XETV-TV

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XETV
Image:XETV6 San Diego.jpg
San Diego, California
City of license Tijuana, Baja California
Branding Fox 6
Slogan Your Station for Balanced News
Channels Analog: 6 (VHF)
Digital: 23 (UHF)
Affiliations Fox
Owner Televisa
(LMA with Entravision)
Founded 1953
Call letters meaning XE (Mexican license)
TeleVision
Former affiliations Independent (1953-1956, 1972-1986)
ABC (1956-1972)
Transmitter Power 99.25 kW (analog)
402 kW (digital)
Height 258 m (analog)
215 m (digital)
Transmitter Coordinates 32°30′7.9″N, 117°2′26.8″W
Website www.fox6.com

XETV-TV or Fox 6 is the Fox television station serving the San Diego market. It is licensed to Tijuana, San Diego's Mexican twin city (hence the Mexican call sign), but its studios and offices are located on Ronson Road in San Diego.

The station is owned by Mexican world-wide media giant Televisa, and is run Bay City Television, Inc, a subsidiary of Entravision Communications. Televisa is the legal owner since Mexican law does not allow foreigners to own any media outlets.

Contents

XETV-TV came into existence because of a technical quirk affecting stations in San Diego and Los Angeles. San Diego's first two television stations, KFMB-TV and KFSD-TV (now KGTV), were among the last construction permits issued before the FCC froze all new construction permits in 1948. Even after the FCC lifted the freeze in 1952, signing on a third television station in San Diego proved difficult. While San Diego and Los Angeles are not close enough that one city's stations can be seen clearly over the air in the other, the unique Southern California geography results in tropospheric propagation. This phenomenon makes co-channel interference a big enough problem that the two cities must share the VHF band. By 1952, San Diego and Los Angeles already had all but two VHF channels covered. UHF was not seen as a viable option because set makers were not required to include UHF tuners until 1964. Complicating matters, the Mexican authorities had allocated two VHF channels to neighboring Tijuana--channels 6 and 12. Since these were the last two VHF channels left in the area, the FCC did not accept any new construction permits from San Diego as a courtesy to Mexican authorities.

Although San Diego was large enough for a third station, it soon became obvious that the only way to get a third VHF station signed would be to use one of Tijuana's allocations. The Azcarraga family, owners of Telesistema Mexicano, forerunner of Televisa, quickly snapped up the license for channel 6, and XETV signed on in 1953 as an independent station. Even though it is licensed to Tijuana and owned by Mexican interests, for all intents and purposes it has been a San Diego station from the beginning, broadcasting entirely in English except for station identification purposes, the compulsory playing of the Mexican national anthem, and technical disclaimers. (Tijuana did not get its own station until 1960, when XEWT-TV, also owned by the Azcarragas, signed on.)

In 1956, the Federal Communications Commission granted XETV permission to carry ABC programming. ABC was carried part-time by KFMB (Channel 8) and KFSD (Channel 10) at the time, but ABC immediately made XETV its exclusive San Diego affiliate. In the late 1960s, Bass Broadcasting of Texas, then-owner of KCST (channel 39, now KNSD), began a lengthy battle to take away the ABC affiliation, claiming it inappropriate for an American television network to affiliate with a Mexican-licensed station when there was a viable American station available. In 1972, the FCC revoked XETV's permission to carry ABC programming. The wording of the FCC decision forced ABC to move its programming to KCST, which was the market's only other station not affiliated with either CBS or NBC in existence at the time. Not surprisingly, ABC was not happy with how it ended up on a UHF station, and only stayed with KCST for five years until moving to channel 10 (renamed KGTV in 1972) in 1977.

XETV once again became an independent station, with a number of cartoons, sitcoms, old movies, and dramas. In 1986 XETV became one of the very first stations outside of the original group of six former Metromedia stations (which had been purchased by Fox's parent company, News Corporation, earlier that year) to join the newly-launched Fox Broadcasting Company as a charter affiliate. However, XETV had its network affiliation threatened once again by 1994, when Fox acquired the broadcast rights of the National Football League. FCC regulations do not allow stations licensed outside of the United States to air live American sporting events without licensing approval. In November 1995, then-UPN affiliate KUSI-TV tried unsuccessfully to wrestle the Fox affiliation away from XETV by filing an appeal, as cited in the United States Court of Appeals (Channel 51, Inc. vs. Fox Television Stations). The permit was granted to Fox on behalf of XETV, and the case was settled on March 26, 1996. By the mid 1990s, reality and talk shows had been mixed into the station's lineup.

XETV launched a news operation in 1999, after pressure from Fox executives to broadcast local news. It had previously had a newscast from sign-on in 1953 until losing ABC in 1972. A 10 p.m. newscast was started, and later that year, a local morning news show followed. The cartoon morning block was abandoned but the afternoon one remained until 2002 when Fox ended its weekday Fox Kids block nationwide. The 10 p.m. news was initially a half-hour show, but expanded to an hour by 2000. As for Fox Kids, the remaining Saturday morning block has revamped to 4Kids TV, but XETV splits the block up between Saturdays and Sundays due to a morning newscast now.

