Callsign: | KATH-LD |
Location: | Juneau–Douglas, Alaska |
Country: | United States |
City: | Juneau, Alaska |
Branding: | KATH 2 Juneau |
Digital: | 35 (UHF) |
Virtual: | 2 |
Affiliations: | 2.1: NBC |
Owner: | Gray Television |
Licensee: | Gray Television Licensee, LLC |
Callsign Meaning: | Former owner's wife's name is Kathy |
Sister Stations: | KYEX-LD |
Former Callsigns: | K05JR (1998–2001) |
Erp: | 0.1 kW |
Haat: | -377.90NaN0 |
Facility Id: | 188833 |
Coordinates: | 58.2997°N -134.4239°W |
Licensing Authority: | FCC |
Callsign: | KSCT-LP |
Above: | Translator of KATH-LD |
Location: | Sitka, Alaska |
Country: | United States |
Branding: | see KATH-LD infobox |
Digital: | 5 (VHF) |
Virtual: | 2 |
Owner: | Gray Television |
Licensee: | Gray Television Licensee, LLC |
Callsign Meaning: | Sitka Community Television |
Former Callsigns: | K05KH (May–November 1995) |
Former Channel Numbers: | Analog: 5 (VHF, 1995–2018) |
Erp: | 0.619 kW |
Haat: | 23.10NaN0 |
Facility Id: | 15348 |
Coordinates: | 57.0503°N -135.3355°W |
Licensing Authority: | FCC |
KATH-LD, virtual channel 2 (UHF digital channel 35), is a low-power NBC-affiliated television station licensed to both Juneau and Douglas, Alaska, United States. The station is owned by Gray Television. KATH-LD's transmitter is located in downtown Juneau.
KSCT-LP (virtual channel 2, VHF digital channel 5) in Sitka is a translator of KATH-LD, broadcasting from a transmitter in downtown Sitka. Programming is identical to KATH-LD with both stations being fed from the studios of sister station KTUU-TV (channel 2) in Anchorage.
On cable, KATH-LD is carried on GCI in Juneau on channel 15, on Dish Network throughout Southeast Alaska on channel 5/9380, and on DirecTV throughout Southeast Alaska on channel 4. KATH-LD's high definition feed is also available on GCI's basic service on digital channel 652 in Juneau, Sitka, Ketchikan, Petersburg and Wrangell. KATH-LD's standard-definition signal is also on GCI cable in Petersburg, Wrangell and Angoon. Daily Alaska news is provided through a partnership with KTUU-TV.
KSCT-LP was the first of the two stations to go on the air, signing on May 1, 1995, as a Fox affiliate owned by Dan Etulain, who previously owned KTNL (channel 13) from 1983 to 1992.[1] KSCT-LP had operated as a cable-only station since December 9, 1994;[2] during that period, Fox's primetime programming was seen in the afternoon, though it was moved into primetime concurrently with channel 5's sign on.[1] KSCT-LP affiliated with Fox because, at the time, it was the only one of the Big Four television networks that was willing to affiliate with low-power television stations.[1] Initially, most of KSCT-LP's non-Fox programming was supplied by National Empowerment Television, though it also broadcast some local programming;[1] [2] after NET moved to a satellite that the station could not receive, its programming was replaced with Channel America, Outdoor Channel, and American Independent Network on December 1, 1995.[3] By this time, KSCT-LP had added a secondary affiliation with The WB.[3] The station was originally assigned the call letters K05KH; it officially became KSCT-LP on November 20, 1995,[4] though it had promoted itself as "KSCT" since its launch.[1]
In June 1998, Etulain announced that he would launch KATH-LP as Juneau's NBC affiliate that July; KSCT-LP had switched to NBC by this time as well.[5] Delays in receiving equipment required to place the station on GCI's lineup postponed the launch of the station to August 17, 1998.[6] NBC programming was previously only available in Juneau via cable carriage of Seattle's KING-TV; however, KING was not carried on the basic cable tier, unlike KATH-LP.[5] KATH-LP supplemented NBC programming with blocks of local programming, which generally consisted of pre-recorded coverage of community events and high school sports; at its launch, the station did not air any local newscasts.[5] [6] Juneau's existing stations, ABC affiliate KJUD (channel 8) and PBS station KTOO-TV (channel 3), were at the time part of the statewide Alaska's SuperStation and AlaskaOne networks respectively, with limited local programming.[5] Shortly after KATH-LP's launch, Etulain purchased[7] K05JR,[8] which had been licensed in 1994;[9] the sale was completed on May 26, 1999.[7] K05JR and KSCT-LP continued their secondary WB affiliations until early 1999; at that time, K05JR added a secondary UPN affiliation.[10] K05JR's call sign was changed to KATH-LP on November 15, 2001;[8] it had been calling itself "KATH" on the air since its sale to Etulain. By early 2003, KATH-LP was simulcasting local newscasts from KTUU-TV in Anchorage.[11] KATH-LD ended analog over-the-air broadcasts in November 2011.
On November 9, 2012, GCI, through subsidiary Denali Media Holdings, announced plans to purchase KATH-LD and KSCT-LP from Dan Etulain's North Star Television Network, along with KTVA in Anchorage from MediaNews Group. The Federal Communications Commission (FCC) approved the deal on October 29, 2013.[12] KATH-LD's news partnership with KTUU-TV was suspended on December 7, 2013, as a result of a larger dispute between GCI and KTUU,[13] but a deal to resume it was reached on February 6, 2014.[14]
KSCT-LP began broadcasting a digital over-the-air TV signal in January 2018.
Denali Media Holdings announced the sale of KATH-LD and KSCT-LP to Gray Television on May 28, 2020.[15] The sale made KATH-LD and KSCT-LP sister stations to KTUU-TV and KYES-TV in Anchorage and KTVF in Fairbanks, and gave Gray a monopoly on NBC programming throughout Alaska. The sale was completed on July 31.[16]
The stations digital signal carries one subchannel: