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Contents

   



(Top)
 


1 History  



1.1  Early history  





1.2  As an ABC affiliate  





1.3  Becoming an independent once again  





1.4  First Fox affiliation, then back to independent  





1.5  As a UPN affiliate  





1.6  Return to Fox as an owned-and-operated station  





1.7  Video news release controversy  







2 Digital television  





3 News operation  



3.1  Awards  





3.2  News/station presentation  



3.2.1  Newscast titles  





3.2.2  Station slogans  







3.3  On-air staff  



3.3.1  Current on-air staff (as of October 13, 2010)[9]  





3.3.2  News personnel  





3.3.3  Former on-air staff  









4 Broadcasting facilities  





5 Webcasting  





6 References  





7 Notes  





8 External links  














KMSP-TV: Difference between revisions







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Browse history interactively
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Content deleted Content added
Jobu (talk | contribs)
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→‎Former on-air staff: Added Bob Kurtz
Jobu (talk | contribs)
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Line 247: Line 247:

*'''Leslie Jones''' - morning reporter

*'''Leslie Jones''' - morning reporter

*'''Mike Kronforst''' - weather anchor (1975–1979)

*'''Mike Kronforst''' - weather anchor (1975–1979)

*'''Bob Kurtz''' - occasional sports anchor, also Twins play-by-play announcer (1979–1986)

*'''[[Bob Kurtz]]''' - occasional sports anchor, also Twins play-by-play announcer (1979–1986)

*'''[[Dave Lee]]''' - children's host, puppeteer on "Looney Tuners Club"

*'''[[Dave Lee]]''' - children's host, puppeteer on "Looney Tuners Club"

*'''Cathie Mann''' - anchor (1976–1977)

*'''Cathie Mann''' - anchor (1976–1977)


Revision as of 12:01, 24 October 2010

{{Infobox broadcast}} may refer to:

  • Template:Infobox television channel
  • Template:Infobox television station
  • This is an unused template to list other templates associated with a similar title or shortcut.
    If an internal transclusion led you here, you may wish to change it to point directly to the intended page.

    {{Template disambiguation}} should never be transcluded in the main namespace.

    KMSP-TV, channel 9, is the Fox-owned-and-operated television station serving the Minneapolis-Saint Paul, Minnesota designated market area, owned in a duopoly with MyNetworkTV affiliate WFTC (channel 29). Its studios are located in Eden Prairie, Minnesota, and its transmitter is located in Shoreview, Minnesota.

    KMSP is a more news-based Fox station with 48.5 hours a week of locally-produced newscasts, as well as first-run prime time, late-night and sports programming from Fox. It also runs off-network sitcoms, talk shows, reality shows and court shows.

    The KMSP-WFTC duopoly is a union shop, with all technicians and photographers being required to join the IBEW Local 292.

    History

    Early history

    The station grew out of an AM station, KEYD 1440, with which it was co-owned until mid-1956. Leading up to the grant of the new TV station, two other Twin Cities radio stations were also interested: WLOL and WDGY, however, withdrew their applications at the last minute, assuring that the new station would go to KEYD. KEYD-TV began broadcasting on January 9, 1955 [2] and was affiliated with the DuMont Television Network. Harry Reasoner was the station's first anchor and news director.[1] DuMont shut down in late 1955, leaving the station as an independent outlet. When Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer purchased a minority (25 percent) but controlling stake in the station in 1956, the news department was shut down and Reasoner was hired by CBS.[2]. Reasoner became an anchor for CBS's 60 Minutes when it debuted in 1968.

    Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer changed the call sign to KMGM-TV in 1956.[3] National Telefilm Associates, which later purchased WNTA in New York, purchased 75 percent of the station not owned by MGM in 1957. KMSP became the new name of the station in 1958 when NTA acquired the remaining 25 percent of the station from MGM.[4]. KMSP was sold to United Television (at the time 20th Century Fox's broadcasting division) the following year.

    During its early years until 1972, the station's studios and offices were located in a lower level of the Foshay Tower in downtown Minneapolis; the transmitter was located on top of the tower, the tallest structure in the area until 1971, along with channels 4 and 11. The transmitter was moved in 1971 to a new tower constructed by KMSP in Shoreview, MN, while the studios and offices relocated in 1972 to Edina on York Avenue South, across from Southdale Shopping Center. The station moved once more, in 1992, to its current location on Viking Drive in Eden Prairie.

