KYMA-DT

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KYMA-DT
KYMA logo
Yuma, Arizona/El Centro, California
Branding News 11
Slogan Where News Comes First
Channels Digital: 11 (VHF)
Affiliations NBC
This TV (DT2)
Owner Intermountain West Communications Company
(Yuma Broadcasting Company)
First air date January 22, 1988
Call letters' meaning YuMA
Former callsigns KYMA (1987-2009)
KCAA (1982-1987)
Former channel number(s) Analog:
11 (VHF, 1988-2009)
Digital:
41 (UHF, 2007-2009)
Former affiliations LATV (DT2, 2007-2009)
Transmitter power 2.1 kW
Height 493 m
Facility ID 74449
Transmitter coordinates 33°3′10.3″N 114°49′43.5″W / 33.052861°N 114.82875°W / 33.052861; -114.82875
Website www.kyma.com

KYMA-DT ("News 11") is an NBC-affiliated television station in Yuma, Arizona/El Centro, California, USA, broadcasting locally in digital on VHF channel 11. KYMA can be received over the air in Blythe, California in the Palo Verde Valley, and in the southeastern end of the Coachella Valley, and it transmits a clear signal to viewers in Mexicali, Mexico. KYMA also broadcasts This TV programming on digital subchannel 11.2.

Contents

[edit] History

Channel 11 had been home to Yuma's first television station, KIVA, which operated from 1953 until 1970, when it went off the air. The allocation lay vacant for ten years, but by 1980, applications had been submitted to revive channel 11 in Yuma, and on September 29, 1982, the FCC awarded an original construction permit to Elizabeth Overmyer with call letters KCAA. The station's early history was eventful, as Overmyer was forced to transfer control of the station to Cadmus, Inc. in November 1984. Cadmus then sold the station to Yuma Television Associates (later Manning Telecasting, then Yuma Broadcasting Company) in January 1986. The station changed its call letters to KYMA on July 27, 1987, reviving long-dormant call letters of a Yuma radio station, and began broadcasting in January 1988 as an ABC affiliate, later becoming an NBC affiliate in a swap with then-KYEL, which would later become KSWT. KYMA was granted its initial license on April 29, 1988. The station changed hands again on June 8, 1989, when Yuma Broadcasting was sold to Sunbelt Communications Company, and finally, KYMA and its parent company, were sold to James Rogers on May 21, 1996.

[edit] Programming

KYMA is an NBC affiliate, and its schedule is dominated by network and syndicated programming, including children's programming from qubo. The station produces four daily newscasts weekdays, at 6:00 am, 5 pm, 6 pm, and 10 pm, and two daily newscasts on the weekends, at 5 pm and 10 pm. (All times MST.) Until December 2008, it operated a news bureau in El Centro to provide additional coverage of the Imperial Valley.

In May 2007, KYMA added secondary programming on digital 11.2 from LATV, a bilingual music and entertainment network highlighting the Latin music scene. The affiliation lasted until late 2009, when KYMA replaced it with This TV.

[edit] Digital television

On April 3, 1997, the FCC assigned UHF channel 41 as the digital companion channel for KYMA, and on May 25, 2000, granted a construction permit. KYMA applied for Special Temporary Authorization (STA) for reduced-power operations in order to get a digital signal on the air quickly. The STA was granted on June 7, 2002 and the station built temporary digital facilities, to eventually be replaced by full-power operations. In 2005, KYMA elected and was approved for channel 11 as its permanent digital channel, meaning its license for channel 41 would be returned to the FCC after the analog shut-off, at the time scheduled for February 17, 2009. Since operations on channel 41 would be temporary, KYMA requested to specify its low-power operation as its final pre-transition DTV facilities. The request was approved and the station was granted a license for its digital channel on September 20, 2006. KYMA was granted a construction permit for its post-transition operations on channel 11 on August 19, 2008. These facilities became operational on June 12, 2009, the new date for the DTV transition.

[edit] News/station presentation

[edit] Newscast titles

  • Valley News (1960's)
  • KYMA Eyewitness News 11 (1988–1990)
  • KYMA First News (1990–1996)
  • NewsCenter 11 (1996–1999)
  • NBC NewsChannel 11 (1999–2009)
  • News 11 (2009–Present)

[edit] Station slogans

  • Channel 11 The Ones To watch! (1988–1990)
  • KYMA, Yuma/El Centro's Station (1991–1998)
  • Where News Comes First (1999–present)
Television.svg This film, television or video-related list is incomplete; you can help by expanding it with reliably sourced additions.

[edit] On-air staff

[edit] Current on-air staff

Anchors

  • Christi Rodriguez - Weeknights "Early Edition", "Evening Edition" and "Nightside" 5PM, 6PM and 10PM
  • Patrick Walker - Weeknights "Early Edition", "Evening Edition" and "Nightside" 5PM, 6PM and 10PM
  • Rachel Elzufon - Weekdays "Sunrise" 6am (also general assignment reporter)
  • Jon Archuleta - Weekdays "Sunrise" 6am (also general assignment reporter)


Reporters

  • Rachel Elzufon - Imperial Valley reporter
  • Rebecca Buchanan - Weekend Anchor/General Assignment Reporter (also producer)
  • Ernesto Romero - Managing Editor
  • Mitch Punpayuk - Movie Critic


Weather

  • Rob Fram - Weeknights "Early Edition", "Evening Edition" and "Nightside" 5PM, 6PM and 10PM


Sports

  • Matt Boyer - Weekdays 6PM and 10PM


[edit] Former on-air staff

(In alphabetical order)

Personality Position Years at KYMA Currently
Sergio Avila El Centro Bureau Chief 2004–2008 Reporter KSNV-DT Las Vegas, NV
Natasha Curry Anchor/Reporter 2001–2002 Anchor CNN Headline News Atlanta, GA[1]
Alexis DelChiaro Morning Anchor/Reporter 2004–2006 Anchor "Good Morning San Diego" KUSI San Diego, CA[2]
Evanka Osmak Anchor/Reporter 2000s Anchor Rogers Sportsnet Canada
Sara Sandrik Anchor/Reporter/Producer 2004–2006 Sub-Anchor/North Valley Bureau Chief KFSN Fresno, CA[3]
Ashlee Tate Midday anchor and weather 2003–2005 now Ashlee Tate DeMartino Weekend Weather Anchor KTNV Las Vegas, NV[4]

[edit] Notes

[edit] External links

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