KTSF

KTSF
San Francisco/Oakland/
San Jose, California
United States
City Brisbane, California
Branding KTSF
Slogan The Face of the Bay Area
Channels Digital: 27 (UHF)
Virtual: 26 (PSIP)
Subchannels (see article)
Affiliations Multicultural independent
Owner Lincoln Broadcasting Company, a California LP
First air date September 4, 1976 (1976-09-04)
Call letters' meaning Television
San
Francisco
Former callsigns KTSF-TV (1976–1981)
Former channel number(s) Analog:
26 (UHF, 1976–2009)
Transmitter power 500 kW
Height 403.4 m
Facility ID 37511
Transmitter coordinates 37°41′12″N 122°26′3″W / 37.68667°N 122.43417°W / 37.68667; -122.43417Coordinates: 37°41′12″N 122°26′3″W / 37.68667°N 122.43417°W / 37.68667; -122.43417
Licensing authority FCC
Public license information: Profile
CDBS
Website www.ktsf.com

KTSF, virtual channel 26 (UHF digital channel 27), is a leading independent Asian television station located in Brisbane, California, United States. The station is owned by Lincoln Broadcasting Company. KTSF maintains studio facilities located on Valley Drive in south suburban Brisbane, and its transmitter is located atop San Bruno Mountain.

History

In 1965, Lillian Lincoln Howell was issued a broadcast license for a new television station in San Francisco. Her goal was to offer programming to audiences that were not targeted by the television stations already on the air at the time. Her stated mission was to "serve the underserved." It took many years to build the station, but when KTSF finally signed on the air on September 4, 1976,[1] it began broadcasting a general entertainment format featuring older off network shows from the 1950 and 1965, Japanese cartoons and live action shows dubbed in English, and older movies during the day and Asian programming after 7:00pm weekdays and 4:00pm weekends. For many years a half-hour horse racing program hosted by Sam Speer brought video of the GoldenGate Fields or Bay Meadows daily results. The station also ran religious shows in the morning hours such as The PTL Club and Praise The Lord. Entertainment shows included Dennis the Menace, The Donna Reed Show, Hazel, The Flying Nun, Father Knows Best, Lassie, Marine Boy, Ultraman, King Kong cartoons and The Space Giants. At that time, four other independent Bay Area stations had general entertainment schedules, including KTVU, KTZO (now KOFY-TV), KICU, and KBHK (now KBCW). By 1981, the Japanese animated and live action shows were dropped. KTSF (the "-TV" calls were dropped on December 31, 1981) became the first U.S. broadcaster to carry Asian-language programming.

In January 1, 1980, KTSF ended the Chinese and other Asian programming weeknights, relegating it to weekend afternoons. Daily after 7:00pm, the station picked up a subscription movie service called ONTV. Its signal would appear scrambled, with an audio message being played that described the service and provided a phone number to subscribe. Descrambler boxes could be rented to view the channel.

In 1983, KTSF expanded its Asian content to reflect the changing demographics of the Bay Area. With increasing immigration of the Bay Area's Asian population from the Philippines and Korea, KTSF Tagalog and Korean language program content and expanded its schedule to include programming from India and Iran. The station began running this programming a couple hours a day middays. In the Spring of 1985, ONTV was winding down operations nationally so KTSF expended Asian offerings to evenings and overnights as well. Also, in 1985, KTSF dropped English general entertainment programming as well, partly due to the fact that San Francisco had 4 stations doing such a format.

A significant step in the station's history came in 1987 when it hired Gallup to perform the first Chinese-language consumer study ever conducted in the United States. The challenge for any commercial broadcaster is to be able to demonstrate to advertisers a profile of its viewers. The Gallup study demonstrated to mainstream U.S. companies that the Chinese-American market behaved like most other groups. For instance, the vast majority of Chinese people had bank accounts at "mainstream" financial institutions such as Bank of America and Wells Fargo, while only a small percentage had accounts at Chinese-owned banks. The major grocery store chains, with their large variety of products and convenient locations, were patronized by 75% of Chinese-Americans on a weekly basis.

With this new research, KTSF was able to attract mainstream U.S. companies to the Asian American market. On February 6, 1989,[1] KTSF launched the first live Chinese language newscast in the United States. Throughout the 1990s, with the H-1B visas in place, it was easier for U.S. companies to attract qualified workers from other countries. The Bay Area saw a large number of workers from China, Taiwan and India move to Silicon Valley. KTSF responded by dramatically expanding its Mandarin-language and South Asian programming.

In 2005, KTSF became the first Asian broadcaster in the U.S. to subscribe to Nielsen. With the daily overnight viewing data, KTSF was able to help advertisers better target the Asian demographic. By 2010, KTSF carried programming in twelve languages including Mandarin, Cantonese, Taiwanese, Japanese, Vietnamese, Hindi and Tagalog.

In 2007, the KTSF news department expanded by adding a special features unit. A series of in-depth news features and hour-long documentaries were scheduled throughout the year. Topics included the tenth anniversary of the Hong Kong handover, the fashion industry in China, Olympic previews and the 40th anniversary of the Cultural Revolution which landed KTSF its first Emmy nomination.

In 2008, a weekly business show - Business and Lifestyle - began airing. The show featured successful business profiles from the industries of finance, real estate, beauty, health and nutrition. It also included tips from established entrepreneurs on how to grow your business and how to avoid the common pitfalls of first-time business owner as well.

