KAMC

KAMC, virtual channel 28 (UHF digital channel 27), is an ABC-affiliated television station licensed to Lubbock, Texas, United States. Owned by Mission Broadcasting, it is operated under a local marketing agreement (LMA) by Nexstar Media Group, making it a sister station to CBS affiliate KLBK-TV (channel 13). The two stations share studios and transmitter facilities on University Avenue in Lubbock, just two blocks south of Loop 289.

KAMC
Lubbock, Texas
United States
ChannelsDigital: 27 (UHF)
Virtual: 28 (PSIP)
BrandingKAMC ABC (general)
KAMC News (newscasts)
SloganLocal. Live. Late Breaking.
Programming
Affiliations
Ownership
OwnerMission Broadcasting, Inc.
OperatorNexstar Media Group
(via LMA)
Sister stationsKLBK-TV
History
First air dateNovember 11, 1968 (1968-11-11)
Former call signsKSEL-TV (1968–1975)
KMCC (1975–1979)
Former channel number(s)Analog:
28 (UHF, 1968–2009)
Former affiliationsIndependent (1968–1969)
Call sign meaningstation calls are pronounced Kay-Mack (KA-MC)
Technical information
Licensing authorityFCC
Facility ID40820
ERP1000 kW
490 kW (application)
HAAT219.4 m (720 ft)
265.9 m (872 ft) (application)
Transmitter coordinates33°31′33.8″N 101°52′8.6″W
Links
Public license informationProfile
LMS
Websitewww.everythinglubbock.com

On cable, KAMC is available on Suddenlink channel 8, and channel 3 on other systems in outlying areas of the market.

History

KAMC first began broadcasting in the fall of 1968 as KSEL-TV. Originally an independent station, KSEL soon began broadcasting some ABC programming which was previously split between CBS affiliate KLBK and NBC affiliate KCBD (channel 11). After a few months of sharing secondary affiliations with the local CBS and NBC affiliates, KSEL became the primary and exclusive ABC affiliate for the Lubbock market in the fall of 1969. A few years later (1975 after sale of sister stations KSEL (AM) (now KJTV (AM) and KSEL-FM (now KLBB-FM) channel 28 changed its call letters to KMCC, then later (1979) to the current KAMC. From 1979 to 1986, KAMC applied the former KMCC call sign to a satellite station on channel 12 in Clovis, New Mexico that is currently operating as KVIH-TV, now a satellite of Amarillo ABC affiliate KVII-TV. KMCC is now the callsign for an unrelated station in Laughlin, Nevada.

KSEL-TV entered as a competitor to established KLBK (as noted above, a full-time CBS and part-time ABC affiliate) and NBC affiliate KCBD, and recent sign-on (and, with regards to signal, weaker) channel 34, KKBC-TV (later KMXN-TV). KKBC operated from 1967 to 1973. A new channel 34, KJAA, signed on in 1981; it is now Fox affiliate KJTV-TV.

KSEL drew resources from sister stations KSEL-AM (now KJTV), 950 AM, and KSEL-FM (now KLBB-FM), 93.7 FM. The stations had unified sales staffs (spots were sold on both radio and TV by one sales force, which often voiced spots or appeared in commercials or as on camera talent, i.e., Bill Maddox was sales manager and late news anchor). All stations were owned by R.B. Mac McAlister, his son Bill, and the department heads at the stations (A.C. Ace Wimberly, Bill Maddox, Lew Dee, Bill Baker, etc.).

KSEL filled air time with many movies, each accompanied by an on camera host. The late Lew Dee (1935-2011), also known as Lewis T. D'Elia, hosted a movie show, in addition to co-hosting This, That and the Other on radio and KSEL-TV. The news department gathered and delivered news for all three stations.

The old KAMC studios, which later housed the transmitter. Since the analog to digital TV conversion this site has not been used by KAMC.

The radio stations were sold to other interests in 1974–75, and moved out of the shared building at 1201 84th Street in south Lubbock (in picture), though the FM transmitter remained at this site until sold to the Ramar interests (and moved to new KJTV-TV tower in 2009); KSEL-TV continued to broadcast from the same studios afterwards for decades. KSEL-TV changed its call sign to KMCC and invested in better equipment (RCA TCR-100 video cartridge player) and programming, including M*A*S*H reruns. Between growth of ABC's ratings in the late 1970s, an improving news operation, and the syndicated product, the station became a real player in the early 1980s.

A satellite station was added in 1979. KFDW-TV, channel 12 in Clovis, had been a satellite station of KFDA-TV in Amarillo for many years, under the same ownership (once the Bass Brothers) from 1966 to 1976 and under Mel Wheeler from 1976 to 1979. The McAlisters changed KFDW's call sign to KAMC, which triggered a complaint from NBC affiliate KAMR-TV, which was carried on cable systems in Clovis. The call signs were exchanged: the repeater in Clovis took the KMCC calls, while channel 28 in Lubbock became KAMC. The station is now KVIH-TV, a satellite station of KVII-TV; it was sold in 1986 as part of KAMC's financial restructuring (as former news anchor Jeff Klotzman, now at KJTV-TV, later wrote).[1]

