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XETV's audio signal can be heard on 87.7 MHz on the FM dial in San Diego, Tijuana and surrounding areas, though at a slightly lower volume than other FM stations - due to technical reasons. This is because the audio signal of channel 6 is located at 87.75 MHz. This frequency assignment applies to all channel 6 television stations in countries using the [[NTSC|NTSC-M]] standard.
XETV's audio signal can be heard on 87.7 MHz on the FM dial in San Diego, Tijuana and surrounding areas, though at a slightly lower volume than other FM stations - due to technical reasons. This is because the audio signal of channel 6 is located at 87.75 MHz. This frequency assignment applies to all channel 6 television stations in countries using the [[NTSC|NTSC-M]] standard.



==References==
{{Listaref}}


==Enlaces externos==
==Enlaces externos==

Revisión del 00:34 20 ago 2008

XETV,Canal 6, es una estacion de television con licencia en Tijuana, Baja California, Mexico, sirviendo a CW Television Network afiliada conSan Diego, California Cruzando el borde internacional a los Estados Unidos de America. XETV's esta localizadon en Ronson Road en la ciudad de San Diego, pero su antena transmitora esta basada en la Montaña San Antonio en Tijuana.

La estacion pertenece al magnante medio de comunicacion en Mexico Grupo Televisa, pero su programacion y los derechos de ventas es respaldado por Bay City Television, Inc., una corporacion en California [1]

Historia

Primeros años

La 3era señal en el mercado de San Diego por medio de VHF , XETV nació debido a las estaciones de afectación en problemas tecnicos en San Diego y Los Angeles. Incluso antes Federal Communication Commission levantado una helada de cuatro años de largo en la concesión de la construcción de televisión permite en[ [1952]], la firma de la tercera estacion en San Diego promoviendo dificultad. Mientras en San Diego y 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.

En 1952, San Diego (concediendo 8,10 ) y Los Angeles (asignando los canales 2, 4, 5, 7, 9, 11, and 13) cuando actualmente 3 canales de VHF (3, 6 and 12 No eran usados en el area). San Diego la primera en tener dos estaciones, KFMB-TV (canal 8) y KFSD-TV (canal 10, ahora KGTV), estaba en la ultima construccion de permitir otra señal antes de que congelara FCC y entro en efecto. La señal UHF no fue una viable opcion debido a que los diseñadores no requerian la señal UHF hasta 1964. Las autoridades Mexicanas obtuvieron dos señales VHF para la ciudad vecina Tijuana -- los canales 6 y 12. Desde hace tiempo estos dos VHF canales fueron olvidados en el area.(el canal 3 fue inusable debido a localizacion de Santa Barbara y la señal reciba mucha señal al area de San Diego desde el momento que quisieron atravezar la linea del Oceano Pacifico), FCC no aceptaba ningun permiso de construccion en San Diego por cortesia de las autoridades Mexicanas.

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 January 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 El Himno Nacional Mexicano (the Mexican national anthem) and technical disclaimers. Tijuana did not get its own station until 1960, when the Azcarragas signed on XEWT-TV on channel 12.

In 1956, the FCC granted XETV permission to carry ABC programming. ABC was carried part-time by KFMB-TV and KFSD-TV at the time, but ABC immediately made XETV its exclusive San Diego affiliate. However, the FCC did not allow American networks to transmit their signals to stations located outside the United States. As a result, ABC programs were recorded (on film, kinescope, and later videotape) from a location north of the border and then physically transported to channel 6's transmitter in Tijuana, a practice known in the television industry as "bicycling". While this arrangement legally circumvented the station's inability to acquire a direct network feed, it left XETV unable to carry live network programming, such as breaking news events and some sports coverage.

Transition

In the late 1960s Texas-based Bass Broadcasting, then-owner of independent KCST-TV (channel 39, now KNSD), began a lengthy battle to take the San Diego ABC affiliation from XETV. The station claimed it was inappropriate for an American television network to affiliate with a Mexican-licensed station when there was a viable American station available. The FCC would later agree with KCST, and in 1972 the Commission revoked channel 6'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 KGTV in 1977.

XETV once again became an independent station, with a standard program schedule comprised of syndicated offerings, off-network programs, movies, and children's shows. Also, because Mexican broadcast regulations did not limit commercial time [cita requerida] (as FCC regulations did at the time[cita requerida]) every Sunday, the station, in a forerunner to future changes in the U.S., became, in effect, the first station in North America to carry an infomercial,[cita requerida] which consisted of a one-hour advertisement of listings of local houses for sale. As FCC regulations at that time limited television stations to 18 minutes of commercials in an hour,[cita requerida] such a program could not have been run on U.S. television at that time.[cita requerida]

As a Fox affiliate

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. Similar to its earlier arrangement with ABC, channel 6 had to receive pre-recorded Fox programs on tape, transported directly to the station's Tijuana facilities. When Fox acquired the broadcast rights of the National Football League in 1994, the FCC soon granted a waiver of the rules and allowed Fox to transmit a direct network feed to XETV.