    As an ABC affiliate

    In 1961, KMSP took over the ABC network affiliation from WTCN-TV (channel 11, now KARE), an affiliation it would keep until 1979. Throughout its years with ABC, KMSP was notorious for having a sub-standard news department with large staff turnover. Ratings were dismal with KMSP obtaining only one-third of the viewing audience of each of their two competitors, CBS affiliate WCCO-TV (channel 4) and NBC station KSTP-TV (channel 5).

    Ratings improved by 1977 when ABC went from being the last-place network to being the first. To cash in, KMSP re-branded itself "ABC9" (approximately 20 years before U.S. stations began the network name in their branding en masse), and retooled their newscast. KMSP's news department was still a distant third behind WCCO-TV and KSTP-TV. That same year Chris-Craft Industries purchased a minority stake in United Television's parent 20th Century Fox.

    In the late 1970s ABC steadily rose to first place in the network ratings. Accordingly, the network sought to upgrade its affiliate list, which was made up of some stations that either had poor signals or poorly-performing local programming. In early 1977, ABC warned KMSP that it would yank its affiliation unless improvements were made and fast.

    Becoming an independent once again

    On August 29, 1978, ABC announced that KSTP-TV would be its new affiliate in the Twin Cities. The signing of channel 5 made nationwide news, as it had been an NBC affiliate for three decades. KSTP looked forward to affiliating with the top network, as third-place NBC had been in a long slump. In retaliation for losing ABC, KMSP immediately removed all ABC branding and regularly preempted network programming. KMSP then attempted to affiliate with NBC, thinking Johnny Carson would be a good lead-out from their 10:00 PM news, despite low prime time ratings. However, NBC, miffed at losing one of its strongest affiliates, and not wanting to pick up ABC's rejects, turned down KMSP's offer almost immediately and signed an affiliation agreement with independent WTCN.

    As a result of being rejected by both ABC and NBC, KMSP prepared to become an independent station. It would also be freed up from investing as heavily in their meager news department. Most of the on-air and off-air staffers resigned, not wanting to work for a down-scaled independent operation, and frustrated with the station's lack of competitiveness over the years.[citation needed]

    The affiliate switch occurred on March 5, 1979, and KMSP debuted its new independent schedule featuring cartoons, syndicated shows and even the locally-based American Wrestling Association[5], with much of it coming from WTCN-TV. It re-branded itself as "Receptive Channel 9", and became quite aggressive in programming, obtaining broadcast rights to several state high school sports championships (MSHSL), the NHL's Minnesota North Stars and the Minnesota Twins baseball team. The stripped-down evening newscast was moved to 9:30 p.m., then by 1981 to 9 p.m. and expanded to one hour.

    As many people[who?] were predicting failure for the new channel 9, KMSP's transition into an independent station turned out to be a blessing in disguise. It was far more successful than it ever had been as an ABC affiliate. It became a regional superstation, available on nearly every cable system in Minnesota as well as large portions of North Dakota, South Dakota, Iowa, and Wisconsin. Over time, it became one of the most successful and profitable independent stations in the country.

    In 1981, KMSP went through another ownership change when United Television was merged with BHC Communications as the result of Chris Craft Industries' swap of its stake (then at 20 percent) in 20th Century Fox for a 19 percent stake in United Television. Two years later, Chris-Craft Industries gained majority control of United Television.

    First Fox affiliation, then back to independent

    The station remained independent through 1986. Intrigued by the idea of being a network affiliate while not having to be tied down to a network-dominated schedule, KMSP became one of the original affiliates of the newly-launched Fox network. However, it did not remain a Fox affiliate for long. By 1988, KMSP was one of several Fox affiliates nationwide disappointed with the network's weak programming offerings, particularly on Saturday nights, which were bogging down KMSP's otherwise successful independent lineup. It started preempting and time-shifting network shows, much to Fox's irritation. After an ultimatum by the network to run the full schedule in pattern, Fox named KITN (channel 29, now WFTC) as its new Twin Cities affiliate, and KMSP returned to full independent status.

    As a UPN affiliate

    By the early 1990s, Fox had exploded in popularity. It had strong shows that were starting to rival the offerings of the 'Big Three' networks, and had just picked up rights to the NFL. In response to this, KMSP's then-owner, Chris-Craft/United Television, partnered with Paramount Pictures (which soon became part of media conglomerate Viacom) to create the United Paramount Network (UPN). Channel 9 became a UPN owned and operated station on January 16, 1995, the day the network commenced operations with the two-hour pilot episode of Star Trek: Voyager.

