KFSN-TV
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| KFSN-TV | |
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| Fresno, California | |
| Branding | ABC30 Action News HD |
| Slogan | Live, Local, Late Breaking |
| Channels | Analog: 30 (UHF) Digital: 9 (VHF) |
| Translators | K13PG Springville |
| Affiliations | ABC ABC-30 Weather Now (DT3) |
| Owner | Disney/ABC |
| Founded | May 10, 1956 |
| Call letters meaning | K FreSNo |
| Former callsigns | KFRE-TV (1956-1971) |
| Former channel number(s) | 12 (1956-1961) |
| Former affiliations | CBS (1956-1985) |
| Transmitter Power | 3720 kW (analog) 8.7 kW (digital) |
| Height | 622 m (analog) 614 m (digital) |
| Facility ID | 8620 |
| Transmitter Coordinates | |
| Website | www.abc30.com |
KFSN-TV is the ABC owned and operated television station in Fresno, California. The station transmits its analog signal on UHF channel 30, and its digital signal on VHF channel 9. Its signal covers the Central San Joaquin Valley and the mountain ranges flanking either side, including the Sierra Nevada mountains and Yosemite National Park. The station serves Fresno, Madera, Merced, Tulare, and Kings counties. The station's transmitter is located in Meadow Lakes, California.
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Out of ten ABC owned stations, KFSN is the only one using a UHF channel to carry its analog signal. The station is one of the two network owned television stations in the Fresno television market. (The other is KNSO, the NBC-owned Telemundo affiliated station.)
The station's newscasts are not branded Eyewitness News, like most of its other owned stations, they are called "ABC30 Action News". Sister station WPVI in Philadelphia also uses this moniker. In late 2003, the station began pooling resources with sister stations KABC-TV in Los Angeles and KGO-TV in San Francisco to hire a full time reporter and photographer to staff a Sacramento bureau following Arnold Schwarzenegger's election to the office of Governor during the 2003 California recall election.
Like its sister stations, KFSN's syndicated programming lineup includes The Oprah Winfrey Show, Wheel of Fortune, and Jeopardy!. Other syndicated programming carried by the station includes The Rachael Ray Show and weekend shows Teen Kids News, Hispanics Today, At the Movies with Ebert & Roeper, and The Dead Zone.
In the 1950s, KARM-AM and KFRE-AM competed for the channel 12 license, the sole VHF TV allocation in Fresno. KFRE won the license, and the station known today as KFSN-TV signed on the air for the first time on May 10, 1956 on channel 12 as KFRE-TV, taking the CBS affliation from KJEO-TV (channel 47).
The KFRE stations were acquired by Triangle Publications in 1959, and on February 17, 1961, KFRE-TV reluctantly moved to UHF channel 30 to make Fresno an all-UHF market under orders from the Federal Communications Commission. The move came after Central Coast-area politicians pressured the FCC to move KFRE-TV in order to alleviate interference with KCOY-TV in Santa Maria. (Fresno is still a predominantly-UHF market to this day with all 12 full power analog signals operating on UHF channels. The exceptions are a few low-power and digital outlets, including KFSN's own digital signal on VHF 9.)
Capital Cities Communications acquired the KFRE stations from Triangle in 1971; the company sold off the AM and FM radio stations and kept the TV station, changing its calls from KFRE-TV to KFSN-TV. (The KFRE calls are now used on Fresno's CW affiliate; that station is unrelated to the current KFSN-TV.) The station became an ABC O&O in September 1985 following ABC's merger with CapCities; CBS returned to KJEO (now KGPE).
KFSN's newscasts have dominated the ratings in the San Joaquin Valley for many years. Its 5 pm newscast, "Live at Five," frequently attracts more viewers than all other local stations combined.
On April 23rd, 2007 KFSN-TV became the 6th ABC O&O station to broadcast their newscasts in HD following their sister stations KABC-TV, WPVI-TV, WABC-TV, WLS-TV and KGO-TV. They starting with the 5 P.M. newscast and branding as "ABC 30 Action News HD". In addition, ABC 30 has also changed its logo to follow the practice of its other sister stations incorporating the Circle logo.