In the early-2000s, XETV's digital signal, on channel 23, signed on. With its transmitter being in Mexico, XETV had the distinction of being Mexico's first digital station, as none of Mexico's other stations opened their digital facilities yet.

Because XETV is licensed to Tijuana (under authority of the Secretary of Communication and Transportation of Mexico, as the sign-on disclaimer notes each day at 5 AM (6 AM on Sunday Mornings), the beginning of XETV's broadcast day), it is not covered under the FCC's must-carry rules. This means that XETV and the other Fox affiliate licensed to Mexico, XHRIO-TV in Brownsville, Texas (licensed to Matamoros) are the only network affiliates that local cable providers are not required to carry even if the TV station requests to be carried under this provision. However, cable systems are effectively required to carry them anyway. The FCC's must-carry rules give full-powered American stations the option of "retransmission consent", or requesting compensation from cable systems to carry their station. In the case of Entravision, it can require San Diego-area cable systems to carry XETV (and sister station XHDTV-TV) as a condition of carrying KBNT.

Marc Bailey, the FOX in the Morning co-anchor is a native San Diegan, who started his career as a San Diego policeman. Christina Russo, the morning weather and traffic anchor is also a surfer and former soccer player. Current weeknight weather host Aloha Taylor (who joined XETV in Sept. 2006) holds full certification as a meteorologist as well as a university degree, but is also remembered as Miss Hawaii USA 1996 (chosen that year as Miss Congeniality in the Miss USA pageant). CS Keys, the 10pm Sports anchor is recognized by the California State Assembly for his tireless efforts to help San Diego youth, Keys started his own foundation, C.S. Keys’ KIDS with Athletes for Education Foundation.

XETV's broadcast day begins at 5:00 AM (6 AM on Sundays) and ends the next late night/morning at 2:00 AM (most days, the 2:00 AM-5:00 AM schedule is filled by infomercials). Since it is a Mexican-licensed station serving both San Diego and Tijuana, the broadcast day begins with both the Mexican National Anthem and the U.S. National Anthem, followed by the customary operational information and disclaimer in both English and Spanish versions. Since XETV is licensed in Mexico, it will probably be exempt from the requirement to discontinue analog broadcasting after February 17, 2009, that U.S. full-power stations are subject to.

VP & General Manager: Richard Doutre Jones
Chief Financial Officer: Rodrigo Salazar
News Director: Tauna Lange
News Managing Editor: Greg Todd
Human Resources Director: Olvia Alvarez
Operations Director: Bob Anderson
General Sales Manager: Chuck Dunning
Creative Services Director: Judy Albrecht
Engineering/IT Director: Gary Stigall
Asst News Director: Tim O'Brien
Production Manager/Senior Director: Jackson Sturlin
Webmaster: Aaron Sheinbein
Newstips: 858-650-5401

  • FOX6 News at 5AM - 5:00AM to 5:30AM with Marc Bailey, Angela Chee and Christina Russo weather.
  • FOX6 News at 5:30AM - 5:30AM to 6:00AM with Marc Bailey, Angela Chee and Christina Russo weather.
  • FOX6 News at 6AM - 6:00AM to 7:00AM with Marc Bailey, Angela Chee and Christina Russo weather.
  • FOX In The Morning - 7:00AM to 9:00AM with Marc Bailey, Angela Chee and Christina Russo weather.
  • FOX6 News at 10:00 - 10:00 p.m. to 11:00 p.m. with Jim Patton, Aloha Taylor weather, and C.S. Keys sports.

  • FOX6 News in the Morning Weekend - 7:00 a.m. to 9:00 a.m. with Anita Lightfoot, Lynn Stuart and Terry Burhans weather.
  • FOX6 News at 10:00 - 10:00 p.m. to 11:00 p.m. with Maria Arcega-Dunn,Terry Burhans weather and Andrea Nakano on sports.

  • FOX6 News in the Morning Weekend - 7:00 a.m. to 9:00 a.m. with Anita Lightfoot, Lynn Stuart and Terry Burhans weather.
  • FOX6 News at 10:00 - 10:00 p.m. to 10:30 p.m. With Maria Arcega-Dunn
  • That Sunday Sports Show - 10:30 p.m. to 11:00 p.m. with C.S. Keys and Andrea Nakano

Couch Potato is XETV and XHDTV's viewer loyalty game. Viewers simply watch either channel throughout the day for special Couch Potato codes and answers to trivia questions. If the viewer enters the code and answer the given trivia questions on the Couch Potato site, they can earn points to win prizes. Membership is free. NOTE: Couch Potato codes will only work on the day given.

On September 5, 2006, XETV's news team gained national attention, when Unit 6 Investigative reporter John Mattes was beaten very badly by a disgruntled man and his wife named Sam Suleiman and Rosa Barraza. All was captured on tape and shown on many news programs throughout the nation. The reporter and photojournalist were investigating a husband-and-wife team who were accused of a real estate scam.[1]

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