KEDT
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
KEDT | |
---|---|
Corpus Christi, Texas | |
Channels | 16 (UHF) analog, 23 (UHF) digital |
Affiliations | PBS |
Owner | South Texas Public Broadcasting System |
Founded | October 16, 1972 |
Transmitter Power | 1480 kW (analog) 50 kW (digital) |
Height | 296 m (analog) 270 m (digital) |
Website | www.kedt.org |
KEDT is a full-service television station in Corpus Christi, Texas, broadcasting locally in analog on UHF channel 16 and in digital on UHF channel 23 as a PBS member station. Founded in 1972, the station is owned by South Texas Public Broadcasting System.
Contents |
[edit] History
KEDT began as a vision by local businessman, Charles Butt (part of the family that founded the H-E-B supermarket chain), to bring the benefits of Public Television to South Texas. Joining with Don Weber, another local businessman with similar vision, the two approached the Corpus Christi business community with a proposal to start a local PBS television station. Others became interested, and soon formed a Board of Directors.
The station had humble beginnings. The original equipment was a package of used equipment located in Houston. The original transmitter location was on a site donated by a local rancher. The original broadcast facilities were in an abandoned school building in town, and the original programming was provided by San Antonio PBS station KLRN via telephone cables. Overcoming all of the challenges, KEDT signed on the air on October 16, 1972. KEDT moved into its current facilities the following year.
The station was well-received in the community, and with a strong energy-based local economy and the philanthropy that accompanies strong economies, KEDT prospered. South Texas Public Broadcasting System, KEDT's owner, even made plans for a low-power station in Victoria that would have expanded KEDT's reach in South Texas. In addition, KEDT began to produce its own programming, supplementing the PBS network fare.
The good times were not to last. A community heavily dependent on one industry is subject to the fortunes and misfortunes of that industry. Corpus Christi was no exception, and the prosperity that enriched KEDT in the late 1970s and early 1980s quickly disappeared with the hard times in the energy industry in the mid- to late-1980s. Corporate and personal donations to the station all but vanished, and the locally-produced programming, while critically acclaimed and in wide demand, did not generate enough revenue to meet the station's needs. Plans for a television station in Victoria were scrapped. By the end of the 1980s, KEDT was deeply in debt.
Sound financial management helped the station to recover in the 1990s, including debt restructuring, aggressive cost-cutting, and revenue enhancement. KEDT outsourced many of its non-essential functions and began changing their programming to further serve the needs of the community. One such change was the addition of distance learning in conjunction with local educational establishments.
The advent of the new century brought new opportunities and challenges to KEDT. Digital television (DTV) has brought new financial burdens to the station, but at the same time is bringing new benefits. As of 2003, the station was still using some of its original equipment and transmitter from 1972, so DTV presented an opportunity to modernize. In addition, DTV has allowed the station to air even more programming to serve the community, giving more opportunity to generate needed revenue.
[edit] Digital television
KEDT-DT was granted an original construction permit on August 20, 2001, to transmit on UHF channel 23. As with many other DTV facilities, KEDT-DT has not been able to build the facilities as quickly as planned, and the station has had to request several extensions of the construction permit. On April 30, 2003, the station was granted Special Temporary Authority (STA) to broadcast at reduced power to conserve financial resources. The STA has been extended several times, and the station has indicated that it may wish to make its temporary operations permanent, as its DTV signal coverage matches its analog signal coverage, and compares favorably with the DTV signal coverage of a local commercial television station that has already maximized its DTV signal.
[edit] Programming
KEDT carries programming typical of PBS member stations. On weekdays from 7:00 AM - 9:30 AM, KEDT airs children's programming, followed by educational programming suitable for use in schools from 9:30 AM - 3:00 PM. Another block of children's programming fills the late afternoon hours from 3:00 PM - 5:30 PM, followed by adult PBS network programming through the evening. During the overnight hours, KEDT airs classes from Del Mar College two nights a week from 1:00 AM - 5:30 AM, and for the rest of the week, airs more network programming until 5:00 AM, followed by additional children's programming. The weekends also consist mostly of network fare.
KEDT produced several original programs for broadcast nationally on PBS. Of note is Lone Star, an eight-part series on the history of Texas, was produced in honor of the Texas Sesquicentennial in 1986. It was hosted by Larry Hagman and continues to be requested by Texas schools for use in supplementing their Texas history courses. Another notable production was John Henry Faulk: The Man Who Beat the Blacklist, hosted by Bill Moyers and Studs Terkel. The documentary detailed the effects of McCarthyism on John Henry Faulk, a Texas radio broadcaster, and on the nation as a whole. Justice for My People: The Dr. Hector P. Garcia Story focused on Dr. Hector P. Garcia, a Mexican-born medical doctor from Corpus Christi, who was cherished by many thousands with whom he had contact. Other local programs included Liz Carpenter and the Good Old Boys and USS Lexington: Always Ready!, the latter a documentary about the World War II aircraft carrier that compiled the longest service record in the history of the United States Navy.
[edit] External links
Broadcast television in the Corpus Christi market (Nielsen DMA #129) | ||
---|---|---|
KIII 3 (ABC) - KRIS 6 (NBC / The CW on DT2) - KZTV 10 (CBS) - KEDT 16 (PBS) - KTOV-LP 21 (MNTV) - KCCX-LP 25 (Ind) - KORO 28 (UNI) - KCRP-CA 41 (TFU) - K47DF 47 (FOX) - K54JS 54 (Multimedios) - K68DJ 68 (TEL) |
PBS Member Stations in the state of Texas | |
---|---|
KACV 2 (Amarillo) - KTXT 5 (Lubbock) - KUHT 8 (Houston) - KLRN 9 (San Antonio) - KCOS 13 (El Paso) - KERA 13 (Dallas) - KAMU 15 (College Station) - KEDT 16 (Corpus Christi) - KLRU 18 (Austin) - KWBU 34 (Waco) - KPBT 36 (Odessa) - KDTN-DT 43.2 (Denton) - KNCT 46 (Belton) - KMBH 60 (Harlingen) |
|
See also: ABC, CBS, CW, Fox, MyNetwork TV, NBC, Telefutura, Telemundo, Univision, i, Religious, Independent, Home Shopping and Other Spanish stations in Texas |