KLAX-TV

KLAX-TV


Alexandria/Pineville, Louisiana
Branding ABC 31 KLAX
ABC 31 News
Slogan Covering Central Louisiana
Channels Digital: 31 (UHF)
Virtual: 31 (PSIP)
Subchannels 31.1 ABC
31.2 Me-TV
Owner Pollack/Belz Communications Co., Inc.
First air date March 3, 1983
Call letters' meaning Louisiana and AleXandria
Sister station(s) KWCE-LP, KIEM-TV
Former channel number(s) 31 (UHF analog, 1983-2009)
Former affiliations Independent (1983-1985)
UPN (secondary, 1995-1997)
Transmitter power 200 kW
Height 333 m
Facility ID 52907
Transmitter coordinates 31°33′54″N 92°33′0″W / 31.56500°N 92.55000°W
Website KLAX-TV.com

KLAX-TV is the ABC-affiliated television station for Central Louisiana licensed to Alexandria. It broadcasts a standard definition digital signal on UHF channel 31 from a transmitter in the Kisatchie National Forest southwest of Dry Prong. The station can also be seen on Suddenlink channel 3. Owned by the Pollack/Belz Broadcasting Company, KLAX is sister to low-powered Retro Television Network (RTV) affiliate KWCE-LP and the two outlets share studios on England Drive/LA 498 in Alexandria. Syndicated programming on KLAX includes Entertainment Tonight, The Dr. Oz Show, and The Insider, among others.

Digital channels

Channel Video Aspect Programming
31.1 720p 16:9 Main KLAX-TV programming / ABC
31.2 480i 4:3 Me-TV [1]

History

KLAX was launched on March 3, 1983 originally operating as an independent station, owned by the late Don Lyons and his wife, the former Rebecca Payton (1937-2012), a native of Saline in Bienville Parish. The Lyonses came to Alexandria from Many, where they had formerly owned and operated radio station KWLA.[2]

Two years later, it became the area's ABC affiliate with Monday Night Football serving as the first program that the station aired as a network affiliate. Prior to this, area cable companies had piped in either WBRZ from Baton Rouge or KATC out of Lafayette. Cypress Communications sold the station to current owner Pollack/Belz Broadcasting on June 3rd, 1988. KLAX became one of two default ABC affiliates for the Monroe area (along with KTBS) in 1994 after that city's former ABC affiliate, KARD, became a Fox station. This situation continued until 1998 when KAQY signed-on and took the ABC affiliation. During this time due to the SyndEx rules, programming airing on other stations in Monroe was replaced by CNN Headline News.

KLAX also had a secondary affiliation with UPN from 1995 until 1998 when sister station KWCE signed-on (it is now a Retro Television Network affiliate). Until upgrading its master control to allow the broadcast of high definition programming in 2012, KLAX was one of the few ABC affiliates and one of the last remaining major network stations in the United States that continued to broadcast exclusively in standard definition.

Newscasts

News open.

KLAX established a fully staffed and produced local news department in the 1980s. The operation was shut down in 2001 being unable to compete with longtime dominant KALB. A news operation was revived in 2008 in partnership with the Independent News Network (INN). The news anchor, meteorologist, and sports anchor are provided by the centralized news operation and other personnel from INN can fill-in as necessary. KLAX maintains local reporters who contribute content to newscasts seen weeknights at 6 and 10. The shows are taped in advance and originate from INN's facility on Tremont Avenue in Davenport, Iowa.

References

  1. http://metvnetwork.com/wherewatch.php?marketID=195
  2. "Rebecca Payton Lyons obituary". Alexandria Daily Town Talk. Retrieved November 23, 2012.

External links