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Contents

   



(Top)
 


1 History  





2 News operation  



2.1  Notable former on-air staff  







3 Technical information  



3.1  Subchannels  





3.2  Analog-to-digital conversion  





3.3  Satellite stations  





3.4  Translators  







4 References  





5 External links  














KOB (TV)







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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
 

(Redirected from K30KX-D)

KOB

  • United States
  • City

    Albuquerque, New Mexico

    Channels

  • Virtual: 4
  • Branding

    KOB 4

    Programming

    Affiliations

  • for others, see § Subchannels
  • Ownership

    Owner

  • (KOB-TV, LLC)
  • History

    First air date

    November 29, 1948 (75 years ago) (1948-11-29)

    Former call signs

    KOB-TV (1948–2009)

    Former channel number(s)

    Analog: 4 (VHF, 1948–2009)

    Former affiliations

    • All secondary:
  • ABC (1948–September 1953)
  • CBS (1948–October 1953)
  • DuMont (1948–1955)
  • Call sign meaning

    From former sister stations KOB-AMFM

    Technical information[1]

    Licensing authority

    FCC

    Facility ID

    35313

    ERP

    270 kW

    HAAT

    1,277 m (4,190 ft)

    Transmitter coordinates

    35°12′42.1″N 106°27′0.5″W / 35.211694°N 106.450139°W / 35.211694; -106.450139

    Translator(s)

    see § Translators

    Links

    Public license information

  • LMS
  • Website

    www.kob.com

    KOB (channel 4) is a television stationinAlbuquerque, New Mexico, United States, affiliated with NBC. It is owned by Hubbard Broadcasting, whose sister cable channel Reelz is also based in Albuquerque (KOB and Reelz, however, maintain separate operations and facilities). KOB's studios are located on Broadcast Plaza just west of downtown, and its transmitter is located on Sandia Crest, east of Albuquerque.

    History[edit]

    KOB logo, used from 1996 to 2010.

    KOB-TV started operations on November 29, 1948, after Albuquerque Journal owner and publisher Tom Pepperday won a television license on his second try. Pepperday, who also owned KOB radio (770 AM), had previously applied for one in 1943. It was the first television station in New Mexico, as well as the third television station between the Mississippi River and the West Coast (behind WBAP-TV (now KXAS-TV) in Fort Worth, and KDYL-TV (now KTVX) in Salt Lake City). Initially, channel 4 ran programming from all four networks—NBC, ABC, CBS and DuMont. However, it has always been a primary NBC affiliate owing to its radio sister's long affiliation with NBC radio.

    Later, in May 1952, the KOB stations were purchased by magazine publisher Time-Life (later Time Inc.) and former Federal Communications Commission (FCC) chairman Wayne Coy. It was Time-Life's first television asset.[2] In 1953, two new TV stations signed on within a week—KGGM-TV (channel 13, now KRQE), which affiliated with CBS, followed by KOAT, which took ABC; DuMont shut down in 1956.

    Stanley E. Hubbard, founder of Hubbard Broadcasting, bought KOB-AM-TV from Time-Life in 1957, and his heirs have owned the station since.[3] KOB's radio cousins were sold off in 1986 and are now known as KKOB and KOBQ. Despite the change, many people still confuse the television and radio stations today. In 2005, KOB-TV entered into a news partnership with KKOB.

    Although the KOB radio stations had long amended their callsigns, KOB-TV did not drop the "-TV" suffix until June 13, 2009, when the FCC allowed a limited opportunity for stations to change their suffixes (adding "-TV" or "-DT") or drop them in the wake of the digital transition that was completed the previous day.

    News operation[edit]

    KOB broadcasts 32+12 hours of locally produced newscasts each week (with 5+12 hours each weekday, three hours on Saturdays, and two hours on Sundays). During the school year, KOB broadcasts a weekly 15-minute sportscast, New Mexico Gameday, dedicated to high school sports.

