KCAL-TV, channel 9, is an
independent
television station in Los Angeles, California
, owned by the CBS
Corporation. KCAL-TV shares its studio facilities with
KCBS-TV
(channel 2) inside CBS Studio Center
in the Studio
City
section of Los Angeles, and its transmitter is
located atop Mount Wilson
.
History
Early years
Channel 9 went on the air as
KFI-TV on August 25,
1948, owned by
Earle C.
Anthony, along with KFI radio
(640 AM). KFI had long been affiliated with
NBC and KFI-TV served for a brief period as Los
Angeles' first NBC television affiliate.
Channel 9 lost its NBC
affiliation in January 1949 when the network launched its own
station, KNBH (now KNBC
).
KFI-TV then became an
independent station, a
status it has retained to this day (though it carried
DuMont programming from 1954 up to
the network's demise in 1956).
Channel 9's engineers made noises about going on
strike in 1951, leading Anthony to sell the
station to the
General
Tire and Rubber Company. A few months earlier General Tire had
purchased the
Don Lee
Broadcasting System, a regional West Coast radio network. Don
Lee's flagship station was
KHJ radio (930
AM), and General Tire changed its new TV station's call letters to
KHJ-TV. The Don Lee name was so well respected in
California broadcasting that KHJ-TV called itself "Don Lee
Television" for a few years in the early 1950s, even though it had
never been affiliated with KHJ radio until the 1951 deal.
Most of
Don Lee's television experiments had been conducted on what is now
KCBS-TV
– ironically, current sister station to channel
9.
In 1955, General Tire purchased
RKO
Radio Pictures, giving the company's TV stations access to
RKO's film library, and soon after General Tire merged its
broadcast interests as
General Teleradio. In 1959,
General Tire's broadcasting and film divisions were renamed as
RKO General.
RKO ownership
By the late 1960s, channel 9 offered a standard independent
schedule of movies, off-network reruns, children's shows like "The
Pancake Man" hosted by
Hal Smith
who showed educational shorts like
The Space Explorers, syndicated fare,
and locally-produced programs such as news, sports, and
public-affairs shows.
In the
early-1970s, KHJ-TV sought a similar programming strategy to that
of cross-town competitor KTLA
, which
focused more on talk shows, game shows, sports, films, and
off-network dramas. The cartoons were phased out (some moving to
KTTV
and KCOP
), and the
station ran fewer off-network sitcoms. It did continue to
have a weekday children's show called
Froozles, which ran
until the late 1980s. It also produced many 30 minute public
affairs programs as well as a local talk show called
Mid
Morning L.A., hosted over the years by
Bob Hilton,
Meredith
MacRae,
Geoff Edwards and
Regis Philbin, which ran well into the 1980s.
Edwards and MacRae won Emmy Awards for their hosting duties during
the early-1980s. Some other locally produced public affairs shows
included the investigative show
Camera 9 and
The
Changing Family, a program about family and social issues
during the 1980s. Despite this, KHJ-TV was perceived as an also ran
while KTLA was the leading independent with a similar format.
Meanwhile, a behind-the-scenes battle was underway with serious
implications on the station's future – and that of its owner. In
1965, RKO General faced a threat to its license for KHJ-TV from a
group called Fidelity Television. At first, Fidelity's claim
focused on channel 9's programming quality. Later, and more
seriously, Fidelity claimed that KHJ-TV was involved in reciprocal
trade practices. Fidelity alleged that RKO's parent company,
General Tire, forced its retailers to purchase advertising on
KHJ-TV and other RKO stations as a condition of their contracts
with General Tire. An administrative law judge found in favor of
Fidelity, but RKO appealed.
In 1972, the FCC allowed RKO to keep the
license for KHJ-TV, but two years later conditioned future renewals
on the renewal of sister station WNAC-TV (now WHDH-TV
) in Boston
. Six
years later, the FCC stripped WNAC-TV of its license for numerous
reasons, but largely because RKO had misled the FCC about corporate
misconduct at General Tire.
