Oklahoma Educational Television Authority

Oklahoma Educational Television Authority
Oklahoma Educational Television Authority
Oeta.png
statewide Oklahoma
Branding OETA
Slogan The Oklahoma Network
Channels Analog: see table below
Digital: see table below
Affiliations PBS
Owner Oklahoma Educational Television Authority
First air date April 13, 1956
Former affiliations NET (1956-1970)
Website www.oeta.tv

OETA (Oklahoma Educational Television Authority), is a state network of Public Broadcasting Service (PBS) member Non-commercial educational Public television stations covering the entire state of Oklahoma.

The state network is primarily broadcast from facilities located on North Kelley Avenue in Oklahoma City (adjacent to the studios of Oklahoma City's CBS affiliate KWTV), and operates a satellite studio in Tulsa.

Contents

History

OETA traces its history to 1953, when the Oklahoma state legislature created a statute forming the Oklahoma Educational Television Authority, to provide Educational television programming to Oklahomans on a coordinated statewide basis; made possible with cooperation from the state's educational, government and cultural agencies. After securing a Broadcast license from the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) and funding from various groups, KETA was finally able to sign on the air as the flagship on April 13, 1956, as the nation's 11th educational television station, and the first Non-commercial station in the state. It was originally associated with National Educational Television until it became the Public Broadcasting Service in 1970, taking over many of the functions of its predecessor.

From 1959 to 1978, three more stations signed on, extending OETA's signal to portions of Kansas, Missouri, Arkansas and Texas. A satellite station, KOED, channel 11 in Tulsa, went on the air January 12, 1959. When KOED came online, OETA became the second operational educational television state network in the United States (after the present-day Alabama Public Television).

On December 1, 1977 KOET, Channel 3 in Eufala joined the state network, as a satellite of KOED to serve areas of east-central Oklahoma (in some areas of east-central Oklahoma, KOET's signal runs into the signal of its Tulsa satellite KOED, and in other areas, runs into the signal of Oklahoma City's KETA). Finally, on August 6, 1978 KWET, channel 12, in Cheyenne signed on to serve west-central and southwestern Oklahoma and a small portion of the eastern Texas panhandle.

OETA's full-power stations cover roughly 80 percent of Oklahoma's population. The only portions of Oklahoma not served by a full-power over-the-air OETA member station are the panhandle, and northwest, south-central and southeast parts of the state; however these areas are served by low-power translators of the state network.

OETA's flagship news program is the weeknightly Oklahoma News Report, which has aired since 1976. In 2003, the stations began their first digital television broadcasts, in 2005 they began broadcasting select PBS programs in high definition, and in 2006 the organization launched a full-time digital channel, OETA OKLA, devoted to local and regional programs.

In December 2008, OETA began producing most of its local productions in High Definition, including the Oklahoma News Report, OKC Metro, Stateline and Tulsa Times.

On February 17, 2009 at 1PM, KETA-TV's (Oklahoma City) and KOED-TV's (Tulsa) analog transmitter was shut down for the DTV conversion. On March 31, 2009 at 9:00AM, KWET-TV (Cheyenne) and KOET-TV (Eufala) shut down their analog signal. All the state translators went digital-only on June 12, 2009.

Purchase of KAUT and conversion to "The Literacy Channel" (1991-1998)

From 1991 to 1998, OETA owned and ran KAUT channel 43 as secondary PBS member station KTLC. Then-independent station KOKH (channel 25) was sold to KAUT's former owner Heritage Broadcasting in 1991, and KAUT's programming moved to KOKH, who assumed that station's Fox affiliation. Heritage then sold KAUT to OETA in a similar deal to one Pappas Telecasting made in 1988, in which KGMC (channel 34, now KOCB) and KAUT (channel 43)'s programming inventories (along with KAUT's Fox affiliation) would move to KOKH. As part of the deal, KOCB would become a Home Shopping Network affiliate, while KAUT would become an educational station. The original sale fell through in 1989, and the three stations continued on as rival independents until 1991, when Heritage traded KAUT to OETA.

In the summer of 1991, KAUT changed its callsign to KTLC, meaning "The Literacy Channel", which the station used as its branding. Despite the name, however, its emphasis wasn't entirely on literacy. After the switch to a secondary PBS member station, KTLC's schedule included fitness programs weekday mornings from 7 to 8:30 a.m., instructional programming and select PBS series (including The NewsHour with Jim Lehrer) in the late evenings, and children's programming from mid-morning to early evening (PBS member stations typically air children's programming from sunrise until late afternoon). Most of the programs were rebroadcasts from KETA.

