KMYA-DT
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Little Rock, Arkansas United States |
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City of license | Camden, Arkansas |
Branding | Me-TV Arkansas |
Channels | Digital: 49 (UHF) Virtual: 49 (PSIP) |
Affiliations | Me-TV Soul of the South Network (DT2) |
Owner | 1 Squared Media, LLC (sale to LR Telecasting, LLC pending) (KMYA, LLC) |
First air date | June 7, 1999 |
Former callsigns | KKYK-TV (1999–2001) KYPX (2001–2006) KKYK-DT (2006–2011) |
Former channel number(s) | Analog: 49 (UHF, 1999–2006) Digital: 44 (UHF) |
Former affiliations | The WB (1999–2001) Pax TV (2001–2005) RTN (2005–2009) This TV (2009) |
Transmitter power | 104.6 kW (KMYA) 15 kW (KLRA-CD) |
Height | 183 m |
Facility ID | 86534 |
Transmitter coordinates | Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found. |
Licensing authority | FCC |
Public license information: | Profile CDBS |
KMYA-DT, virtual channel 24 (UHF digital channel 49), is a Me-TV-affiliated television station serving Little Rock, Arkansas, United States that is licensed to Camden. The station is owned by 1 Squared Media, LLC. Prior KMYA maintains studio facilities located on Shackelford Drive in the Beverly Hills section of Little Rock, and its transmitter is located on Shinall Mountain, near the Chenal Valley neighborhood of Little Rock. The station's programming is simulcast on translator station KLRA-CD, virtual and UHF digital channel 20, in Little Rock and relayed on KWNL-CD (digital subchannel 31.2) in Winslow.
Contents
History
The station's repeater, KLRA-CD, was founded on May 5, 1995 as K22FA; it later changed its callsign to KKYK-LP in 1996. The low-power station was originally an affiliate of Network One, but later became an affiliate of The WB. The full-power station now known as KMYA first signed on the air in Camden on June 7, 1999, as KKYK-TV, with KKYK-LP becoming its repeater. The station was originally owned by Equity Media Holdings, which was headquartered in Little Rock and housed the master control hub for all of the company's television stations.
In 2001, the station changed its call letters to KYPX, and swapped affiliations with then sister-station KWBF (channel 42, now KARZ-TV), becoming an affiliate of Pax TV (now Ion Television). The station, and its repeater (which retained the KKYK-LP calls), remained affiliates of Pax TV until June 30, 2005, when it became i: Independent Television. KYPX disaffiliated from the newly rebranded network, and instead became the flagship station of the Retro Television Network.
On June 30, 2006, the station modified its call sign to KKYK-DT, becoming one of the few U.S. television stations to bear the suffix. KKYK's analog repeater on UHF channel 20 in Little Rock, had been designated as a Class A station with its call letters being modified to KKYK-CA (formerly broadcasting on channel 22, KKYK-CA was forced to move to accommodate the digital signal of ABC affiliate KATV, channel 7).
On January 4, 2009, a contract conflict between Equity and Luken Communications (which had acquired RTN in June 2008) resulted in the station losing RTN programming.[1] As a result, Luken moved the Retro Television Network's operations to its headquarters in Chattanooga, Tennessee, and terminated all agreements with affiliates owned by Equity, including KKYK, immediately;[2] RTN (under its new modified initials RTV) later affiliated with KATV, being carried on that station's second digital subchannel. The station also reneged on a deal with the Southland Conference to carry Central Arkansas University basketball games in the interim.[3]
The station became an affiliate of This TV in February 2009, lasting five months until June of that year (This TV was not available at all in the Little Rock market from that point on until 2012, when it resurfaced on a digital subchannel of Fox affiliate KLRT-TV (channel 16), which later dropped the subchannel after it was sold to Nexstar Broadcasting Group partner company Mission Broadcasting in 2013). On April 10, 2009, Equity Media Holdings announced a fire sale of all television stations; KKYK was set for an asking price of $15 million, the highest price for any of the stations in the sale.[4] In the auction, which took place on April 16, the station was sold to the Bank of Little Rock,[5] which acquired the station through the subsidiary[6][7][8] Hallmark National Mortgage Corporation.[9] On January 3, 2011, the repeater began broadcasting digitally as KKYK-CD, and then changed its call sign to the current KLRA-CD on February 28, 2013.
The station's call letters were changed to KMYA-DT on July 8, 2011. That November, Hallmark National Mortgage Corporation announced that it would sell KMYA to Ellis-Wilson, LLC, a company controlled by two former Equity executives.[10] The sale was consummated on March 30, 2012.
Digital television
Digital channels
The station's digital channel is multiplexed:
Channel | Video | Aspect | PSIP Short Name | Programming[11] |
---|---|---|---|---|
49.1 | 480i | 4:3 | KMYA-DT1 | Main KMYA-DT programming / Me-TV |
49.2 | KMYA-DT2 | Soul of the South Network |
Analog-to-digital conversion
KMYA-DT (as KKYK-DT) shut down its analog signal, over UHF channel 49, on June 30, 2006. The station flash-cut its digital signal into operation on UHF channel 49.[12] The station's digital signal had been operating at reduced power (70 kW under a Special Temporary Authority) and was also relayed on then-sister station KWBF (now KARZ-TV)'s digital subchannel 42.2, until Nexstar Broadcasting Group assumed ownership of channel 42 in January 2009.
Newscasts
In 1998, KMYA (as KKYK) began producing a half-hour 9 p.m. newscast, which became the first primetime newscast in the Little Rock market (Fox affiliate KLRT (channel 16) did not debut its 9 p.m. newscast until March 2004); the newscast was broadcast from a virtual set inside the station's studio complex. The program cancelled after less than a year on the air due to low ratings. As a Pax affiliate, the station (as KYPX) ran rebroadcasts of the 6 and 10 p.m. newscasts from ABC affiliate KATV (channel 7), one of a few Pax affiliates to rebroadcast local news programming from a station affiliated with a network other than NBC.
References
- ↑ What’s Wrong with MyTV?
- ↑ Financial Dispute Disrupts RTN Diginet, TVNewsCheck, January 5, 2009.
- ↑ http://www.nwanews.com/adg/Sports/249737/
- ↑ Equity Media Sets Auction For Stations, Broadcasting & Cable, April 10, 2009.
- ↑ Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
- ↑ Report of the Bank Commissioner of Arkansas, 2008(p. 131 of PDF, numbered p. 125)
- ↑ KKYK Asset Purchase Agreement (from FCC sale application)
- ↑ FCC Form 314, Exhibit 12 (from FCC sale application)
- ↑ Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
- ↑ Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
- ↑ RabbitEars TV Query for KMYA
- ↑ Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.