Bill McAlister, who served as Lubbock's mayor in the early 1980s, died in 1983. Eight years later, in an effort to make the station more profitable, McAlister's son Greg took over the station before selling it in 1999. Klotzman, who spent much of the late 1970s and almost all of the 1980s as an anchor/reporter, wrote in 2000 that KAMC's position as a distant #3 (behind KCBD and KLBK) and "low prices for cotton and other agricultural commodities, which were Lubbock's economic base" as some of the primary factors hurting the station's financial situation.[2]

For much of the late 1970s and all of the 1980s, KAMC had used the Action News branding for its newscasts. However, in September 1991, the station retired this news branding and reintroduced the News 28 branding in an attempt to shake up its newscasts and more robustly compete with KCBD's and KLBK's newscasts. KAMC would use the News 28 branding until 1997; it had been used during a brief period during the mid-to-late 1970s, when the station had the KMCC call sign.[3][4]

Beginning with the 1986–87 season, KAMC began using Stephen Arnold's "Spirit" news music that had been used at its fellow ABC affiliate in Dallas before briefly jettisoning it in favor of a news theme in late 1989 that was likely produced in-house. They reused the "Spirit" news theme when they jettisoned the "Action News" branding in favor of "News 28" in late 1991. This time, they used the cut of the "Spirit" news music used in Dallas since 1987. They discontinued the "Spirit" news music in mid-1995 in favor of "The One and Only". KAMC used "The One and Only" until mid-2009.

KAMC was acquired by Mission Broadcasting in late 2003 as part of the Nexstar Broadcasting Group's acquisition of Quorum Broadcasting; since most Mission stations have local marketing agreements with Nexstar stations in the same market, this paired KAMC with KLBK-TV. Not long after Mission's acquisition, KAMC relocated its operations from its longtime 84th Street studios and moved into studios originally long occupied by KLBK.

Digital television

Digital channels

The station's digital signal is multiplexed:

Channel Video Aspect PSIP Short Name Programming[5]
28.11080i16:9KAMC-DTMain KAMC programming / ABC
28.2480i4:3EscapeCourt TV Mystery
28.3BounceBounce TV
28.4CBNCBN News

On June 15, 2016, Nexstar announced that it has entered into an affiliation agreement with Katz Broadcasting for the Escape (now Court TV Mystery), Laff, Grit, and Bounce TV networks (the last one of which is owned by Bounce Media LLC, whose COO Jonathan Katz is president/CEO of Katz Broadcasting), bringing one or more of the four networks to 81 stations owned and/or operated by Nexstar, including KAMC.[6]

Analog-to-digital conversion

KAMC shut down its analog signal, over UHF channel 28, on February 17, 2009, the original target date in which full-power television stations in the United States were to transition from analog to digital broadcasts under federal mandate (which was later pushed back to June 12, 2009). The station's digital signal remained on its pre-transition UHF channel 27.[7] Through the use of PSIP, digital television receivers display the station's virtual channel as its former UHF analog channel 28.

Programming

Syndicated programs on KAMC includes Entertainment Tonight, Dr. Phil, Live with Kelly and Ryan, 25 Words or Less, and Rachael Ray.

News operation

KAMC's news coverage centers around the city of Lubbock and across the South Plains region of West Texas. Newscasts air weekday mornings from 5:00 to 7:00 a.m., 11:00 a.m. and weeknights at 5:00, 6:00 and 10:00 p.m. Saturday night newscasts air at 6:00 and 10:00 p.m. Only one newscast airs on Sunday nights at 10:00 p.m. In July 2013, the station became the fourth news operation in Lubbock to begin broadcasting all newscasts in high definition. On that day the station debuted its newly constructed sets, updated branding and image and a new state of the art weather graphics system from WSI. In April 2014 the station debuted a new half-hour midday newscast that airs weekday mornings at 11:00 a.m.

gollark: *But* it sends en-US at q=0.5 somehow?
gollark: Oh, hey, for some reason it *does* send it to the Organization site.
gollark: Firefox, latest version.
gollark: Why not use Accept-Language if it exists then fall back to GeoIP?
gollark: Whereas Accept-Language isn't sent even though I never configured it to not be.

References

  1. Jeffery A. Klotzman, "The History of McAlister Television Enterprises of Lubbock, Texas," M.A. thesis, Texas Tech University, August 2000, p. 77, https://repositories.tdl.org/ttu-ir/bitstream/handle/2346/9709/31295016546797.pdf?sequence=1.
  2. Klotzman, pp. 83, 97-9, 5-6.
  3. https://ttu-ir.tdl.org/ttu-ir/bitstream/handle/2346/63060/31295010058070.pdf?sequence=1&isAllowed=y
  4. Joel Burns, "Changes in store for area newscasts," University Daily (Texas Tech University), September 16, 1991, p. 5 https://swco-ir.tdl.org/swco-ir/handle/10605/242712
  5. RabbitEars TV Query for KAMC
  6. "Bounce TV, Grit, Escape, Laff Multicast Deal Covers 81 Stations, 54 Markets". Broadcasting & Cable. June 15, 2016. Retrieved June 16, 2016.
  7. "DTV Tentative Channel Designations for the First and the Second Rounds" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2013-08-29. Retrieved 2012-03-24.
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