KMBH-LD

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(Redirected from KFXV-LD)

KMBH-LD
Translator of KFXV, Harlingen, Texas
Channels
Branding
  • Fox Rio Grande Valley
  • Fox News Rio Grande Valley
  • Rio Grande Valley's CW 21 (LD2)
Programming
Affiliations
Ownership
Owner
KFXV, KXFX-CD, KNVO, KTFV-CD, KCWT-CD
History
FoundedAugust 14, 1997
First air date
July 28, 2001 (22 years ago) (2001-07-28)
Former call signs
  • K67HC (1997–2000)
  • KSFE-LP (2000–2011)
  • KSFE-LD (2011–2012)
  • KFXV-LD (2012–2020)
Former channel number(s)
Analog: 67 (UHF, 2001–2011)
Primary:
Azteca América (2001–2007)
The CW Plus (2007–2011, now on DT2)
Secondary:
MyNetworkTV (2011–2021)
Call sign meaning
McAllen, Brownsville, Harlingen
Technical information[1]
Licensing authority
FCC
Facility ID49038
ERP14.18 kW
HAAT215 m (705 ft)
Transmitter coordinates26°5′19″N 98°3′45″W / 26.08861°N 98.06250°W / 26.08861; -98.06250
Links
Public license information
LMS
Websitefoxnewssouthtexas.com

KMBH-LD, virtual channel 67 (UHF digital channel 20), is a low-power television station licensed to McAllen, Texas, United States. It is a translator of Harlingen-licensed Fox affiliate KFXV (channel 38) which is owned by Santa Monica, California–based Entravision Communications. KMBH-LD's transmitter is located on Farm to Market Road 493 near Donna, Texas; its parent station shares studios with duopoly partner and Univision affiliate KNVO (channel 48) on Jackson Road in McAllen.

From 2012 to 2020, this station was KFXV-LD; the call letters were moved when Entravision bought and relaunched full-power KMBH as KFXV in May 2020.

History[edit]

Before 2012[edit]

Formerly known as KSFE-LP, the station became the valley's CW affiliate on August 6, 2007. Despite the fact that it was not carried on Time Warner Cable at the time, it was decided to brand the station as "The CW 21" to reflect the channel's eventual cable slot. For about a year, programming from The CW had been seen on cable-only affiliate "KMHB", which previously served as a WB affiliate from 1998 to 2006. KSFE began broadcasting a digital signal on sister station KNVO's subchannel 48.4 around the same time, enabling much of the Rio Grande Valley to receive The CW over-the-air.

In 2010, KSFE-LP began broadcasting as a low-power digital channel and can be found on RF channel 20, displayed as 67.1. Despite the fact that The CW was the primary affiliate, it was decided, in late 2011, to make the main channel a translator of then-primary Fox-affiliated sister station, XHRIO, with The CW pushed to the second subchannel.

Since 2012[edit]

In 2012, the call letters were changed to KFXV-LD to better reflect the station's status as a translator of a Fox station. Furthermore, the station began to identify itself by the KFXV calls and channel despite the fact it was still branding itself as channel 2. It was also announced that The CW would henceforth be referred to as KCWT, also a low-power station owned by Entravision, located on analog channel 30. The analog feed of The CW was moved to KCWT, and The CW now airs on that station (using virtual channel 21).

Around that time, it was announced that a new Spanish-language network by Fox called MundoFox would be coming to the Rio Grande Valley when it launched in August 2012; reports indicated that a full-power station owned by Entravision would assume the affiliation. While KFXV remained the Fox affiliate, XHRIO broke off and began airing MundoFox programming on August 7, nearly a whole week before MundoFox's scheduled full launch date, XHRIO began airing MundoFox on 2.1 calling it a "test signal". The next day, via Fox Rio 2's Twitter feed, it was officially announced that MundoFox would be coming to XHRIO 2.1 and Fox would remain on KFXV 67.1. Although this switch had already happened unofficially, it officially took place on August 13, 2012, effectively splitting XHRIO and KFXV into two separate and distinct channels, making KFXV 67.1 the official Fox affiliate for the Rio Grande Valley. This also marks the first time in the network's history that the valley's Fox station is of American origin, with an American callsign.

Despite moving the Fox affiliation from channel 2 to 67, the station was not rebranded from its "Fox 2" moniker, making KFXV's primary branding match its location on satellite systems rather than its virtual channel. This was changed in 2016, when the station began branding with its call letters.

On May 27, 2020, KFXV-LD became KMBH-LD. This came after KMBH was bought by Entravision and became a full-power Fox affiliate as KFXV.

On October 1, 2021, MyNetworkTV (which was carried on KFXV and KMBH as a secondary affiliation) moved to Antenna TV O&O KGBT-TV (channel 4) also as a secondary affiliation.

News operation[edit]

KMBH-LD's news operation has migrated over from XHRIO during its time as the Fox affiliate.

When XHRIO debuted in 1979, the station produced hourly bilingual news briefs with KRIO newscasters Fred Cantu and Rod Santa Ana during evening programming.

A full local newscast would not air on the station until March 12, 2007, when XHRIO debuted Fox 2 News at Nine. The 30 minute newscast airs Monday through Friday at 9 p.m. It was not the first 9 p.m. newscast in the area, as XHFOX produced one while it was a Fox affiliate. Like many Fox affiliates, KMBH-LD takes advantage of the network's shorter prime time schedule by scheduling their newscasts an hour before the other local affiliates in the region. In addition to local/national news, weather and sports, Fox 2 News also includes "Around the World in 80 Seconds", an 80-second segment dedicated to International news, health news and entertainment news. KMBH-LD's newscast line-up is somewhat similar to that of sister station KNVO's Spanish language newscasts since both stations share the same facility.

Subchannels[edit]

The station's signal is multiplexed:

Channel Video Aspect Short name Programming [2]
67.1 720p 16:9 KMBH-DT Main KMBH-LD programming / Fox
67.2 480i Simulcast of KCWT-CD / Rio Grande Valley CW 21

See also[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^ "Facility Technical Data for KMBH-LD". Licensing and Management System. Federal Communications Commission.
  2. ^ "RabbitEars.Info".

External links[edit]