KRQE

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KRQE
Albuquerque, New Mexico
Branding KRQE News 13
Slogan Balanced News.
Earning Your Trust.
Channels Analog: 13 (VHF)

Digital: 16 (UHF)

Affiliations CBS
Owner LIN TV Corporation
(LIN of New Mexico, LLC)
First air date October 1953[1]
Call letters’ meaning AlbuqueRQuE
Sister station(s) KASA-TV
Former callsigns KGGM-TV (1953-1992)
Former affiliations Secondary:
UPN, The WB (January-October 1995)
Transmitter Power 87.1 kW (analog)
75 kW (digital)
Height 1287 m (analog)
1268 m (digital)
Facility ID 48575
Transmitter Coordinates 35°12′40.3″N, 106°26′59.3″W
Website www.krqe.com

KRQE is a local television news station in Albuquerque, New Mexico. It is a CBS network affiliate and broadcasts on channel 13. KRQE is currently owned by LIN TV and is sister station to KASA-TV. Its transmitter is located on Sandia Crest, east of Albuquerque.

Contents

[edit] History

Channel 13 began operation in October of 1953 as KGGM-TV, owned by the Hebenstreit family's New Mexico Broadcasting Company along with KGGM radio. In the late 1960s, the Hebenstreits sold a minority share to Chicago's Harriscope Broadcasting, which at one point owned Telemundo's WSNS Chicago.

The Hebenstreits sold KGGM-TV to Lee Enterprises in 1991, and at that time the call letters were changed to KRQE. However, the name "New Mexico Broadcasting Company" continued on the station's license well into the 21st century.

In January of 1995 KRQE became a secondary UPN and WB affiliate running their programming on weekend overnights initially. They still continued as a primary CBS affiliate. In October of 1995 KASY (which was owned by Ramar Communications at the time) signed on channel 50. At that time, KRQE bought the entire broadcast day on KASY in the form of a local marketing agreement. KRQE moved the UPN and WB shows to Channel 50 along with second runs of a few talk shows airing on Channel 13 as well. They also ran cartoons and sitcoms on Channel 50. Channel 13 remained a CBS affiliate.

In 1999 Ramar sold KASY to Acme TV which also owns KWBQ (which signed on the previous year). As a result, the LMA with KRQE was terminated and KASY was then programmed by KWBQ.

Lee would eventually exit broadcasting and sold KRQE to Emmis Communications in 2000. In 2005, Emmis sold the station to LIN Television (the station's current owner) in a group deal. In 2006, LIN announced their purchase of Raycom Media-owned Fox affiliate KASA-TV, which KRQE took control of on September 15th. LIN's acquisition of KASA was finalized on February 22, 2007. [1]

KBIM-TV, Channel 10 in Roswell, New Mexico signed on in 1966 as the CBS affiliate for Southeastern New Mexico, replacing former CBS affiliate KAVE-TV in Carlsbad, New Mexico, which became an ABC affiliate. KREZ-TV, Channel 6 in Durango, Colorado originated in 1963 as a satellite of CBS affiliate KREX-TV 5 in Grand Junction, Colorado, becoming a KRQE satellite in 1994.

On May 18, 2007, LIN TV announced that it was exploring strategic alternatives that could result in the sale of the company.[2]

[edit] Satellite stations

These stations rebroadcast KRQE's signal and add local content for other parts of the broadcast market:

Station City of license Channels
(Analog/
Digital)
First air date ERP
(Analog/
Digital)
HAAT
(Analog/
Digital)
Facility ID Transmitter Coordinates
KBIM-TV Roswell, New Mexico 10 (VHF)
41 (UHF)
February 19661 316 kW
50 kW
610 m
26.7 m
48556 33°3′19.2″N, 103°49′20.9″W (analog)
33°21′2″N, 104°31′22″W (digital)
KREZ-TV2 Durango, Colorado 6 (VHF)
15 (UHF)
September 4, 1965 6.17 kW
46 kW
110 m
90.4 m
48589 37°15′45.5″N, 107°54′0.4″W

Notes:

In addition, there are several low-powered repeaters that carry KRQE's programming throughout New Mexico.