KTLC scaled back its broadcast schedule, ending its broadcast day at midnight, as OETA did at the time. The weekend lineup initially retained the same broadcast day period as it did on weekdays, but KTLC reduced its program hours on weekends from 4:00 p.m. to midnight in 1995. The city's cable operator, Cox Communications filled non-programming hours with QVC programming on cable Channel 13 (the station now airs on Cox channel 16). OETA eventually found it hard to run two stations in Oklahoma City, so it decided to sell KTLC. In January 1998, KOCB announced that it would switch its affiliation from UPN to The WB, as a result of a deal by Sinclair Broadcast Group (which operated the station under a Local Marketing Agreement at the time) in which its UPN affiliates and independent stations would affiliate with The WB, Paramount Stations Group (now CBS Television Stations Group) then later agreed to buy KTLC.

Channel 43 returned to a general entertainment format on June 20, 1998 at 5 a.m. as KPSG, named after its new owner. KPSG still aired educational shows from 7 a.m. to noon, followed by a general entertainment format consisting of classic sitcoms, cartoons, UPN primetime shows, and movies. That fall, the station became a full-time general entertainment station, removing PBS educational shows (though the station would continue to simulcast OETA pledge drives until 2003). The station changed its callsign back to the original KAUT in November 1998, following the death of station founder Gene Autry. KAUT today is now a MyNetworkTV affiliate, owned by Local TV, in a duopoly with NBC affiliate KFOR-TV.

Stations

Station City of license Channels
(Digital)
First air date Call letters’
meaning
ERP
(Digital)
HAAT
(Digital)
Facility ID Transmitter Coordinates
KETA-TV Oklahoma City 32 (UHF)
(Virtual: 13)
April 13, 1956 Oklahoma
Educational
Television
Authority
1000 kW 465.2 m 50205 35°35′52″N 97°29′23″W / 35.59778°N 97.48972°W / 35.59778; -97.48972 (KETA-TV)
KOED-TV Tulsa 38 (UHF)
(Virtual: 11)
January 12, 1959 Oklahoma
EDucational
1000 kW 395.8 m 66195 36°1′15″N 95°40′32″W / 36.02083°N 95.67556°W / 36.02083; -95.67556 (KOED-TV)
KOET Eufaula 31 (UHF)
(Virtual: 3)
December 1, 1977 Oklahoma
Educational
Television
1000 kW 364.1 m 50198 35°11′1″N 95°20′21″W / 35.18361°N 95.33917°W / 35.18361; -95.33917 (KOET)
KWET Cheyenne 8 (VHF)
(Virtual: 12)
August 6, 1978 Western Oklahoma
Educational
Television
30 kW 303.2 m 50194 35°35′37″N 99°40′3″W / 35.59361°N 99.6675°W / 35.59361; -99.6675 (KWET)

Translators

Direct repeaters of KETA:

Direct repeaters of KOET:

Direct repeaters of KWET:

KOED in Tulsa has no translators relaying its over-the-air signal, as KOED's signal adequately covers northeastern Oklahoma, coupled along with the overlapping signals of fellow PBS member stations KOZJ in Joplin, Missouri and KAFT in Fayetteville, Arkansas.

OETA's translators reach into portions of Kansas and Texas, while KOET's over-the-air signal reaches parts of Western Arkansas and is carried by Cox Cable in Fort Smith on channel 9. Some of the donations for OETA's Festival and AugustFest pledge drives come from those states.

Digital television

The digital channels of OETA's main stations are multiplexed:

Channel Video Aspect Name Programming
xx.1 1080i 16:9 OETADT1 Main OETA Programming / PBS
xx.2 480i 4:3 OETADT2 OETA OKLA

OETA Kids and OETA Create were also carried as the third and fourth digital subchannels of all four full-power OETA digital stations until 2008. Since then, they are currently operating as cable-only channels and are available on Cox Digital Cable in these areas.

Cable and satellite availability

OETA is carried on all Oklahoma cable systems. On satellite, KETA, KOED and KOET are carried on the Oklahoma City, Tulsa and Fort Smith DirecTV and Dish Network feeds, respectively.