In November 1995, then-UPN affiliate KUSI-TV (channel 51) tried unsuccessfully to wrestle the Fox affiliation away from XETV by filing an appeal, as cited in the United States Court of Appeals case Channel 51 of San Diego, Inc. vs. FCC and Fox Television Stations, Inc. The permit was granted to Fox on behalf of XETV, and the case was settled on March 26, 1996. [2][3]

San Diego 6

In March 2008 Tribune Broadcasting announced that its San Diego station, CW affiliate KSWB-TV, would be switching to Fox in August 2008. The fate of both XETV and the CW affiliation for the San Diego market remained unclear until July 2, 2008, when channel 6 announced that they would be joining the CW [4]​. This will leave XETV's sister station, XHRIO-TV in Matamoros, Tamaulipas (serving the Rio Grande Valley area of Texas), as the only Fox affiliate to originate in Mexico. On July 19th, 2008, the station began dropping references to Fox, referring to itself as "San Diego 6, your new home for the CW". The San Diego 6 logo features the CW logo mark in either the top left corner of the 6 box or off to the right full-size with the 6, depending on circumstances. XETV, upon switching networks, replaced KSWB-TV on DISH Network as CW-W in markets without a CW Television Network affiliate on the system.

Despite signing with the CW, XETV plans on fighting the affiliation switch in court, saying the switch violates a contract channel 6 has with Fox to run until 2010. In addition, the station did not know about the affiliation change until the switch announcement was made public. [5]

Special broadcast authority

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 the beginning of XETV's broadcast day), it is not covered under the FCC's must-carry rules. This means that local cable providers are not required to carry XETV, 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.

XETV's broadcast day begins at 5:00 a.m. Pacific time (6:00 a.m. on Sundays) and ends the next late night/morning at 2:00 a.m. (most days, the late night schedule is filled by infomercials). The broadcast day begins with the playing of both El Himno Nacional Mexicano and the Star Spangled Banner, followed by the customary operational information and disclaimer, read in both English and Spanish. [6]

Television Digital

A principios de los años 2000s, la señal digital de XETV fue agregada en el canal 23. XETV tuvo la distincion de ser la primera señal digital mexicana, ninguna otra señal mexicana habia abierto canales digitales. XETV fue tambien la primera señal digital en el area de San Diego.

Desde que XETV tuvo licencia con Mexicana , era de esperarse del requerimento de la transcion digital antes de 17 de Febrero del 2009 , Cuando todas las señales Americanas lo tendran que hacer . Excepto en Mexico debido a diferente año de la transicion a digital , se tiene predicho que para el 2022 se tendra por completado.

Noticias

XETV noticias tuvo nuevas operaciones apartir de 1999, debido a la afiliaccion con la cadena FOX y aceptando un nuevo noticiero local. Anteriormente el ultimo Audencias fue en 1953 hasta 1967. (Lionel Van Deerlin, el despues congresano en San Diego fue el director de XETV's en los primeros años.) A las 10 p.m. las noticias empezaron apartir de , poco despues ese año comenzo las noticias locales por la mañana. A las 10 p.m. noticias fueron iniciadas por una media hora el show , pero se expandio a una hora en el 2002. La estacion todavia sigue contribuyendo noticias pero ahora bajo la afilicacion de CW.

National attention

El 5 de Septiembre del 2006, XETV's grupo de noticias gano la atencion nacional, cuando el reportero John Mattes Cuando mala mente fue golpeado por Sam Suleiman y Rosa Barraza, un esposo y esposa en equipo acusandose del fraude del real state cuando el reportero investigaba . Cuando el incidente fue capturado y tapado en varios programas para no atraer la atencion nacional. [7]

Personalidades

Conductores
  • Marc Bailey - por la mañana entre semana
  • Joe Bauer - San Diego Living
  • Anita Lightfoot - por la mañana los fines de semana
  • Lynda Martin - por la mañana los fines de semana
  • Heather Myers - conductor por la noche
  • Jim Patton - conductor por la noche
  • Jeff Powers - conductor por la noche los fines de semana
  • Lynn Stuart - conductor por la noche los fines de semana
Weather
  • Renee Kohn - meteorologa
  • Aloha Taylor - chief/weeknight meteorologist
Sports
  • C.S. Keyes - Director de deportes / conductor entre semana
  • Andrea Nakano - Conductor los fines de semana
Reporteros
  • Brooke Beare
  • Antonio Castelan
  • Sharon Chen
  • Eric Collins
  • Carlos Delgado
  • Ruben Galvan
  • Amanda Grace
  • Jenny Hamel
  • John Mattes
  • Sherri Palmeiri

Programas de mucho peticion

Logos

"Couch Potato"

Couch Potato is XETV and XHDTV's viewer loyalty game. Viewers simply watch either channel throughout the day for special Couch Potato codes (which only apply on the day given) 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.

Radio

XETV's audio signal can be heard on 87.7 MHz on the FM dial in San Diego, Tijuana and surrounding areas, though at a slightly lower volume than other FM stations - due to technical reasons. This is because the audio signal of channel 6 is located at 87.75 MHz. This frequency assignment applies to all channel 6 television stations in countries using the NTSC-M standard.


Enlaces externos

Plantilla:San Diego TV Plantilla:English Mexico Plantilla:Tijuana Radio Plantilla:CW California

  1. Bay City Television fue anteriormente pertenecida a Entravision Communications, sin embargo Entravision´s corporate website nunca tubo nada de referencias con XETV. SEC filing (10-K) suggests its contract to manage the station expired that year.
  2. http://bulk.resource.org/courts.gov/c/F3/79/79.F3d.1187.95-1128.html 79 F.3d 1187
  3. http://www.fcc.gov/ogc/documents/opinions/1997/radiotv.html Radio Televisión v. FCC, No. 96-1438
  4. http://www.fox6.com/news/local/story.aspx?content_id=7a4bac12-8df5-48e6-8f68-d8e355f50b95
  5. Plantilla:Cite url
  6. Youtube - XETV San Diego Sign-on 2007.08.20 (Flash Video). 
  7. Plantilla:Cite url