KFOL-CD

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KFOL-CD / KJUN-CD
HTV10.png
Houma / Morgan City, Louisiana
United States
City of license Houma, Louisiana
Branding HTV 10
Slogan Stay with the Ones You Know, the Ones Who Know You
Your Local News Leader Since 1985
Channels Digital:
KFOL-CD: 30 (UHF)
Virtual: 30.1 (PSIP)
KJUN-CD: 7 (VHF)
Virtual: 30 (PSIP)
Affiliations Independent
Owner Folse Communications, LLC
Founded Both stations:
August 28, 1989
Call letters' meaning KFOL-CD:
FOLse Communications (owner)
KJUN-CD: K-JUN (Cajun)
Former callsigns KFOL-CD: K30EM, K60GH (CP-never used), K11SY
KJUN-CD: K07UT
Transmitter power KFOL-CD: 15 kW
KJUN-CD: 0.3 kW
Height KFOL-CD: 113 m
KJUN-CD: 100 m
Class Class A
Facility ID KFOL-CD: 24978
KJUN-CD: 24979
Transmitter coordinates KFOL-CD: Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
KJUN-CD: Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
Licensing authority FCC
Public license information: / KJUN-CD Profile
/ KJUN-CD CDBS
Website www.bayoutimelive.com

KFOL-CD, virtual and VHF digital channel 7, is an independent television station located in Houma, Louisiana, United States. The station is locally owned by Folse Communications, LLC (owned by station manager and news anchor Martin Folse). KFOL maintains studio facilities located on Main Street/Highway 24 in downtown Houma; KFOL maintains transmitter facilities located on Hunley Court (southwest of the Saint Louis Bayou) in the city's northeast side. On cable, the station is available on channel 10 on Comcast Xfinity in Houma, Charter Communications in Thibodaux and Bourg, Vision Communications in Larose and AT&T U-verse in New Orleans, and on Allen TV Cable Service channel 71 in Morgan City.

The station's programming is simulcast on translator station KJUN-CD, VHF digital channel 7 and virtual channel 30, in Morgan City. KJUN maintains transmitter facilities located on Highway 70 in rural southern St. Martin Parish (northeast of Morgan City). The two stations utilize the unified brand "HTV 10" ("HTV" meaning "Houma TeleVision").

History

Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found. KFOL and KJUN both first signed on the air on August 28, 1989.

On September 1, 2008, during the height of Hurricane Gustav, KFOL's transmitter tower, located behind its studio facility, collapsed. Interrupting a live news broadcast on the station, anchor Martin Folse thought that the loud crash came from the station's tape library (located behind the studio), until an operator in KFOL/KJUN's control room informed him that the tower had fallen to the ground. Until new transmitter facilities were set up, the station temporarily streamed local news updates focused on Terrebonne Parish via its website. KFOL provided a direct feed to area cable providers, restoring service until a temporary tower was erected.

On January 20, 2014, KFOL began broadcasting from a new studio facility located on Main Street in downtown Houma, within a building that formerly housed a Dupont's Department Store location.

Digital television

Digital channels

KFOL and KJUN's digital channels are multiplexed:

Channel Video Aspect PSIP Short Name Programming[1][2]
30.1 1080i 16:9 HTV-10 Main KFOL-CD/KJUN-CD programming
(digital channel 30.2 simulcasts the main feed with no audio)
30.2 480i 4:3 HTV-10.
30.3 (silent)
30.4 Weather

Analog-to-digital conversion

In 2010, KFOL flash-cut its digital signal into operation through the activation of a new transmitter tower located on the east side of Houma, operating at 15 kW. KJUN also activated its new transmitter facility, operating at 300 watts, near its existing site off of Highway 70. On January 20, 2014, KFOL began broadcasting all in-studio and field segments within its programming in 1080i high definition.

Programming

The two stations generally carry locally-produced programming including news and public affairs programs. Programs broadcast by KFOL/KJUN include the weeknight news, interview and call-in program Bayou Time; the interview program One on One; the New Orleans Saints-focused sports magazine series Saints on the Bayou; the college football analysis program The Charlie Stubbs Show; the sports wrap-up program Friday Night Sports, and The Beat (a series similar in format to the long-running reality series Cops that follows local police officers).

See also

References

External links