    When KOAT's top anchorman, Dick Knipfing, was fired on June 4, 1979, KOB hired him to anchor their newscasts. Although KOAT sued to keep Knipfing off the air until the following year,[4] an opinion from the United States District Court allowed the anchorman to proceed with his plans to begin anchoring channel 4 on August 1,[5] creating the first big-dollar anchor in Albuquerque, and allowing him to stand out in the industry as the "anchorman wars" moved to smaller markets. Knipfing's salary at that time was approximately $90,000. However, channel 4 was never able to overtake KOAT in the news ratings.

    KOB produced an hour-long nightly newscast for Albuquerque's then-Fox affiliate, KASA-TV, from November 2000 through September 14, 2006, called Fox 2 News at Nine. The next day, KRQE took over production of that newscast as that station's parent company, LIN TV, began taking over KASA's operations as it purchased the station.

    On September 26, 2010, KOB began producing and broadcasting its newscasts in 16:9 widescreen standard definition, and debuted new on-air graphics and a new station logo (the logo used for its newscasts is very similar to that used by Swedish television channel TV4 for its programming) on that date as well.

    On February 13, 2020, the 10 p.m. newscast was renamed KOB 4 NightBeat, switching the newscast from its former Eyewitness News format to a looser talk-based news format. It is believed that it will be only for the late newscast, but could expand depending on viewer input.

    On October 18, 2021, KOB resumed producing newscasts for KASA-TV, which had switched affiliations from Fox to Telemundo in January 2017 and was later acquired by NBCUniversal's Telemundo Station Group on October 5, 2021. [6] This marked the end of a transitional services agreement KASA-TV had with Gray Television, which had purchased its former Ramar Communications-owned sister stations in Lubbock (including KJTV-TV), to continue news production in the short term.[7]

    Notable former on-air staff[edit]

    Technical information[edit]

    Subchannels[edit]

    The station's signal is multiplexed:

    Subchannels of KOB[9][10]

    Channel

    Res.

    Aspect

    Short name

    Programming

    4.1

    1080i

    16:9

    KOBDT1

    NBC

    4.2

    480i

    4:3

    KOB-DT2

    Heroes & Icons

    4.3

    KOBDT3

    MeTV

    4.4

    16:9

    KOBDT4

    Catchy Comedy

    4.5

    4:3

    KOBDT5

    Ion Plus[11]

    4.6

    KOBDT6

    Scripps News

    4.7

    KOBDT7

    Start TV

    In September 2006, KOB-TV began broadcasting NBC WeatherPlus on digital subchannel 4.2, at first inserting its Doppler weather radar during time reserved for local segments. In December 2008, WeatherPlus was replaced with KOB's own locally programmed weather station. Weekly E/I programming required of broadcast television stations by the FCC came from NASA TV on weekend mornings.

    On February 7, 2011, the subchannel began to carry programming from This TV. On June 30, 2016, Comet TV was added as a third digital channel, airing science fiction programs. On April 30, 2021, Decades was added as a fourth digital channel, airing decades on shows. In summer 2021, Defy TV and TrueReal were added as KOB's fifth and sixth digital channels. On October 15, 2021, KOBDT4's Decades was replaced with Heroes & Icons, shortly after it was dropped from KASA channel 29.1, but would later return to an added seventh digital channel on November 23. On December 30, 2021, KOB changed the line-up moving H&I to channel 4.2 while Decades (which became Catchy Comedy in March 2023) returned to 4.4 with This TV moving to 4.7.[12] On July 8, 2022, KOB added Newsy to digital channel 4.6, while TrueReal moved to channel 4.3 replacing Comet. TrueReal subsequently ceased operations as a network on March 27, 2023, thus leaving channel 4.3 blank.[13]

    On July 1, 2023, KOB-TV added MeTV to channel 4.3, taking it from Telemundo station KASA-TV/KTEL-CD/KRTN-LD. Concurrently, KOB-TV added Start TV (also from KASA-TV/KTEL-CD) to channel 4.7, dropping This TV from its programming.[14]

    Analog-to-digital conversion[edit]

    KOB-TV shut down its analog signal, over VHF channel 4, on June 12, 2009, the official date on which full-power television stations in the United States transitioned from analog to digital broadcasts under federal mandate. The station's digital signal remained on its pre-transition UHF channel 26,[15] using virtual channel 4.

