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K13TR-D : ウィキペディア英語版
KYUR

KYUR, virtual channel 13 (digital channel 12), is an ABC-affiliated television station located in Anchorage, Alaska, United States. It is owned by Vision Alaska. KYUR currently shares studios with Fox affiliate KTBY-TV on East Tudor Road in Anchorage, and its transmitter is located at the Knik TV Mast in the Matanuska-Susitna Borough. KYUR is the flagship station of a trio of ABC and digital CW affiliates covering the U.S. state of Alaska under the "Alaska's Superstation" banner, which also includes KATN in Fairbanks and KJUD in Juneau.
==History==
KYUR signed on the air on October 31, 1967 as KHAR-TV. It was the third television station in Anchorage, after KTVA and KENI-TV (now KTUU-TV). The station was launched by Sourdough Broadcasters, a company headed by Willis R. "Bill" Harpel, on of Alaska's broadcasting pioneers. Harpel began his broadcasting career in the early 1940s at Anchorage radio station KFQD, and was previously the owner of radio stations in Ellensburg and Mercer Island, Washington. Prior to the launch of the television station, he started Anchorage radio stations KHAR-AM in 1961 and KHAR-FM (now KBRJ) in 1966. A short time after the television station signed on the air, on January 13, 1968, Harpel died in a snowmobile accident near Girdwood, south of Anchorage. He was 46 years old. His widow, Patricia, took over the reins at a time when the station's future was uncertain.
For its first three-plus years on the air, KHAR was unable to obtain a network affiliation, forcing it to operate as an independent station. Finally, in 1970, it took the NBC affiliation from KENI. Patricia Harpel became sole owner of Sourdough Broadcasters at around the same time. KHAR swapped affiliations with KENI a year later and joined ABC; that same year, it changed its call letters to KIMO.
In 1972, KIMO opened its own taping facility in Seattle so it could tape ABC shows directly off the network feed without having to use Honolulu's KITV as a middleman. The station brought ''Mister Rogers' Neighborhood'' and some other PBS programs to Anchorage in the early 1970s, before KAKM signed on in 1975. The station had the top local newscasts in Anchorage from 1977 until 1986, when it was surpassed by KTUU.
In 1995, owner Smith Media bought KJUD in Juneau. Having bought Fairbanks' KATN a decade earlier, Smith merged all three of Alaska's ABC affiliates into the "Alaska's Superstation" network.
Smith sold KIMO and the remainder of the "ABC Alaska's Superstation" system to Vision Alaska LLC in 2010. The station was taken over by Coastal Television, owners of Fox affiliate KTBY, under a shared services agreement that June; on January 1, 2011, KIMO changed its call letters to KYUR.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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