KLDO-TV

KLDO-TV (channel 27) is a television station in Laredo, Texas, United States, affiliated with the Spanish-language network Univision. It is owned by Entravision Communications alongside two low-power, Class A stations: UniMás affiliate KETF-CD (channel 39) and Fox affiliate KXOF-CD (channel 31). The three stations share studios on Monarch Drive in Laredo; KLDO-TV's transmitter is located in Ranchos Penitas West, Texas.

History

ABC affiliate

In the early 1980s, five applications were received to start a new TV station for Laredo, the city's third, on UHF channel 27. In December 1982, the Federal Communications Commission designated four of them for hearing, from K-RIO Broadcasting Company; Carlos Ortiz; Tierra del Sol Broadcasting Company, owner of KVEO-TV in Brownsville; and Panorama Broadcasting Company.[1] Ortiz, a pastor proposing to operate channel 27 as a Christian station, later dropped his proposal because of the multiple competing applications from secular groups; Oro Broadcasting Company was disqualified because its principal owner was not a United States citizen.[2]

As a result of a downturn in the regional economy, Tierra del Sol withdrew; Panorama then reimbursed K-RIO for its expenses in a settlement that paved the way for it to be granted the permit in April 1983.[3] A tower was erected in the parking lot of Laredo's Riverdrive Mall, where studios were set up.[4] Having been known as KJTB during construction, KLDO-TV signed on December 17, 1984, as an ABC affiliate; the affiliation had belonged to KGNS-TV. Laredo thus became among the last markets with three-network service. In addition to ABC programming, KLDO-TV produced local news under the title Laredo Eyewitness News.[5] In January 1987, KLDO became a secondary affiliate of Fox.[6]

Spanish-language programming

The station switched to Telemundo in October 1988, retaining select ABC programs including sports, Good Morning America,[7] and Nightline. The move coincided with Panorama signing a management agreement with Francisco Javier Sánchez Campuzano, the president of Mexico City-based Grupo Siete, which at the time owned several radio stations in Nuevo Laredo.[8][9] The switch to primarily Spanish-language programming led to an upturn in ratings, moving from dead last to first place in the February 1989 Nielsen survey.

In 1996, KLDO changed affiliations from Telemundo to Univision; by this time, in total-day audience ratings, it was the market's number-one station.[10] Entravision acquired KLDO-TV in 1997,[11] and the station moved out of the Riverdrive Mall and into a new facility on Loop 20 in 2000.[12] KLDO-TV continued to be the most-watched station in the market, but KGNS-TV brought in twice as much revenue.[13]

Until February 28, 2018, the station produced Spanish-language newscasts, branded as Noticias Univision 27; the KLDO news operation was discontinued in favor of a regional newscast produced out of McAllen sister station KNVO.[14]

Technical information

Subchannels

The station's signal is multiplexed: {{legend|#f2d1de|Subchannel broadcast with MPEG-4 video}}

References

  1. Public Notice Laredo Morning Times, December 28, 1982^
  2. Bill Bouldin. Who gets Channel 27? Laredo Morning Times^
  3. Bill Bouldin. Channel 27: Laredoans get Ok for third station Laredo Morning Times, April 25, 1983^
  4. Bill Bouldin. Tower Ok'd: New TV station to lease mall parking area Laredo Morning Times, October 3, 1984^
  5. The Turn-On Is Tomorrow (ad) Laredo Morning Times, December 16, 1984^
  6. KLDO features Joan Rivers show Laredo Morning Times, January 11, 1987^
  7. Tom Sanchez. Surprise showing: KLDO zooms into first place in prime time TV ratings Laredo Morning Times, March 31, 1989^
  8. Jim Parisi. KLDO announces switch to Spanish programming Laredo Morning Times, October 19, 1988^
  9. Horizons brightening for communications Laredo Morning Times, January 22, 1989^
  10. Robert Garcia. Local television viewers following national trend Laredo Morning Times, June 30, 1996^
  11. Mark Peterson. Entravision takes over at KLDO Laredo Morning Times, January 1, 1997^
  12. Robert Garcia. KLDO parent company in major expansion purchase Laredo Morning Times, December 24, 1999^
  13. Dan Trigoboff. Focus Laredo Broadcasting & Cable, August 12, 2002^
  14. Veronica Villafañe. Entravision shuts down Univision Laredo newscast, lays off staff Media Moves, March 1, 2018, retrieved March 12, 2018^
  15. RabbitEars TV Query for KLDO RabbitEars.info, retrieved December 14, 2024^