KVMD

KVMD
Huntington Beach/Los Angeles, California
United States
City Huntington Beach, California
Channels Digital: 23 (UHF)
Virtual: 31 (UHF)
Affiliations TV Unidos
Owner KVMD TV, LLC. (Ronald Ulloa)
First air date December 1, 1997
Sister station(s) KXLA, KJLA
Former channel number(s) Analog:
31 (UHF, 1997-2003)
Former affiliations

America One (1997-2003)
Independent (2003-2016)

effective_radiated_power = 150 kW ERP
Height 784 m
Facility ID 16729
Transmitter coordinates 34°2′16.8″N 116°48′49.9″W / 34.038000°N 116.813861°W / 34.038000; -116.813861

KVMD is a Spanish Religious Programming as a TVUnidos affiliate licensed to Huntington Beach, California, USA. The broadcast signal covers all the Greater Los Angeles Area on digital UHF channel 23. KVMD-DT is also available on DirecTV and Dish Network on channel 31, its former analog channel. The station is also seen throughout the Los Angeles media market on various cable TV systems.

The station broadcasts digitally on nine subchannels. KVMD is dedicated to providing free over-the-air programming to minority groups in southern California. Currently programming is offered in Spanish. Mandarin Chinese, Vietnamese, English, and Armenian. KVMD's owner, Ronald Ulloa, is also president and majority owner of KXLA.

KVMD's transmitter is located atop Snow Peak in the San Bernardino Mountains north of Banning, California.

KVMD has subchannels in other languages serving the region's Asian American community.

History

On December 1, 1997 on analog channel 31, KVMD signed on. While its analog signal was rather weak and could not generally be received beyond Twentynine Palms and Yucca Valley, it sought and obtained carriage on many cable television systems throughout Southern California, as well as satellite TV, due to its fortuitous location in the outskirts of the Los Angeles DMA and Federal Communications Commission (FCC) must-carry rules. KVMD started out broadcasting America One programming. On July 29, 2002, its digital signal went on the air on channel 23. This signal is much stronger, potentially reaching 80 times as many viewers over the air as its analog signal, and reaching most of the Inland Empire. It also reaches a good portion of Los Angeles, Orange and part of San Diego counties.

On June 1, 2003, KVMD became the first station in the country to shut off its analog channel and go digital-only, in support of the government-mandated digital transition.

On June 1, 2008, KVMD started to air ARTN Armenian programming every night.

DirecTV Carriage

KVMD ceased programming on DirecTV's local standard-definition coverage on December 19, 2007 but returned on October 31, 2008.

Digital channels

Channel Programming
31.1 TV Unidos (Spanish Religious)
31.2 University of Guadalajara (Spanish Cultural/Educational) XHUDG-TDT
31.3/31.7 OnTV4U (English)
31.4 GDTV World American Edition (Cantonese/Mandarin)
31.5 Creation TV USA (Cantonese/Mandarin)
31.6 OnTV4U (Spanish)
31.8 WCETV / CCTV-4 (Mandarin)
31.9 CCTV News (English)
31.10 Spanish infomercials

References

    This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 12/4/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.