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KREZ-TV

KRQE
KRQE Primary Logo.png

Fox New Mexico Logo.png
Albuquerque-Santa Fe, New Mexico
United States
Branding KRQE News 13
Fox New Mexico (on DT2)
Slogan Local Reporting You Can Trust
Channels Digital: 13 (VHF)
Virtual: 13 (PSIP)
Subchannels 13.1 CBS
13.2 Fox
Owner Nexstar Media Group
(Nexstar Broadcasting, Inc.)
First air date October 4, 1953; 63 years ago (1953-10-04)
Call letters' meaning AlbuqueRQuE
Sister station(s) KWBQ, KASY-TV
Former callsigns KGGM-TV (1953–1992)
Former channel number(s) Analog:
13 (VHF, 1953–2009)
Digital:
16 (UHF, 2002–2009)
Former affiliations Secondary:
UPN / The WB (January–October 1995)
DT2:
ZUUS Country (2014–2015)
Dark (2015–2016)
GetTV (2016–2017)
Transmitter power 21.5 kW
Height 1,287 m (4,222 ft)
Facility ID 48575
Transmitter coordinates 35°12′40.3″N 106°26′59.3″W / 35.211194°N 106.449806°W / 35.211194; -106.449806
Licensing authority FCC
Public license information: Profile
CDBS
Website krqe.com

KRQE, VHF digital channel 13, is the CBS-affiliated television station in Albuquerque, New Mexico, United States that also serves Santa Fe. The station is owned by Nexstar Media Group and is currently a sister station to CW affiliate KWBQ (channel 19) and MyNetworkTV affiliate KASY-TV (channel 50) (both owned by Tamer Media with certain services provided by Nexstar through a shared services agreement). KRQE also serves as the Fox affiliate for New Mexico on digital subchannel 13.2; the subchannel took on the affiliation in January 2017 following the sale of the network's previous affiliate, KASA-TV to Ramar Communications, which changed KASA into a Telemundo affiliate.

KRQE has studios on Broadcast Plaza in Albuquerque (across the street from KOB). Its transmitter is located on Sandia Crest, east of Albuquerque.

Channel 13 began operation in October 1953 as KGGM-TV, owned by the Hebenstreit family's New Mexico Broadcasting Company along with KGGM radio (610 AM, now KNML). In the late 1960s, the Hebenstreits sold a minority share to Chicago's Harriscope Broadcasting, which at one point owned WSNS-TV in Chicago (among other stations). Many early Westerns were filmed, at least partially, at KGGM. The large studio that it used is now KRQE's "Newsplex," a combination newsroom and news studio. KGGM talent Earnest "Stretch" Scherer, known as Captain Billy, hosted a children's show called Captain Billy's Clubhouse. The format was a kids peanut gallery on bleachers holding about 50 seats with games and banter between cartoons, à la Bozo's Circus. Captain Billy was a sea captain with a Dutch boy white haircut sticking out from under a sea Captain's hat and big brush moustache. Scherer was shot in the station's lobby after a misunderstanding involving a jealous husband. He died later at a hospital. Among many alumni at KGGM/KRQE is Ray Rayner, formerly a children's television personality at WGN-TV in Chicago. He spent the last several years at KRQE before going into retirement.


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