In 2010, Kaitlyn's Beauty Journal began airing. The show produced and broadcast in Mandarin-Chinese with English subtitles and hosted by popular beauty blogger- Kuan-Ling Kaitlyn Chen, features make-up application tips, hair and nail care how-to's, product reviews and tests, and the latest fashion trends. Kaitlyn’s Beauty Journal broadcasts in New York, Los Angeles, Seattle and Houston. Kaitlyn's Beauty Journal has the potential to reach 56.3% of all Chinese in the U.S.

In 2014, KTSF launched its local TV App in the Apple App Store and Google Play Store and fully implemented Nielsen proprietary mobile measurement software in order to inform its research and insights and drive advertising effectiveness.[2]

On February 1, 2016, KTSF's main signal transitioned from 4:3 to 16:9 which allowed local programming and the Cantonese and Mandarin newscasts to be broadcast in widescreen.[3]

Digital television

Digital channels

The station's digital channel is multiplexed:

Channel Video Aspect PSIP Short Name Programming[4]
26.1 1080i 16:9 KTSF-D1 Main KTSF programming
26.2 576i 4:3 KTSF-D2 Diya TV
26.3 KTSF-D3 MBC America
26.4 KTSF-D4 ICN
26.5 KTSF-D5 Viet Today TV
26.6 KTSF-D6 Viet Shopping TV
26.7 16:9 KTSF-D7 Homelinks Aruna

KTSF formerly carried NHK World on digital channel 26.2; the network moved to KCNS digital subchannel 38.4 on November 1, 2011. KTSF also formerly carried KBS World on digital channel 26.3 until KBS and KTSF discontinued their relationship on January 1, 2015.[5]

Analog-to-digital conversion

KTSF's digital signal launched in 2002 on UHF channel 27.[6] The station shut down its analog signal, over UHF channel 26, on June 12, 2009, as part of the federally mandated transition from analog to digital television.[7] The station's digital signal remained on its pre-transition UHF channel 27,[8] using PSIP to display KTSF's virtual channel as 26 on digital television receivers.

Programming

Mandarin programming

On February 13, 2006, KTSF began broadcasting Talk Tonight, a live Mandarin-language phone-in talk show; guests have included a variety of entertainment, political and sports figures. On August 4, 2013, the station began producing a local Mandarin-language financial program titled Talk Finance.

Japanese programming

KTSF broadcast Japanese programming during primetime on Saturday and Sunday, along with a Japanese language morning news program on weekdays, titled FCI Morning Eye. Fuji TV provided the Saturday night programming, while Tokyo TV provided its Sunday night programming, branded as TTV.[9] Fuji TV had been broadcasting since February 20, 1972 (predating KTSF's actual debut),[10] while Tokyo Television programming debuted on KTSF when it launched on September 4, 1976.[11] By December 2011, TTV programming had moved to KCNS channel 38.4.[12]

Fuji TV telecasts on KTSF ceased after March 29, 2014. As of that date, KTSF no longer airs any Japanese language programming.

CMC on KTSF

On weekday afternoons, KTSF carries programming from the California Music Channel, consisting of CMC California Music Channel and CMC Beat Lounge. The station also airs a late-night version of CMC that broadcasts on Saturday nights, known as CMC Late Night.[13]

News operation

KTSF presently broadcasts 22 hours of locally produced newscasts each week (with four hours on weekdays, and one hour on weekends). The station's newscasts are subject to delay or preemption due to special programming. It is currently the only television station in the United States broadcasting daily, live local and international news programming in both the Cantonese and Mandarin languages. KTSF currently utilizes Traditional Chinese subtitles for both the Cantonese and Mandarin newscasts; open captions are employed, since closed captioning is only available for languages based on the Latin alphabet (e.g. English and Spanish).

The station launched its news department on February 6, 1989, with the debut of Cantonese News and Mandarin News as the first live Chinese-language television program in the United States. The station launched Mandarin News, as well as a local Mandarin-language talk program, known presently as Talk Tonight. Chinese News at 9 originally aired at 9:00pm for 30 minutes, but was renamed Cantonese News on September 27, 1993 before it was extended to one hour and moved back to the 8:00pm timeslot and eventually the current 7:00pm on December 17, 2001. Chinese News at 8:45 originally aired at 8:45pm for 15 minutes, but was renamed Mandarin News on February 7, 1994 before it was extended to 30 minutes and moved back to the 7:30pm timeslot and eventually the current before it was extended to one hour and moved to the 10:00pm on December 17, 2001.

The station aired Hong Kong Weekly News from February 11, 1989 to March 18, 2006 with minor schedule changes. That show was pushed back to the 5:30pm on December 28, 2002 and then moved back to the 5:00pm timeslot on March 6, 2004. The station began producing weekend editions of its newscasts in Cantonese and Mandarin on March 25, 2006 that originally aired only in Cantonese on Saturday and Mandarin on Sunday; both of which aired originally at 6:00pm before moving to 7:00pm on January 4, 2014. Another major change occurred on January 9, 2016 as both the Cantonese and Mandarin newscasts expanded to air on both Saturday & Sunday at 7:00pm and 10:00pm, respectively, to match their weekday counterparts. Unlike the weekday newscasts, the weekend news in both Cantonese and Mandarin air for 30 minutes as opposed to one hour on weekdays.

The first local morning news in Cantonese debuted on October 17, 2016, running from 6:00am to 8:00am, with frequent weather and traffic updates every 10 minutes. Unlike a typical Chinese morning newscast, which runs their traffic and weather updates every 30 minutes, KTSF runs their morning newscast as a conventional morning news and adapting news in a similar format to most morning newscasts in the United States, but retaining features that are common on evening newscasts broadcast in Cantonese.

Notable on-air staff

Former on-air staff

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 10/31/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.