KPBN-LD

KPBN-LD, virtual and UHF digital channel 14, is a low-powered Sonlife-affiliated television station licensed to Baton Rouge, Louisiana, branded as "The Pelican." The station is seen on AT&T U-verse on Cox Communications and Allen Cable. It is also available online at pelicansportstv.com

KPBN-LD
Baton Rouge, Louisiana
United States
ChannelsAnalog: 11 (VHF)
Digital: 14 (UHF)
Virtual: 14 (PSIP)
BrandingThe Pelican
SloganYour Louisiana Television Station
Programming
Subchannels3.1 Pelican TV3
5.1 Pelican TV5
6.1 Pelican TV6
7.1 Pelican TV7
8.1 Pelican TV8
14.1 SBN
14.2 Pursuit/local programs
14.4 Light TV
Ownership
OwnerPelican Broadcasting
History
First air date1988 (as a translator of WBTR), 1994 (first incarnation), January 12, 2002 (2002-01-12) (second and current incarnation)
Last air dateDecember 27, 2000 (2000-12-27) (first incarnation)
Former call signsK07UJ (1988-1994)
WTVK (1994-1999)
KTTE (1999-2002)
Former affiliationsIndependent (1994-1995, 1999-2000)
The WB (1995-1999)
Dark (2000-2002)
America One (2002-2015)
Untamed Sports TV (2008-2017)
Call sign meaningPelican Broadcasting Network
Links
Websitepelicansportstv.com

KPBN's main programming feed is carried on the station's second digital subchannel, which is affiliated with the Pursuit Channel when local programs are not airing. The station's first subchannel airs Jimmy Swaggart's SonLife Broadcasting Network, while the fourth subchannel (the third is unused) carries Light TV.

Programming

KPBN airs Louisiana-based programming and sports coverage, plus national programming and sports of interest to Louisiana residents. Daily programming includes This Week in Louisiana Agriculture and LSU Athletics.

History

KPBN started as K07UJ, a translator station for the Woody Jenkins-owned WBTR. The station soon changed to channel 11 and was an independent station known as WTVK in 1994, owned by Gulf Atlantic Communications. In 1995, WTVK served as Baton Rouge's first WB affiliate with a secondary affiliation with America One, yet the station failed to secure a spot on Baton Rouge's cable lineup and had a broadcast range of only six miles. Only cable systems at LSU, Clinton, Jackson, and Watson carried the station.[1]

By 1999, WBBR signed on as a cable-only station, taking the WB affiliation, and channel 11 changed its call letters to KTTE, serving as an independent station on March 31 of that year that focused on local and sports programming.[2] At this time, KTTE secured a spot on TCI's cable lineup; however, the station struggled to stay on the air, as the owners faced eviction in August 2000.[3] After returning to the air for a brief period of time, the station signed off for good on December 27, 2000 after a conflict emerged between the station's owner, Dave Loflin of Gulf Atlantic, and station manager Upfront Partnership, owned by Tony Perkins and Bob Courtney. On January 12, 2002, KPBN signed on channel 11, carrying a sports-centered programming lineup with some America One programming. The station chose not to renew its America One affiliation once the network merged with YouToo TV.

Beginning in 2017, KPBN dropped its Untamed Sports TV affiliation & now only broadcast programming from The Pursuit Channel outside of Local Programming. In 2017, the station became Jimmy Swaggart's Sonlife TV network flagship station with sports programming moving to the second subchannel. Pelican Sports was added to KPBN's second subchannel, and Light TV was added to the fourth subchannel on January 1, 2018.

KPBN-HD is now available on Cox Communications channel 1013, they are also working on their digital signal located on UHF 14.

Digital channels

Channel Video Aspect PSIP Short Name Programming[4]
14.1480i4:3KPBN-LDSonLife
14.2480i4:3PelicanPelican Sports/Pursuit Channel
14.4LightLight TV
gollark: No actual drawing of graphs occurs, but it's effectively that.
gollark: ↑ blatantly stolen from the internet
gollark: https://external-content.duckduckgo.com/iu/?u=https%3A%2F%2Ftse1.mm.bing.net%2Fth%3Fid%3DOIP.ErSQsJ4GpOj4abc9DfPkagAAAA%26pid%3DApi&f=1
gollark: It basically just uses the derivative to draw a tangent line from your current best guess of the root/zero of a function out until it hits the X axis, repeatedly.
gollark: Works for me.

References

  1. A David facing TV Goliaths *** WTVK thinking big despite low-power pole, The Advocate, January 14, 1996
  2. "Information Please," Baton Rouge Advocate, September 12, 1999
  3. TV station wins some equipment back after eviction, Baton Rouge Advocate, August 26, 2000
  4. RabbitEars TV Query for KPBN-LD
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