KSTU

KSTU
In a white box trimmed in blue, the Fox network logo — the uppercase letters FOX in a sans serif — next to a blue box containing the numeral 13 in a serif. Beneath the box are the words Salt Lake City in a sans serif, tracked slightly wide.
Channels
BrandingFox 13; Fox 13 News
Programming
Affiliations
Ownership
Owner
KUPX-TV
History
First air date
October 24, 1978 (45 years ago) (1978-10-24), on channel 20[a]
Former channel number(s)
  • Analog: 20 (UHF, 1978–1987), 13 (VHF, 1987–2009)
Independent (1978–1986)
Call sign meaning
Springfield Television of Utah, original owners
Technical information[1]
Licensing authority
FCC
Facility ID22215
ERP350 kW
HAAT1,210 m (3,970 ft)
Transmitter coordinates40°39′32.8″N 112°12′10.8″W / 40.659111°N 112.203000°W / 40.659111; -112.203000
Links
Public license information
Websitefox13now.com

KSTU (channel 13) is a television station in Salt Lake City, Utah, United States, affiliated with the Fox network. It is owned by the E. W. Scripps Company alongside Provo-licensed independent station KUPX-TV (channel 16). KSTU's studios are located on West Amelia Earhart Drive in the northwestern section of Salt Lake City, and its transmitter is located on Farnsworth Peak in the Oquirrh Mountains, southwest of Salt Lake City. More than 80 dependent translators carry its signal throughout Utah and portions of neighboring states.

KSTU went on the air in 1978 as the third attempt at an independent station in the Salt Lake City market. It was by far the most successful to date; it was the first independent in the market to last longer than two years. Broadcasting on channel 20, it was also the first commercial UHF outlet in the state. It was built by and named for Springfield Television, the Massachusetts-based firm that owned it. KSTU was sold to Adams Communications in 1984 and affiliated with Fox at its launch in 1986.

While KSTU was starting on channel 20, a decade-long proceeding began to assign VHF channel 13, which had been made available in Salt Lake City in 1980. Eight applicants submitted bids; Mountain West Television, a consortium of mostly local partners, emerged with the construction permit after buying out its competitors' interests. In what the partners later described as coerced action coordinated by their legal counsel and financial backers, the company bought KSTU's intellectual property and moved it to channel 13 in November 1987 instead of building and staffing its own station.

Between 1989 and 2007, KSTU was a Fox owned-and-operated station. In 1991, the station began producing local newscasts, which Fox and subsequent owners would use as the foundation for a large emphasis on news. After Fox spun off its smaller owned-and-operated stations in 2007, KSTU has been owned in succession by Local TV LLC, Tribune Media, and Scripps.


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  1. ^ "Facility Technical Data for KSTU". Licensing and Management System. Federal Communications Commission.