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{{TV_Infobox|title1 = KLCS|image1 = KLCS-NewLogo.jpg|location = Los Angeles, CA|branding = KLCS|slogan = Always Learning Live. Learn. Love. L.A. TV's Force for Good|channel_number = 58|subchannels = 58.4: KLCS-HD<br>58.5: PBS Kids<br>58.6: Create|affiliation = PBS|first_air_date = November 5, 1973|call_letter_meaning(s) = Los Angeles<br>City<br>Schools|former_channel_number(s) = Analog:<br>58 (UHF, 1973–2009)<br>Digital:<br>41 (UHF, 2003–2018)|owner = Los Angeles Unified School District}}
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{{TV_Infobox|title1 = KLCS|image1 = KLCS-NewLogo.jpg|location = Los Angeles, CA|branding = KLCS|slogan = Always Learning Live. Learn. Love. L.A. TV's Force for Good|channel_number = 58|subchannels = 58.4: KLCS-HD<br>58.5: PBS Kids Local<br>58.6: Create|affiliation = PBS|first_air_date = November 5, 1973|call_letter_meaning(s) = Los Angeles<br>City<br>Schools|former_channel_number(s) = Analog:<br>58 (UHF, 1973–2009)<br>Digital:<br>41 (UHF, 2003–2018)|owner = Los Angeles Unified School District}}KLCS, channel 58, is a non-commercial educational, public television station located in Los Angeles, California, United States. The station is licensed to the Los Angeles Unified School District (LAUSD), and is one of eight television stations in the U.S. that is operated by a local school system. KLCS's studios are located in downtown Los Angeles, adjacent to Downtown Magnets High School, and its transmitter is located atop Mount Wilson.
KLCS, channel 58, is a non-commercial educational, public television station located in Los Angeles, California, United States. The station is licensed to the Los Angeles Unified School District (LAUSD), and is one of eight television stations in the U.S. that is operated by a local school system. KLCS's studios are located in downtown Los Angeles, adjacent to Downtown Magnets High School, and its transmitter is located atop Mount Wilson.
 
   
 
KLCS is one of three Public Broadcasting Service (PBS) member stations in the Los Angeles television market; the others are KVCR-DT (channel 24) in San Bernardino and KOCE-TV (channel 50) in Huntington Beach (which in 2011 replaced KCET as the primary PBS station in Los Angeles). KLCS is the fifth most-watched public television station in the country.
 
KLCS is one of three Public Broadcasting Service (PBS) member stations in the Los Angeles television market; the others are KVCR-DT (channel 24) in San Bernardino and KOCE-TV (channel 50) in Huntington Beach (which in 2011 replaced KCET as the primary PBS station in Los Angeles). KLCS is the fifth most-watched public television station in the country.
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As of autumn 2018, KLCS's new General Manager is Jaime Jimenez.
 
As of autumn 2018, KLCS's new General Manager is Jaime Jimenez.
   
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{{PBS California}}
 
{{Los Angeles TV}}
 
{{Los Angeles TV}}
 
[[Category:PBS Member Stations]]
 
[[Category:PBS Member Stations]]
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[[Category:Los Angeles]]
 
[[Category:Los Angeles]]
 
[[Category:California]]
 
[[Category:California]]
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[[Category:Los Angeles Unified School District]]
 
[[Category:UHF]]
 
[[Category:UHF]]
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[[Category:PBS California]]
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[[Category:PBS Kids Affiliates]]
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[[Category:Create Affiliates]]
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[[Category:World Channel Affiliates]]

Revision as of 16:28, 20 September 2020

KLCS, channel 58, is a non-commercial educational, public television station located in Los Angeles, California, United States. The station is licensed to the Los Angeles Unified School District (LAUSD), and is one of eight television stations in the U.S. that is operated by a local school system. KLCS's studios are located in downtown Los Angeles, adjacent to Downtown Magnets High School, and its transmitter is located atop Mount Wilson.

KLCS is one of three Public Broadcasting Service (PBS) member stations in the Los Angeles television market; the others are KVCR-DT (channel 24) in San Bernardino and KOCE-TV (channel 50) in Huntington Beach (which in 2011 replaced KCET as the primary PBS station in Los Angeles). KLCS is the fifth most-watched public television station in the country.

History

Pre-KLCS years (1957–1973)

In October 1957, the Los Angeles Unified School District began producing televised instructional programs to be viewed in school by students. By the 1966-67 school year, it was producing over 700 television programs per year for broadcast on various local stations in the Los Angeles area and leasing airtime to broadcast 40 hours of instructional programming Monday through Friday each week. Over the years, the district earned the support of teachers and administrators who were impressed with the effectiveness of the programs on the learning experience in the classroom.

