KMCC

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KMCC
Image:Logo-multimedios.jpg
Laughlin, Nevada
Channels Analog: 34 (UHF)

Digital: 32 (UHF)

Translators KNBX-CA 31 Las Vegas
K57JO Laughlin
Affiliations Multimedios Television
Owner Cranston II, LLC
(managed by Equity Media Holdings Corporation)
(Cranston Acquisition, LLC)
First air date August 21, 2003
Call letters’ meaning Meridian
Communications
Company
(original licensee)
Former affiliations NBC, TeleFórmula
Transmitter Power 416 kW (analog)
1000 kW (digital)
Height -63 m (analog)
607 m (digital)
Facility ID 41237
Transmitter Coordinates 35°10′8.2″N, 114°38′12″W (analog)
35°39′7″N, 114°18′44″W (digital)

KMCC is a full-power television station in Laughlin, Nevada, broadcasting locally in analog on UHF channel 34 and in digital on UHF channel 32 as a Multimedios Television affiliate. The station is owned by Cranston II LLC ("Cranston") and managed by Equity Broadcasting.

Contents

[edit] History

On May 14, 1996, the FCC issued a construction permit to Meridian Communications Company (now Mojave Broadcasting Company) for a full power television station on UHF channel 34 to serve Lake Havasu City, Arizona. Its original call letters were to be KAUE, adopted in February 1997, but changed to KMCC a month later.

In July 1996, while preparing to build the station, Mojave Broadcasting determined that the proposed transmitter location was inadequate for a full-power television operation and that the alternate site near Oatman, Arizona could not provide city-grade service to Lake Havasu City due to terrain. In early 1999, they requested to move the station and both the analog and digital allotments to Laughlin, Nevada, with the transmitter at the Oatman site. They later modified their proposal to specify a transmitter in Laughlin, allowing it to secure an affiliation with NBC, since the new location would not interfere with Las Vegas NBC station KVBC-TV, which was owned by a sister subsidiary of Mojave Broadcasting.

The FCC formally granted the request in June 2000 [1] and Mojave Broadcasting began building the station in Laughlin. The FCC granted a construction permit for a digital companion channel, UHF 32, on January 15, 2002, and granted Special Temporary Authorization (STA) on April 6, 2004 to broadcast in digital at reduced power from the analog transmitter location.

The analog station was granted a license on May 28, 2004 and signed on as a satellite of KVBC-TV. The affiliation was temporary, as before the station was licensed, Cranston II LLC had agreed to buy the station from Mojave Broadcasting. The sale was approved by the FCC in October 2004 and consummated in July 2005. Upon taking ownership, Cranston changed the station to Spanish-language programming from TeleFórmula. In March 2006, equipment failure forced the station to reduce power significantly; in November, it switched to Multimedios Television.

[edit] Digital television

KMCC-DT has a construction permit to broadcast on UHF channel 32 from a transmitter location approximately 40 km (25 mi) NNE of the analog transmitter location. The site, located near Dolan Springs, Arizona is over 1200 m (4000 ft) higher in elevation than the analog site, so while the analog station serves the Mohave Valley from Bullhead City, Arizona and Laughlin down to Needles, California, the digital station, when fully built and operational, will not only serve Laughlin and the Colorado River Valley, but most of central Mohave County, Arizona and will reach beyond Las Vegas [2]. As of October 2007 however, the station is broadcasting on STA from the analog site at 15 kW with coverage approximately that of the analog signal. Cranston has filed a request to extend the STA until January 1, 2007.

[edit] Translators

The following stations rebroadcast the signal of KMCC:

Of note, KNBX-CA (meaning Nevada BoX) is owned by Equity Media Holdings and previously broadcast programming from TeleFórmula. Before that, it had aired programming from MTV2. Like most over-the-air MTV2 affiliates, it was an affiliate of The Box until that network's acquisition by Viacom in 2001.

[edit] External links