Programming

OETA airs 17½ hours of instructional programming a week. Instructional programming airs weekdays from 5:00 (or 6:00am) to 7:00am and 10:00am to 12 (or 12:30pm) and weekends from 6:00 to 8:00am.

OETA is one of several PBS member stations to produce programming for syndication to other PBS stations around the country as well as to the OETA state network itself. OETA produces series under the banner, OETA: The Oklahoma Network. It distributes The Kalb Report, hosted by Marvin Kalb.[1]

In September 1986, OETA began syndication of episodes of The Lawrence Welk Show, after that series left commercial syndication. The Lawrence Welk Show is OETA's most-watched series. OETA has also produced Lawrence Welk specials.

OETA also is known for the OETA Movie Club hosted by B.J. Wexler, for more than two decades. OETA Movie Club features classic movies from the 1930s to the 1980s.

OETA also produces Stateline which deals with issues important to Oklahoma and also the United States and Gallery, focusing on Oklahoma's art community.

During the early 2000s, on cable outlets around the state, OETA aired programming from PBS' national feed to fill the time from sign-off at night to sign-on in the morning. The national feed began broadcasting over the air in April 2006 making OETA one of the few broadcast stations in the last decade to switch to a 24-hour format.

News operation

OETA is one of only a handful of PBS stations to produce a local newscast. The Oklahoma News Report is anchored by Dick Pryor, Angela Rosecrans and Lis Exon. It originally featured clips of special reports from newscasts in the Oklahoma City and Tulsa area. The newscast airs weekdays (except on Independence Day, Labor Day, Thanksgiving Day and the day after, Christmas Eve and Christmas Day, and New Year's Eve and New Year's Day). The newscast features reports from its offices in Oklahoma City and Tulsa, OETA's Stateline and Gallery units, the State Department of Agriculture, Food and Forestry, the Oklahoma Department of Career and Technology Education and Oklahoma's commercial television stations.

The newscast features the traditional news and also the following:

  • In July 2010, started a strictly news oriented show without any weather, unless it was a news story.
  • The newscast has no sports coverage, but occasionally features sports related stories.
  • The newscast airs a stock market segment featuring the day's closing numbers of the Dow Jones and NASDAQ markets and stocks on businesses that do business in Oklahoma (Kerr-McGee, ConocoPhillips, etc.)

On July 1, 2011, the Oklahoma News Report signed off for the last time as a weeknightly news program, citing a 9% cut in OETA's budget by the Oklahoma state legislature as the reason, the newscast's timeslot was replaced with the PBS NewsHour as part of a shuffling of OETA's early evening news block as a result of the removal of ONR as a weekdaily newscast; ONR relaunched as a once-a-week newsmagazine on July 15, 2011, airing on Friday nights only.[2]

News/station presentation

Newscast titles

  • Oklahoma News Report (1980-present)

Station slogans

  • The Oklahoma Network (2004-present; also name for OETA's production/syndication unit)

On-air staff

Current on-air staff (as of July 21, 2011)

Anchors
  • Gerry Bonds - host of OKC Metro
  • Lis Exon - general assignment reporter/Tulsa News Manager/co-anchor, "The Oklahoma News Report" (ONR)
  • Dick Pryor - co-anchor, "The Oklahoma News Report" (ONR) ; also host of Oklahoma Forum
  • Angela Rosecrans - general assignment reporter/co-anchor, "The Oklahoma News Report" (ONR)
Reporters
  • Steve Bennett - general assignment reporter
  • Robert Burch - general assignment reporter
  • Susan Miller - general assignment reporter
  • Bob Sands - general assignment reporter
  • Cathy Tatom - general assignment reporter
Photojournalists
  • Aaron Byrd
  • Tim Carson
  • Pius Mburu
  • Edwin Wilson

Office location

OETA is located on 7403 North Kelley Ave. in Oklahoma City, next door to the studios of CBS affiliate KWTV (channel 9). The phone number is 405-848-8501. OETA has a Tulsa office and is located at 811 North Sheridan Road in Tulsa. The phone number is 918-838-7611. In March 2011, they will be moving into their new facility built on the OSU-Tulsa campus.

References

  1. ^ http://kalb.gwu.edu/series.html
  2. ^ OETA changes nightly ‘Oklahoma News Report' to weekly show, NewsOK.com, June 29, 2011.

External links

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