    As part of the SAFER Act,[16] KOB-TV kept its analog signal on the air until June 30 to inform viewers of the digital television transition through a loop of public service announcements from the National Association of Broadcasters.

    Satellite stations[edit]

    Two stations rebroadcast KOB's signal and insert local content for other parts of the media market:

    Station

    City of license

    Channels

    First air date

    Former callsigns

    ERP

    HAAT

    Facility ID

    Transmitter coordinates

    Public license information

    KOBF

    Farmington

    12
    12 (VHF)

    October 20, 1972 (51 years ago) (1972-10-20)

    KIVA-TV (1972–1983)

    30 kW

    125 m (410 ft)

    35321

    36°41′43N 108°13′16W / 36.69528°N 108.22111°W / 36.69528; -108.22111 (KOBF)

    Public file
    LMS

    KOBR

    Roswell

    8
    8 (VHF)

    June 24, 1953 (71 years ago) (1953-06-24)

    KSWS-TV (1953–1985)

    40 kW

    533 m (1,749 ft)

    62272

    33°22′31.3″N 103°46′14.3″W / 33.375361°N 103.770639°W / 33.375361; -103.770639 (KOBR)

    Public file
    LMS

    KOB formerly operated a third satellite station, KOBG-TV (channel 6) in Silver City, which signed on in 2000. Its transmitter was located at 32°51′49N 108°14′29.6″W / 32.86361°N 108.241556°W / 32.86361; -108.241556 (KOBG-TV). KOBG had a permit to construct a digital station on channel 8, but these facilities were never built. After the digital transition on June 12, 2009, KOBG began operating with facilities on channel 12 identical to that of low-power translator stations under special temporary authority,[17] and was formally replaced with a translator (K12QW-D) on April 26, 2011,[18] though its license was not canceled until August 3.[19]

    The last letter of the satellite station callsigns stands for the city or county where the station is located. KOBG was in Grant County.

    Translators[edit]

    In February 2019, Las Cruces–based K42DJ, which was owned by the News-Press & Gazette Company and rebroadcast the Azteca América subchannel of El Paso, Texas–based KVIA-TV, was transferred to Hubbard and began to rebroadcast KOB instead as K22NM-D. This provided Las Cruces over-the-air access to an in-state NBC affiliate in addition to the main NBC affiliate serving Las Cruces, Nexstar's KTSM-TV.

    References[edit]

    1. ^ "Facility Technical Data for KOB". Licensing and Management System. Federal Communications Commission.
  • ^ "KOB-AM-TV sale; official announcement made." Broadcasting - Telecasting, March 10, 1952, pg. 30. [1]
  • ^ "Time sells KOB-AM-TV stations." Broadcasting - Telecasting, January 14, 1957, pp. 96-97. [2] [3]
  • ^ Gallagher, Hugh. "KOAT Fires Knipfing, Hires 2 Replacements". The Albuquerque Journal. June 5, 1979. A-1.
  • ^ Tessier, Denise. "Knipfing Allowed To Be KOB Anchorman." The Albuquerque Journal. July 7, 1979. C-5.
  • ^ "NBCUniversal Local Acquires Television Stations from Ramar Communications". NBCUniversal Media Village. NBCUniversal Media, LLC. October 5, 2021. Archived from the original on October 2, 2020. Retrieved April 28, 2024.
  • ^ Malone, Michael (October 18, 2021). "KASA Albuquerque Premieres Local News". Broadcasting & Cable. Archived from the original on October 18, 2021. Retrieved April 28, 2024.
  • ^ "'Dr. George' Fischbeck, LA TV weatherman, dies at 92". The San Diego Union-Tribune. March 25, 2015. Retrieved April 28, 2024.
  • ^ "RabbitEars TV Query for KOB". www.rabbitears.info.
  • ^ "KOB TV Schedules". Kob.com. Retrieved July 4, 2023.
  • ^ Keys, Matthew (June 28, 2024). "Scripps replacing Defy TV with Ion Plus on broadcast TV". TheDesk.net. Retrieved June 28, 2024.
  • ^ "Heroes & Icons moves to channel 4.2, This TV to channel 4.7". KOB.com. Retrieved May 7, 2022.
  • ^ Lafayette, Jon (March 10, 2023). "E.W. Scripps Folding TrueReal Digital Network Into Defy TV". Broadcasting Cable. Retrieved March 10, 2023.
  • ^ "KOB 4 launches MeTV and Start TV in New Mexico". KOB.com. June 30, 2023. Retrieved July 4, 2023.
  • ^ "DTV Tentative Channel Designations for the First and the Second Rounds" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on August 29, 2013. Retrieved March 24, 2012.
  • ^ "UPDATED List of Participants in the Analog Nightlight Program" (PDF). Federal Communications Commission. June 12, 2009. Retrieved June 4, 2012.
  • ^ "STA purpose statement" (PDF). CDBS Public Access. Federal Communications Commission. June 17, 2009. Retrieved August 12, 2012.
  • ^ "KOBG-TV Children's Television Programming Report". Federal Communications Commission. Retrieved August 12, 2012.
  • ^ Harding, Kevin R. (August 3, 2011). "Re: KOBG-TV, Silver City, New Mexico" (PDF). CDBS Public Access. Federal Communications Commission. Retrieved August 12, 2012.
  • External links[edit]

