Annex
Advertisement

KHNL-TV is the NBC-affiliated television station for the state of Hawaii that is licensed to Honolulu. The station broadcasts a high definitiondigital signal on UHF channel 35 (or PSIP virtual channel 13) from a transmitter in Palehua. KHNL is owned and operated by Raycom Media, who also owns CBS affiliate KGMB and operates MyNetworkTV affiliate KFVE by virtue of a shared services agreement with KFVE's owner MCG Capital Corporation. All three stations share studios on Waiakamilo Road in Honolulu.

KHNL-TV
225px-Khnl 2009200px-Hawaii news now
Honolulu, Hawaii
Branding KHNL (general)

Hawaii News Now(newscasts)

Slogan Your Source for Breaking News
Channels Digital: 35 (UHF)
Subchannels

13.1 - NBC

13.2 - Antenna TV

Owner Raycom Media

(KHNL/KGMB License Subsidiary, LLC)

First air date July 4, 1962
Call letters' meaning HNL is Honolulu International Airport'sIATA code
Sister station(s) KGMB

KFVE

Former callsigns KTRG (1962-1967)

KIKU (1967-1984)

Former channel number(s) Analog:

13 (VHF, 1962-2008)

Former affiliations Independent (1962-1986)Fox (1986-1995)
Transmitter power 25 kW
Height 629 m
Facility ID 34867
Transmitter coordinates 21°24′3.0″N158°6′10.0″W
Website www.hawaiinewsnow.com

As of March 2nd, 2011, KHNL is available in HD on DIRECTV.

Programming[]

KHNL clears all network programming. The station rarely pre-empts NBC for two reasons. First, NBC has historically been not as tolerant as the other networks although they have loosened up. Second, when KHNL picked up the network in 1995, NBC had less programming that local stations could pre-empt than they did in the past. Outside of network hours, KHNL airs various syndicated programming. Compared to the other major network affiliates in Hawaii, they air no sitcom or drama reruns. This can be attributed mainly to NBC's extensive overnight lineup which leaves very little room for affiliates to air syndicated programming during the late night hours.

Syndicated programming on KHNL includes Entertainment Tonight, The Doctors, Who Wants To Be a Millionaire and Judge Joe Brown.






Digital programming[]

The station's signal is multiplexed. On DT2 was NBC Plus which was not seen on the digital tier of Oceanic Time Warner Cable. After Hawaii's analog television shutdown on January 15, 2009,[1] the three full-powered stations remained on their current digital channels using PSIP to display virtual channels for each station corresponding to their former analog channel numbers .[2]

As of Wednesday, March 2, 2011 KHNL is now available in HD on DirecTV. (local channel 13) Leaving KFVE as the only local channel remaining in Hawaii not offered in HD by DirecTV.

Channel Name  Programming 
13.1 KHNL-DT1 Main KHNL-TV Programming / NBC (HD)
13.2 KHNL-DT2 Antenna TV

History[]

Independent station[]

The station signed-on July 4, 1962 as KTRG airing an analog signal on VHF channel 13 from a transmitter on top of the Hawaiian Village Hotel in Waikiki. Owned by the Watumull Broadcasting Company and unaffiliated with a national network, they broadcasted English and Japanese language Independent programming. New ownership started on January 15, 1966. In 1967, KTRG switched call letters to KIKU and moved to Puuhale Road while offering English programming from 1 to 5 P.M. as well as 10 to 11 with Japanese programming from 5 to 10. The English shows included old movies, westerns, and cartoons.

Mid-Pacific Television Associates bought the station on April 9, 1979. By this time, it ran English programming (like "Hour Magazine" and "The John Davidson Show") from 7 A.M. until 7 P.M. with Japanese programming from 7 to 10 and back to English after 10 until their sign-off. In 1981, the station became a full-time English speaking general entertainment station running a blend of cartoons, sitcoms, westerns, movies, and for a brief time, a local newscast. Japanese programming moved to various UHF stations. In 1984, the call letters were changed again to the current KHNL and the station branded itself as the "News Alternative" and "Free Movie Channel" while also beginning to air University of Hawaii at Manoa athletics.

