Nebraska Public Media Explained

Callsign:Nebraska Public Media
Digital:see table below
Affiliations:Television:
PBS (1970–present)
APT
Radio:
NPR (1989–present)
PRX
APM
Country:United States
Airdate: (television)
(radio)
(Statewide network launch)
Location:statewide Nebraska
Callsign Meaning:all stations, except University of Nebraska as Lincoln affiliate:
2nd letter: see table below
Nebraska
Former Callsigns:NET
Owner:KUON: The University of Nebraska
Others: Nebraska Educational Telecommunications Commission
Former Affiliations:Television:
NET (1954–1970)
Erp:see table below
Haat:see table below
Facility Id:see table below
Coordinates:see table below

Nebraska Public Media, formerly Nebraska Educational Telecommunications (NET), is a state network of public radio and television stations in the U.S. state of Nebraska. It is operated by the Nebraska Educational Telecommunications Commission (NETC). The television stations are all members of the Public Broadcasting Service (PBS), while the radio stations are members of National Public Radio (NPR).

The network is headquartered in the Terry M. Carpenter & Jack G. McBride Nebraska Public Media Center which is located at 1800 North 33rd Street on the East campus of the University of Nebraska in Lincoln, and has a satellite studio in Omaha.

History

Television

Nebraska was one of the first states in the nation to begin the groundwork for educational broadcasting. The University of Nebraska successfully applied to have channel 18 in Lincoln allocated for educational use in 1951.

Meanwhile, broadcasting pioneer John Fetzer purchased Lincoln's two commercial TV stations, KOLN-TV (channel 12) in August 1953 and KFOR-TV (channel 10) in February 1954. In order to avoid running afoul of Federal Communications Commission (FCC) ownership regulations and to create a commercial broadcast monopoly for himself in the Lincoln market,[1] Fetzer moved KOLN from its sign-on channel 12 to KFOR's channel 10 and offered to donate the channel 12 license to UNL.[2] Since this would allow UNL to use more signal at less cost, the school quickly jumped at this proposal. KUON-TV went on the air on November 1, 1954, from KOLN-TV's studios, where the stations had to take turns using studio space; when KOLN was live, KUON had to broadcast a film, and vice versa. The station joined the nascent National Educational Television network (which had begun operations in May) upon its sign-on. It was operated in trust for UNL until 1956, when the FCC granted the channel 12 license to the school's Board of Regents. In 1957, KUON moved to its own studios in the Temple Building on the UNL campus. In 1960, the Nebraska Council for Educational Television was created by six school districts in Nebraska. By 1961, five VHF and three UHF channels were allocated for educational use in Nebraska—the largest set ever approved for educational use in a single state. In 1963, the state legislature, per a committee's recommendation, approved plans for a statewide educational television network under the control of the Nebraska Educational Television Commission. A deal was quickly reached in which Lincoln's KUON-TV would remain under UNL's ownership, but serve as the new state network's flagship.

In 1965, KLNE-TV in Lexington became the first station in the new state network, followed a month later (October 1965) by KYNE-TV at channel 26 in Omaha.[3] The state network grew quickly; six stations signed on from 1966 to 1968 to complete the state network. It began a full seven-day schedule in 1969. The Nebraska Educational Telecommunications Center opened in 1972; it is named for Carpenter, a state senator who introduced legislation in 1969 to fund the center, and McBride, NET's founding general manager and leader for 43 years. (The KLNE-TV and KLNE-FM transmission tower (40.3848°N -99.4589°W) is on the site of the World War II prisoner-of-war camp, Camp Atlanta, near Holdrege, Nebraska.) National Educational Television would be absorbed into the Public Broadcasting Service (PBS) in October 1970, and KUON-TV joined the new network.

In 1974, Nebraska ETV adopted a new logo – a red stylized abstract "N" formed from two trapezoids. A year later, NBC unveiled the same logo that Nebraska ETV was using, but for the blue coloring of the right trapezoid in the NBC logo. The commission sued NBC for trademark infringement in February 1976, a suit which generated national attention. In an out-of-court settlement, Nebraska ETV agreed to allow NBC to keep its logo. In return, NBC donated a color mobile unit and other equipment totaling over $800,000. It also paid the commission an additional $55,000 for the costs of rolling out a new logo and eliminating the old logo from all advertising; Nebraska ETV's new logo was unveiled in late 1976.[4] [5]

A CPB study, Study of School Use of Television and Video, found Reading Rainbow (a co-production of NET and Buffalo, New York's WNED-TV until 2006) to be the most used and viewed children's television program in America during the 1990–1991 school year.

Since 1974, NET has operated a studio in Omaha, on the campus of the University of Nebraska–Omaha. It is primarily used when KYNE breaks off from the state network to broadcast programming of specific interest to the Omaha market.