[edit] News

Ordinarily, KRQE produces four and a half hours of local news on weekdays and about an hour each weekend day. The station and its newscasts identify themselves as "KRQE News 13".

According to Nielsen Media Research, the station was long the number three station in the market in terms of local viewership, primarily because of CBS' ratings problems in markets that serve vast areas such as Albuquerque-Santa Fe, especially since the 1970s. However, it is now competing for the number one spot in a tight three-way race with the two other major network affiliates, KOB and KOAT.

Since September 15, 2006, KRQE also produces a one-hour, 9 pm newscast for co-owned Fox affiliate KASA-TV.

[edit] On-air personalities

Anchors
  • Dick Knipfing: Weeknight Anchor
  • Dianne Anderson: Weeknight Anchor
  • Mike Powers: Weekday Morning Anchor
  • Greg Gurule: Weekday 4:30PM and Weekend Evening Anchor
  • Deanna Sauceda: Noon and 4PM Anchor
  • Kim Vallez: Weekend Anchor
  • Kim Stecklein: KBIM NEWS 10 Roswell Weeknight Anchor
Reporters
  • Tim Maestas: General Assignment Reporter
  • Annie McCormick: General Assignment Reporter
  • Bob Martin: "Skyranger" Pilot Reporter
  • Addie Knowlton: General Assignment Reporter/Weekend Anchor
  • Larry Barker: Investigative Reporter
Weather
  • Mark Ronchetti: Chief Meteorologist
  • Mike Hernandez (AMS): Morning Meteorologist
  • Jason Laney: Meteorologist
  • Travis Christy: Weekend Meteorologist
Sports
  • Van Tate: Sports Director, seen weeknights
  • Roland Glembine: Weekend Sports Anchor

[edit] News

[edit] Newscast titles

  • Newsroom 13
  • News 13
  • Q-13 News
  • 13 News
  • CBS Southwest News
  • KRQE News 13

[edit] KBIM newscast titles

  • Active 10 News
  • The News on Ten
  • 10 News
  • CBS Southwest News
  • KBIM News 10

[edit] Station slogans

  • We've Got The Touch, You & channel 13 (1980s)
  • Balanced News. Earning Your Trust. (2003-present)

[edit] Trivia

  • KRQE is one of few CBS affiliates not to air daytime network programming in a specific order. As The World Turns airs at 10 AM (should air at 1 PM as the third soap), The Price Is Right airs at 11 AM (should air at 10 AM), The Young and The Restless airs at 1 PM (should air first at 11 AM) and CBS Evening News would air at 5 PM (should air at 5:30 PM).[citation needed]
  • Many early Westerns were filmed, at least partially, at KGGM. The large studio that they used is now KRQE's "Newsplex," a combination newsroom and news studio.[citation needed]
  • Among many alumni at KRQE is the late Ray Rayner, formerly a children's television personality at WGN-TV in Chicago. He spent the last several years at KRQE before going into retirement.[citation needed]
  • LIN Television has been recently criticised by various newspapers in New Mexico for the purchase of the Fox News affiliate in Albuquerque, which resulted in the loss of many positions. The Albuquerque Objectivist newspaper in October of 2006 referred to KRQE as the local "news empire".[citation needed]
  • During the 1980s, Albuquerque was one of the very few markets to carry Jeopardy! and Wheel of Fortune on separate stations, with Jeopardy! being on channel 13 and Wheel of Fortune being on channel 4. Since the mid-1990s, however, both shows air on channel 13.

[edit] References

  1. ^ The Broadcasting and Cable Yearbook says October 3, while the Television and Cable Factbook says October 4.

[edit] External links