K22JA-D

K22JA-D ("KDF")
Corpus Christi, Texas
Branding KDF-TV (general)
KRIS 6 News
Slogan Clearly to the point.
(during KRIS-TV news)
Channels Digital: 22 (UHF)
Virtual: 47.2 (PSIP)
Translators See Below
Affiliations Independent (1990–1994, 2008–present)
Owner Cordillera Communications
(KRIS Communications, LLC)
Founded 1990 (1990)
Sister station(s) KRIS-TV, KZTV, K47DF-D
Former callsigns K47DF (1989–2015)
Former channel number(s) Analog:
47 (UHF, 1990–2015)
Former affiliations Fox (1994–2008)
Transmitter power 21.7 kW
Height 51 m (167 ft)
Facility ID 51376
Transmitter coordinates 27°43′2.00″N 97°23′19.00″W / 27.7172222°N 97.3886111°W / 27.7172222; -97.3886111
Licensing authority FCC
Public license information: ("KDF") Profile
("KDF") CDBS
Website kztv10.com

K22JA-D, virtual channel 47.2 (UHF digital channel 22), known on-air as KDF, is a low-power independent television station licensed to Corpus Christi, Texas, United States, broadcasting on the second digital subchannel of Telemundo affiliate K47DF-D. Owned by the Cordillera Communications subsidiary of Evening Post Industries, it is a sister station to NBC affiliate KRIS-TV (channel 6); Cordillera also operates CBS affiliate KZTV (channel 10) through a shared services agreement with owner SagamoreHill Broadcasting. The four stations share studios on Artesian Street in Downtown Corpus Christi; K22JA-D's transmitter is located in Robstown.

On cable, KDF can be seen on Charter Spectrum on channel 13. From December 13, 2011 to May 2012, the station's owners and the cable company (as Time Warner Cable at the time) were under a dispute regarding carriage fees.[1]

KDF can also be seen on K31KK-D channel 31 in KingsvilleAlice (transmitter northwest of Bishop along the Nueces and Jim Wells County line) and K30EG channel 30 in BeevilleRefugio (transmitter east of Beeville).

History

Logo as a Fox affiliate.

K22JA-D was started in 1990 as K47DF by Paloma Broadcasting (which the Roman Catholic Diocese of Corpus Christi had a stake in). It started as an independent with general entertainment programming. KDF's big break came in 1993 when some high-profile syndicated programming arrived such as Wheel of Fortune, Jeopardy!, Siskel & Ebert, and Oprah, which moved to the station after KRIS-TV dropped them in favor of other programming. Paloma also launched the station's two repeaters in order to improve KDF's availability in the fringes of the market. That same year, the cable wars between the big three affiliates of Corpus Christi were going on.

In 1994, the station became a Fox affiliate. Even though the network name was used in KDF's logo and the station referred to itself as "KDF Fox", it did not follow the station standardization mandate imposed by the network, prior to this, viewers in Corpus Christi watched Fox on either KRRT in San Antonio (the Fox affiliate at the time) or on Foxnet. Otherwise, it would have been called "Fox 47", "Fox Corpus Christi", or even "Fox 13" after its cable slot on Time Warner Cable. By 1997, KDF had invested heavily in expensive programing, leaving the station nearly bankrupt. Regretting its attempt to enter commercial television, the Roman Catholic Diocese of Corpus Christi sold its share in the station. It was then sold to T. Frank Smith, then-owner of KRIS-TV. KDF moved into that station's studios on South Staples Street in Downtown Corpus Christi while Wheel of Fortune, Jeopardy!, and Oprah were moved back to that channel.

On January 16, 2008, it was announced that the station would lose its Fox affiliation in favor of new higher-powered KUQI, which began airing the network's programming starting on February 4, 2008. At that time, the channel reverted to an independent. The last Fox programs on KDF were Super Bowl XLII and its leadout program, the House episode "Frozen". After the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) issues construction permits to KDF and its translators, they will convert to digital-only broadcasting eventually adding high definition capabilities.

In 2014, the station merged with former sister station K22JA-D ("KAJA Telemundo") on UHF 22 (but displaying as 47), bumping KDF to 47.2, with KAJA remaining on 47.1. KDF remains in 480i SD, until sufficient programming is acquired to convert the feed to high definition.

Transmitters

KDF
RF ChannelVirtual ChannelCall LettersLocationNotes
09 47.1 K09YZ-D Beeville, Texas DC (Class A Digital)
22 47.1 K22JA-D Corpus Christi, Texas LD (Low-Power Digital) companion for K47DF; formerly K68DJ, then K22JA-D
31 47.1 K31KK-D Kingsville, Texas DC

Programming

Syndicated programming on this station includes Mike & Molly, Entertainment Tonight, The People's Court, and Judge Mathis.

Newscasts

Under pressure from TCI Cable (now Time Warner Cable), KDF began its own news department and produced local news. These shows featured former KRIS-TV anchor Jay Ricci (now at KVII-TV in Amarillo). Weather was provided by WeatherVision meteorologists during the newscast's run. In 1995, the news department was shut down due to low ratings and increased production costs. In Fall 1997, KRIS-TV restored news programming to KDF with a fifteen-minute news update at 9 followed by Star Trek. This practice continued until the sale of the stations to Cordillera in 1999, at which point the newscast was expanded to a full thirty minutes.

The prime time show is simulcasted on CW affiliate KRIS-DT2 but is known by a different name and has a different opening. After KRIS-TV and former rival KZTV joined forces, the former moved into the latter's facilities in September 2010. Due to technical issues with the move of KRIS-TV, it was not able to air newscasts from September 26 until September 28. That station unveiled a brand new high definition-ready set and graphics package on September 29. Eventually, KRIS-TV will stream all of its newscasts on the website. Previously, it had streamed the weekday noon show online.

References

  1. "Attention Time Warner Cable and former CoBridge customers". KRIS-TV. Retrieved January 7, 2012.
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