In January 2005, Nebraska ETV and Nebraska Public Radio were united under a single name, Nebraska Educational Telecommunications.In May 2021, NET changed its name to Nebraska Public Media to more accurately represent the organization's entire impact.[6]

Radio

The Educational Television Commission had its mission broadened to radio in 1984, but it was 1989 before it could begin the groundwork for building a statewide public radio network. For many years, there were only two NPR members in the entire state—Omaha's KIOS and Lincoln's KUCV, which had signed on in 1974. In 1989, however, UNL bought KUCV from Union College. KUCV officially relaunched from its new studios on October 10, 1989. In 2001, KUCV moved from 90.9 FM (where it had been since its sign-on) to 91.1.

In 1990, the commission opened stations in Alliance, Lexington, Columbus, Norfolk, and Hastings. North Platte, Bassett, Merriman, and Chadron followed in 1991. The entire Nebraska Public Radio Network (NPRN) was formally dedicated on October 8 in a special ceremony, broadcast live on NPRN and NETV.The Nebraska Educational Telecommunications Facilities Corporation was established to facilitate lease/purchase of the GTE SpaceNet 3 transponder.

Television stations

Nebraska Public Media consists of nine full-power TV stations that make up the network; all stations have callsigns beginning with the letter K, as licensed by the Federal Communications Commission (FCC), and ending in NE (the postal abbreviation for Nebraska) except "UON" (University of Nebraska) for the Lincoln station. Combined, they reach almost all of Nebraska, as well as parts of Colorado, Iowa, Kansas, Missouri, South Dakota, and Wyoming. Eight of the stations are owned by the NETC. Flagship station KUON is owned by the University of Nebraska, but is operated by the Commission through a long-standing agreement between the Commission and NU.

StationCity of licenseFacility IDERPHAATCall sign
meaning
Transmitter coordinatesFirst air datePublic license information
KTNE-TV13 (13) 47996 4660NaN0 Television Nebraska 41.8408°N -103.055°W
KMNE-TV7 (7) 47981 27 kW 4530NaN0 Middle Nebraska 42.3347°N -99.4839°W
KHNE-TV29 (28) 47987 200 kW 3660NaN0 Hastings, Nebraska 40.7722°N -98.0892°W
KLNE-TV3 (26) 47975 375 kW 3310NaN0 Lexington, Nebraska 40.3847°N -99.4583°W
KUON-TV12 (12) 66589 75 kW 2530NaN0 University of Nebraska 41.1383°N -96.4556°W
KRNE-TV12 (12) 47971 75 kW 3220NaN0 Merriman, Nebraska 42.6769°N -101.7108°W
KXNE-TV19 (19) 47995 475 kW 253.20NaN0 Across Nebraska 42.2375°N -97.2781°W
KPNE-TV9 (9) 47973 85 kW 3340NaN0 North Platte, Nebraska 41.0228°N -101.1539°W
KYNE-TV26 (17) 47974 21.5 kW 283.60NaN0 Your Nebraska 41.3089°N -96.0262°W

Translators

Nebraska Public Media operates 15 translators to widen its coverage area. Nine directly repeat KUON, four repeat KXNE and one repeats KMNE.

StationCity of licenseChannelParent stationFacility ID
K23AA23 KHNE 47983
K24GO24 KUON 47969
K31OC-D7 KMNE 181534
K06JC6 KTNE 47977
K06KR6KTNE 47991
K34IB34 KXNE 47976
K25OG-D25 KUON-TV 47970
K08LN8 KUON 47992
K33FO 33 KPNE48009
K21OI-D9 KPNE-TV 47954
K27NI-D 27 KXNE-TV 47985
K14MI 14 KXNE 47988
K33AC 33 KUON47993
K10JW-D 19 KXNE-TV 47989
K20IJ 20 KPNE47980

Cable and satellite availability

Nebraska Public Media is available on nearly all cable systems in Nebraska. Selected cable systems in northern Kansas carry Hastings' KHNE in addition to Smoky Hills PBS; these counties are part of the Hastings/Kearney side of the Lincoln/Hastings/Kearney media market. Additionally, Omaha's KYNE is carried on most cable systems in southwestern Iowa.

On satellite, KUON, KYNE, KPNE, KXNE, and KTNE are carried on the local Lincoln, Omaha, North Platte, Sioux City, and Cheyenne, Wyoming Dish Network feeds, respectively. KTNE is the sole PBS station available to satellite viewers in the Cheyenne market, due to FCC regulations that prohibit Wyoming PBS to be seen in that market, since KWYP-TV in Laramie is located in the Denver television market. KHNE, KYNE, and KXNE are available on the Lincoln, Omaha, and Sioux City DirecTV feeds, respectively.