The decision meant KHJ-TV and sister station
WOR-TV (now WWOR-TV
) in New York City
lost their licenses as well. However, an
appeals court ruled that the FCC had erred when it tied channel 9's
renewal to that of WNAC-TV and ordered new hearings for KHJ-TV and
WOR-TV.
The hearings dragged on until 1987. That year, an administrative
law judge found RKO unfit to be a broadcast licensee due to
numerous cases of dishonesty by RKO, including fraudulent billing
and lying about its ratings. The FCC advised RKO that it would
almost certainly deny any appeals, and persuaded RKO to sell its
stations to avoid the indignity of having their licenses taken
away.
Joining the House of Mouse
Finally, in 1989, RKO agreed to sell KHJ-TV to Fidelity Television,
the group that originally challenged the license in 1965. Fidelity
then sold the license to the
Walt
Disney Company. As a result of the sale, many, if not all, of
KHJ-TV's staffers were dismissed or left the station, including
notably longtime KHJ-TV general manager Charles Velona.
Even
though Channel 9's longtime radio sisters had changed their calls
to KRTH
some years
before, Disney wanted to make a clean start. Accordingly, it
changed the calls to
KCAL-TV, and briefly branded
the station as
California 9 before settling on
K-CAL
9.
The station also overhauled its format in
the wake of its ownership change, adding many children's programs,
including cartoons from the Walt Disney library (especially in
1990, when The Disney
Afternoon transferred from KTTV
after Fox's
launch of Fox Kids). The station
also ran a greater number of family based off-network sitcoms and
syndicated programs.
Cartoons continued to be a big part of KCAL's schedule in the
1990s, with blocks of children's programming on weekday mornings
and afternoons, that lasted well into 1997. In the early 1990s, the
family sitcoms were gradually phased out and KCAL added more
first-run syndicated talk, reality, court, and newsmagazine
shows.
In 1995,
Disney purchased Capital
Cities/ABC, which
owned KABC-TV
. Due to FCC regulations at the time, Disney
was not allowed to keep both KABC-TV and KCAL. Disney chose to
divest KCAL, which was purchased by
Young Broadcasting in 1996.
The afternoon kids block would remain until 1998, when the Disney
kids block moved to UPN and KCOP. In 2000, the children's shows in
the morning were gone as well under the ownership of Young
Broadcasting. The station also added more weekday daytime newscasts
at 2 and 3 p.m., and the 6:30 p.m. newscast was discontinued.
It would
also be the last station in the Los Angeles area to air a half-hour
local newscast at 6:30 p.m., until January 2009 when KTLA
launched its
6:30 p.m. local newscast, a decade after KCAL ended.
CBS purchase
As a
result of massive debt acquired from purchasing KRON-TV
in San
Francisco
, Young
Broadcasting put KCAL up for sale in 2002, and the station was
purchased by CBS, then a subsidiary of Viacom, on June 1, 2002.
KCAL's
operations were merged with those of KCBS-TV, and channel 9 moved
from its longtime headquarters at the Paramount Studios on Melrose Avenue in Hollywood
to the historic CBS Columbia Square
, located one mile away.
When Viacom/CBS bought KCAL-TV, many in the broadcasting industry
speculated that they would move its
UPN
affiliation from
Fox-owned
KCOP to KCAL.
Chris-Craft
Industries, KCOP's previous owners, had co-founded UPN with
Viacom in 1995, and owned 50 percent of the network before selling
out to Viacom in 2000. Fox's parent company, the
News Corporation, purchased KCOP and the
other Chris-Craft TV stations in 2001. However, CBS Corporation
decided to leave channel 9 as an independent, as Fox renewed its
affiliation agreement for its UPN-affiliated stations.
It is widely believed
that Fox used KCOP as leverage to keep UPN on Fox-owned stations in
New York (WWOR-TV, KCAL's former sister station) and Chicago
, threatening to drop the network in those markets
should Viacom move UPN to KCAL. This issue became moot with
the announcement of the merger of UPN and the
WB Television Network into the
CW Television Network, in
January 2006.