Fox affiliate[]

In 1986, the year the station was acquired by the King Broadcasting Company of Seattle, KHNL contracted programming from the new Fox network to begin airing in April 1987. This included The Late Show Starring Joan Rivers, The Tracey Ullman Show, and Married with Children. Also in 1986, they added translator station K21AG from Scala Broadcasting to rebroadcast KHNL on Maui. This was eventually divested to LeSea Broadcasting in July 1990. In June 1987, the station added K65BV from the Channel 13 Club of Kauai. In May 1989,KHBC-TV in Hilo became a full-time satellite of KHNL. In August 1990, KOGG began broadcasting on Maui as a satellite.

It was not until September 1993, after King Broadcasting was sold to the Providence Journal Company, that KHNL adopted the brand name "FOX 13". On May 5 of that year, they entered into a local marketing agreement (a.k.a. LMA) with KFVE which merged its operations into KHNL's facility. In January 1994, all University of Hawaii sports moved to KFVE where it remains today. In August, KHON-TV announced it was dropping its affiliation with NBC to become the new Fox affiliate since its new owner, SF Broadcasting, was partly funded by the network. At first there was talk about NBC going with current ABC affiliate KITV. However, after Argyle purchased that station in 1995, they decided to keep KITV with ABC instead. On January 1, 1996, KHNL switched its affiliation to NBC while Fox moved to KHON.

NBC affiliate[]

On October 29, 1999, Belo sold KHNL and its LMA with KFVE to current owner Raycom Media along with KASA-TV in Albuquerque, New Mexico (which has since been sold to the LIN TV Corporation). Raycom acquired KFVE outright two months after the company completed its purchase of KHNL creating one of the very first official co-owned commercially-licensed duopolies in the country. On May 11, 2002, KHBC added a digital signal on UHF channel 22.[3] In 2003, KHNL got national exposure for having Conan O'Brien's Triumph the Insult Comic Dog do the weather report at the station. Triumph was actually invited to the station after chatting with people auditioning for American Idol in Hawaii.With the new affiliation, KHNL began construction of the first fully digital newsroom in the world. It also became the first to utilize fiber optic technology to broadcast live feeds from the neighboring islands. Former KITV anchor Dan Cooke and sports anchor Robert Kekaula moved to KHNL during that time to start up the very first newscast on this station. On January 1, 1996, the station officially became Hawaii's new NBC affiliate dubbed "NBC Hawaii News 8" (for the station's dial position on most Hawaii cable systems). During that year, KHNL won the first Emmy Award for a local news broadcast. When the Providence Journal Company merged with Belo on February 28, 1997, the station struck a deal with the Honolulu Star-Bulletin newspaper to share polling services.

SSA with KGMB[]

On August 18, 2009, KHNL and MCG Capital Corporation (owner of CBS station KGMB) announced a planned shared services agreement (a.k.a. SSA) under which KGMB's operations including news coverage would be combined with KHNL and KFVE. The proposal would see KGMB moved from its studios on Kapiolani Boulevard in downtown Honolulu to the KHNL/KFVE facilities on Waiakamilo Road; it would also see KGMB fall under Raycom ownership, moving from channel 9 to channel 5, while KFVE would move from channels 5 to 9 and fall under MCG Capital's ownership.[4] Citing "the economic reality... that this market cannot support five traditionally separated television stations, all with duplicated costs," and facing the risk of "the loss of one, or possibly two stations in Hawaii," Raycom President Paul McTear said the SSA would "preserve three stations that provide important and valuable local, national and international programming to viewers in Hawaii."[5]

The plan, however, has met with criticism from organizations such as Media Council Hawaii which views the plan as a way to circumvent Federal Communications Commission (FCC) rules preventing one company owning two of the top four stations in any market[4] (The FCC only recognizes ownership of facility identifications and not a station's call sign or other properties, and as such Raycom's ownership of both KHNL and KGMB, once it moved to Channel 5, would be allowed). The SSA took effect on October 26, 2009, at which point KHNL dropped its "NBC 8" branding in favor of simply its call letters (KGMB and KFVE, who swapped dial positions on that date, adopted similar branding approaches as well). An estimated 68 positions from a total of 198 from the three stations would be eliminated as part of the agreement.[6]

Satellite stations[]

These stations, in addition to translator K65BV in Lihue, rebroadcast KHNL's signal throughout Hawaii. K65BV has a transmitter northwest of Omao.

