KTVQ (channel 2) is a
television station in
Billings, Montana, United States, affiliated with
CBS and
The CW Plus. Owned by the
E. W. Scripps Company
The E. W. Scripps Company is an American broadcasting company founded in 1878 as a chain of daily newspapers by Edward Willis "E. W." Scripps and his sister, Ellen Browning Scripps. It was also formerly a media conglomerate. The company is he ...
, it is part of the
Montana Television Network
The Montana Television Network (MTN) is a statewide network of CBS affiliates in the U.S. state of Montana. It also includes one NBC station. All but one of these stations are owned by the E. W. Scripps Company. Five of the full-powered MTN stati ...
, a statewide network of CBS-affiliated stations. KTVQ's studios are located on Third Avenue North in Billings, and its transmitter is located on Sacrifice Cliff southeast of downtown.
History
The Montana Network, owner of radio station
KOOK (970 AM), applied on December 13, 1952, for a construction permit to build a new TV station on channel 2 in Billings, which was granted by the
Federal Communications Commission (FCC) on February 4, 1953.
The turnaround time was short considering that Robert S. Howard, who owned Scripps-associated radio and newspaper holdings in Utah and Idaho, had also applied for channel 2, but his firm dropped its bid and cleared the way for The Montana Network. KOOK had already revealed it had held an option for two years to build a transmitter site on
Coburn Hill
Coburn Hill is located southeast of Billings, Montana in Yellowstone County. Its most predominant feature is Sacrifice Cliffs, part of the Rimrocks surrounding the city. Another feature is several radio and television broadcast towers located on ...
. Ground was broken on the studio and transmitter facilities there in early June, and programming from KOOK-TV began on November 9, 1953. It was the third station in the state:
Butte's
KXLF-TV had begun in August, and a second station,
KOPR-TV
KOPR-TV was a television station on channel 4 in Butte, Montana, United States, which operated from 1953 to 1954. It was owned by the Copper Broadcasting Company alongside KOPR (550 AM) and was the second outlet in Butte and the state, broadcast ...
, had started there at about the same time. KOOK-TV was affiliated with CBS,
ABC
ABC are the first three letters of the Latin script known as the alphabet.
ABC or abc may also refer to:
Arts, entertainment, and media Broadcasting
* American Broadcasting Company, a commercial U.S. TV broadcaster
** Disney–ABC Television ...
and the
DuMont Television Network
The DuMont Television Network (also known as the DuMont Network, DuMont Television, simply DuMont/Du Mont, or (incorrectly) Dumont ) was one of America's pioneer commercial television networks, rivaling NBC and CBS for the distinction of being ...
at launch.
In December 1956, Joseph Sample acquired majority control of KOOK radio and television from its previous ownership, headed by
Charles L. Crist, a state representative. A year later, KOOK broke ground on a new radio and television center in downtown Billings, which was completed in 1959; three homes were moved off the property before construction began. By the time the building was completed, a second television station, KGHL-TV (channel 8, now
KULR-TV), had begun in 1958.
Sample later expanded his holdings across the state. In 1961, he acquired KXLF in Butte;
in 1969, he purchased
KRTV
KRTV (channel 3) is a television station in Great Falls, Montana, United States, affiliated with CBS and The CW Plus. It is owned by the E. W. Scripps Company alongside KTVH-DT, KTGF-LD (channel 50), the local NBC affiliate, and is part of the Mo ...
in
Great Falls
Great may refer to: Descriptions or measurements
* Great, a relative measurement in physical space, see Size
* Greatness, being divine, majestic, superior, majestic, or transcendent
People
* List of people known as "the Great"
*Artel Great (born ...
, giving his Garryowen Broadcasting coverage of half the state's population. The Montana Television Network was formed that same year
from these stations and
KPAX-TV in
Missoula, which was built in 1970. In 1972, seeking to get ahead of a proposed FCC rule that would have barred radio-television cross-ownership, Sample sold KOOK radio; the call letters were retained by the radio station, and the television station changed its call sign to KTVQ on September 5, 1972. The new designation was chosen because the station had exhausted its preferred options, it was available, "Q2" (which became the station's moniker) was a branding option, and due to a since-repealed FCC regulation prohibiting TV and radio stations in the same market, but different ownership, from sharing the same call signs.