The new network launched in September 2006,
with former WB affiliate KTLA
affiliating
with the CW.
KCAL-TV is still an independent, and is now one of three
independent stations owned by CBS.
The other two stations are both former
UPN affiliates, KTXA
in Fort Worth,
Texas
and WSBK-TV
in Boston
.
Channel 9 currently offers first-run syndicated programs such as
Dr. Phil (one week-old reruns from
KCBS),
Inside Edition,
The People's Court (the
original version with
Judge Joseph
Wapner also aired on Channel 9 during various points of the
'80s and '90s), reruns of
South
Park,
The George
Lopez Show, and
Scrubs, among others. KCAL is the
Southern California home of the annual
Jerry Lewis MDA Telethon, which it
has carried since 1997.
On April
21, 2007, KCBS-TV and KCAL-TV moved from Columbia Square to an
all-digital facility at the CBS Studio Center
in Studio City. The move allowed both
stations to begin broadcasting all local programming in High
Definition. In addition, KCBS-TV and KCAL-TV now operate in a
completely tapeless newsroom. This newsroom is named after veteran
newscaster
Jerry Dunphy, who worked at
both stations during his career. With the move to Studio City, KTLA
and KCET are the only stations (either in radio or television) in
Los Angeles to broadcast from Hollywood.
Although KCAL-TV is an independent station, it has aired
programming from the CBS network on at least two occasions.
On August
30, 2007, it aired an elimination episode of Big Brother
8
and a rerun of CSI: Crime Scene
Investigation because KCBS carried a National Football League preseason
game between the San Francisco
49ers and the San Diego
Chargers at the same time. In 2005, an episode of
Big Brother 6 was bumped
to KCAL, as KCBS-TV aired an
Oakland
Raiders preseason game.
Digital television
The station's digital channel:
KCAL-DT
KCAL-DT broadcasts on digital channel 9.Digital
channels
| Channel |
Name |
Programming |
| 9.1 |
KCAL-TV |
main KCAL-TV programming |
Analog-to-Digital Conversion
KCAL-TV ended programming on its analog signal, over
VHF channel 9, on June 12, 2009 at 1:10
p.m. , as part of the
DTV transition in the United
States. The station had been broadcasting its pre-transition
digital signal over
UHF channel
43, but returned to channel 9 for its post-transition
operations.
Sports programming
For much of its history, sports have been a part of Channel 9's
identity, even more so today. From 1961 to 1963, KHJ-TV was the
first television home of the
Los Angeles Angels. The team
moved to KTLA starting in 1964, when then-Angels owner
Gene Autry bought KTLA. Channel 9 has been the
broadcast home of
Los Angeles
Lakers of the
National Basketball
Association, first from 1961 to 1964, and every year since the
1977-78 season, and it has the
longest current consecutive station-team broadcast partnership in
the NBA.
In 1996, KCAL-TV once again became the broadcast home of the Angels
(Disney's ownership interest in the Angels briefly overlapped its
stewardship of the station), and added more basketball coverage
that same year with the
Los Angeles
Clippers, in addition to its Lakers telecasts. The station and
the Clippers parted ways in
2001, as they eventually moved
their over-the-air telecasts to KTLA; The Clippers aired the
majority of their telecasts in
2001-02 NBA season on FSN West 2 (now
Fox Sports Prime
Ticket). The Angels departed KCAL after the
2005 season, moving to KCOP.
In 1997, KCAL premiered the first fifteen-minute weekday sports
report
Final Quarter. The show was an expansion of the
typical five minute sports report seen towards the end of a
newscast. Several years later the show was renamed
KCAL 9
Sports News and with the purchase by CBS, joined KCBS-TV and
was renamed
Sports Central. The show was recently expanded
to a full half-hour on Friday, Saturday, and Sunday nights. With
the termination of the
Southern California Sports Report
on
Fox Sports West and
Prime Ticket, this is the only nightly detailed sports
highlights show on local television.
