Los Angeles Times

KCET, KOCE PLAN TO JOIN FORCES

Southland public TV stations have been in merger talks for years.

- By Meg James

After clawing for seven years over the same turf, Southern California’s two large public television stations — KCET and KOCE — are merging to become a stronger voice in local broadcasti­ng.

The consolidat­ion, announced Wednesday, will bring together two nonprofit organizati­ons with separate strengths and programmin­g philosophi­es. KCETLink Media Group, which runs the Los Angeles station, has long enjoyed a prominent profile, but its 2010 decision to sever ties with the national Public Broadcasti­ng Service was a costly blunder.

Orange County’s KOCETV picked up the PBS affiliatio­n and its award-winning programmin­g and branded itself as PBS SoCal. But over the years, it too has struggled to win acceptance and prime channel locations from pay-TV operators that would enhance its exposure and fundraisin­g might. Both stations have been hampered by lingering confusion in the market about their roles and programmin­g.

“This merger has been in the works for many, many years,” said Dick Cook, chairman of KCET’s board, who will become chairman of the combined entity when the deal closes this summer. “There is a time and a place for everything, and this is the time, the right moment, for these two great institutio­ns to come together.”

The Corporatio­n for Public Broadcasti­ng, which allocates federal dollars to public stations, long had prodded the two stations to unite. That goal made even more sense in an era in which President Trump and some members of Congress have

threatened to slash funding for public broadcasti­ng.

Merger talks began three years ago but were put on hold because of the Federal Communicat­ions Commission’s spectrum auction last year. More than half of the $19.8 billion generated in the auction went to broadcaste­rs that were willing to give up some of their spectrum.

KCET, based in Burbank, received about $65 million from the auction, while KOCE got about $49 million. That allowed the organizati­ons to fortify their finances and establish endowments for programmin­g.

“That provided a unique opportunit­y to pay off existing debt and get on a more solid financial footing,” said Cook, a former Walt Disney Studios chairman. “It was very important to build a strong financial foundation.”

The two stations will fold together their separate assets, with neither side making any payments to the other, the officials said. Andrew Russell, president and chief executive of PBS SoCal (KOCE) will run the combined entity, which will have about 130 employees. No layoffs are planned. KCET has been without a chief executive since February, when Michael Riley joined Ellen DeGeneres’ company.

The proposed marriage comes amid a period of frenzied consolidat­ion in commercial television. CBS Corp. and Viacom Inc. are pondering a tie-up; Walt Disney Co. has made a $52.4-billion bid to swallow much of Rupert Murdoch’s 21st Century Fox; and telecommun­ications giant AT&T Inc. has been on an 18-month quest to buy Time Warner Inc., which includes CNN, HBO, TBS, Cartoon Network and the Warner Bros. film and television studio.

TV station chains have been consolidat­ing too because local TV stations, even those affiliated with big broadcast networks, are facing head winds as advertiser­s move their dollars to digital media in search of younger viewers and moretarget­ed consumers.

Also making headlines has been the conservati­veleaning Sinclair Broadcast Group, a Maryland company that already owns more than 190 stations and is seeking regulatory approval to buy Tribune Media, which owns one of Los Angeles’ original television stations — KTLA-TV Channel 5. (The Times and KTLA were part of the same company until a 2014 separation.)

Such ownership changes, centralize­d decision-making and viewership shifts, including the rise of online streaming services, have prompted organizati­ons — including KCET and KOCE — to take stock of their missions and roles in a fastchangi­ng environmen­t.

“We are building something for future generation­s,” Cook said. “And the demand for high-quality storytelli­ng has never been greater — or more important.”

KCET and PBS SoCal will remain separate channels available to 18 million residents of metropolit­an Los Angeles and will continue to offer different types of programmin­g. The combined company will operate seven broadcast channels, including the free PBS Kids.

“This is a merger where there is not a lot of overlap,” Russell said. “There are a lot of complement­ary strengths. We are excited about bringing both stations together and continuing to bring all the programmin­g that people love.”

KCET launched in September 1964 and was once a model in public television. It was the second educationa­l TV station to go on the air, just a few months after KUHT in Houston.

For decades, it was part of a core cluster of over-theair stations in L.A. But after cutting ties with PBS, following a dispute over the fees that KCET had to pay for programmin­g, there were fears that KCET might go out of business.

But over time, KCET made the most of its independen­ce and developed its own streaming service. It also began producing indepth original programs that filled a niche that was all but abandoned by commercial stations. Last year, KCET produced 54 hours of original content.

KCET continues to get mileage from the late Huell Howser’s jaunts around the Golden State.

KOCE began broadcasti­ng in November 1972 from Huntington Beach. The station, which was formed by the Coast Community College District, was proud of its Orange County roots at a time when commercial stations were concentrat­ed in Los Angeles and Hollywood.

The station’s worldview expanded in 2011 when KOCE became the PBS station for Greater Los Angeles and changed its name to PBS SoCal. Almost immediatel­y, the station soared to new heights with the popular “Downton Abbey.”

“It’s been quite a journey,” Russell said. “We’ve seen great membership growth, and our strength continues to be community service and education.”

A 32-person board will oversee the combined entity. It will be composed of 14 members from KCET, 14 members representi­ng KOCE and four new appointees. The two sides said the name of the combined entity would be announced when the merger closes, most likely in July.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States