Digital television

Subchannels

The signals of Nebraska Public Media's television stations are multiplexed:

Channel! scope = "col"
Res.AspectShort nameProgramming
xx.1 NE-PBS Main Nebraska Public Media programming / PBS
xx.2 NE-W World
xx.3 NE-C Create
xx.4 NE-KIDS PBS Kids
xx.5 NE-FNX First Nations Experience

Analog-to-digital conversion

During 2009, in the lead-up to the analog-to-digital television transition that would ultimately occur in 2009, Nebraska Public Media shut down the analog transmitters of its stations on a staggered basis. Listed below are the dates each analog transmitter ceased operations as well as their post-transition channel allocations:[7]

Radio stations

Nebraska Public Media's radio stations are governed by the NET Commission and the NET Foundation for Radio Board. It consists of all NPR member stations in the state except for KIOS in Omaha; that station is operated by the Omaha Public Schools. Programming consists of classical music and NPR news and talk.

Nebraska Public Media Radio can also be heard on the FNX television channel.[8]

There are nine full-power stations in the state network:

StationFrequencyCitydata-sort-type="number" ERPdata-sort-type="number" HAATCallsign meaning
KUCV91.1 FMLincoln (flagship)100 kW2100NaN0Union College (original owner) Voice
KCNE-FM91.9 FMChadron8.4 kW1030NaN0Chadron, Nebraska
KHNE-FM89.1 FMHastings68 kW3290NaN0Hastings, Nebraska
KLNE-FM88.7 FMLexington65 kW296.80NaN0Lexington, Nebraska
KMNE-FM90.3 FMBassett100 kW4020NaN0Middle Nebraska
KPNE-FM91.7 FMNorth Platte88 kW2880NaN0North Platte, Nebraska
KQNE-FM89.9 FMFalls City3.2 kW1370NaN0Quality Radio for Nebraska
KRNE-FM91.5 FMMerriman100 kW2940NaN0Merriman, Nebraska
KTNE-FM91.1 FMAlliance100 kW4040NaN0Towards Nebraska
KXNE-FM89.3 FMNorfolk45 kW3000NaN0Across Nebraska

The state network also has four low-power repeater/translator signals.

StationFrequencyCityParent Station
K209FS89.7 FMColumbusKXNE
K224CH92.7 FMCulbertsonKPNE
K208CB89.5 FMHarrisonKTNE
K227AC93.3 FMMaxKPNE

K209FS went off the air in July 2023 due to the dismantling of its broadcast tower. NPM is seeking a new location for the translator but ultimately will replace it with a higher-power station, KUNE-FM.[9] [10]

Programming

Although Nebraska Public Media provides PBS programming, it also produces original programs, such as:

News operation

The Nebraska Public Media News team was led by News Director Dennis Kellogg until 2022.[11] The news department produces regular "Signature Stories" for air on Nebraska Public Media's radio stations.

External links

40.8311°N -96.6721°W

Notes and References

  1. Web site: 50 Years of Service NET . McGuire. Jana. Nebraska Alumni Magazine. Fall 2004 . March 11, 2013.
  2. Web site: NET Television's 60 Anniversary Celebrates Its Educational Focus . NET Nebraska (press release). September 24, 2015 . October 5, 2018 . https://web.archive.org/web/20170330213752/http://netnebraska.org/news-releases/net-televisions-60-anniversary-celebrates-its-educational-focus . March 30, 2017.
  3. Web site: ETV Comes to Omaha University . 15 June 2018.
  4. Web site: One of NBC's great blunders . 8 September 2011 . Ken . Levine .
  5. News: At NBC, All's Well That N's Well . The Washington Post . Tom . Shales . 19 July 1985 . 15 June 2018.
  6. Web site: NET No More: PBS, NPR Stations Rebrand as Nebraska Public Media. Jon. Ellis. Northpine.com. May 15, 2021. May 15, 2021.
  7. Web site: DTV Tentative Channel Designations for the First and the Second Rounds . 2012-03-24 . https://web.archive.org/web/20130829004251/http://hraunfoss.fcc.gov/edocs_public/attachmatch/DA-06-1082A2.pdf . 2013-08-29 . dead .
  8. https://nebraskapublicmedia.org/en/about/pressroom/press-releases/nebraska-public-media-launches-fnxfirst-nations-experience-as-fifth-tv-channel/
  9. Web site: Nebraska Public Media Columbus FM Translator Going Off Air . Nebraska Public Media (press release). 2023-07-05 . 2023-10-18.
  10. Web site: Weekly Log: Public Radio Off Air in Neb. Town; New Mpls. Anchor . NorthPine . 2023-07-07 . 2023-10-18.
  11. Web site: News.