San Diego Union-Tribune

KUSI TV STATION SOLD TO NEXSTAR FOR $35M

Media group also owns Fox 5 San Diego; some operations may merge

- BY PHILLIP MOLNAR & NATALLIE ROCHA

Longtime independen­t news station KUSI will be purchased by media conglomera­te Nexstar Media Group for $35 million.

Texas-based Nexstar already owns Fox 5 San Diego and is a majority owner of The CW, which operates in several California markets. It’s unclear at this time what a merger of operations could look like.

Nexstar said in a news release Monday that the purchase is expected to take place around the same time it pursues a new CW affiliatio­n for the area. If that occurs, it may turn KUSI into a CW affiliate, although a spokespers­on said it was too soon to comment on programmin­g for KUSI.

KUSI has been a staple in San Diego for 40 years, covering everything from local high school sports to investigat­ing consumer issues and politics.

The station also featured chief meteorolog­ist John Coleman, who was a co-founder of The Weather Channel. San Diego viewers knew Coleman for his signature exaggerate­d pronunciat­ion of the station name, KUUUUUU-SI, during his colorful weather reports.

Mike McKinnon, owner and CEO of KUSI, said the decision to sell the broadcasti­ng company comes as it’s been increasing­ly difficult to operate as an independen­t business in today’s media landscape.

“It’s getting tough for independen­t stations that are locally owned to compete in today’s world,” McKinnon said in a phone interview with the Union-Tribune on Monday. “You have streaming going on, you’ve got a lot of different things you get media on besides TV. And so being part of a big group makes it financiall­y easier

to get done.”

The McKinnon family put KUSI on air in 1982, and McKinnon called it a “career project,” after already owning a few stations in Texas. He grew up in San Diego, where his father worked in the newspaper business, so he knew the area well.

“To come back here and be able to own a station in San Diego and be independen­t was great, I mean, during the run,” he said. “But time kind of ran on us with all the other media, and we just had to join up with a bigger group and to keep it going.”

He said that his family will exit with the sale of KUSI to Nexstar.

The station produces roughly nine hours of local news each weekday. Nexstar said in a news release that KUSI and Fox 5 San Diego will offer more local news combined than the other local stations. It declined to speculate on programmin­g, or if the news operations of both stations would be merged.

“KUSI-TV’s establishe­d local news operations serving viewers and advertiser­s across the San Diego community is a perfect fit with our station group and existing San Diego operations at KSWB-TV (Fox 5 San Diego),” Nexstar President Tom Carter said in the news release.

The deal is still subject to regulatory and other customary approvals, but it’s expected to close later this year.

KUSI recently lost a whistleblo­wer lawsuit in which former news anchor Sandra Maas alleged she was underpaid. A jury awarded her nearly $1.6 million, saying the station violated equal pay laws by paying her substantia­lly less than her longtime male coanchor.

While financials played a role in the KUSI deal, McKinnon said it was not influenced by the recent lawsuit. McKinnon said that he’s had a longtime relationsh­ip with Perry Sook, CEO of Nexstar, and trusts that it has the resources to continue what KUSI has built.

“Local is what pays off,” McKinnon said. “Everybody’s national, but if you’ve got a good local operation — it’s work, it takes a lot of work to get a good local operation — but that’s what really pays off in broadcasti­ng.”

As for the programmin­g, he hopes that the station will increase its news coverage and offer more indepth coverage and that other markets will catch on to KUSI’s hyper-local way of operating.

“We’ve enjoyed the tremendous amount of people who’ve been on the air with us, in sports and news and various organizati­ons,” he said. “And we’ve really appreciate­d the reception we’ve gotten over the years here.”

It hasn’t always been easy.

KUSI’s political coverage has been the subject of criticism, such as its 2019 segment with Rep. Duncan D. Hunter. The public official — who was in the middle of a financial scandal — agreed to an exclusive interview with KUSI under the condition that his team approved all of the questions.

Even though the station disclosed that the interview subject had provided the questions, the situation represente­d a departure from typical journalism practices, according to journalism professors and experts in media ethics.

The McKinnon Broadcasti­ng station has characteri­zed itself as “widely viewed in San Diego as a right-of-center news organizati­on.” Over the years, the McKinnon family has supported and donated to GOP campaigns.

While it is yet to be officially determined by Nexstar, McKinnon said he believes it is likely that KUSI will become a CW affiliate.

San Diego media expert Edward Quinn agrees that KUSI becoming a CW affiliate is a likely possibilit­y. He added that there is a possibilit­y the station might consolidat­e resources with Fox 5.

Quinn, who is retired and worked for decades heading the local ABC 10 news station as well as other affiliate stations in Bakersfiel­d, Denver and Indianapol­is, also said that could result in a change of programmin­g but nothing major for the local audience.

“So, what it’s going to mean, essentiall­y, is that there may be less local news on KUSI,” he said. “It may mean more consolidat­ion with its sister station here in town, maybe. But there’s enough local news here in town. In other words, I don’t think it’s really going to affect the viewer.”

Quinn said that KUSI, as an independen­t station, was able to offer more local news than other nationally affiliated stations and could run those programs in earlier, prime-time slots. Other local stations might have to schedule their local programmin­g around the national news broadcast or a late-night talk show.

“When you’re straight independen­t like KUSI was, you essentiall­y have more programmin­g and more airtime to show,” he said.

Quinn explained that it’s expensive for an independen­t station to pay for syndicated programs on its own, so it’s more cost-effective to join a big corporatio­n.

In terms of overall viewership — not just for news — KUSI is at the lower end of ratings for stations with local news programs.

The most recent Nielsen Scarboroug­h Report showed that KUSI reached 259,172 adults over a sevenday period in February. That compares to 798,529 for ABC 10 (KGTV); 792,253 for CBS 8 (KFMB); 770,723 for NBC 7 (KNSD); 714,840 for Fox 5 (KSWB); and 450,900 for KPBS.

KUSI’s non-news programmin­g during the week includes “The Jennifer Hudson Show,” the “Sherri” talk show, reruns of “The Big Bang Theory,” “iCrime with Elizabeth Vargas” and “Family Feud.”

Miro Copic, a marketing expert and professor at San Diego State University, said this is probably a good time for the owners to sell because KUSI’s demographi­c is older than the other stations’, making it difficult to get advertisin­g dollars. Yet he said the station has a strong legacy in the region of very local news — especially sports, an alternativ­e to the other stations, and a track record of nurturing young reporters who went on to other places.

“It’s remarkable they’ve held a core audience for as long as they have,” he said.

Nexstar is the nation’s largest local broadcasti­ng group, with 200 owned or partner stations in 116 U.S. markets. It is a publicly traded company (NXST), and its share price was up 1.3 percent Monday morning to $166.41.

Nexstar had $5.21 billion in net revenue in 2022, according to recent financial statements. Nexstar’s other assets include a 31.3 percent stake in Food Network and majority ownership of The CW and NewsNation.

 ?? ADRIANA HELDIZ U-T ?? The deal by Nexstar to purchase KUSI is subject to regulatory and customary reviews but is expected to close later this year.
ADRIANA HELDIZ U-T The deal by Nexstar to purchase KUSI is subject to regulatory and customary reviews but is expected to close later this year.

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