Station City of license Channel First air date [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Call_sign Call letters’

meaning]

ERP HAAT Facility ID Transmitter location Transmitter Coordinates
KHBC-TV Hilo 22 (UHF) August 22, 1983 Hilo's NBC 8 kW -170 m 34846 on top of Hilo Hawaiian Hotel 19°43′40.9″N 155°4′0.7″W
KOGG Wailuku 16 (UHF) August 22, 1989 OGG is Kahului Airport's IATA code 50 kW 818 m 34859 summit of Haleakala 20°39′26.7″N 156°21′39.1″W

News operation[]

220px-Khnl news open

Their weeknight 5 and 10 o'clock news open.

On August 31, KHNL added a sports magazine and wrap-up show called Sports Sunday Hawaii. On June 1, 1999, the weeknight 6 o'clock show began began simulcasting on KCCN-AM 1420. They added "Chopper 8", the only television helicopter in the market, on April 5, 2000. On April 1, 2002, their weekday morning program was reduced to 90 minutes. A news share agreement was established with KKBG-FM 97.9,KLEO-FM 106.1, KHLO-AM, and KKOA-FM 107.7 on October 10. KIKU began a partnership with KHNL airing nightly news updates from this station on February 3, 2003. October 18, 2004 saw the relaunch of prime time news on KFVE. On January 7, 2007 that station debuted a weeknight 6:30 newscast also produced by KHNL. December 3, 2007 saw the launch of a midday newscast on the station, this has since been dropped. On December 22, 2008, KHNL and KFVE became the first local stations in Hawaii to broadcast local newscasts in high definition.[3]As KTRG, the station had a start-up news program called Nightly News that aired from their original studios at Royal Block on Kalakaua Avenue. After joining NBC, it was the last of the major network television stations in Hawaii to debut a news telecast. In January 1995, they developed a new brand name and successfully mounted a challenge to top rated KHON. On April 17, 1995, the station launched a prime time newscast at 9 with a simulcast on KFVE. Further launches of broadcasts continued with the addition of 10 (on June 19), 5 (on July 24), and 6 o'clock (on November 30) shows. They added a two-hour long morning show on January 1, 1996. A audio simulcast of their 6 P.M. news was added to KUMU-AM 1500 on January 6, 1997. August 3 saw the original KFVE broadcast being dropped.

The origins of the three stations sharing their resources was announced on August 18, 2009, when MCG Capital Corporation and Raycom Media (owner of KHNL and, at the time, KFVE) announced a shared services agreement which would see Raycom merge the three stations' operations into the KHNL/KFVE studios on Waiakamilo Road in Honolulu (KGMB would vacate its studios on Kapiolani Boulevard). Though non-news programming would remain in place, the 3 stations' news operations would be combined under one banner. The arrangement would also see a channel swap, with KGMB moving from PSIP channel 9 to channel 5 and KFVE move from 5 to 9. KFVE's newscasts would remain in place[4]

The shared services agreement resulted in the termination of all but four KHNL on-air staff and all of KHNL's morning show technicians when its newsroom merged with KGMB on October 26, 2009 when they began their simulcast.[7] Seniority was guaranteed to technicians in the IBEW Local 1260 contract, but management said "New equipment nullifies any previous seniority.", even though the technicians had installed and been operating the new equipment for over 6 months. The new hires had no prior experience operating the new equipment and had to be trained. The IBEW reps and heads were paid to turn a blind eye to the situation. People let go had been with the station from between 20 to 3 years, while those with as little as 6 months were allowed to keep their jobs, this suggests those with long service were let go to hire new people at less pay. The two stations began to jointly produce and simulcast a weeknight 5 and 10 o'clock newscasts while KHNL moved their 6 P.M. show to 5:30. KGMB continues to have its own weeknight 6 o'clock newscast. The only times when they don't simulcast is during the 7AM hour when KHNL starts airing NBC's Today Show, 5:30PM when KGMB airs The CBS Evening News, and at 6PM when KHNL airs The NBC Nightly News. Weekday morning and weekend shows are simulcasted on the two but can be preempted on one station due to network obligations. The local news schedule on KFVE-TV remains unchanged. There is no weekday midday news on either station.[8] Complaints to IBEW Local 1260 about the legality of the layoffs still goes unanswered.

