KTFN
KTFN, virtual channel 65, is a UniMás-affiliated television station licensed to El Paso, Texas, United States and also serving Las Cruces, New Mexico. The station is owned by Entravision Communications, as part of a duopoly with Univision affiliate KINT-TV. The two stations share studios on North Mesa Street/Highway 20 in northwest El Paso; KTFN's transmitter is located atop the Franklin Mountains on the El Paso city limits.
History
The station first signed on the air on June 22, 1991 as KJLF-TV; it originally served as an English-language outlet, formatted as religious independent station. The station was founded by Pete E. Meryl Warren III—who had signed on KCIK-TV in August 1979—and was run by the Warren family, with John Warren serving as the station manager. Initially, KJLF-TV ran mostly Christian-oriented programs mixed with several hours of secular programs such as sporting and hunting shows, westerns, some older sitcoms, public domain movies and low-budget barter cartoons. Gradually, the religious programming decreased and was replaced with more classic sitcoms and cartoons, causing the station to evolve into a more traditional independent.KJLF became a charter affiliate of The WB upon the network's launch on January 11, 1995. The station was sold to White Knight Broadcasting in 1998; afterward, its call letters were changed to KKWB. After KMAZ dropped its affiliation with UPN and switched to Telemundo in 1998, KKWB began carrying UPN programming as a secondary affiliation and acquired many of the syndicated programs that were part of KMAZ's inventory.
The station was sold to the Entravision Communications Corporation in 2001; White Knight had originally agreed to sell KKWB to Univision Communications, who assigned their right to acquire the station to Entravision that October. The sale was opposed by The WB, who filed a lawsuit seeking to block the sale and the concurrent sale of Killeen sister station KAKW to Univision, as KKWB's contract with The WB was not slated to expire until January 11, 2005, and the terms of the sales called for both stations to drop their WB affiliations in favor of Spanish-language programming supplied by Univision. On January 29, 2002, the station became an affiliate of TeleFutura and changed its callsign to KTFN in reflection of its new affiliation. After the switch, WB and UPN network programming in El Paso was provided on cable via their networks' flagship stations in Los Angeles; WB network programming was only available via KTLA, while UPN programming was only available via KCOP-TV—both of which were carried on Time Warner Cable in the area—for the remainder of their runs. This switch left southern New Mexico without a WB affiliate until February 2003, when KRWB-TV began broadcasting. The WB and UPN ceased operations in September 2006 and merged their programming as part of a joint venture between CBS Corporation and Time Warner to form The CW, whose affiliate is KVIA-TV, which carries the network's CW Plus feed on its second digital subchannel.
Digital television
Digital channels
The station's digital signal is multiplexed:Channel | Video | Aspect | PSIP Short Name | Programming |
65.1 | 1080i | KTFN-HD | Main KTFN programming / UniMás | |
65.2 | 480i | Justice | Justice Network | |
65.3 | 480i | Quest | Quest | |
65.4 | 480i | Bienstr | Bienestar TV |
On July 8, 2012, KTFN announced that it would begin airing newfound TeleFutura competitor MundoFox on digital subchannel 65.2, when the network formally launched on August 13, 2012. However, the station began carrying the network upon MundoFox's soft launch two weeks earlier on August 1.
Analog-to-digital conversion
KTFN shut down its analog signal, over UHF channel 65, at noon on June 12, 2009, the official date in which full-power television stations in the United States transitioned from analog to digital broadcasts under federal mandate. The station's digital signal remained on its pre-transition UHF channel 51. Through the use of PSIP, digital television receivers display the station's virtual channel as its former UHF analog channel 65, which was among the high band UHF channels that were removed from broadcasting use as a result of the transition.After regular programming was discontinued on its analog signal, the station, as well as sister station KINT-TV, transmitted a repeated crawl in Spanish informing viewers about the digital transition and advising viewers of their options to continue receiving programming, which ran until KINT permanently ceased analog transmissions at 11:59 p.m.