KPXG

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KPXG
Portland, Oregon
City of license Salem, Oregon
Branding ION Television
Channels Analog: 22 (UHF)

Digital: 4 (VHF)

Translators KPXG-LP 54 Portland (city)
K14LP Cottage Grove
Affiliations ION Television
Owner ION Media Networks, Inc.
(Paxson Salem License, Inc.)
First air date November 21, 1981
Call letters’ meaning PaX TV OreGon
Former callsigns KECH (1981-1986)
KWVT (1986-1987)
KHSP (1987-1988)
KBSP-TV (1988-1998)
Former affiliations independent (1981-1987)
FNN (1982-1985)
HSN (1987-1998)
Pax TV (1998-2005)
i (2005-2007)
Transmitter Power 1700 kW (analog)
16 kW (digital)
Height 363 m (analog)
490 m (digital)
Facility ID 5801
Transmitter Coordinates 44°59′55″N, 122°41′41.5″W (analog)
45°31′20.5″N, 122°44′49.5″W (digital)
Website www.ionline.tv

KPXG is the ION Television affiliate licensed to Salem, Oregon, and serves the Portland, Oregon-Vancouver, Washington television market. It broadcasts on analog Channel 22/ATSC Channel 4. It operates translator KPXG-LP, channel 54, to further enhance Portland coverage. Also covers part of the Eugene TV market, over the air and cable as well.

The station's current programming consists of the ION national feed including religious programs, plus paid infomercials and local advertising spots. The network programing on Friday includes qubo in the afternoon and ION Life in the early evening. Both programing blocks are now full time digital sub-channels.

Contents

[edit] History

The station went on air on November 21, 1981 as KECH. It was started by general partners Chris Desmond and Arnold Brustin, both formerly associated with CBS. [1] It broadcasted old movies and TV shows using the slogan "Catch 22". By mid-1982, the station was offering the ON-TV subscription service. Customers would be supplied with small yagi antenna, amplifier if needed and a Set-top box.

The station reverted to a general entertainment format in 1984, and changed its call sign to KWVT on October 1, 1986. It began airing Home Shopping Network, owned by HSN's broadcasting arm, Silver King Television. Programming during the overnight in 1986, HSN programming was added to the midday later that year, and by 1987 the station ran HSN programming full-time. At that point the station was sold to Blackstar Broadcasting, and changed its call sign first to KHSP on September 17, 1987, and then KBSP-TV on April 21, 1988. During that same year. The station carried the Oregon Megabucks drawing. This program was produced in conjunction with the Oregon Lottery. The state lottery discontinued the program by 1990.

Blackstar sold the station to Paxson Communications (now ION Media Networks) on January 19, 1996, and the station began to air religious programming in the morning, informercials in the afternoon and evening, and Worship Network programming overnight. On July 1, 1998 the station changed it call letters to KPXG and began airing Pax TV programming from noon to midnight (reduced to 4–11pm by 2003). It remains an affiliate of the ION Television network owned by ION, following the network's rebrandings from Pax TV and i.

[edit] KPXG-LP history

Originally on channel 43, it first signed on the air in the Spring of 1994, as K43EK. The station was owned by ValueVision Media, which aired ValueVision shopping programing for four years.

In 1998 K43EK was bought by Paxson Communications. A few months later Paxson Communications was able to convert it to a translator of KPXG, and soon changed the calls to KPXG-LP.

The station now broadcasts on channel 54, with a pending move to channel 42. Other call letters assigned to channel in the past were K60DW and K43EK.

[edit] Station Brandings

  • One Good Thing Leads To Another
  • Here's The Thing To Do Catch 22

[edit] Digital Television (Over The Air)

The station's over the air digital channel is multiplexed:

Digital channels
Virtual
Channel
Physical
RF Channel
Video Aspect Programming
22.1 4.1 480i 4:3 Main KPXG Programming from the ION Television network
22.2 4.2 480i 4:3 qubo
22.3 4.3 480i 4:3 ION Life
22.4 4.4 480i 4:3 The Worship Network

In 2009, KPXG will remain on channel 22 when the analog to digital conversion is complete.[2]

[edit] External links

[edit] References

  1. ^ Salem-Based TV to reach Clark County. The Columbian, November 10, 1981
  2. ^ http://hraunfoss.fcc.gov/edocs_public/attachmatch/DA-06-1082A2.pdf