News/station presentation[]

Newscast titles[]

  • Nightly News (1960s)
  • The Big News (1960s)
  • KHNL Hawaii News 8 (1995–1996)
  • Ten at 10 (10 p.m. newscast; 1995–2004)
  • NBC Hawaii News 8 (1996–2002)
  • News 8 (2002–2004)
  • KHNL News 8 (2004–2009)
  • Hawaii News Now (2009–present)

Station slogans[]

  • KHNL 13, This is the Year (1988–1990; localized version of Fox ad campaign)
  • Cool Like Fox 13 (September–December 1995; last localized version of Fox ad campaign)
  • Live. Local. Latebreaking. (1995–2009)
  • The Year to Be on NBC Hawaii News 8 (January–September 1996; first localized version of NBC ad campaign)
  • Live, Local, Connected (2009–2013)
  • Your Source for Breaking News (2013-present)

News team[]

Current on-air staff[]

Hawaii News Now Anchors


  • Steve Uyehara - weekday mornings at 5 a.m.-7 a.m. (also sports special assignments)
  • Grace Lee - weekday mornings at 5 a.m.-7 a.m. (also reporter)
  • Shawn Ching - weeknights at 5 & 5:30 p.m. (also reporter)
  • Stephanie Lum - weeknights at 5, 5:30, & 10 p.m.
  • Keahi Tucker - weeknights at 10 p.m.
  • Lisa Kubota - weekends at 5 & 10 p.m. (also reporter)


Hawaii's Severe Weather Team (Hawaii Weather Now)


  • Guy Hagi - weeknights at 5, 5:30, & 10 p.m.
  • Dan Cooke - weekday mornings at 5 a.m.-7 a.m. (also fill-in morning news anchor)
  • Malika Dudley - weekends at 5 & 10 p.m. (also weekday morning special projects reporter)
  • Ben Gutierrez - fill-in weather anchor (also reporter)


Hawaii Sports Now


  • Mike Cherry - sports anchor/reporter - weeknights at 10 p.m. and weekends at 5 & 10 p.m.
  • Russell Yamanoha - fill-in sports anchor


Hawaii News Now Reporters


  • Brooks Baehr - general assignment reporter
  • Taizo Braden - Hawaii Traffic Now reporter weekday mornings
  • Howard Dicus - weekday morning business and weeknight special reports
  • Byron Furukawa - weekday mornings "Around Town"
  • Terry Hunter - movie/film critic
  • Amy Kalili - weekday morning special correspondent for Hawaiian news
  • Jim Mendoza - general assignment reporter
  • Teri Okita - senior reporter
  • Tim Sakahara - general assignment reporter
  • Minna Sugimoto - general assignment and crime reporter
  • Billy V - weekday morning local events and celebrity news
  • Oscar Valenzuela - general assignment reporter (also video journalist)
  • Ramsay Wharton - weekday mornings (also fill-in morning news anchor)
  • Lynn Kawano chief investigative reporter

Former on-air staff[]

KHNL News[]

These "on-air" personnel were the last news team seen on KHNL-TV until the consolidation with KGMB-TV.

+ denotes KHNL personnel kept after consolidation on October 26, 2009

Anchors


  • Howard Dashefsky - weekday mornings at 5 a.m.-7 a.m.
  • Diane Ako - weekday mornings at 5 a.m.-7 a.m.
  • Kristine Uyeno - weeknights at 5 & 6 p.m.
  • + Stephanie Lum - weeknights at 6 & 10 p.m. (also weeknights at 6:30 & 9 p.m. on KFVE-TV)
  • + Mari-Ela David - weekends and reporter (also weekends at 9 p.m. on KFVE-TV)
  • Paul Drewes (AMS Seal of Approval) - weekends and reporter (also weekends at 9 p.m. on KFVE-TV); also weekend meteorologist (currently with KITV-TV)


Weather Anchors


  • Sharie Shima - chief meteorologist seen weeknights at 5, 6, & 10 p.m. (also weeknights at 6:30 & 9 p.m. on KFVE-TV)
  • Tracy Gladden - weekdays mornings at 5 a.m.-7 a.m. and reporter


Sports


  • Jason Tang - sports director seen weeknights at 6 & 10 p.m. (also weeknights at 6:30 & 9 p.m. on KFVE-TV)
  • Brian Ojima - weekends (also weekends at 9 p.m. on KFVE-TV), sports reporter and video journalist


Reporters


  • Zahid Arab (currently with KLAS-TV, Las Vegas, NV)
  • Leland Kim
  • Roger Mari
  • + Duane Shimogawa
  • + Minna Sugimoto


These personnel were also seen at KHNL-TV at some point in time.