    Broadcast television in New Mexico and the Four Corners

    This region includes the following cities: Albuquerque/Santa Fe
    Carlsbad/Roswell
    Farmington, NM/Durango, CO
    Reception may vary by location and some stations may only be viewable with cable television

    Albuquerque
    / Santa Fe

    Full-power
    stations

  • KOB (4.1 NBC, 4.2 H&I, 4.3 MeTV, 4.4 Catchy, 4.5 Ion+, 4.6 Scripps News, 4.7 Start)
  • KNME-TV (5.1 PBS, 5.2 Kids, 5.3 FNX, 5.4 World, 5.5 Create)
  • KOAT-TV (7.1 ABC, 7.2 Estrella, 7.3 Crime, 7.4 LC, 7.5 Story)
  • KCHF (11.1 Rel., 11.2 QVC, 11.3 QVC2, 11.4 Buzzr, 11.5 Newsmax 2, 11.6 AVN)
  • KRQE (13.1 CBS, 13.2 Fox, 13.3 Bounce)
  • KLUZ-TV (14.1 UNI, 14.2 Quest, 14.3 HSN, 14.4 Court, 14.5 Dabl, 14.6 Nuestra Visión)
  • KWBQ (19.1 CW, 19.2 Grit, 19.3 Laff, 19.4 Ion, 19.5 REW)
  • KNAT-TV (23.1 TBN, 23.2 Merit, 23.3 Inspire, 23.4 Smile, 23.5 Positiv)
  • KAZQ (32.1/.2 Rel., 32.3 SonLife, 32.5 Daystar)
  • KTFQ-TV (41.1 UniMás, 41.2 LATV, 41.3 HSN, 41.4 Charge!)
  • KASY-TV (50.1 MNTV, 50.2 Mystery, 50.3 ANT, 50.4 Court)
  • Low-power
    stations

  • KRTN-LD (2.2 TXO, 39.1 Cozi, 39.6 TBD)
  • KYNM-CD (21.1 SWC, 21.2 JTV, 21.3 NTDA, 21.4 Heartland, 21.5 Rel., 21.6 KDAZ Radio (audio), 21.7 Fam)
  • KQDF-LD (25.1 Latina, 25.2 ShopHQ, 25.3 Majestad TV, 25.4 beIN Sports, 25.5 Shop LC)
  • K38IM (38.1 3ABN, 38.2 3ABN Proclaim!, 38.3 3ABN Dare to Dream, 38.4 3ABN Latino, 38.5 3ABN Radio, 38.6 3ABN Radio Latino, 38.7 Radio 74)
  • KWPL-LD (45.1/.2/.5 Ads, 45.3 Novelisima, 45.4 beIN Xtra, 45.6 MMN)
  • KTEL-CD (47.3 TBD, 47.4 Movies!)
  • Outlying
    areas

