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KMEG Branding KMEG 14 (general; sounded out as K-Meg) Siouxland News (newscasts): 32 (): 14 () 14.1 14.2 14.3 18 K18KG-D 30 K30BP-D Owner Waitt Broadcasting, Inc. Operator (via ) First air date September 5, 1967 (51 years ago) ( 1967-09-05) MEG Donovan (founding owners' daughter) -or- 1 Former channel number(s) Analog: 14 (UHF, 1967–2009) Digital: 39 (UHF, until 2018) Translator: 35 K35FM Norfolk, NE Both secondary: (1988–1999) (until 2006) 1,000 611 m (2,005 ft) 39665 Transmitter coordinates Licensing authority Public license information: Website KMEG is a - to,,. It broadcasts a signal on channel 32 (or 14 via ) from a transmitter in east of and along the line. The station is owned by Waitt Broadcasting; the, which owns affiliate (channel 44), operates KMEG under a agreement. The two outlets share studios along (postal address says Gold Circle) in,.
Contents • • • • • • • • • History [ ] The station signed on, as the 's third television outlet. It has been affiliated with CBS since the beginning. Before its launch, the network had previously been carried on KVTV (now ) from 1953 until 1967. That station switched its affiliation to on September 2, 1967, and Siouxland was briefly without a CBS affiliate until KMEG signed on three days later. KMEG was started by a group of local investors led by Bob and Norma Donovan. Its were selected in honor of their daughter Meg who would later pass away.
The station's original ownership group sold KMEG to in 1969. Fetzer sold off all of his broadcasting properties in the mid-1980s. KMEG was among the last to be divested, going to in 1985. The next year, Gillett sold the station to the Maine Radio and Television Company, the owner of in,, and in. KMEG was one of only two CBS stations not to air the when it premiered. In,, also declined to alter its syndicated lineup in order to air the new program.
(CBS programming is now seen in Fargo on /.) This led Sioux City to become known as the Late Show 's first. KMEG began airing the show in 1994.
Maine Radio and Television merged with in 1998. However, KMEG was not included in the deal; it was acquired by Waitt Broadcasting later in 1998. The new owners significantly upgraded KMEG's facilities, including an increase of its broadcast tower height to 2,000 feet (610 m) and to five million. Manager.jar 240x320. This gave its signal on UHF channel 14 a signal comparable to those of KCAU and, spanning 23 counties in northwestern Iowa, northeastern, and southeastern South Dakota. Previously, its over-the-air signal was effectively limited to Sioux City itself and the immediate metro area; most of the market had needed to get an acceptable signal.
Around the same time Waitt bought KMEG, the company also purchased Fox affiliates in,, in,, in,, and in. In 2003, Waitt Broadcasting merged with (who concurrently transferred KYOU's license to due to (FCC) regulations, as Raycom already owned Ottumwa's ABC affiliate at the time); however, KMEG was not included in the merger and was instead spun off to a new locally based owner that took the Waitt Broadcasting licensee name. From 1988 until the sign-on of KPTH in 1999, the station maintained a secondary affiliation with Fox. It also aired selected programming out-of-pattern until the network merged with (carried locally on and ) to form in 2006. KMEG's first studios were at the corner of 7th Street and Floyd Boulevard in until around the start of the 21st century when it moved into new facilities in Dakota Dunes near. The 20,132-square-foot (1,870 m 2) building was constructed by Darland Construction Company, and at the time, the building housed KMEG and two ( 102.3 FM and 101.3 FM). In May 2005, Waitt Broadcasting entered into a agreement (SSA) with, then-owner of KPTH—a rare instance of a affiliate being junior partner in such an arrangement.