In 1963, the LAUSD began the application process to acquire a license from the Federal Communications Commission and launch its own full-service television station on UHF channel 58. In 1967, the district also applied for and later received state and federal grants to build and equip a broadcast facility for the new station. In the summer of that year, advocates for the LAUSD testified before the FCC on the benefits of an instructional television station for students, staff and the local community. Five years later, on March 3, 1972, the FCC granted the district a license to broadcast on channel 58, and the new station signed on the air on November 5, 1973 as KLCS, the call letters an apparent acronym for "Los Angeles City Schools".

Present operations

The station presently produces more than 700 hours of educational, informational, sports and entertainment programming a year, including live telecourse instruction from the California State University system. It is one of five television stations licensed in the Los Angeles market that continue to utilize their original call signs, alongside KTLA (channel 5), KTTV (channel 11), KCET (channel 28) and KMEX-TV (channel 34).

Since 1984, KLCS has produced Homework Hotline. Created by then General Manager Patricia Prescott-Marshall, Homework Hotline is a weekday afterschool call-in program where students receive homework help from LAUSD teachers and other faculty who appear on the show. In its first year, Homework Hotline was featured in a Time magazine article titled "Education: Help from the Hotline", and has won many Los Angeles Area Emmy Awards over the years, including two in 1986 for Best Instructional Program and Creative Technical Crafts.

Unlike most public television stations, KLCS does not hold an annual pledge drive. However, its website lists special premiums and discounts given to subscribers who support the station at various levels, including recognition on-air and in KLCS' monthly viewer magazine. KLCS was slated to begin high definition broadcasting in the autumn of 2014, but remained in standard definition until April 23, 2018, when the station began HD broadcasting at 720p following a reallocation to digital channel 28.

For a period of time, instead of broadcasting a 24-hour program schedule, KLCS signed off at the end of each broadcast day, ceasing programming on some or all of its four subchannels at either 1:00 or 2:00 a.m. and resuming its schedule the next morning at either 5:00 or 6:00 a.m. One subchannel may continue overnight programming, such as for Create programs or regular meetings of the Los Angeles County Board of Supervisors, while the others have individually signed off. In lieu of a test pattern, a overnight-themed title card is aired reminding viewers to tune in the next morning when programming resumes. This made KLCS one of the largest television stations in the United States by market size to still have traditional sign-on and sign-off procedures. KLCS has since resumed a 24-hour schedule. Its second digital subchannel also broadcasts 24 hours a day and is featured as part of DirecTV's digital programming package.

When Janalyn Glymph retired, Sabrina Fair-Thomas became general manager in July 2012 after being with the station for over 25 years.

Partnering with the Idea To Reality development team, Saul Davis and Joe Regis, KLCS debuted new station IDs in 2015 featuring Los Angeles Mayor Eric Garcetti, Bill Nye, Mark Wahlberg, Moby, Flea, and Joaquin Phoenix, as well as new station taglines including "Live Learn Love LA" and "TV's Force For Good".

As of autumn 2018, KLCS's new General Manager is Jaime Jimenez.


TV stations in California
KOCE, Huntington Beach

KVCR-DT, San Bernardino
KLCS, Los Angeles County
KCET, Los Angeles
KEET, Eureka
KVIE, Sacramento
KIXE, Redding/Chico
KQED, San Francisco
KQET, Oakland
KQEH, San Jose
KRCB, Cotati
KVPT, Fresno
K18HD-D, Bakersfield
KPBS, San Diego

TV stations in Southern California, including Los Angeles, Orange County, and portions of the Inland Empire
KCBS 2 (CBS)
KNBC 4 (NBC)
KTLA 5 (CW)
KHTV-CD 6 (MeTV+)
KABC 7 (ABC)
KFLA-LD 8 (NEWSNET)
KCAL 9 (Ind)
KIIO-LD 10 (IND)
KTTV 11 (FOX)
KTBV-LD 12 (Ind)
KCOP 13 (MNTV)
KPOM-CD 14 (Story)
KSCI 18 (Ind)
KNLA-CD 20 (SBN)
KVME 20 (H&I)
KWHY 22 (Ind)
KVCR 24 (PBS)
KVHD-LD 26 (EVINE)
KSFV-CD 27 (JTV)
KCET 28 (ETV)
KPXN 30 (Ion)
KVMD 31 (LATV)
KCIO-LD 33 (IND)
KMEX-DT 34 (UNI)
KTAV-LD 35 (ALMA)
K36JH-D 36 (TVA)
KHIZ-LD 39 (COURT)
KTBN 40 (TBN)
KXLA 44 (Ind)
KFTR-DT 46 (UnM)
KOCE 50 (PBS)
KVEA 52 (TLM)
KAZA 54 (MeTV)
KDOC 56 (Ind)
KJLA 57 (Ind)
KLCS 58 (PBS)
KRCA 62 (ESTRELA)
KBEH 63 (Rel)
KILM 64 (BOUNCE)
KEDD-LD 69 (HSN)