    Durango

  • KOBF (12.1 NBC, 12.2 H&I, 12.3 MeTV, 12.4 Catchy, 12.5 Ion+, 12.6 Scripps News, 12.7 Start)
  • KRMU (20.1 PBS/RMPBS, 20.2 PBS Kids, 20.3 Create/World)
  • KRTN-TV (33.1/2 TBD, 33.3 Cozi, 33.4 TMD)
  • Hobbs

  • K19KT-D (34.1 Ind./News, 34.2 Fox, 34.3 Ion)
  • K34KZ-D (45.1 3ABN, 45.2 3ABN Proclaim!, 45.3 3ABN Dare to Dream, 45.4 3ABN Latino, 45.5 3ABN Radio, 45.6 3ABN Radio Latino, 45.7 Radio 74)
  • Roswell

  • KBIM-TV (10.1 CBS, 10.2 Fox, 10.3 Bounce)
  • KRWB-TV (21.1 CW)
  • KRPV-DT (27.1 GLC)
  • Other

  • KVIH-TV (12.1 ABC, 12.2 CW+, 12.3 Comet, 12.4 TBD, 12.5 Charge!; Clovis)
  • KCEI-LD (18.1 Ind.; Taos)
  • KVBA-LP (19Rel.; Alamogordo)
  • KRWG-TV (22.1 PBS, 22.2 World, 22.3 Kids; Las Cruces)
  • KTEL-TV (25.1 TXO, 25.2 Cozi, 25.3 TBD, 25.4 TMD; Carlsbad)
  • ATSC 3.0

  • KASY-TV (7.1 ABC, 13.1 CBS, 13.2 Fox, 19.1 CW, 50.1 MNTV)
  • Cable

  • Bally Sports Southwest
  • Channel23TV (Carlsbad)
  • CLC-TV (Las Cruces)
  • Encantada TV (Albuquerque)
  • Las Cruces Channel (Las Cruces)
  • Streaming

    Defunct

  • KOBG 6 (Silver City)
  • KOCT 6 (Carlsbad)
  • KOVT 10 (Silver City)
  • KGSW-TV 14 (Albuquerque)
  • K47DR 47 (Farmington)
  • KTFA-LP 48 (Albuquerque)
  • Colorado Springs/Pueblo, CO
  • El Paso, TX
  • Midland/Odessa, TX
  • Lubbock, TX
  • Phoenix, AZ
  • Tucson, AZ
  • El Paso

  • KVIA-TV (7.1 ABC, 7.2 CW, 7.3 Ion, 7.4 QVC, 7.5 Scripps News, 7.6 Ion+, 7.7 Grit, 7.8 Universal Church)
  • KTSM-TV (9.1 NBC, 9.2 Estrella, 9.3 Mystery, 9.4 Laff)
  • KCOS (13.1 PBS, 13.2 Create, 13.3 PBS Kids)
  • KFOX-TV (14.1 Fox, 14.2 Comet, 14.3 Charge!, 14.4 Nest)
  • K27OJ-D (25.1 Voz y Visión, 25.2 Teleritmo)
  • KINT-TV (26.1 UNI, 26.2 Grit, 26.3 LATV, 26.4 Bounce, 26.5 Court)
  • KSCE (38.1 Rel. Ind., 38.2 Vida, 38.3 Scriptures, 38.4 Kids & Youth)
  • KTFN (65.1 UniMás, 65.2 Crime, 65.3 Quest, 65.4 Bienestar)
  • Las Cruces

  • K22NM-D (4.1 NBC, 4.2 H&I, 4.3 MeTV, 4.4 Catchy, 4.5 Ion+, 4.6 Scripps News, 4.7 Start)
  • K38MH-D (7.1 ABC, 7.2 CW, 7.3 Ion, 7.4 QVC, 7.5 Scripps News, 7.6 Ion+, 7.7 Grit, 7.8 Universal Church)
  • KRWG-TV (22.1 PBS, 22.2 World, 22.3 PBS Kids)
  • KTDO (48.1 TMD, 48.2 TXO, 48.3 Lx, 48.4 Cozi, 48.5 Oxygen)
  • Ciudad Juárez