    KMSP became one of UPN's most successful affiliates. In addition, it was still enjoying success with local sports programming featuring the Minnesota Twins, as well as the MSHSL championships.

    Return to Fox as an owned-and-operated station

    KMSP remained as a UPN affiliate even after the station, along with several other stations owned by Chris-Craft, was sold to the Fox Television Stations Group in 2001 (this brought KMSP, along with the other two ex-United stations, back under common ownership with 20th Century Fox). An affiliation swap was expected after KMSP's affiliation contract with UPN ran out. Besides Fox's presumed preference to have its programming on a station it already owned, KMSP's signal was much stronger than that of WFTC. Also, WFTC didn't have a news department. The move was made easier when Fox bought WFTC from Clear Channel shortly after in July 2001 (it swapped KTVX in Salt Lake City and KMOL, now WOAI-TV in San Antonio, for WFTC).

    On September 8, 2002, KMSP and WFTC swapped network affiliations. This move (accompanied by a "Make the Switch" ad campaign on both stations) made KMSP a Fox station once again. At that time, KMSP took all Fox programming, including the Fox Box (which later went back to WFTC as 4KidsTV until its December 2008 discontinuation). The affiliation swap coincided with the start of the 2002 NFL season; KMSP became the primary station for the Minnesota Vikings as Fox owns the broadcast rights to the National Football Conference (which the Vikings are in).

    Of all the former Chris-Craft stations Fox retained, KMSP was the only one not to retain its UPN affiliation. KMSP is one of three network-owned stations in the Twin Cities alongside sister WFTC and CBS-owned WCCO.

    Fox proceeded to invest heavily in KMSP, creating the station's strongest news operation ever (it even briefly produced a newscast for sister station WFTC). In addition, Fox soon become a full-fledged competitor with NBC, ABC and CBS with a number of hit shows and an aggressive cable news operation. The late night edition of Fox9 News today often draws better ratings than the newscasts on KSTP-TV, which obtained the ABC affiliation from KMSP thirty years earlier.

    Video news release controversy

    On June 16, 2006, KMSP played a "video news release" about convertibles produced by GM in its entirety. The narrator, Medialink publicist Andrew Schmertz, was introduced as reporter André Schmertz. KMSP did not disclose the corporate source of this segment to their viewers.[6]

    Digital television

    Digital channels
    Channel Programming
    9.1 KMSP-TV programming / Fox HD
    9.2 WFTC programming / MyNetworkTV SD

    KMSP-DT was originally on 26, using PSIP to display its virtual channel as 9. After the analog television shutdown and digital conversion was completed on June 12, 2009, KMSP-TV moved its digital broadcasts back to channel 9.

    In November 2009 the station moved the standard definition feed of WFTC to KMSP-DT2 to allow viewers to choose which of the FTSG signals works best for their reception needs.

    News operation

    KMSP broadcasts a total of 41 hours of local news a week (6½ hours on weekdays, four hours on Saturdays and 4½ hours on Sundays), more than any other station in Minneapolis and the state of Minnesota; however as is standard with Fox stations that carry early evening weekend newscasts, KMSP's Saturday and Sunday 5 p.m. newscasts are subject to preemption due to sports coverage.

    The station has had a long-running 9 p.m. newscast (now known as Fox at 9), which airs an hour before all other news broadcasts in the area. The two primary news anchors are Jeff Passolt and Robyne Robinson, who are the longest current anchor team in the Twin Cities at 14 years, according to the station. This changed when Robinson announced on May 11, 2010 that she would leave KMSP after 20 years at the station. KMSP, along with KDFWinDallas-Fort Worth, and KSAZ-TVinPhoenix are the only Fox-owned stations to have a 10 p.m. newscast in the Central and Mountain Time Zones (of the mentioned stations, KMSP and KDFW do not run their 10 p.m. newscast nightly and KMSP is the only one that airs their 10 p.m. newscast on during the weekend, airing it on Sunday nights. However, KSAZ in Phoenix runs a 10pm newscast seven nights per week.). Sister stations WTVTinTampa-St. Petersburg and WTTGinWashington, D.C. have a late newscast at the Eastern time zone equivalent of 11 p.m.

