KTXH
KTXH | |
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Houston, Texas | |
Branding | My20 |
Channels | Analog: 20 (UHF) Digital: 19 (UHF) |
Affiliations | MyNetworkTV |
Owner | Fox Television Stations |
Founded | November 7, 1982 |
Call letters meaning | K TeXas Houston |
Former affiliations | Independent (1982-1995) UPN (1995-2006) |
KTXH, channel 20, is a MyNetworkTV-affiliated television station in Houston, Texas. It is owned by the Fox Television Stations, a division of the News Corporation, and is one-half of a duopoly with Fox network station KRIV (channel 26). From January 1995 until August 2006, KTXH was affiliated with the United Paramount Network (UPN). Prior to 1995, KTXH was an independent station.
Along with programming from MyNetworkTV, the station also airs cartoons, sitcoms, first run syndicated talk/reality shows, and some paid programming. Although the station does not carry a regular newscast, it will pre-empt its programming for news coverage from either KRIV or the Fox News Channel (both owned by Fox) when situations warrant. [citation needed]
Contents |
History
KTXH began broadcasting on November 7, 1982, using the on-air branding tagline "20 Vision." Channel 20 became the third independent station in Houston, after KRIV (then owned by Metromedia), and Gaylord Broadcasting's KHTV (channel 39, later KHWB and now KHCW). It was also the second station in Texas owned by a group headed by television station enterpreneur Milton Grant. The group launched a similarly-formatted station, KTXA in Fort Worth, in January 1981. It programmed a general entertainment format consisting of cartoons, vintage off-network sitcoms and dramas, old movies, westerns, and sports.
The fledgling station was broadcasting from a tower under construction that collapsed in 1982, killing five workers. It was eventually replaced by the Senior Road Tower.
Grant Broadcasting sold both KTXH and KTXA to Gulf Broadcasting in 1984. Several weeks later, Gulf sold its television broadcasting division to Taft Broadcasting. Even after going through three owners within the same year, the station did not change its programming format.
For many years, KTXH was the over-the-air broadcast rights holder for both the Houston Astros baseball team and the NBA's Houston Rockets. Hannah Storm, later a noted national broadcast personality, anchored the station's coverage of the Rockets in the mid-1980s.
Taft sold its group of independent and Fox-affiliated stations, including KTXH and KTXA, to the TVX Broadcast Group in February 1987. Two years later, Paramount Pictures purchased a minority ownership in TVX, which suffered from financial problems after the Taft purchase. Paramount bought out the remainder of TVX's shares in 1991. Under Paramount, the station added several first run syndicated shows in the mid-1990s and rebranded to Paramount 20. It eventually became an affiliate of the United Paramount Network at the network's launch on January 16, 1995.
KTXH was purchased by Fox Television Stations in 2001, as part of a station trade which saw Viacom exchanging KTXH and WDCA-TV in Washington, D.C. in exchange for KBHK-TV (now KBCW) in San Francisco. The transaction established the first television duopoly in Houston with KRIV and KTXH. Channel 20 also relocated its broadcasting facilities from the original studios on Kirby Drive near present-day Reliant Park to KRIV's studios.
From UPN to MyNetworkTV
On January 24, 2006, the UPN and WB networks announced that they would merge into a new network called the CW. KHCW, owned by Tribune Broadcasting, was announced as the CW's Houston station. Almost immediately, KTXH dropped the UPN branding from its station branding, and revamped its logo to just feature the boxed "20", and also announced that they would no longer promote any UPN programming. Additionally, the station began referring to itself in promos as "Houston's 20". Similar changes were also made to Fox's other UPN affiliates, as the CW network list consisted of both stations owned by Tribune and stations owned by CBS. News Corporation also chose not to affiliate stations with the CW in markets where neither Tribune nor CBS (excluding CBS owned-and-operated stations) owned a station.
In June 2006, Channel 20 began the transition to its new network by rebranding as My20. The transition was complete when MyNetworkTV began operations on September 5, 2006. KTXH and its sister stations did not carry the final two weeks of UPN programming, which explained UPN's low-key sign-off. Occasionally as time permits, KTXH may now air Fox network programming whenever KRIV cannot in the event of an emergency. [citation needed] Sister station KRIV recently revamped its newsroom and logo, and is soon to produce a 5:00 newscast for KTXH. [citation needed]
There were, for a period of time, rumors that KTXH would get a new website at www.my20.com, because the site showed the same thing KRIV's website showed before opening. This rumor turned out to be false, since this website is now obviously not KTXH's.
Trivia
- The former upn20.com website under Paramount's ownership had various information about the station, programming, the network, and more. Unfortunately, it went from that to a simple placeholder with little to no information when Fox picked up the station; KRIV suffered this setback for years. However, KTXH.com, which formerly lead to the same placeholder page now redirects to the main MyNetworkTV network website.
External links
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Local television stations serving Greater Houston/Galveston/Sugar Land/Baytown Defunct television stations Significantly Viewed Out-of-Market Broadcast Stations |
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XHRIO-TV 2 (Matamoros, TAM/Brownsville/McAllen) - KDBC-DT 4.2 (El Paso) - KOSA-DT 7.2 (Odessa) - KXII-DT 12.2 (Sherman) - KMYL-LP 14 (Lubbock) - KTXH 20 (Houston) - KTOV 21 (Corpus Christi) - KUMY-LP 22 (Beaumont) - KDFI 27 (Dallas) - KCPN-LP 33 (Amarillo) - KJBO-LP 35 (Wichita Falls) |
See also: ABC, CBS, CW, Fox, NBC, PBS, Telefutura, Telemundo, Univision, Religious, Other English and Other Spanish stations in Texas |