KPAL-LP

Television station in Greater Los Angeles
CityPalmdale/Los Angeles, CaliforniaChannels
  • Digital: 22 (UHF)
  • Virtual: 38 (UHF)
BrandingHometown Television for the Antelope ValleyProgrammingAffiliationsDefunctOwnershipOwnerKPAL Television, Inc.HistoryFoundedSeptember 27, 1989
First air date
October 17, 1990 (1990-10-17)
Last air date
June 15, 2010 (2010-06-15)
(19 years, 241 days)
Former call signs
K38CW (1990-1996)
Former affiliations
  • Network One (1993-1997)
  • America One (1997-2001)
  • UATV (2001-2006)
  • Independent (1990-1993, 2006-2010)
Technical informationFacility ID22179ClassClass AERP2.6 kWHAAT793 m

KPAL-LP was a low-power Class A television station in Palmdale, California, broadcasting locally in analog on UHF channel 38 as an Independent station. Founded September 27, 1989, and its studios in Lancaster.

History

On September 27, 1989, the FCC granted an original construction permit to Xenia Renatta Izzo to build a low-power television station to serve Palmdale. The station was to operate on UHF channel 38 and was given callsign K38AW. Izzo licensed the station on October 17, 1990. In October 1992, Izzo agreed to sell the station to Four Pals Community Television Inc., a four-way equal partnership. The FCC approved the deal in May 1993 and the parties finalized a month later. The station took the call letters KPAL-LP in September 1996 and upgraded its license to Class A on July 9, 2001. In December 2003, following the death of one of the members, Four Pals Community Television reorganized as KPAL Television, Inc., a partnership between the three surviving members [1][permanent dead link]. In 2005 and 2006, the station received Special Temporary Authorization (STA)to decrease its signal strength from the licensed 4.77 kW. As of November 2006, the station operates at 2.6 kW, but with a broadcast pattern that better serves the community with improved coverage of Lancaster [2][permanent dead link].

Although KPAL had applications pending with the FCC to convert to digital transmission mode, move to channel 22, and transfer ownership to Venture Technologies Group, the station's license was abruptly cancelled by the FCC on July 13, 2012; the STA was terminated and all of the pending applications were dismissed [3][permanent dead link]. The station no longer appears in the FCC database.

Programming

KPAL-LP was an independent television station aimed at the local community. Its schedule consisted of news, general entertainment, children's and religious programming. However, paid programming filled much of the broadcast day. The station had been affiliated in the past with defunct networks Network One and UATV, and with America One [4][5].

External links

  • Facility details for Facility ID 22179 (KPAL-LP) in the FCC Licensing and Management System
  • v
  • t
  • e
Broadcast television in Southern California, including Los Angeles, Orange and Ventura counties, and portions of the Inland Empire
English-language
stations
Public television
Foreign language stations
  • v
  • t
  • e
Foreign-language television stations in the greater Los Angeles area
Spanish
Armenian
  • KIIO-LD 10 (.1 USArmenia, .2 ARTN, .3 Horizon Armenian TV, .4 AABC TV, .5 H2 TV, .6, amga, .8 Kentron TV, .11 ARM Music)
  • KNET-CD 25 (.2 Pan Armenian, .3 1USA)
Chinese
Mandarin
KVMD 31 (.2 HTTV, .8 WCETV)
KMEX-DT 34 (.5 Super TV)
KXLA 44 (.2 Sino TV, .3 SkyLink-3, .7 NTDTV)
KJLA 57 (.9 ZWTV)
Cantonese
KXLA 44 (.4 SkyLink-2)
Farsi
KIIO-LD 10 (.1 Ind.)
Korean
Vietnamese
  • KDOC-TV 56 (.5 SET, .7 LSTV, .9 KDHL)
  • KJLA 57 (.2 VietFace TV, .3 VNATV, .4 Viet Sky,. 5 Saigon, .6 VBS, .7 Diamond King, .8 IBC, .10 Viet Pho, .11 VStar, .12 Global Mall, .13 VCAL, .16 S)
Multilingual
Outlying areas
ATSC 3.0 digital
Local cable channels
Local streaming channels
Defunct stations
Adjacent areas
  • Phoenix
  • Las Vegas
California television
Bakersfield
Chico–Redding
Eureka
Fresno
Los Angeles
Medford OR
Monterey
Inland Empire (Palm Springs)
Reno NV
Sacramento
San Diego
San Francisco
Santa Barbara
El Centro CA / Yuma AZ


Stub icon

This article about a television station in California is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it.

  • v
  • t
  • e