In 2007, KCAL became the new over-the-air television home of the
Los Angeles Dodgers, televising
at least 50 games a year. Also, channel 9 recently signed a
contract extension to continue to carry Lakers games through the
end of the current decade , which would give them a 30-plus-year
relationship with the NBA team. KCAL carries a minimum of 35 road
games per season, with
FSN West given the rights
to home games. KCAL also carried selected games from the
Los Angeles Galaxy of
Major League Soccer until 2005, when the
games became cable-exclusive to FSN West. Currently, channel 9
broadcasts all Lakers and Dodgers games in High Definition.
In
addition, KCAL broadcasted selected weekend Mighty Ducks of Anaheim games from the team's
first season in 1993 (both entities were Disney properties until
1996) until 2005, when the Ducks moved their over-the-air
broadcasts to Anaheim
-based independent station KDOC-TV
. KCAL was also home to the
Los Angeles Kings in the early 1980s and
again during the mid-to-late 1990s. Channel 9 ran preseason
coverage of the
NFL's
San Diego Chargers in 2005, and
aired contests of the Chargers'
AFC West rival,
the
Oakland Raiders, in 2006. The
station also aired preseason Raiders during the middle 1990s. Also
of note, KCAL-TV
simulcasted the
ESPN and
TNT
feeds of Sunday night football games featuring the then-Los Angeles
Raiders and then-Los Angeles Rams (now the
St. Louis Rams) from 1990 until 1993.
Since its founding in 1994, KCAL has been the originating station
of the annual
John R.
Wooden classic basketball classic at
Anaheim's Honda
Center
. Channel 9's coverage is syndicated
nationally to stations across the country, including on
WGN America.
News programming
In the 1970s, KHJ-TV had a 10 p.m. newscast. It was moved to 9 p.m.
during the 1980s, and the station later added a half-hour 8 p.m.
newscast during the late 1980s. Some of its most notable
personalities included anchors
George Putnam,
Jerry Dunphy, Pat Harvey, Tom Lawrence, Nathan
Roberts, Lonnie Lardner, Linda Edwards, and Andrew Amador, who
continues to work in Southern California television. He fronts the
"Best Deals" program airing on KTLA-TV and KCAL-TV. Many of chanel
9's former staff were let go by the time Disney purchased the
station. By 1989, Disney implemented the concept of a prime time
news block, with
"Prime 9 News" between 8 and 11
p.m.. The 3-hour news block is still seen on KCAL-TV to this day. A
few years later, channel 9 added a short-lived half-hour newscast
at 6:30 p.m.
KCAL is notable for airing newscasts during unconventional time
blocks. Along with newscasts at 10 p.m. (where it competes against
KTLA and KTTV), noon (competes against KTTV), and 4 p.m. (competes
against KABC), it also airs news at 2 p.m., 3 p.m., 8 p.m., and 9
p.m. Combined with its sister station KCBS-TV the two stations air
just over 11 hours of news programming every weekday.
KCAL's newscasts run the gamut in tone. Its 8 p.m. newscast is
generally an update on the day's news, which are much of the
stories devoted to California and local news, and was previously
branded
California Report. Its 9 p.m. newscast is
generally the most serious newscast and was branded in previous
years as the
Prime 9 News World Report. The 9 p.m.
newscast prominently features political, business, and
international news. The noon newscast, on the other hand, features
lighter stories, including features on food, health, and
entertainment news. The 4 p.m. newscast is essentially a repurposed
KCBS-TV newscast and is done with channel 2 anchors
Harold Greene and
Ann Martin, who did not appear
recently elsewhere on KCAL.
