KGBT-TV

KGBT-TV
Rio Grande Valley, Texas
United States
City Harlingen, Texas
Branding CBS 4 (general)
CBS 4 News (newscasts)
Slogan Taking Action for You
Channels Digital: 31 (UHF)
Virtual: 4 (PSIP)
Subchannels 4.1 CBS
4.2 Azteca
4.3 Comet TV
Owner Sinclair Broadcast Group
(KGBT Licensee, LLC)
First air date October 4, 1953 (1953-10-04)
Call letters' meaning Genevieve Beryl Tichenor
(wife of founding owner McHenry Tichenor)
Former channel number(s) 4 (VHF analog, 1953–2009)
Former affiliations ABC (1953–1976)
NBC (1976–1981)
both secondary
Transmitter power 1000 kW
Height 368 m
Facility ID 34457
Transmitter coordinates 26°8′57″N 97°49′19.2″W / 26.14917°N 97.822000°W / 26.14917; -97.822000
Licensing authority FCC
Public license information: Profile
CDBS
Website valleycentral.com

KGBT-TV, virtual channel 4 (digital channel 31), is a CBS affiliate located in Harlingen, Texas. Its market includes the greater Rio Grande Valley metropolitan area. KGBT is currently owned by Sinclair Broadcast Group. KGBT's studios are on West Expressway (I-2/US 83) in Harlingen and its transmitter is located in La Feria in Cameron County. The digital channel is available in standard definition and high definition on Time Warner Cable on channels 4 and 865 respectively. KGBT's own local 24-hour weather channel is also available on Time Warner Cable digital channel 366. KGBT is also available on channel 4 in both standard definition and high definition on DirecTV and Dish Network. Syndicated programming on KGBT includes: Wheel of Fortune, Jeopardy!, and Judge Judy.

Digital channels

Channel Video Aspect PSIP short name Programming [1]
4.1 1080i 16:9 KGBT-HD Main KGBT-TV programming / CBS
4.2 480i 4:3 KGBT Azteca America
4.3 Comet TV

History

The history behind what is now KGBT dates back to the mid 20th century. The station originally began as KGBT Radio, owned then by the Harbenito Broadcasting Company (now Univision Radio after several mergers). It opened in 1941 as KGBS, an independent radio station of 250 watts and a staff of eleven people. KGBT became an affiliate of the CBS Radio Network in January 1944, becoming the first CBS radio affiliate in lower South Texas. KGBT's TV offshoot signed on in 1953, and has always been a CBS affiliate. KGBT-TV was founded by the Tichenor family, whose media holdings (the Harbenito Broadcasting Company) later became Tichenor Media System, Inc., a regional conglomerate of Spanish-language radio stations. The call letters KGBS were chosen to honor the maiden initials of Genevieve Beryl Smith, wife of founder McHenry Tichenor. The call letters were later changed to KGBT to honor her married name Genevieve Beryl Tichenor.

KGBT was actually the second television station in the valley. The first was XELD-TV, a station on channel 7 in Matamoros, which had opened in 1951, and operated primarily in English, although it was licensed as a Mexican station. XELD was owned by Romulo O'Farrill—who had put Mexico's first television station, XHTV in Mexico City, on the air the previous year—and held affiliations with all four US networks.[2] XELD-TV's fortunes declined with the opening of KGBT, and it closed soon after KRGV opened, in 1954. In 1968 channel 7 in the valley was taken over by XHAB, a local Televisa station.

Until 1976, KGBT shared ABC programming with then-NBC affiliate KRGV-TV; when that station became a sole ABC affiliate that year, KGBT-TV took on a secondary NBC affiliation until 1981 when KVEO began operations. It is the only major English-language station in the Rio Grande Valley never to have changed its primary network affiliation. In 1986, Tichenor decided to exit the English-language broadcasting market by selling KGBT-TV to the Draper Holdings Business Trust, the owner of WBOC-TV in Salisbury, Maryland; Tichenor retained the KGBT radio stations until 2003 when their company (which became the Hispanic Broadcasting Corporation by the late 1990s) merged with Univision Communications.

