KTNC-TV

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KTNC-TV / KUNO-TV
Image:Ktnc2007.jpg
KTNC: Concord/San Francisco, California
KUNO: Fort Bragg, California
Branding KTNC 42
Slogan ¡Somos tu canal!
(We're your station!)
Channels Analog:
KTNC: 42 (UHF)
KUNO: 8 (VHF)

Digital:
KTNC: 63 (UHF)
KUNO: 15 (UHF)

Affiliations TuVisión
Owner Pappas Telecasting Companies
(KTNC: KTNC License, LLC)
(KUNO: Concord License, LLC)
First air date KTNC: June 19, 1983
KUNO: 1990[1]
Call letters’ meaning KTNC:
Television
Northern
California
KUNO:
UNO (Spanish for "one")
Former callsigns KTNC:
KFCB (1983-1996)
KUNO:
KFWU (1990-2003)
Former affiliations KTNC:
independent (1983-1996)
Azteca America (2002-2007)
KUNO:
ABC (1990-early 2000s)
Transmitter Power KTNC:
1290 kW (analog)
47.3 kW (digital)
KUNO:
224 kW (analog)
1000 kW (digital)
Height KTNC:
856 m (analog)
942 m (digital)
KUNO:
744 m (analog)
733 m (digital)
Facility ID KTNC: 21533
KUNO: 8378
Transmitter Coordinates KTNC:
37°53′33.3″N, 121°53′57.2″W (analog)
37°52′54.1″N, 121°55′8.7″W (digital)
KUNO:
39°41′38.3″N, 123°34′46.5″W
Website www.ktnc.com

KTNC-TV, over-the-air channel 42, is a Spanish-language independent station in Concord, California, serving the Sacramento and San Francisco areas. It is owned by Pappas Telecasting and broadcasts at 2240 kilowatts.

Programming on KTNC can also be seen in Mendocino County on KUNO-TV channel 8, licensed in Fort Bragg.

The station began broadcasting in 1983 as KFCB, a Christian-broadcasting station owned by First Century Broadcasting (later, Family Christian Broadcasting) --the initials in the company name formed the station's original call letters. At that time, its president was Rev. Ronn Haus. A majority of its air time was devoted to Christian programming, including its own in-house productions. The flagship program was called "California Tonight", later retitled "Coast to Coast", a Christian talk show with sermons, conversations with religious topics, and musical guests. The program utilized an applause cart (audio tape cartridge) to give the viewers the impression of a studio audience. Other programming included The 700 Club, Dr. Robert Schuller's Hour of Power, and various other local and national religious programs, usually of an evangelical nature. In its earliest years, Channel 42 aired shows such as Speed Racer, Dennis The Menace, Father Knows Best, Mighty Hercules, Candid Camera, New Zoo Revue, Danger Mouse, CNN Headline News, and others for about 5 hours per day. Though they aired some secular shows and commercials, KFCB's primary revenue source was always viewer donations. The station broadcast semi-annual telethons, in the manner of public television and radio. Christian children's programming included The Gospel Bill Show, Superbook, Davey and Goliath, and others. From 1985 to 1986, the station phased out most of its secular shows, although a lineup of Saturday morning secular shows remained until at least 1989. The secular shows were occasionally modified to meet the station's "Christian" standards--master control operators were instructed to cover up the "Hollywood Minute" feature of CNN Headline News, and beer commercials were deleted from It's Your Business, a syndicated discussion program.

Original studios of KFCB were located at 5101 Port Chicago Highway, in the industrial section of north Concord, just north of the interchange with State Route 4. Later, space was leased in a neighboring office building for additional offices and a larger studio. Only the cameras (three RCA TK-761's) were moved to the new studio, with the control room remaining in the original building. The new studio was also the only television studio in the Bay Area to feature a restroom in the middle of the studio floor, the result of the studio being located in a roughed-in, but unfinished, office structure. The restroom was placed off-limits during tapings as a result of not being soundproof. The RCA transmitter was located on the north peak of Mount Diablo, in a very difficult to access building which was barely large enough to house the transmitter itself--the result of challenges from environmentalists against the station's original application for a construction permit. An engineer working on the front panel of the transmitter was actually standing outside the building itself.

KFCB maintained a full-time production staff and generated much of its own programming, primarily short ministry programs with local ministers. A Sunday-afternoon public-affairs program, "Open Forum", covered secular community issues and was the result of an agreement between First Century Broadcasting and a competing applicant for the channel 42 license. The program was later replaced by a similar show, "The Informed Viewer".

Around 1988, a translator station, K34AV, was built in Fresno, California to rebroadcast KFCB's signal. The translator became low-power station KSDI-LP in 1997 (now on channel 33) and is no longer associated with KFCB/KTNC. Efforts around the same time to construct another translator in Modesto, California, and purchase a full-power station on Long Island, New York failed.

In 1990, the license renewal application of KFCB came under fire from minority groups for alleged failures to comply with the equal employment opportunity regulations of the FCC. After an investigation by the FCC, the license was ultimately renewed.

A few years later, Haus and other partners decided to form a national Christian network called United Christian Broadcasting, in which KFCB was to be its flagship station. The purpose was for the station's programming to be spread to a nationwide audience just like other Christian networks such as Trinity Broadcasting Network and 3ABN. The venture would prove to be a financial disaster, and by 1996 Haus was forced to sell the station to Pappas Telecasting.

Today Channel 42 is known as KTNC-TV and remains a Spanish-language station.

Pappas Telecasting terminated KTNC's affiliation agreement with Azteca America after the end of the June 30, 2007 broadcast day. [1] On July 1, KTNC officially became a part of Pappas' independent Spanish language network, TuVision. [2] The Azteca América affiliation for the San Francisco DMA moved to a newly-created digital subchannel of KBWB, while the Azteca América affiliation for the Sacramento DMA moved to a low-power station, KSTV-LP. [3] DirecTV has replaced the signal of KTNC with the Azteca America feed from KBWB-DT 20.4 in some locations as of July 1, 2007.

[edit] External links

[edit] References

  1. ^ The Broadcasting and Cable Yearbook says February 1, while the Television and Cable Factbook says May 13.