Logopedia
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1949-1955 1955-1956 1956–1960 1960–1964 1964–1978 1978–1979
1949-1955 1955-1956 1956–1960 1960–1964 1964–1978 1978–1979
1979–1980 1980-1995 1984–1995 1995–2010 2010–present  
1979–1980 1980-1995 1984–1995 1995–2010 2010–present

1949–1955[]

Logopedia InfoWhite LOGO MISSING

The FCC granted the construction permit for channel 6 to the George E. Cameron Jr.-Maria Helen Alvarez-John B. Hill group on June 2, 1948. KOTV first began test transmissions on October 15, 1949; the station started regular broadcasts on October 22. It was the first television station to sign on in the Tulsa market. The station has been a primary CBS television affiliate since it signed on. It was also the only station in the market until March 1954 when KCEB (channel 23, frequency now occupied by KOKI-TV signed on.

KOTV was sold to Indianapolis-based Whitney Corporation (later Corinthian Broadcasting) in 1954, which became a subsidiary of Dun & Bradstreet in 1971.

1955–1956[]

Logopedia InfoWhite LOGO MISSING

1956–1960[]

Logopedia InfoWhite LOGO MISSING

1960–1964[]

Kotv0660

1964–1978[]

Screen Shot 2020-03-09 at 6.31.43 PM

1978-1979[]

KOTV (1978)

1979–1980[]

KOTV 1979

1980–1995[]

KOTV 1980

The Corinthian stations were sold to Dallas-based Belo in 1983, except for WISH-TV and WANE-TV.

1995–2010[]

KOTV 2000

Oklahoma City-based Griffin Communications purchased KOTV in 2000, making it sister to company flagship KWTV (a fellow CBS affiliate) and KPOM-TV/KFAA-TV in the adjacent Fort Smith–Fayetteville, Arkansas market (the latter were sold to Nexstar Broadcasting Group in 2004).

KOTV would later gain another sister station, as Griffin purchased The WB affiliate KWBT (channel 19, now CW affiliate KQCW-DT) in 2005.

2010–present[]

KOTV logo 2010
Designer:  Hothaus Creative
Typography:  Goudy (logo)
Helvetica Neue (graphics, 2010-2019)
Montserrat (graphics, 2019-present)
Launched:  October 25, 2010

On October 24, 2010, KOTV began broadcasting local newscasts in widescreen standard definition, and syndicated programming and some local commercial advertisements in high definition; along with this upgrade, KOTV (and its sister station KWTV in Oklahoma City, which began carrying its newscasts in high definition on that date), overhauled their logos and began using a uniform graphics package. KOTV began broadcasting newscasts in high definition on January 19, 2013.

The current logo is a flipped variant of sister KWTV-DT in nearby Oklahoma City.

External links[]

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