KIXE-TV

KIXE-TV
Redding/Chico, California
United States
City Redding, California
Branding KIXE
Channels Digital: 9 (VHF)
Virtual: 9 (PSIP)
Subchannels 9.1 PBS
9.2 Create
9.3 PBS World
Translators KIXE-LD 18 Chico
(see article)
Affiliations PBS (1970–present)
Owner Northern California Educational Television Association, Inc.
First air date October 5, 1964 (1964-10-05)
Call letters' meaning IX (Roman numeral 9)
Educational
(Similar to Sacramento's KVIE)
Former channel number(s) Analog:
9 (VHF, 1964–2008)
Digital:
18 (UHF, 2004–2008)
Former affiliations NET (1964–1970)
Transmitter power 15 kW
Height 1091 m
Facility ID 47285
Transmitter coordinates 40°36′9″N 122°39′5″W / 40.60250°N 122.65139°W / 40.60250; -122.65139
Licensing authority FCC
Public license information: Profile
CDBS
Website www.kixe.org

KIXE-TV, channel 9, is the Public Broadcasting Service (PBS) affiliate in the Sacramento Valley of California. KIXE broadcasts only in digital VHF channel 9 at 15-thousand watts and covers a 130-mile radius that includes ten California counties: Butte, Colusa, Glenn, Lassen, Modoc, Plumas, Shasta, Siskiyou, Tehama, and Trinity. Today, KIXE is one of the most watched TV stations in this area. Some 33% of KIXE's budget comes in the form of a federal grant. The balance is derived from program underwriting, auction, members, and other fundraising activities. The station serves more than 500,000 people with more than 74,000 television households tuning in to Channel 9 each and every week.[1]

Fun Fact: The IX in KIXE is for the Roman numeral 9.

History

KIXE went on the air in black and white in 1964. In 1967 the station moved from Chico, California to Redding, California, and began broadcasting in color in 1971.

The station was originally located in Redding, on Industrial Street. It soon ran out of room and expanded to a bigger facility on N. Market Street (State Route 273), north of downtown. The new building had space for television broadcasting courses at Shasta College. Many local media personalities have appeared on KIXE over the years like Cal Hunter, Mike Mangas, Ray Roberts, Ken Murray and others.

1952 - First educational television station, KUHT, goes on air.

1954 - KIXE incorporation papers signed

1961 - TV "Vast Wasteland" speech by FCC Chairman Newton Minnow

1964 - KIXE signs on air with black and white programs only

1967 - Public Television Act signed by President Johnson

1967 - Channel 9 moved from Chico to Redding

1969 - Public Broadcasting Service (PBS) begins in US

1971 - KIXE begins broadcasting network, color programs

1974 - KIXE begins to originate color programs

1981 - KIXE broadcasts programs with Closed Captions

1987 - KIXE moves from Industrial Way to North Market Street

1995 - KIXE installs new transmitter

1996 - KIXE broadcasts programs in stereo

1997 - KIXE broadcasts programs with Descriptive Video

2003 - KIXE installs a new digital transmitter and broadcasts programs in digital, simulcasting alongside analog

2008 - KIXE terminates analog broadcast and transmits in digital ONLY, on VHF channel 9

2014 - KIXE celebrates our 50th Anniversary

Digital television

Digital channels

The station's digital signal is multiplexed:

Channel Video Aspect PSIP Short Name Programming[2]
9.1 720p 16:9 KIXE-DT Main KIXE-TV programming / PBS
9.2 480i 4:3 CREATE Create
9.3 WORLD PBS World

Chico fill-in Translator

Viewers in the Chico, Paradise, Oroville, Magalia, Orland and surrounding areas who had originally had trouble receiving KIXE’s digital signal from Redding began to notice a substantial improvement with a new fill-in transmitter on Cohasset Ridge that went online Monday September 21 Template:Of what year?. The 4,000-watt transmitter is located 200 feet up on a transmission tower and is rebroadcast KIXE’s regular programming lineup as well as the popular CREATE channel. The transmitter is broadcast on Channel 18 (a UHF signal) but viewers’ TV sets should “see” it as Channel 9-1 (KIXE’s traditional lineup), 9-2 (CREATE)and 9-3 (WORLD).

Analog-to-digital conversion

KIXE-TV shut down its analog signal, over VHF channel 9, on August 18, 2008, four days later. The station's digital signal relocated from its pre-transition UHF channel 18 to VHF channel 9 for post-transition operations.[3] Translators finally converted on September 1.

Early Switch

KIXE is broadcasting in a digital format on VHF channel 9. The exclusive digital broadcast began August 22, 2008, well before the then planned transition date in 2009. The early switch was mainly due to the transmission location being covered with snow on the original switchover mandate of February 2009.[4] KIXE became the second all-digital PBS station in California, after KCSM-TV in San Mateo (which serves the San Francisco Bay Area).

Rebroadcasters

KIXE is rebroadcast on 12 digital translator stations:[5]

The cities served by translators, (except Canby and Big Bend) had cable headends nearby.

Local programs

Current Shows:

Past Shows:

The Forum is a gathering place of interesting people doing interesting things and making an impact in Northern California. Hosted by Ashlee Tate and Christy Largent the purpose of the show is to shine a light on those people and organizations who are positively influencing their communities whether it be through their business or volunteer organization. It is the goal of KIXE to feature guests from all reaches of our 10 county viewing area so that each community and viewer can feel as though they are a part of the larger Forum.[6] The first episode of The Forum aired in June 2013.[7]

Season One

Episodes:

Season Two

Episodes: Show 201: Rachel Hatch-Tedx Redding Organizer Faye Hall—BuildIT Founder

Show 202: Kate Mahar—College Options Kate Grissom and Kathy Garcia- Expect More Tehama

Show 203: Little Red Hen

Show 204: Tina Gower, local author Faydra Koenig, local author

Show 205: Weed Pride Madrone Hospice

Show 206: Riverfront Playhouse Cottonwood Performing Arts Center

Show 207: Mike Frank Consulting and Onramp Dr. Jackson Corley—Incrediwear

Show 208: Chico Women’s Club Arc Solutions

Show 209: Dutch Bros. Vintners and Cascade Theater

Show 210: Red Bluff State Theater Rick Kern, Volunteer extraordinaire

Show 211: Liberty Arts Contemporary Art Gallery College Scheduler

Show 212: Arts for All Behrens Eaton House Museum

Show 213: Jefferson Economic Development Institute Sierra Nevada Brewing

NATURE: Caught In The Act

NATURE: Caught In The Act is an online film festival hosted by KIXE, in which viewers from their 10-county viewing area were able go out and film footage of wildlife and scenery in Northern California and upload them to the dedicated website using YouTube. 8 of the 10 submissions were shown on KIXE on October 18 at 7:30 P.M., right before Nature. The program was part of Film Vista and was hosted by assistant producer Matthew Shoutte.

The program featured a variety of locations around Northern California including Lassen National Park, Lava Beds National Monument, and Modoc National Wildlife Refuge.

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 4/19/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.