KAZD , virtual channel 55 (UHF 39 digital channel), is a television operated and operated by Azteca Amà © rica licensed to Lake Dallas, Texas, USA and serves the Dallas-Fort Worth Metroplex. The station is owned by HC2 Holdings. The KAZD office is located on McKinney Avenue in downtown Dallas, and its transmitter is located south of Belt Line Road in Cedar Hill. On cable, this station is available in various channels in Charter Spectrum depending on the municipality of the metropolitan area it serves, Verizon FiOS channel 3 and channel AT & amp; T U-verse 55.
Video KAZD
Histori
Riwayat sebelumnya dari saluran UHF 55 di Dallas-Fort Worth
UHF 55 channel allocation in the Dallas-Fort Worth market was formerly occupied by KLDT (standing for one L ake D allas, T exas "or" L ake D allas T elevision "), signed in the air on December 25, 1990 This station was established as a joint venture between Opal Thornton and Johnson Broadcasting (owned by entrepreneur Doug Johnson). The station program originally consisted of a Christian-oriented music video, before it was converted to a general religious format. The station's original transmitter site is located in Lewisville.
Thornton, unable to find programming resources and operating capital, attempted to add a Dallas-based pastor, Robert Tilton as partner, with KLDT to serve as the main television channel for his "Word of Faith" ministry. However, Tilton's poor record with the Federal Communications Commission prevented this, and the request was canceled in 1991 amid exposure to Tilton and other televangelists aired on ABC PrimeTime Live magazine. The station was noted for the hefty $ 15,500 penalty charged by the FCC in 1995 for failing to meet its main studio staff, for not making its public inspection files freely available, and for other archiving violations. The station lost its license in the mid-1990s.
KAZD station history
Channel 55 is currently established on March 18, 1997 as KAVB , with original construction permission for Johnson Broadcasting of Dallas, LLC. The app is mutually exclusive with license renewal applications from the first KLDT station, but the FCC provides the Johnson Broadcasting app and does not renew the license from the previous station.
Shortly after signing-on, the station quickly changed its call letter to KLDT . It originally served as an affiliate of the Collectibles Network home shopping service, the station soon degraded its shopping program into the evening hours, and began broadcasting syndicated series of television and films, as well as a business news program from Bloomberg Television, a college sports event syndicated by ESPN Plus , the Lone Star Park racetrack, and the Houston Astros Major League Baseball games that are broadcast from the KNWS-TV sister station (now KYAZ) in Houston. During this time, the station adopted the slogan "TV55 Has an Event You Know".
In 2000, KLDT dropped most of its entertainment programs for infomercials, or a shopping program from the ACN. However, in the same year, the station received a much-needed shot in the arm. KLDT later became the flagship station of the Hispanic Television Network, which aired programs targeted to Hispanic viewers from Mexico. Due to some errors, the network ceased operations in 2003 and the station re-aired its home shopping program, affiliated with ShopNBC.
At the moment, most of the station's sports programs have moved to Telemundo's previous affiliate KFWD (channel 52), which became an independent public entertainment in January 2002. In 2005, KLDT became a broadcaster while FC Dallas football team, whose matches also eventually moved to KFWD. The station eventually dropped ShopNBC affiliates and started filling up empty spots with infomercials and religious programs. Two weeks before switching off the analog signal, KLDT becomes an affiliate of Gems TV. In 2008, KLDT returned to the infomercial format, this time through the OnTV4U and WizeBuys networks; on November 2, 2009, KLDT was again affiliated with ShopNBC.
Johnson Broadcasting filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection in October 2008. One year later, the impatient creditors demanded a bankruptcy court to allow the sale of KLDT and KNWS. Una Vez MÃÆ'ás Holdings, LLC emerges as the primary bidder. The sale to Una Vez MÃÆ'ás was approved by the bankruptcy court on December 29, 2009, and finally received FCC approval on September 27, 2010 after the FCC rejected the petition to deny sales made by the Spanish Broadcasting System. On September 30, 2010, Una Vez Mas requested a change of call alert to KAZD to reflect the affiliation meant by Azteca Amà © à © rica. The KLDT plan initially requested the station to bring the Retro Television Network to its second digital sub-channel (54.2), but due to filing bankruptcy, the plan was immediately removed.
The station broadcasted all its program audio in the second audio program feed until February 2009. In April 2010, KLDT became an affiliate of the Liquidation Channel. With the exception of two religious programs and one children's program, the majority of KLDT programming consists of infomercials and Liquidated Funnel baits. However, in mid-November 2010. KLDT switched to infomercials (despite continuing to bring religious programs). Over the years, KLDT has experienced some technical setbacks, almost to the point where they have to leave the air for several hours. The station officially changed its summons to KAZD on December 30, 2010, and became an affiliate of Azteca AmÃÆ'à © rica at 09:00. on that date.
In 2014, Una Vez Mas TV assets (including KAZD) are then sold to Northstar Media, LLC. In turn, HC2 Holdings acquired Northstar Media in addition to Azteca AmÃÆ' à © rica on 29 November 2017, making KAZD a station owned and operated by Azteca.
Maps KAZD
Digital television
Digital channels
Digital channel of this station multiplexing:
Analog-to-digital conversion
On May 22, 2006, KAZD - as KLDT - signed its digital signal on the UHF 54 channel. This will be the key, such as Qualcomm, which launches a poor MediaFLO service at 716-722 MHz (frequency corresponding to UHF 55 Channel) to stop using channel 55. On November 17, 2006, the Federal Communications Commission granted KLDT permission to turn off analogue and flash-cut transmitter facilities to its latest digital channel at the end of the digital transition.
KLDT turned off its analog signal, via the UHF 55 channel, on January 1, 2007. The station's digital signal stays in the pre-transition UHF 54 channel, becoming the first station on the market that is broadcast exclusively in digital. On June 12, 2009, KLDT transferred its digital signal to UHF channel 39 after KXTX turned off its analog signal on the channel, using PSIP to display the KLDT virtual channel as 54 from 2007 to 2010; in December 2010, what now KAZD changed its virtual channel to 55. UHF TV channels 52 through 69 were removed from the use of television broadcasts as part of the transition from analog to digital.
See also
- KYAZ (sister station in Houston, Texas)
References
External links
- Official station website
- The official website of Azteca AmÃÆ'à © rica
- FCC TV station database request for KAZD
- BIAfn's Media Web Database - Information on KAZD-TV
Source of the article : Wikipedia