The 4 p.m. newscast was moved to KCAL from KCBS-TV to make room for
Dr. Phil, which by contract is not allowed to air opposite
The Oprah Winfrey
Show, which in Los Angeles airs on KABC-TV at 3 p.m. Its
10 p.m. newscast is simply more of an update of the 8 p.m. news, as
it competes with KTTV and KTLA, and in the past KCOP, though in
recent years, it has been shortened to 30 minutes, in order to make
way for
Sports Central, the only comprehensive local
sports news program in Southern California (since the demise of the
Southern California Sports Report on
Fox Sports Net). The 6:30 p.m. newscast,
which ran in the early 1990s was called
First 9 News
focused primarily on local news and competed against the national
network newscasts aired on KCBS-TV, KNBC-TV and KABC-TV. However,
KCBS did air a 6:30 p.m. local newscast in the mid to late 1990s,
while the CBS Evening News aired at 5:30 p.m.
Because of the amount of news on the station, channel 9 is known as
the station showing the most police chases. Often regular news
programming is dropped to cover a police chase, and programming
following the news is sometimes pre-empted to show the chase's
conclusion.
On April 1, 2008, CBS' owned-and-operated television stations
division ordered widespread budget cuts and staff layoffs from its
stations. As a result of the budget cuts, roughly 10 to 15 staffers
were released from KCBS-TV and KCAL-TV, including reporters
Jennifer Sabih, Greg Phillips, and Jennifer Davis. Harold Greene
and Ann Martin, who were then the 4:00 p.m co-anchors on channel 9
and 6:00 p.m. on sister station, Channel 2, were also said to have
been on the layoff list, but have both decided to retire from
television when their contracts expired in June.
On April
23, 2009, it was announced that Emmy winner and
Los Angeles native Rick Garcia, formerly
with KTTV
Channel 11,
has joined KCAL and will be paired with Pat
Harvey as co-anchors for the station's weeknight 8 and 10 p.m.
newscasts.
NewsCentral era

KCAL 9 NewsCentral Logo
On September 19, 2009, KCBS and KCAL rebranded to the
NewsCentral brand (unrelated to
Sinclair Broadcasting Group's
former "
News Central" brand). The
slogan was changed to
News That's Central To Your Life and
Covering Stories That Hit Home! and was refocused to cover
on more community news, including news from outlying communities.
Local news headlines from the
Los Angeles Newspaper Group and
other
MediaNews Group newspapers are
displayed on the ticker, "street team" submissions of video and
photos from viewers are featured, reporters end stories with
NewsCentral rather than the individual station names, and
mic flags and news vehicles have been branded to show both stations
at once (previously the KCBS logo was displayed on half the sides
and the KCAL logo on the other half).
NewsCentral
claims that they produce more local news than any other television
station in the country, with reporters in Ventura County
, the Inland Empire,
and Orange County, and the only Los
Angeles television station with two helicopters (subcontracted to
Angel City Air, owned by reporter Larry Welk). Ed Asner was used to introduce the new newscast.
CBS denies that this move was made in response to other stations
pooling newsgathering resources.
Personalities
- Current Anchors
- David Gonzales - weekdays (noon-1 and 2-3PM)
- Juan Fernandez - weekends (9:00-9:30pm and 10-10:30PM) (also
fill-in anchor)
- Rick Garcia - weeknights (8-9 and 10-10:45PM)
- Pat Harvey - weeknights (8-9 and
10-10:45PM)
- Sandra Mitchell - weekdays (12-1 and 2-3:30PM)
- Sylvia Lopez - weekdays (4-5 and 9-10PM)
- Leyna Nguyen - weekdays (4-5PM and
9-10PM) (also fill-in anchor)
- Sharon Tay - weekends (8-9 and
10-10:30PM)
- Glen Walker - weekends (8-9PM and 9:30pm-10pm)
- NewsCentral Weather Team
- Jackie Johnson - Main Weather
