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Anchorage, Alaska | |
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City of license | Anchorage |
Branding | My KYES 5 |
Channels | Digital: 5 (VHF) Virtual: 5 (PSIP) |
Translators | 14 (UHF) Anchorage (construction permit) KYEX-LP 18 Anchorage K22HN-D 22 Anchorage K06MF 6 Kenai K08LW 8 Soldotna K09X0 9 Homer-Seldovia |
Affiliations | MyNetworkTV, Antenna TV, This TV |
Owner | Fireweed Communications Corporation |
First air date | January 21, 1990 |
Former callsigns | KYES (1990-2007) |
Former channel number(s) | Analog: 5 (VHF, 1990-2009) |
Former affiliations | independent (1990-1993) PTEN (1993-1995) UPN (1995-2006) The WB (secondary, 1995-2006), HDNet RTN Wealth TV |
Transmitter power | 45 kW |
Height | 277 m |
Facility ID | 21488 |
Transmitter coordinates | 61°20′8.9″N 149°30′55.9″W / 61.335806°N 149.515528°W |
Website | www.kyes.com |
KYES-TV is the local MyNetworkTV affiliate in Anchorage, Alaska, broadcasting locally on channel 5, with a repeater in Anchorage on channel 18, KYEX-LP. It has translators (repeaters) in Kenai-Soldotna on channel 6, Homer-Seldovia on channel 9 (petition to change to channel 3), and can be seen via satellite on AMC 7 at 137 degrees via an authorized Wegener satellite receiver. The station is owned by Fireweed Communications LLC. KYES is one of the few stand alone locally owned television stations left in the United States.
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KYES, a.k.a. "YES-TV", signed on the air in 1990 as an independent before joining UPN in 1995. It also had The WB as an affiliate for a couple of years before Time Warner decided to drop over the air broadcasting in small markets, instead creating WB+, a cable only signal originating from a computer located at the cable head end. In January 2006 it was announced that the WB+ and UPN were to merge operations in September 2006 to form The CW. The station was expected to become a CW affiliate, but on April 24 it was announced that The CW would be carried on a digital subchannel on ABC's Anchorage affiliate KIMO. KYES instead became an affiliate of My Network TV and one of only two in Alaska (sister station K17HC 17 in Juneau is the other); KFXF, the Fox affiliate in Fairbanks, declined an offer to run it as their secondary network.
In 1990, the station broadcast news from the U.S.S.R. translated into English. It also hosted Valley News, an independent production from Wasilla, Alaska, anchored by long-time Mat-Su Valley broadcaster Fred James. It runs Democracy Now! live (which in Alaska is at 4:00 a.m.), and carries France24 on DTV 4, but does not and never has had the financial strength to launch its own news department.
KYES's digital signal on channel 22 signed on with 20 watts of power on August 25, 2003—the first television station in the Anchorage market to have a digital signal, and the first in Alaska to offer high-definition television.
The means of getting the digital signal out, however, was extraordinary—KYES used a TTC 100-watt analog translator and a K-Tec digital exciter purchased on eBay, along with a temporary 30-foot (9.1 m) tower, originally used for an analog LPTV translator, on the roof of the hillside home of KYES's president and chief engineer manager, Jeremy Lansman. At only $5000 to construct, it was sufficient enough to transmit a viewable digital signal throughout most of Anchorage,[1] with the exception of the road to the town dump.[2] KYES's initial digital programming included high-definition programming from HDNet and Wealth TV, along with an in-house audio music channel, rebroadcasts of KUDO-AM, KEUL FM and the Republic Broadcasting Network, and a standard-definition KYES broadcast.[3]
KYES briefly included Retro Television Network in its digital lineup beginning in 2008. However, this was discontinued when the network was acquired by Luken Communications. No explanation has been given by KYES as to why the programming was discontinued. However, the reasons are likely technical. Under Equity Broadcasting, RTN was uplinked from Galaxy 18 at 123° West. When Luken acquired the network, it was moved to AMC 9 at 83° West, an orbital location that is below the horizon from Anchorage.
The channel 22 signal is now licensed as K22HN, and operates at 2.8 kW ERP. KYES is authorized by the FCC to broadcast digital signals via VHF channel 5, broadcasting up to 45 kW. Thus, it has duplicate VHF and UHF signals.
In a DTV transition status report (FCC Form 387) filed by the station on October 7, 2008, Jeremy Lansman of KYES describes the station's digital readiness:
The document then goes on to cite a local newspaper article[5] explaining that a storm and 100 mph winds had knocked out power in the area, taking K22HN dark. Effectively, KYES-DT files its FCC digital television status reports by candlelight.
Fireweed Communications LLC has now requested FCC authorisation to operate KYES-DT post transition from multiple transmitter sites. The existing UHF 22 DTV facility would continue operation and multiple transmitters would rebroadcast the signal onto the former analog channel (5) using existing KYES low-power television facilities.
While the cash-strapped station expects this will allow rapid and less costly construction and provide replication of analog service, this technically is not a request for a DTx (distributed transmission system). The transmitters may not be synchronized and therefore could interfere with each other in certain narrow geographical areas. The affected locations are all currently unpopulated.[6]
Channel | Programming |
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5.1 | MyNetwork TV |
5.2 | Antenna TV |
5.3 | This TV |
5.4 | France24 |
5.50 | KEUL FM |
5.51 | Uncommon Music |
5.52 | Testing TBD |
As of 13 June 2009, Digital TV is broadcast over VHF channel 5, UHF channels 22, plus a signal intended for the South Anchorage Hillside on UHF channel 14. [7] According to Mr. Lansman, none of the repeaters, nor the analog UHF, are scheduled to "switch to DTV in the immediate future." [8]
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Constructs such as ibid., loc. cit. and idem are discouraged by Wikipedia's style guide for footnotes, as they are easily broken. Please improve this article by replacing them with named references (quick guide), or an abbreviated title. (May 2010) |
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