In 1968, channel 2 picked up a secondary affiliation with NBC after KULR opted to take a primary affiliation with ABC. This was unusual for a two-station market, especially one as small as Billings. In 1979, for instance, KTVQ aired 17 CBS prime time shows and 10 from NBC, the networks with which it had first call on their programs; ABC shows were all seen on KULR, which rounded out its schedule with five additional shows not cleared by KTVQ. It shared NBC with KULR; in 1980, KTVQ became a primary CBS affiliate.
KOUS (channel 4) launched late that year and immediately took all NBC programming that KTVQ did not clear; NBC fare aired by KTVQ at the time included ''
The Today Show'', ''
The Tonight Show'', and several prime time shows, and some of these programs lasted on channel 2 until KTVQ's NBC affiliation contract ended in 1982.
After nearly 27 years owning KTVQ and feeling "burned out" with television, Sample sold the Montana Television Network in 1983 to
SJL Broadcasting
Sir John Lawes School (also known as SJL) is a mixed state secondary school with academy status in Harpenden, United Kingdom. The school has close links to two other local secondary schools, Roundwood Park School and St George's School, an ...
.
Evening Post Industries (through its
Cordillera Communications subsidiary) bought it in 1994 for $8.5 million; this reunited KTVQ with the rest of MTN, which it had purchased in 1986. Scripps closed on its purchase of the Cordillera broadcast properties, including MTN, in 2019.
News operation
In 1971, MTN instituted a hybrid local-regional newscast format. The network news was presented from Great Falls, as that was the only place that could receive feeds from all of the MTN stations at the same time; the Billings, Butte, and (from 1977) Missoula stations presented local news inserts into the statewide program.
However, in Billings, KTVQ had long been the second-place news finisher behind KULR-TV.
One of Sample's last acts as owner of MTN, at the same time he sold the network to Lilly, was to move production of MTN News from Great Falls to Billings in hopes that it would improve MTN's laggard position in the Billings news ratings. Ed Coghlan, who had been the lead anchor from Great Falls, was replaced by Dean Phillips. The order of the newscast was changed to put the local inserts first, and MTN's long-running ''Today in Montana''—which also originated in Great Falls—added news and weather segments aired from Billings.
Despite the use of longer interview segments and in-depth reports, Phillips's style was often seen as too big-city for Montanans; Vic Bracht of ''
The Billings Gazette'' cited an "arrogance factor" that became known even to people who did not watch MTN. Phillips was replaced by Gus Koernig, and the station's ratings immediately improved. In February 1987, both Arbitron and Nielsen found KTVQ to be beating KULR-TV in all time slots. By 1997, KTVQ enjoyed a two-to-one ratings advantage over its competitor for its early evening newscast.
In 1995, President
Bill Clinton visited Billings and KTVQ, where he conducted a televised town hall meeting.
In 1990, KTVQ's newscasts began to be seen on
KXGN-TV channel 5 in
Glendive
Glendive is a city in and the county seat of Dawson County, Montana, United States, and home to Dawson Community College. Glendive was established by the Northern Pacific Railway when they built the transcontinental railroad across the northern ...
when that station joined MTN.
Technical information
Subchannels
The station's digital signal is
multiplexed:
In February 2009, the four major commercial stations in the Billings market were refused
Federal Communications Commission permission to end analog broadcasts and operate as digital-only effective on the originally-scheduled February 17, 2009 date.
Translators
References
External links
KTVQ.com- Official KTVQ-TV website
CWBillings.com- Official CW Billings website
{{EWS CORP
CBS network affiliates
Grit (TV network) affiliates
Defy TV affiliates
Scripps News affiliates
Montana Television Network
Television channels and stations established in 1953
1953 establishments in Montana
TVQ
TVQ is the Brisbane television station of Network 10 in Australia.
History
In April 1964, the Postmaster-General's Department granted Universal Telecasters a broadcasting licence. The channel was allocated channel 0 (the 0 was pronounced as ...
E. W. Scripps Company television stations