KPDX (channel 49) is a television station licensed to Vancouver, Washington, United States, serving the Portland, Oregon, area as an affiliate of MyNetworkTV. It is the only major commercial station in Portland that is licensed to the Washington side of the media market.
KPDX is owned by Gray Media alongside Fox affiliate KPTV (channel 12). The two stations share studios on NW Greenbrier Parkway in Beaverton; KPDX's transmitter is located in the Sylvan-Highlands section of Portland. KPDX's signal is relayed in Central Oregon through translator station KUBN-LD (channel 9) in Bend, making the station available in about two-thirds of the state.
Since February 2018, KPDX has been branded as Fox 12 Plus, an extension of the branding used by KPTV.
Channel 49 would miss several planned launch dates due to multiple factors. The station was forced by Multnomah County to allow other interested broadcasters to rent tower space, and Oregon Public Broadcasting's KOAP-TV and KOPB-FM used the opportunity to consolidate their transmission facilities with the new transmitter. There were also delays in the shipment of structural steel being used to erect the tower. in the West Hills.
Camellia also soon acknowledged that a Washington-specific focus would limit the station's audience and appeal, and changed the call sign to KPDX, representing Portland's airport code. Channel 49 began test transmissions on October 7, 1983, and began official broadcasts on October 9. It maintained a main studio in Vancouver and a production facility in Portland. Initially, KPDX was a general entertainment independent station; the station's format consisted of animated cartoon, , classic feature film, drama series and religious programs.
Portland had been big enough since at least the 1960s to support a second independent station alongside long-established KPTV. However, the Portland market is a very large one geographically; it stretches across a large swath of Oregon as well as much of southwestern Washington. The established stations needed an extensive translator network to reach the entire market, an expense which stymied the first attempt at a second independent in the market, Salem-based KVDO-TV (now Bend Oregon Public Broadcasting outlet KOAB-TV). By the early 1980s, however, cable and satellite—which are all but essential for acceptable television in the rural portions of the market—had gained enough penetration for a second independent to be viable.
Although it was well behind KPTV, one of the strongest independent stations in the country, KPDX more than held its own in its early years and received decent ratings.
Columbia River Television sold the station to Cannell Communications, a broadcast group owned by television producer and author Stephen J. Cannell in 1992. Cannell sold both KPDX and sister station WHNS in Greenville, South Carolina, to First Media Television in 1994. The station began to add more talk and children's programs in the 1990s. The First Media stations, including KPDX, WHNS, and KFXO-LP in Bend, Oregon, were acquired by Meredith Corporation for $435 million in 1997. It gradually drew closer to KPTV as Fox came into its own as a network.
KPDX dropped the UPN branding on April 1, 2006, rebranding from "UPN 49" to "PDX 49", and adopted a new logo in the process. This change of branding had been planned before UPN's shutdown was announced, but the timing of the change was convenient for the upcoming affiliation switch. KPDX's move mirrored one implemented at future MyNetworkTV station WDCA in Washington, D.C. (which branded as "DCA 20"), in using the last three letters of its callsign as its station branding. KPDX retained this branding following MyNetworkTV's launch, and is one of the few MyNetworkTV affiliates to not adopt the network's "blue TV" logo and/or branding style at any point.
On September 8, 2008, KPDX moved MyNetworkTV programming from 8–10 p.m. to 9–11 p.m., making it one of five MyNetworkTV stations at the time that did not air the network's programming in its normal 8–10 p.m. timeslot (KEVU-LP in Eugene, KRON-TV in San Francisco, KQCA in Sacramento, and KMYQ (now KZJO) in Seattle were the others). Concurrent with the schedule change and in anticipation of the station's 25th anniversary, KPDX's on-air brand was modified from "PDX 49" to "PDX TV".
On September 8, 2015, Media General announced that it would acquire Meredith for $2.4 billion, with the combined group to be renamed Meredith Media General once the sale was finalized by June 2016. Because Media General already owned CBS affiliate KOIN (channel 6) and Meredith owns KPTV and KPDX, the companies would have been be required to sell either KPTV or KOIN to comply with FCC ownership rules that forbid common ownership of two of the four highest-rated television stations in a given market in total day viewership, as well as recent changes to FCC ownership rules that restrict sharing agreements; KPDX was the only one of the three stations affected by the merger that could legally be acquired by Meredith Media General, as its total day viewership ranks below the top-four ratings threshold. However, on January 27, 2016, Nexstar Broadcasting Group announced that it had reached an agreement to acquire Media General, resulting in the termination of Meredith's acquisition by Media General.
On February 12, 2018, KPDX branding was changed from PDX-TV to "Fox 12 Plus", as an extension of KPTV's "Fox 12 Oregon" branding.
On September 8, 2008, KPDX began airing a KPTV-produced 8 p.m. newscast; KPTV's production of the hour-long weeknight newscast makes that station one of only a few Fox stations in the United States that produces a newscast for another station in the same market. On April 19, 2010, KPTV began producing a fifth hour of its weekday morning newscast Good Day Oregon for KPDX (running from 9 to 10 a.m.) called More Good Day Oregon, which featured various entertainment and lifestyles topics from a seasoned panel of experts; the program was cancelled in 2012 and was replaced by syndicated programming. On September 29, 2014, KPDX expanded its evening news programming with the launch of an hour-long 9 p.m. newscast, resulting in KPTV producing three hours of news in prime time (two hours on channel 49, as well as the flagship hour-long 10 p.m. broadcast on channel 12); as a result, the station delayed MyNetworkTV programming later in the evening. KPTV/KPDX Launching 9:00pm Newscast, TVSpy, May 22, 2014. FOX 12 / PDX TV announces new 9 p.m. newscast , KPTV, May 21, 2014. The 9 p.m. newscast actually premiered on August 25, 2014, nearly a month earlier than originally announced.
With the ATSC 3.0 transition, the KPDX subchannels moved to the KPTV and KGW multiplexes and were added to their dependent translator stations.
History
As an independent station
As a Fox affiliate
As a UPN affiliate
As a MyNetworkTV affiliate
Sale to Gray Television
Sports programming
Newscasts
Technical information
Subchannels
+ Subchannels provided by KPDX (ATSC 1.0)
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ATSC 3.0
Analog-to-digital conversion
Translators
External links
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