KAZO-LP
Omaha, Nebraska | |
---|---|
Slogan | Es Tu Casa |
Channels | Analog: KAZO-LP 57 (UHF) (defunct) |
Affiliations | Azteca America |
Owner |
Pappas Telecasting (TV Americas de Omaha LLC) |
Founded | 2002 |
Call letters' meaning |
K Azteca Omaha (reflecting Azteca America affiliation) |
Former affiliations | Azteca America (to 6/30/2007) TuVision (to 10/2008) |
Transmitter power | 100 kW |
KAZO-LP, UHF analog channel 57, was a Spanish-language low-power television station in Omaha, Nebraska affiliated with the Azteca America network, except for a brief affiliation with the TuVision Spanish language network in 2007 and 2008. The station was also formerly rebroadcast on KCAZ-LP channel 57 in Columbus, KAZJ-LP channel 46 in Norfolk, KWAZ-LP channel 56 in Lincoln and KAZS-LP channel 23 in South Sioux City. (By 2008 KWAZ-LP had moved to channel 35 and begun rebroadcasting KTVG instead of KAZO; this arrangement remained until January 2010 when KWAZ-LP was taken off the air.)
Prior to July 1, 2007, KAZO was affiliated with the Azteca America network. Before that, KAZO-LP was a repeater for KXVO. Pappas Telecasting terminated KAZO's affiliation agreement with Azteca America on July 1, 2007; after that date, KAZO became a part of Pappas' independent Spanish language network, TuVision.
In October 2008, Azteca America programming returned to Omaha and Sioux City on KXVO-DT2 channel 15.2 (RF 38) and KMEG-DT2 channel 14.2 (RF 39). Analog transmissions on KAZO-LP temporarily ceased around this time, though the analog channel 57 signal was again seen on the air in October 2009 rebroadcasting KXVO-DT2. KAZO-LP left the air for good later in fall 2009 and was no longer listed on KXVO-DT2 station ID screens. As late as 2008, KXVO-DT2 still identified the primary station on its ID screens as being KAZO-LP, though by 2009 it was instead identified locally as "MXVO".
The station was owned and operated by Pappas Telecasting, who at the time KAZO-LP signed off also owned KPTM, KPTH, and KHGI, as well as operated KMEG, KXVO and KFXL-TV through local marketing agreements.
On February 19, 2013, the FCC cancelled its license.[1]
References
External links
- Query the FCC's TV station database for KAZO-LP
- Query the FCC's TV station database for KCAZ-LP
- Query the FCC's TV station database for KWAZ-LP
- Query the FCC's TV station database for KAZJ-LP
- Query the FCC's TV station database for KAZS-LP