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KNOE-TV has been the dominant news station in the Ark-La-Miss for more than a quarter-century. It has won numerous state, regional and national journalism awards, including the 2008 Alfred I. duPont-Columbia University Award for News Director Taylor Henry's investigative series on rogue members of the Louisiana National Guard who looted stores they were deployed to protect during Katrina.
El Dorado, AR–Monroe, LA: KTVE: 10 (27) 1967–1996: NBC affiliate owned by Mission Broadcasting [h] KAQY 11 (11) [i] MeTV affiliate, KMLU, owned by Legacy Broadcasting Grand Junction, CO: KJCT 8 (7) 2013–2014 [j] Court TV affiliate, KLML, owned by Ventura Broadcasting Augusta, GA: WAGT: 26 (30) 2016–2017 [D] Defunct, license cancelled in ...
It was a primary NBC affiliate, sharing ABC with KNOE-TV. Fuqua sold KTVE to Gray Communications in December 1967, making it Gray's third owned station. In February 1970, shortly after rival station KNOE installed a translator in El Dorado to better serve viewers there, KTVE installed a translator south of Monroe, W02AW. [3]
KNOE may refer to: KNOE-TV , a CBS-affiliate television station (channel 8 digital) licensed to Monroe, Louisiana, United States, and its associated ABC and CW subchannels KMVX , a radio station (101.9 FM) licensed to Monroe, Louisiana, United States, which held the call sign KNOE-FM from 1967 to March 2013
The station first signed on, as KNOE, on October 4, 1944, at 1230 kHz. It was founded by former Governor of Louisiana James A. Noe. [5] [6]NoeMac stations list (1955) [7] In November 1948, the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) approved a frequency shift for KNOE from 1230 to 1390 kHz, with a concurrent increase in power from 250 watts to 5,000 watts.
The station, under the KNOE-FM call sign, was founded in 1966 by former Governor of Louisiana James A. Noe. [5] [6] Noe had earlier started Monroe AM radio station KNOE in 1944 and Monroe TV station KNOE-TV in 1953.
The major daily newspaper serving the Monroe-West Monroe and Ark-La-Miss area is Monroe News-Star. Its headquarters are located in midtown Monroe. Ouachita Parish is served by the daily The Ouachita Citizen.
KFAZ's difficulties became acute with KNOE-TV going on-the-air on channel 8 about 5 weeks after KFAZ. KNOE's 229 kW radiated from a 774-foot tower and could be received within a 35-mile radius of its transmitter, with decent picture quality and without the need for a converter or UHF antenna.