KXKW-LP

KXKW-LP
Lafayette, Louisiana
United States
Branding Mustang 87-7 & 107-1
Slogan Louisiana's Real Country
Channels Analog: 6 (VHF)
Digital: Sister Station KXKW-LD 32.1 ASN, 32.2 AntTV (UHF)
Affiliations Independent
Owner Delta Media Corporation
First air date 1991
Sister station(s) KXKW-LD, KSLO-FM, KSLO, KLWB-FM, KOGM, KYMK-FM, KFXZ, KFXZ-FM, KVOL, KDCG-CD, KLWB
Former callsigns K21DM (1990–1995)
KLFT-LP (1995–2009)
KXKW-CA (2009)
Former channel number(s) 21
Former affiliations The Box (1991–1999)
Pax, via KDCG-LP (1999–2004)
UATV (2004–2006)
The Sportsman Channel (2006–2009), ThisTV (2008-2016)
Transmitter power 3000 watts
Class A
Facility ID 33177
Transmitter coordinates 30°20′32.00″N 91°58′32″W / 30.3422222°N 91.97556°W / 30.3422222; -91.97556Coordinates: 30°20′32.00″N 91°58′32″W / 30.3422222°N 91.97556°W / 30.3422222; -91.97556
Website Mustang877.com

KXKW-LP is a low-powered television station serving the Lafayette, Louisiana area. The station is locally owned. The station's primary content is the audio programming on the aural carrier of 87.74 MHz and using a 19 KHz stereo pilot carrier with 75 KHz deviation. This can be received on many FM broadcast receivers, and as a result KXKW-LP markets itself as an FM radio broadcast station. The station is airing a traditional country music format under the brand "Mustang 87-7/107-1."[1] To meet the legal requirements for visual content, the station runs a feed of the local National Weather Service radar.

History

KXKW-LP's old logo

KXKW-LP signed on in 1991 as K21DN from Sunset. At the time, it was one of many low-powered affiliates of the now-defunct Video Jukebox Network, which later became known simply as "The Box." K21DN changed its calls to KLFT-LP in 1995, and moved from Sunset to Lafayette shortly thereafter.

In 1999, KLFT-LP dropped its music video format when programming time was leased to KDCG-LP which used the station to simulcast its Pax programming. After not having a strong enough signal to warrant must-carry status on the Lafayette cable system, KDCG ended the LMA in 2004. Without any programming to air, the station aired nothing but a webcam image of its transmitting equipment with a posterboard reading "KLFT-LP LAFAYETTE" attached, intended to keep the station from losing its license for not properly identifying itself or being off the air for a long period of time. In October 2004, KLFT began airing programming from the Urban America Television network. After Hurricanes Katrina and Rita, the station ran community service information 24 hours a day. UATV suspended operations in May 2006, upon which The Sportsman Channel replaced its feed.

On October 1, 2007, programming was changed at the station, including old sitcoms like The Andy Griffith Show and a showcase for old horror movies called Boogeyman Theater. On April 2, 2009, the station changed the call sign to KXKW-CA. The -CA denotes the station is a class A low-power television station, giving it protection to its signal area (which normal low power stations do not have).

Upon the Digital TV transition on June 12, 2009, Delta Media simultaneously moved the visual programming of KXKW-CA to KXKW-LD (which, despite sharing call letters, does not simulcast KXKW-CA's programming), moved KXKW-CA from channel 21 to channel 6, and launched the station as a simulcast of KSLO-FM radio. Two months later, the station gave up its class A classification and became KXKW-LP.

On December 26, 2012, the current “Mustang 87.7” format launched on KXKW-LP, simulcasting KOGM 107.1

Digital Channels on sister station KXKW-LD below.

Digital channels

The station's digital channel is multiplexed:

Channel Video Aspect PSIP Short Name Programming[2] Notes
32.1 480i 4:3 KXKW-LD ASN Replaced This on July 1, 2016
32.2 AntTV Launched here when H&I launched on KDCG-CD

References

  1. Turk, Leslie (May 17, 2010). "Snap 103.7's classic rock enters market". The Independent Weekly. Retrieved June 15, 2010.
  2. RabbitEars TV Query for KXKW

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 9/28/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.