  • XEPM-TDT (2.1 Las Estrellas Targeting Ciudad Juárez, 2.2 Las Estrellas Targeting El Paso)
  • XHCTCJ-TDT (3.1 Imagen, 3.4 Excélsior)
  • XHJUB-TDT (5.1 Canal 5, 10.1 Nu9ve)
  • XHMTCH-TDT (6.1 Canal 6, 6.2 Milenio, 6.3 Teleritmo, 6.4 ABC Televisión)
  • XHJCI-TDT (8.1 Televisa Regional, 8.2 FORO)
  • XHCPCN-TDT (16.1 Canal Catorce)
  • XHCJH-TDT (20.1 Azteca 7, 20.2 a+)
  • XHIJ-TDT (44.1 Canal 44, 44.2 Canal 44 delayed, 44.3 Canal 14, 44.4 Intermedia Televisión)
  • XEJ-TDT (50.1 XEJ, 50.2 Once Niñas y Niños)
  • Adjacent locals

    Albuquerque: KNAT-TV (23.1 TBN, 23.2 Merit, 23.3 Inspire, 23.4 Smile, 23.5 Positiv)

    Texas television (by city)
    Abilene/Sweetwater
    Amarillo (Texas Panhandle)
    Austin (Hill Country)
    Beaumont/Port Arthur (Golden Triangle)
    Corpus Christi
    Dallas–Fort Worth (North Texas)
    Ciudad Acuña – Del Rio
    Eagle Pass
    El Paso (West Texas)
    Houston
    Laredo
    Lubbock (South Plains)
    Midland–Odessa (Permian Basin)
    Rio Grande Valley
    San Angelo
    San Antonio
    Sherman/Ada, OK
    Texarkana/Shreveport, LA (Ark-La-Tex)
    Tyler/Longview (East Texas)
    Victoria
    Waco/Bryan (Brazos Valley)
    Wichita Falls/Lawton, OK
    Albuquerque/Santa Fe
    Amarillo, TX/Guymon, OK
    El Paso, TX/Las Cruces, NM
    Odessa/Midland, TX
    Chihuahua broadcast television areas by city
    Chihuahua City
    Ciudad Juárez

    Key people

    • Stanley S. Hubbard

    Radio stations

  • KBHP
  • KBLB
  • KBUN
  • KBUN-FM
  • KDKB
  • KDUS
  • KIKV-FM
  • KIXI
  • KKNW
  • KKWS
  • KKZY
  • KLIZ
  • KLIZ-FM
  • KLLZ-FM
  • KNSP
  • KPNT
  • KPNW-FM
  • KQMV
  • KRWM
  • KSHE
  • KSLX-FM
  • KSTP
  • KSTP-FM
  • KTMY
  • KUAL-FM
  • KULO
  • KUPD
  • KVBR
  • KWAD
  • WARH
  • WBQH
  • WDRV
  • WEAT
  • WFED
  • WFTL
  • WIL-FM
  • WIRK
  • WJJY-FM
  • WKRQ
  • WMBX
  • WMEN
  • WREW
  • WRMF
  • WSHE
  • WTBC-FM
  • WTMX
  • WTOP-FM / WTLP / WWWT-FM
  • WUBE-FM
  • WWDV
  • WXOS
  • WYGY
  • ABC network affiliates

  • KSTP-TV / KSAX-TV / KRWF-TV
  • WDIO-DT / WIRT-DT
  • NBC network affiliates

  • KOBF
  • KOBR
  • K22NM-D1
  • WHEC-TV
  • WNYT
  • Other stations

  • WNYA (MyNetworkTV)
  • Cable television channels

  • Reelz
  • Acquisitions

    1Owned by Hubbard and operated by News-Press & Gazette Company in a LMA.