Anchor; weeknights (8-10:45PM)
- Kaj Goldberg - Weather Anchor; weekends (8-10:30PM)
- Josh Rubenstein (AMS Certified Broadcast
Meteorologist/NWA
Seals of Approval) - Meteorologist; weekdays (noon-5PM)
- Henry DiCarlo - Weather Anchor; fill-in
- Johnny Mountain - Weather Anchor; fill-in
- Sports Team
- Jim Hill - Sports Director/Sports
Central co-host (10:30-11PM)
- Steve Hartman - Sports
Central co-host (10:30-11PM)
- Gary Miller - Sports
Anchor; weekends (9-10:30PM) (also Sports Central
co-host)
- Eric Karros - co-host "Think Blue
TV"
- John Ireland - curb-side reporter
for Los Angeles Lakers games
- Stu Lantz - Los Angeles Lakers
commentator
- Steve Lyons - Los Angeles
Dodgers play-by-play for road games
- Joel Meyers - Los Angeles Lakers
play-by-play
- Vin Scully - Los Angeles Dodgers
play-by-play for home games
- James Worthy - Los Angeles Lakers
analyst for Sports Central
- Reporters
- Serene Branson - general assignment reporter
- Dave Bryan - political reporter
- Stacey Butler - general assignment reporter (also fill-in
anchor)
- Mark Coogan - general assignment
reporter
- Amelia Earhart - Sky 9 traffic reporter
- Suraya Fadel - general assignment reporter
- Juan Fernandez - general assignment reporter (also fill-in
anchor)
- Michele Gile - Orange
County
bureau reporter
- David Goldstein - investigative
reporter
- Kirk Hawkins - general assignment reporter
- Kristine Henderson - Orange County bureau reporter
- Amy Johnson - Ventura County
reporter
- Rachel Kim - general assignment reporter
- Kristine Lazar - general assignment reporter
- Cater Lee - general assignment reporter (also fill-in
anchor)
- Dave Lopez - Orange County bureau reporter
- Dave Malkoff - general assignment
reporter
- Melissa McCarty - general assignment reporter
- Christina McLarty - entertainment reporter
- Greg Mills - Inland Empire bureau
reporter
- Sandra Mitchell - general
assignment reporter (also fill-in anchor)
- Randy Paige - consumer reporter
- Lisa Sigell - general assignment
reporter (also fill-in anchor)
- Suzie Suh - general assignment reporter
- Sharon Tay - general assignment
reporter (also fill-in anchor)
- Glen Walker - general assignment reporter (also fill-in
anchor)
- Larry Welk - Sky 9 helicopter pilot
Notable alumni
News/Station Presentation
Newscast Titles
- Don Lee News (1950s)
- Channel 9 News (1960s-1980s)
- The Ten O'Clock News (1970s-early 1980s)
- The Nine O'Clock News (1983-1989)
- Prime 9 News (1990-1995)
- KCAL 9 News (1995-2009)
- KCAL 9 NewsCentral (2009-present)
Station Slogans
- America's Best Local News (1994-1998)
- Live. Local. Latebreaking.
(1998-2009; news slogan)
- Always On (2007-2009; general slogan)
- News That's Central to Your Life (2009-Present)
Movie Umbrella Titles
- The Million Dollar Movie (1967-1989)
- Saturday Night Showcase (1970s-1980s)
- 3:30 Movie (1981-1986)
- Frandsen's Feature hosted by Tom Frandsen (1960s-early
1980s)
- Fright Night
(1970-1981)
- Elvira's Movie Macabre (Fall
1981-1991)
- Channel 9 Evening Movie (1980s)
- California 9 Cinema (1990-1995)
- K-CAL 9 Cinema (1995-present)
"Thames on 9"
From June
11 to June 15, 1978, KHJ-TV aired "Thames on 9," in which the
entire night's lineup of programs was turned over to Great
Britain
's Thames
Television. Shows included
Man About the House, a forerunner
of
Three's Company, and
The Benny Hill Show. A
similar stunt had run two years earlier on WOR-TV in New York City,
which was KHJ-TV's sister station.
Quotes
- "The chances of winning the Mega
Millions are a gajillion to one but some
people feel they will be that one" --Ann Martin, 8 November
2005
- "If news is a minute old, it's old news" — David
Jackson, 2005 (on a series of channel promotions)
Rebroadcasters
KCAL is rebroadcast on the following translator stations:
See also
References
External links