  • Dan Cooke (Weeknight Anchor; Weather Anchor; helped launch first KHNL newscast) - Currently with Hawaii News Now
  • Robert Kekaula (Weeknight Sports Anchor; helped launch first KHNL newscast) - Currently with KITV-TV
  • Jodi Leong (Weeknight Anchor) - Currently with KITV-TV
  • Heidi Umbhau (Weeknight Anchor; Healthcast Reporter)
  • Barbara Wallace (5PM Anchor; KFVE News at 9 Anchor; Morning Anchor; Reporter)
  • Marvin Buenconsejo (Morning Anchor & Reporter; Senior General Assignment Reporter)
  • Lee Cataluna (Morning Anchor; Weeknight Anchor; Reporter) - Currently with The Honolulu Advertiser
  • Lyle Galdeira (Morning Anchor; Fill-In Anchor; Reporter)
  • Angela Keen (Morning Anchor; Morning Weathercaster; Healthcast Reporter)
  • Walter Makaula (5PM Anchor; KFVE News at 9 Anchor; Reporter) - Currently with KSWB-TV, San Diego, CA
  • Mary Simms (Reporter) - Currently a Spokeswoman for the United States Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) in San Francisco
  • Erin Brown (Weather Anchor)
  • Mary Ann Esteban (Weekend Weather Anchor)
  • Guy Hagi (Morning Weather Anchor) - Currently with Hawaii News Now
  • Maria Quiban (Weather Anchor) - Currently with KTTV-TV, Los Angeles, CA
  • Kim Sheree (Weekend Weather Anchor)
  • Mari-Ela David Chock (Weekend Anchor; Reporter)
  • Vince Gerasole (Weekend Anchor; Reporter) - Currently with WBBM-TV, Chicago, IL
  • Russell Yamanoha (Sports Director & Anchor) - Currently Co-Host of The Rob & Russ Show with Rob DeMello on AM-1500 Sporting News Radio Hawaii
  • Eric Elizaga (Weekend Sports Anchor; Sports Reporter)
  • Alema Harrington (Weekend Sports Anchor; Sports Reporter)
  • Reid Shimizu (Weekend Sports Anchor; Sports Reporter)
  • Rod Antone (Reporter)
  • Brooks Baehr (Reporter) - Currently with Hawaii News Now
  • Cindy Cha (Web Producer/Reporter)
  • Sharon Chen (Reporter)
  • Danielle De Longe (Reporter)
  • Dave Erickson (Reporter) - Currently with KXLY-TV, Spokane, WA
  • Stephen Florino (Reporter; Weekend Sports Anchor; Sports Reporter)
  • Beth Hillyer (Reporter)
  • Linda Hosek (Reporter) - Currently with Honolulu Star-Bulletin
  • Lisa Kubota (Reporter) - Currently with Hawaii News Now
  • Patti Lee (Morning Anchor, Reporter)
  • Julie Ogata (Reporter)
  • Darren Pai (Chief Political Reporter)
  • Cindy Paliracio (Reporter; Healthcast Reporter)
  • Audrey Port (Reporter)
  • Joann Shin (Reporter; Fill-In Weather Anchor)
  • Su Shin (Reporter)
  • Melisa Uchida (Reporter)
  • Glenn Wakai (Reporter)
  • Nancy Weiner (Reporter)

Hawaii News Now[]

  • Tannya Joaquin - weekday mornings at 5 a.m.-7 a.m. (also reporter)
  • Byron Furukawa - weekday mornings "Around Town"
  • Terry Hunter - movie/film critic
  • Amy Kalili - weekday morning special correspondent for Hawaiian news

Logos[]

References[]

  1. ^ http://www.hawaiigoesdigital.com
  2. ^ http://hraunfoss.fcc.gov/edocs_public/attachmatch/DA-06-1082A2.pdf
  3. ^ a b http://www.khnl.com/Global/story.asp?S=118635
  4. ^ a b c "Execs explain TV swap, but some see it as blurry", from Honolulu Star-Bulletin, August 20, 2009
  5. ^ "Raycom to Manage Honolulu CBS", from broadcastingcable.com, August 18, 2009
  6. ^ "68 to lose jobs in local TV agreement, sources say", from Honolulu Star-Bulletin, August 18, 2009
  7. ^ https://archive.is/20120903154958/www.honoluluadvertiser.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20091020/BUSINESS/910200313&source=rss_business
  8. ^ http://media.ohio.com/documents/20091021_KGMB.pdf

External links[]

Advertisement