Anchors
- Warren Armstrong - Weeknight 5, 6, 11 PM anchor
- Graciela Moreno - Weeknight 6 and 11 PM anchor
- Nancy Osborne - Weeknight 5 PM anchor
- Dale Yurong - Weeknight 6:30 PM anchor
- Liz Harrison - Weeknight 6:30 PM anchor
- Jason Martinez - AM Live and Midday anchor
- Margot Kim - AM live anchor
- Debra Steele - Midday anchor/reporter
- Itica Milanes - AM Live weekend anchor/reporter
- Maureen Naylor - Weekend 6 and 11 PM anchor/reporter
Weather anchors
- Doug Collins - Weekday Mornings
- Angelo Stalis - Weeknights
- Ashlee Tate - Midday and weekends
Sports
- Dan Taylor - Sports Director weeknights
- Jason Olivera - weekends
Reporters
- Sontaya Rose
- Amanda Perez
- Corin Hoggard
- John-Thomas Kobos
- Andres Araiza - Court Reporter
- Jessica Peres - South Valley Reporter
- Sara Sandrik - North Valley Reporter
- Nannette Miranda - Sacramento State Reporter
- Tony Capozzi - Legal/Political Analyst
- Christine Park - Consumer Reporter
- Gene Haagenson - Senior Reporter
- Aaron Bender - reporter
- Gerrick Brenner - reporter, now at WTVD
- Kevin Cox - anchor/reporter
- Laura Diaz - anchor 1981-83, now at KCBS/KCAL
- Joanne Feldman - weather anchor 2000-2002 later at WTVD 2002-2007 now at WAGA
- Robin Fern - anchor
- Craig Fiegener -reporter, now at KCBS/KCAL
- Keith Garvin - reporter, now at WRC in Washington
- Darla Givens - weather anchor 1992-1996, now at KXTV
- Dan Godwin - anchor/reporter now at KDFW-TV Dallas/Ft. Worth
- Lisa Gonzales - morning anchor 2002-2005, now at KOVR/KMAX
- Katie Hammer - North Valley Bureau Chief 2005-2007, now at KGO
- Craig Herrera - midday & weekend weather anchor 2002-2005 now at KNTV
- Karen Lee - anchor/reporter, now at KARE
- Ellis Levinson - consumer affairs reporter
- Deanna McQueen - South Valley Bureau Reporter 2003-2006, now at KMBC
- Kate Mistol - anchor 1998-2002, now at KTBC
- Richard Montano - sports, 2000-2004 now at WHEC
- Chris Nieto - sports
- Kent Ninomiya - reporter 1990 - 1991
- Lucy Noland - anchor/reporter 1994-1996, now at KHOU
- Ann Norteangelo - reporter 1998-2001 now at KPIX
- Clint Olivier - reporter 2005-2007 Now at KMPH
- Kevin Quinn - reporter 1997-2003, now at KTRK
- Al Radka - KFRE television personality from 1956 to 1985
- Eric Rasmoussen - weekend anchor/reporter 2003-2006, now at WFTV
- Kevin Riggs - anchor/reporter 1992-1994, now at KCRA/KQCA
- Rich Rodriguez - anchor 1980-1985 and 1988-2000, now at KSEE
- Ken Shockley - reporter, now a spokesman for Fresno Fire Department
- Juanita Stevenson - anchor-reporter 1984-2006 now at KJWL-FM
- Cindy Suryan - anchor/reporter, now employed by Community Hospitals of Central California
- Rudy Trevino - anchor, now at KIII - Corpus Christi
- John Wallace - anchor, 1979-1988 now at KGPE
- Alan Wang- Reporter, Now at KGO-TV in San Francisco
- BroadcastPioneers.com: A History of the WFIL Stations - accessed on January 20, 2006
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K02OH 2 (Ind) - KVHF-LP 4 (NOYZ) - K12OZ 12 / K03HK 3 (3ABN) - KCWB-LP 13 / KVVG-LP 54 (Tvida) - KHMM-CA 14 (MTV Tr3s) - KHSC-LP 16 (HSN) - KVPT 18 (PBS) - KFTV 21 (UNI) - KZMM-CA 22 (MTV Tr3s) - Local cable television channels
Defunct television stations
KSCZ-LP 42 (Ind, TBN) |
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KEYT 3 / KSSB 17 / K57BC 57 (Santa Barbara / San Luis Obispo) - KABC 7 (Los Angeles) - KGO 7 (San Francisco) - KRCR 7 (Redding) - KECY-DT 9.2 (El Centro) - KGTV 10 (San Diego) - KXTV 10 (Sacramento) - |
| See also: CBS, CW, Fox, MyNetworkTV, NBC, PBS, Telefutura, Telemundo, Univision, Independent, Other Spanish Network, Religious, Home Shopping and Other stations in California |
