KDTN

KDTN
Denton/Dallas/Fort Worth, Texas
United States
City of license Denton, Texas
Channels Digital: 43 (UHF)
Virtual: 2 (PSIP)
Subchannels 2.1 Daystar
Affiliations Daystar (O&O)
Owner Word of God Fellowship
(Community Television Educators of DFW, Inc.)
First air date September 1, 1988
Call letters' meaning DenToN
also a coincidental backronym of Daystar Television Network
Former channel number(s) Analog:
2 (VHF, 1988–2009)
Former affiliations PBS (1988–2004)
Transmitter power 1000 kW
Height 494.2 m
Facility ID 49326
Transmitter coordinates 32°32′35″N 96°57′32″W / 32.54306°N 96.95889°W
Licensing authority FCC
Public license information: Profile
CDBS
Website www.daystar.com

KDTN, virtual channel 2 (UHF digital channel 43), is the flagship station of the Daystar Television Network serving the DallasFort Worth Metroplex and licensed to Denton, Texas, United States, owned by its subsidiary Word of God Fellowship. KDTN's studio facility is part of the Daystar headquarters located off SH 121 in nearby Bedford, and its transmitter is located south of Belt Line Road in Cedar Hill.

History

In 1948, Variety Broadcasting (controlled by Lee Segall), owner of KIXL radio (1040 AM, now KGGR and 104.5 FM, now KKDA-FM), applied to the Federal Communications Commission for a license to operate a television station on VHF channel 2, to have been given the callsign KIXL-TV. However, the station ultimately never launched. By the time the FCC lifted its freeze on new television station license applications in 1952, the channel 2 allocation had been reassigned to Denton and as a non-commercial educational channel. This did not stop Harwell V. Shepard, the owner of KDNT radio (1440 AM, now KTNO and 106.1 FM, now KHKS), from applying for a commercial license for the station; the application was declined, as other applicants insisted to the FCC that the VHF channel 2 allocation be designated an educational station.

KDTN logo, used from 1988 to 2004.

North Texas Public Broadcasting, owner of PBS member station KERA-TV (channel 13), first expressed interest in establishing a secondary educational television station on channel 2 in May 1977. Several other groups applied for the allocation and a long fight for a construction permit ensued with the FCC. After several other applicants dropped out, KERA worked out an agreement with the lone remaining applicant in 1984 to gain the right to put the station on the air.

As part of the agreement, KERA constructed a studio facility on the campus of the University of North Texas in Denton for the new station, which was given the call letters KDTN (in reference to its city of license), and agreed to run some programs produced by the university. The station first signed on the air on September 1, 1988. KERA used the station primarily to run educational and instructional programs that had previously filled much of KERA's daytime schedule. Channel 13 then shifted to offering primarily entertainment programming from PBS and other public television distributors. Originally branded as "KDTN 2," the station was rebranded as "KERA 2" in the early 2000s.

In 2003, North Texas Public Broadcasting decided that running a second television station in the Metroplex was no longer viable and placed KDTN up for sale; this gave religious broadcast network Daystar an opportunity to get a better signal in the market; as a result, Daystar sold its original flagship station KMPX (channel 29, now an Estrella TV owned-and-operated station) in order to purchase KDTN. The acquisition by Daystar was finalized on January 13, 2004; during KDTN's last two days as a PBS member station before Daystar officially took ownership, the station ran a marathon of the entire run of the ITV drama series Upstairs Downstairs. However, by special arrangement, KERA announced plans to continue carrying programming sourced from the station on KDTN's digital signal, to free up bandwidth on KERA's main digital signal to allow the station to upgrade its main channel to transmit programming in high definition. As KERA only carries one digital subchannel service to date on its digital signal (which carries programming from World), and KERA has not affiliated with any additional subchannel services operated by PBS or American Public Television, KERA has not needed to lease additional subchannel bandwidth from KDTN.

Digital television

Digital channel

Channel Video Aspect PSIP Short Name Programming[1]
2.1 1080i 16:9 KDTN-DT Main KDTN programming / Daystar

Analog-to-digital conversion

KDTN shut down its analog signal, over VHF channel 2, on April 30, 2009.[2] The station's digital signal remained on its pre-transition UHF channel 43, using PSIP to display KDTN's virtual channel as 2 on digital television receivers.

References

External links