In 1998, Draper sold KGBT-TV to Cosmos Broadcasting, the broadcasting division of The Liberty Corporation. Cosmos came directly under the Liberty banner in 2001 when Liberty sold off its insurance business. Liberty merged with Raycom Media in 2006. In August of that year, KGBT-TV was sold again to Barrington Broadcasting. On February 28, 2013, Barrington announced the sale of its entire group, including KGBT-TV, to Sinclair Broadcast Group.[3] The sale was completed on November 25.[4]

The KGBT subchannels can be picked up on basic cable by connecting the cable directly into an HDTV with a built-in QAM tuner, though the sub-channel 4.3 are not available via QAM.

KGBT's broadcasts became digital-only, effective June 12, 2009. [5]

Programming

Specialty programming

KGBT produces annual telethons to benefit children's hospitals, as well as the annual Jerry Lewis MDA Telethon until its 2013 move to a national broadcast on ABC.

Preemptions

Until 2005, KGBT-TV preempted CBS News Sunday Morning for brokered programming from Tejano musical artists, the most popular being the long-running locally produced program Aqui Rogelio. The Spanish-language music show premiered in 1970, while Sunday Morning premiered nine years later; Face the Nation aired later than the usual network time. Just before the station was sold to Barrington, the station began to carry Sunday Morning at its regular time, and eventually Aqui Rogelio went off the air several months later with both Sunday Morning and Face the Nation airing in their regular time slots (though the latter half-hour of Face the Nation airs in the overnights due to local church programming).

News operation

24/7 Weather Lab

KGBT-TV was the first, and still remains the only, news station in the metropolitan area with its own live weather radar, named "Live Super Doppler". KGBT uses this as a marketing ploy to attract a bigger audience, as its radar can accurately predict when severe weather will strike with accuracy to the minute. (See below)

KGBT-TV also broadcasts a 24-hour weather station to Time Warner customers under channel 366 (digital cable only), showing off its live doppler radar as well as updated local forecasts. This feature is very similar to those adopted in most major markets, such as News 8 Austin's doppler radar channel available to Austin Time Warner customers.

On April 29, 2008, KGBT-TV's 43-year veteran weatherman, Larry James, suddenly retired. He refused to comment on what happened other than to say that he was called in to the manager's office and within 10 minutes found that he no longer was employed. He was allowed to remove personal belongings from his desk but was denied access to his e-mail. Those in charge of the station have refused to comment. James was the last of the on-air personnel from what many Valley residents consider the station's "glory days" during the late 1960s and 1970s when it had studios in central Harlingen and the top-rated newscast in the Rio Grande Valley.

As of January 2009, KGBT-TV's "Live Super Doppler Radar" is no longer in use. Neither is KGBT-TV's 24-hour weather station on Time Warner Cable channel 366. KGBT has not released any information why or when these services will be back up.

Sports Extra

During the fall, Sports Extra is an extended sports segment that airs Fridays and Sundays following the 10 p.m. newscast in place of the regular sports segment and are known as "Friday Sports Extra" and "Sunday Sports Extra", respectively. The Friday edition's main focus is the local high school football games played that night and on occasion the previous Thursday. Clay Wiliams provides scores and highlights from the studio while Brendan Fitzgerald and Alex Del Barrio travels the Valley to bring live post-game coverage of Action 4's "Games of the Week".

The Sunday edition provides highlights of additional high school matches played the previous Saturday as well looks at the highlights of Texas college and professional sports from the weekend. The Sunday edition generally features a panel of local sports writers and sports talk radio personalities to break down the following week's high school football games and provide picks and predictions. This effectively makes the Sunday edition more of a sports talk show than a highlight show.

Prior to the start of the high school football season, KGBT produces the "Action 4 Sports: Countdown to Kickoff". The hour-long special briefly previews each team in the Valley and their respective Districts. Clay, Darren then make their predictions for playoff teams from each District.

As of September 2008, "Sunday Sports Extra" is in association with 956 sports. 956sports.com's Jake Berry, Alex Del Barrio and Greg Selber share there (it's THEIR) input during the show and then make there (it's THEIR) predictions. "Sunday Sports Extra" is now one of the most watched local sports productions in the Rio Grande Valley.

Former on-air staff

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 12/1/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.