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KDUL-LP

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KDUL-LP
KDUL-LP logo
Channels
Programming
AffiliationsDefunct
Ownership
OwnerDuluth Broadcasting Partners
OperatorESI Broadcasting
History
First air date
October 1, 2000 (24 years ago) (2000-10-01)
Last air date
August 31, 2001 (23 years ago) (2001-08-31)
Former call signs
K60EZ (1990s–2000)
Former channel number(s)
Analog: 60 (UHF, 1990s–2000)
UPN, AIN
Call sign meaning
DULuth

KDUL-LP, VHF analog channel 12, was a low-power television station licensed to Duluth, Minnesota, United States, which operated from October 2000 to August 2001.[1] The station was owned by Duluth Broadcasting Partners and managed by ESI Broadcasting. KDUL-LP's office and master control were located in Fitger's Brewery Complex, a popular shopping and entertainment venue. Its transmitter was located on Duluth's Observation Hill.

History

KDUL-LP was originally K60EZ Channel 60, which carried a scrambled version of Nickelodeon as part of an eight-channel subscription TV service which operated in the mid-1990s.

After several missed launch dates, KDUL-LP began regular broadcasting on October 1, 2000, carrying UPN, the American Independent Network, and Entertainment Tonight. It was also carried in Duluth and Superior on channel 16 via Charter Communications. The system also carried then-UPN affiliate KMSP-TV from Minneapolis–Saint Paul as a regional superstation and blacked out UPN programming on KMSP at KDUL-LP's request.

KDUL-LP was to have been co-managed with KWMN-LP Channel 56 in Duluth, another former subscription TV station which was to have carried Pax TV. KWMN never signed on. There were also plans to rebroadcast KDUL-LP on W25CA Channel 25 in Ashland, Wisconsin (later WAST-LP), which also never materialized.

ESI Broadcasting severed its management relationship with the station in April 2001. Shortly thereafter, the owners put the station up for sale and laid off all employees except one technician. The station left the air permanently on August 31, 2001, after news that Charter planned to drop KDUL-LP due to poor video and audio quality; the provider had also taken heavy criticism due to the compulsory blackouts of KMSP during UPN hours despite KDUL-LP barely having a viewable signal. No buyer was ever found.

During its entire run on Channel 12, KDUL-LP operated under construction permit program test authority. The construction permit for Channel 12 was cancelled after KDUL-LP went silent. The FCC deleted KDUL-LP on May 15, 2008, nearly seven years after its last broadcast.

References

  1. ^ NorthPine.com Upper Midwest Broadcasting archive, http://www.northpine.com/broadcast/archive