    On September 24, 2007, sister station WJBKinDetroit, Michigan became the third Fox O&O in the Eastern time zone to add an 11 p.m. newscast. This was when WJBK joined KMSP as being one out of several Fox O&Os to go with the FNC-look (new set, new rotating logo, etc.). Fox may have all the O&Os add an 11 p.m. newscast should this become a success. This may mean more of the Fox O&Os in the Central and Mountain Time Zones could add a 10 p.m. newscast as well (KTBCinAustin had a 10 p.m. newscast for years after switching to Fox, which has since been scaled back to 9 p.m.).

    Conversely, KMSP is also one of a few Fox O&Os without a midday newscast (along with WFXTinBoston and WOFLinOrlando) and one of five Fox O&Os with a 5 p.m. newscast, but no 6 p.m. newscast (along with KTBCinAustin, WHBQinMemphis, KRIVinHouston and WFXTinBoston.

    On May 11, 2009, KMSP became the second station to launch local news in high definition. The first was KARE in 2006. The set and music remains the same. The only new thing are the new Fox O&O HD graphics with some minor tweaks and HD weather graphics. On September 14, 2009 KMSP expanded its morning newscast to five and a half hours from 4:30-10 a.m. (one of several Fox-owned stations to do so, following the cancellation of The Morning Show with Mike & Juliet), with the 9 a.m. hour being called Fox 9 News: Morning Buzz.

    Awards

    The station is noted for having a number of Emmy-winning photojournalists and reporters. The newscasts have been nationally honored with the prestigious Edward R. Murrow Award for Best Newscast and Spot News Coverage, in addition to Investigative Reporting, and Videography.

    In October 2008, KMSP won another 17 Emmys, along with four Emmys for its sister station WFTC. Among this years Emmys were wins for ads for myfoxhockey.com, foxhilitestwincities.com, "Stay Connected with Fox 9", and best online marketing initiative for Family Guy Photos at the Fair. Sister station WFTC won multiple Emmys for Twins on My29 Pinball Promos, and its generic composite ads.

    In October 2007, KMSP won 17 Emmys, along with one Emmy for its sister station WFTC. Among the Emmys were wins for Best Website, Several Investigative Reports, along with several Emmys for Advertisements such as the "Wake Up With Fox 9" and the "Jeff & Robyne" spots. For a complete list visit National Television Academy Upper Midwest Chapter.

    News/station presentation

    Newscast titles

    Template:Multicol

    Template:Multicol-break

    • Fox 9 Morning News (September 8, 2002-present)
    • Fox 9 News at 9 (September 8, 2002-present)
    • Fox at 10 (September 2008-present)
    • Fox at 5 (2008-present)
    • Fox at 5:30 (2008-present)
    • Fox 9 News: Morning Buzz (9 a.m. newscast; 2009-present)

    Template:Multicol-end

    Station slogans

    Template:Multicol

    Template:Multicol-break

    Template:Multicol-end

    On-air staff

    Current on-air staff (as of October 13, 2010)[9]

    Anchors

    Fox 9 Weather First

    Sports team

    Reporters

    News personnel

    Former on-air staff

    Broadcasting facilities

    The KMSP TV Tower is located in Shoreview, Minnesota. KMSP owns the tower, which stands 1466 feet (446.8 m) tall, but shares it with sister station WFTC and the Twin Cities Public Television stations, KTCA and KTCI. Several FM stations are also on the tower: KQRS-FM, KXXR ("93X"), KTCZ ("Cities 97"), KTIS-FM, KSJN, KTLK-FM, KDWB, KEEY ("K102"), WLTE, and KZJK.

    KMSP has an extensive network of broadcast translators to carry its analog signal throughout much of the state.

    Webcasting

    KMSP TV provides webcast access to some its programming. For example, wwitv.com-tv_channels- b4202.htm (blacklisted for previous problems) currently ('100711u1400R) provides access to a live video feed of some video of the Mexican Gulf sea floor well head eruption control operations from one of the ROVs.

    References

    Notes

  • ^ [1]
  • ^ http://web.archive.org/web/20031009145802/http://www.northpine.com/broadcast/historical/msptv.txt
  • ^ New Voice on Channel 13 - TIME
  • ^ WWF Champs - All Profiles
  • ^ Would You Buy a Car From This Man? | Center for Media and Democracy
  • ^ http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QOEUOFvkPvM
  • ^ http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rr8jgvXDy6s
  • ^ FOX 9 Bios, MyFoxTwinCities.com. Retrieved October 22, 2010.

  • Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=KMSP-TV&oldid=392582877"

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