Laredo, Texas United States |
|
---|---|
City | Laredo |
Branding | KVTV CBS 13 |
Channels | Digital: 13 (VHF) |
Affiliations | Defunct |
Owner |
Eagle Creek Broadcasting of Texas (Eagle Creek Broadcasting of Laredo, LLC) |
First air date | December 28, 1973 |
Last air date | July 1, 2015 |
Former channel number(s) |
Analog: 13 (VHF, 1973-2009) Digital: 31 (UHF) |
Former affiliations | CBS (1973-2015) |
Transmitter power | 3 kW |
Height | 284 m |
Facility ID | 33078 |
Transmitter coordinates | 27°31′12″N 99°31′19″W / 27.52000°N 99.52194°W |
Licensing authority | FCC |
Public license information: |
Profile CDBS |
Website | www.kvtv13laredo.com |
KVTV was the CBS television affiliate in Laredo, Texas, USA.
On July 1, 2015, Gray Television, owner of NBC affiliate KGNS-TV, bought the non-license assets of KVTV and established KYLX-LP, to which it moved all of KVTV's program streams. KVTV then ceased broadcasting after nearly 42 years. The KVTV full-power license was surrendered on September 19, 2016.
One of several stations serving the Laredo/Nuevo Laredo borderplex, KVTV began in 1973 as a satellite station of KZTV, the CBS affiliate in Corpus Christi, Texas owned by K-Six Television. Both stations were run on tight budgets, which meant that the lack of investment in the station's operations sometimes showed up on-air. In 2002, Alta Communications and Brian Brady acquired K-Six Television, renaming the company Eagle Creek Broadcasting of Texas.
Soon after taking over, the new owners made significant changes to KVTV. All newscasts the station produced were dropped, except for the 12PM show, which was said to help reduce the strain put upon the news and production departments. Later that year, the station made cosmetic and personnel changes on almost every level and renamed their operations "CBS 13 News". The midday newscast was retained for a year and a half and later dropped. Late night news was revived on the station on April 19, 2004 with "CBS 13 News: Nightcast", a similar title to its Corpus Christi sister. For this, former KGNS-TV anchorman Richard Noriega was hired out of semi-retirement to lead the newscast. Several months prior to the newscast, Noriega worked as a consultant and helped with the planning involved in revamping the station's news department.
Nightcast was the station's only local newscast, and was seen weekdays from 10-10:35 PM. Prior to this program, a taped 5 minute news bulletin called "NewsNight" aired.
The station decided to cancel the late newscast on January 3, 2006 and laid off the remaining staff of the news department that day. The move left KVTV as one of the few affiliates of CBS to not have a local newscast; in its last decade on the air, the only news programming on the station came from CBS News, including the CBS Evening News, CBS Morning News, and CBS This Morning with national weather and additional news updates given by a CBS News anchor during the :25 and :55 local news breaks. Since then, the stations has largely served as a pass-through for automated network, syndicated and local paid commercial programming in both English and Spanish.