KUAM-TV
kW | |
HAAT | 304 m (997 ft) |
---|---|
Transmitter coordinates | 13°25′58″N 144°42′45″E / 13.43278°N 144.71250°E |
Translator(s) | |
Links | |
Public license information | |
Website | www |
KUAM-TV (channel 8) is a
History
KUAM was Guam's first television station, signing on August 5, 1956 (initially intended to open on July 15 debuted in 1986, they carried its lineup as well. For a time, this made KUAM one of the few stations to be affiliated with all four major networks.
Despite being affiliated with all four networks, KUAM was hindered by the fact that Guam was a day ahead of the U.S. mainland and that most shows, especially those from the network, were sent via air and/or mail, which meant that viewers would have to wait from a period of two weeks to a month to see any of the offerings. When it was not showing any network fare it featured local in-house programming, syndicated shows and films (mostly travel or cultural)[citation needed] to make up the difference.
KUAM-TV, together with KUAM radio, were originally owned by Harry S. Engel, a former owner-manager of radio station KVEN in Ventura, California, with Adam Young International as the stations' representative. Two enterprising mainlanders, H. Scott Kilgore and Sam Rubin, formed the Pacific Broadcasting Corporation and bought the KUAM stations in 1964; the company changed its name to Pacific Telestations, Inc. in the 1970s.[3]
Between 1969 and 1980, a sister station, WSZE-TV (channel 10) served the Northern Mariana Islands from Saipan.
KUAM would lose ABC to KTGM when it began operations in 1987, and lost Fox to the same station in 1990. CBS programming was dropped in 1995 with the launch of KUAM-LP; that station, in turn, would be added as KUAM's digital subchannel, broadcasting on channel 8.2, in 2009.
As satellite technology started to take off and expand, KUAM began to gradually catch up with the rest of the
In 2006 KUAM's website, kuam.com, received honors at that year's
On February 18, 2009, KUAM signed off its analog signal on channel 8 and switched on its digital signal also on channel 8.[4]
Notable alumni
- Delegate to the U.S. House of Representatives
Subchannels
The station's signal is
Channel | Programming[5] |
---|---|
8.1 | Main KUAM-TV programming / NBC |
8.2 | CBS |
See also
- Channel 8 digital TV stations in the United States
- Channel 8 virtual TV stations in the United States
- Channel 11 branded TV stations in the United States
References
- ^ "Facility Technical Data for KUAM-TV". Licensing and Management System. Federal Communications Commission.
- ^ TV Notes, Meriden Journal, 23 May 1956
- ^ "The History of KUAM".
- ^ "List of TV stations to end analog on Tuesday" From Google (February 13, 2009)
- ^ "KUAM-TV HAGATNA, GU". rabbitears.info. Retrieved October 4, 2020.