Sports
- Alan Massengale - Sports
- Gary Miller - Sports
- James Worthy - Sports
REPORTERS
- Dave Bryan - Political Reporter
- Stacey Butler - Reporter
- Rick Chambers - Reporter
- Mark Coogan - Reporter
- Jennifer Davis - Reporter
- Juan Fernandez (TV reporter) - reporter
- Jaime Garza - Reporter
- Michele Gile - Orange County Reporter
- David Goldstein - Investigative Reporter
- Vera Jimenez - Traffic Reporter
- Dave Lopez - Orange County Reporter
- Mary Beth McDade - Reporter
- Christina McLarty - Entertainment Reporter
- Randy Paige - Consumer Investigative Reporter
- Greg Phillips - Inland Empire Reporter
- Jennifer Sabih - Reporter
- Lisa Sigell - Reporter
- Larry Welk - NewsChopper 2 Pilot / Reporter
CBS2.com
- Mark Liu - Webcaster / Assignment Editor / Blogger
- Jen McBride - Webcaster / Web Producer
Former
- Jerry Dunphy
- David Jackson
- Kerry Kilbride
- Alan Mendelson
- Byron Miranda Now at KTVU in San Francisco
- Lisa Joyner - entertainment reporter
- Linda Breakstone - reporter (1994-2005)
- David Sheehan - entertainment reporter (1971-81 and 1994-2003)
- Jane Velez-Mitchell - reporter (1990-2002)
- Joel Connable
- Carl Bell
- Dilva Henry - health reporter
- Paul Dandridge-reporter
- Joe Fowler- Sports
- Gary Cruz- Sports
[edit] "Thames on 9"
From June 11 to June 15, 1978, KHJ aired "Thames on 9," in which the entire night's lineup of programs was turned over to Great Britain's Thames Television. Shows included Man About the House, a forerunner of Three's Company, and The Benny Hill Show.
A similar stunt had run two years earlier in the New York area on WOR, which was KHJ's sister station.
[edit] Quotes
- "The chances of winning the Mega Millions are a gajillion to one but some people feel they will be that one" --Ann Martin, 8 November 2005
- "If news is a minute old, it's old news" — David Jackson, 2005 (on a series of channel promotions)
[edit] Newscast Titles
- The Channel 9 News (1970s-1980s)
- The Ten O'Clock News (1970s-early 1980s)
- The Nine O'Clock News (1983-1989)
- Prime 9 News (1990-1995)
- KCAL 9 News (1995-present)
[edit] Movie Umbrella Titles
- The Million Dollar Movie (1967-1989)
- 3:30 Movie (1981-1986)
- Frandsen's Feature hosted by Tom Frandsen (1960s-early 1980s)
- Fright Night (1967-1984)
- Elvira's Movie Macabre (1982-1991)
- California 9 Cinema (1990-1995)
- K-CAL 9 Cinema (1995-present)
[edit] Rebroadcasters
KCAL is rebroadcast on the following translator stations:
- K34EU Morongo Valley
- K41CY Daggett
- K54AD Lucerne Valley
- K09MG Ridgecrest
- K45GO Ridgecrest
- K14JT Joshua Tree
[edit] See also
[edit] External links
Independent Television Stations in the state of California | |
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KBTV-CA 8 (Sacramento) - KCAL 9 (Los Angeles) - KSCI 18 (Long Beach) - KBBV-CA 19 (Bakersfield) - KBWB 20 (San Francisco) - KWHY 22 (Los Angeles) - KBSV 23 (Ceres) - KVMD 23 (Twentynine Palms) - KTSF 26 (San Francisco) - KNLA-LP 27 (Los Angeles) - KMTP 32 (San Francisco) - KICU 36 (San Jose) - KCNS 38 (San Francisco) - KBOP-CA 43 (San Diego) - KXLA 44 (Rancho Palos Verdes) - KFTY 50 (Santa Rosa) - KUSI 51 (San Diego) - KDOC 56 (Anaheim) - KJLA 57 (Ventura) - KRCA 62 (Riverside) - KBEH 63 (Oxnard) |
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See also: ABC, CBS, CW, Fox, MyNetworkTV, NBC, PBS, Telefutura, Telemundo, Univision, Other Spanish Network, Religious, Home Shopping and Other stations in California |