    English-language broadcast television stations by affiliation in the state of New Mexico

    ABC

  • KOAT-TV 7 (Albuquerque)
  • KVIA-TV 7 (El Paso, TX)
  • KVII-TV 7 / KVIH-TV 12 (Amarillo, TX/Clovis)
  • CBS

  • KOSA-TV 7 (Odessa, TX)
  • KFDA-TV 10 (Amarillo, TX)
  • KRQE 13 / KBIM-TV 10 / KREZ-TV 6 (Albuquerque/Roswell/Farmington)
  • Fox

  • KFOX-TV 14 (El Paso, TX)
  • KCIT 14 (Amarillo, TX)
  • KPEJ-TV 24 (Odessa, TX)
  • NBC

  • KOB 4 / KOBF 12 / KOBR 8 (Albuquerque/Farmington/Roswell)
  • KTSM-TV 9 (El Paso, TX)
  • KWES-TV 9 (Odessa, TX)
  • The CW

  • KVIA-DT 7.2 (El Paso, TX)
  • KVII-DT 7.2 / KVIH-DT 12.2 (Amarillo, TX/Clovis)
  • KWBQ 19 / KRWB 21 (Santa Fe/Roswell)
  • MyNetworkTV

  • KUPT 29 (Hobbs)
  • KCPN-LD 33 / KAMR-DT 4.2 (Amarillo, TX)
  • KASY-TV 50 (Albuquerque)
  • PBS

  • KNME-TV 5 (Albuquerque)
  • KNMD-TV 9 (Santa Fe)
  • KRWG-TV 22 (Las Cruces)
  • Other

  • KCHF 11 (Rel. Ind., Santa Fe)
  • KUPT-LD 16 (H&I, Albuquerque)
  • KWBQ-DT 19.4 / KRWB-DT 21.4 (Ion, Santa Fe/Roswell)
  • KNAT-TV 23 (TBN, Albuquerque)
  • KRPV-DT 27 (GLC, Roswell)
  • KEYU-DT 31.4 (Ion, Borger, TX)
  • KAZQ 32 (Rel. Ind., Albuquerque)
  • KRTN-LD 33 (MeTV, Albuquerque)
  • K38IM 38 (3ABN)
  • See also
    English stations
    Spanish stations
    English-language broadcast television stations by affiliation in the state of Arizona

    ABC

  • KGUN-TV 9 (Tucson)
  • KECY-DT 9.2 (El Centro, CA)
  • KTNV-TV 13 (Las Vegas, NV)
  • KNXV-TV 15 (Phoenix)
  • CBS

  • KLAS-TV 8 (Las Vegas, NV)
  • KOLD-TV 13 (Tucson)
  • KRQE 13 (Albuquerque, NM)
  • KYMA-DT 13 (Yuma)
  • Fox

  • KECY-TV 9 (El Centro, CA)
  • KSAZ-TV 10 (Phoenix)
  • KMSB 11 (Tucson)
  • KRQE-DT 13.2 (Albuquerque, NM)
  • NBC

  • KOB 4 (Albuquerque, NM)
  • KVOA 4 (Tucson)
  • KYMA-DT 11 (Yuma)
  • KPNX 12 / KNAZ-TV 2 (Mesa/Flagstaff)
  • The CW

  • KECY-DT 9.3 (El Centro, CA)
  • KWBQ 19 (Santa Fe, NM)
  • KVCW 33 (Las Vegas, NV)
  • KWBA-TV 58 (Sierra Vista)
  • MyNetworkTV

  • KTTU-TV 18 (Tucson)
  • KVCW-DT 33.2 (Las Vegas, NV)
  • KUTP 45 (Phoenix)
  • KASY-TV 50 (Albuquerque, NM)
  • Ion

  • KOLD-DT 13.4 (Tucson)
  • KYMA-DT 13.4 (Yuma)
  • KWBQ-DT 19.4 (Albuquerque, NM)
  • KMCC 34 (Laughlin, NV)
  • KPPX-TV 51 (Tolleson)
  • PBS

  • KAET 8 (Phoenix)
  • KLVX 10 (Las Vegas, NV)
  • K19CX 19 (Yuma)
  • Religious

    Daystar

  • KDTP 11
  • Hope

    TBN

  • KNAT-TV 23
  • Other

  • IZ Hope
  • Other stations and
    subchannels

    Phoenix market

  • KTVK-DT 3.2 (Phoenix, Comet)
  • KPHO-DT 5.2 (Phoenix, Cozi)
  • KMOH-TV 6.1 (Kingman, MeTV)
  • KAZT-DT 7.2 (Prescott, MeTV)
  • KAZT-DT 7.3 (Prescott, HSN)
  • KAZT-DT 7.4 (Prescott, Charge!)
  • KSAZ-DT 10.2 (Phoenix, H&I)
  • KSAZ-DT 10.3 (Phoenix, Grio)
  • KWKM-LP 10 (Show Low, A1)
  • KPNX-DT 12.3 (Mesa, Crime)
  • KPNX-DT 12.4 (Mesa, Quest)
  • KWSJ-LP 12 (Snowflake, A1)
  • KNXV-DT 15.2 (Phoenix, ANT)
  • KNXV-DT 15.3 (Phoenix, Laff)
  • K18DD-D (Camp Verde, 3ABN/EVINE Live)
  • KTVW-DT 33.3 (Phoenix, Grit
  • KTVW-DT 33.4 (Phoenix, Bounce)
  • KKAX-LD 36 (Kingman, A1)
  • K14RK-D 38.2 (Phoenix, Tuff)
  • K14RK-D 38.3 (Phoenix, Videos)
  • K14RK-D 38.4 (Phoenix, CMT)
  • KEJR-LD 40.2 (Phoenix, MeTV+)
  • KPDF-CD 41.4 (Phoenix, Ads)
  • KPHE-LD 44 (Phoenix, Ind.)
  • KLHU-CD 45 (Lake Havasu City, Community/Ind.)
  • KSAZ-LDSTA (Whiteriver, MNTV/Fox)
  • KUTP-LD 45 (Williams, MNTV/Fox)
  • KUTP-DT 45.2 (Phoenix, Movies!)
  • KUTP-DT 45.3 (Phoenix, Buzzr)
  • KECY-LD 46 (Parker/Blythe, CA, ABC/CBS/The CW)
  • K48NG (Parker/Blythe, CA, Fox/MNTV/NBC)
  • KDVD-LD 50 (Phoenix, Ads)
  • KPPX-DT 51.2 (Tolleson, Bounce TV)
  • KPPX-DT 51.3 (Tolleson, Court TV)
  • KDPH-LD 58 (Phoenix, JTV)
  • KASW 61ATSC 3.0 (Phoenix, Ind.)
  • KASW-DT 61.2 (Phoenix, Start)
  • KASW-DT 61.3 (Phoenix, Grit)
  • KASW-DT 61.4 (Phoenix, Mystery)
  • Tucson market

  • KVOA-DT 4.3 (Tucson, Mystery)
  • KGUN-DT 9.2 (Tucson, Laff)
  • KGUN-DT 9.3 (Tucson, ANT)
  • KGUN-DT 9.4 (Tucson, Bounce)
  • KMSB-DT 11.2 (Tucson, Movies!)
  • KMSB-DT 11.3 (Tucson, Crime)
  • KMSB-DT 11.4 (Tucson, Quest)
  • KOLD-DT 13.2 (Tucson, MeTV)
  • KOLD-DT 13.3 (Tucson, Circle)
  • KTTU-DT 18.3 (Tucson, H&I)
  • K35OU-D 21 (Tucson, HSN)
  • KUVE-DT 46.3 (Green Valley, getTV)
  • KUVE-DT 46.4 (Green Valley, Mystery)
  • KWBA-DT 58.3 (Sierra Vista, Grit)
  • Defunct

  • K36DU 36 (Worship)
  • KDPH-LP 48
  • See also
    English stations
    Spanish stations

    Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=KOB_(TV)&oldid=1233732416"

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    1948 establishments in New Mexico
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