News Channel Nebraska
News Channel Nebraska (NCN) is an independent, in-state network of commercial radio and television stations in the U.S. state of Nebraska and Sioux City. It is operated by Flood Communications LLC, which was founded by attorney, businessman and Congressman Mike Flood. The television stations are all members of the NCN network.
![]() | |
| |
---|---|
City | Norfolk, Nebraska |
Channels | |
Branding | NCN |
Programming | |
Subchannels | See below |
Affiliations | Television: Independent (2015-present) Telemundo (2017-present) WeatherNation TV (2016-present) 3ABN (2017-present) Daystar (2018-present) Radio: (2015–present) |
Ownership | |
Owner | Flood Communications LLC (Mike Flood) |
History | |
Founded | 2002 |
First air date | June 2015 (Statewide network launch) including Siouxland |
Call sign meaning | see table below |
Technical information | |
ERP | see table below |
HAAT | see table below |
Transmitter coordinates | see table below |
Links | |
Website | News Channel Nebraska |
History
News Channel Nebraska was founded in 2015 at Norfolk, Nebraska. In 2017, Flood Communications announced the addition of Spanish-language network Telemundo, also called Telemundo Nebraska.
In addition to commercial advertising, NCN holds pledge drives and solicits donations in the same manner as non-commercial broadcasters.
Programming
News Channel Nebraska primarily focuses on rolling news coverage similar to the original CNN Headline News and the current NewsNet, whose owner and founder helped establish the format on the News Channel Nebraska stations. Newscasts air every hour and focus primarily on rural Nebraska stories with some coverage of the two major cities, Lincoln and Omaha, and weather forecasts every 10 minutes including former WTNH-TV meteorologist Geoff Fox broadcasting from his home studio in Irvine, California.[1] The network also includes extensive coverage of high school and small college sports with two broadcast trucks covering rural football and basketball games.[2] There is a "north" and "south" feed which show different sports programs, with the other feed's game rebroadcast on delay. High school sports programming requires a subscription when viewed online.[3] In order to avoid conflicts of interest, articles and news coverage involving Flood are written by the Associated Press or Gray Television affiliates in Nebraska.[4]
In March 2020, NCN launched Quarantine Tonight, a show featuring live music from local musicians originally produced as a service to viewers during the COVID-19 pandemic that proved popular enough to continue well past its original planned ending date.[5] Flood was the host of Quarantine Tonight until he began his run for Congress, since then the program has been hosted by former News Channel Nebraska reporter Austen Hagood.
NCN carries some limited syndicated lifestyle programming on weekend mornings, including AgPhD, Ron Hazelton's HouseCalls and P. Allen Smith Garden Style.
- Rolling News
- NCN Daybreak (Mon-Fri 6am-10am)
- NCN Midday (Mon-Fri 10am-4pm)
- NCN Evening (Mon-Thu 4pm-6am, Fri 4pm-Midnight)
- NCN Weekend (Sat-Sun 4pm-Midnight)
- Non-News Programming
- Quarantine Tonight
- High School Football
- Girls High School Volleyball
- High School Basketball
- Nebraska Loves Public Schools
- College Football
- Women's College Volleyball
Low-powered television stations
NCN consists of seven low-power TV stations that make up the network, all stations have callsigns beginning with a K, as licensed by the Federal Communications Commission (FCC). Combined, they reach almost all of eastern and central Nebraska, as well as parts of Siouxland. The stations are owned by Flood Communications of Nebraska, LLC.
Station | City of license | Channels (VC / DT) |
First air date | Call letters’ meaning |
ERP | HAAT | Facility ID | Transmitter Coordinates |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
KWBE-LD | Beatrice | 21 21 (UHF) | 2016 | BEatrice; shared with sister station KWBE (AM) | 15 kW | 391 m (1,283 ft) | 184308 | 40.263583°N 96.774139°W |
KMJF-LD | Columbus | 48 16 (UHF) | 2015 | Michael John Flood | 12 kW | 269 m (883 ft) | 185295 | 41.452556°N 97.252667°E |
KFDY-LD | Lincoln | 27 27 (UHF) | 2017 | Floody the nickname of Mike Flood's oldest son, Brenden Flood | 3.65 kW | 226 m (741 ft) | 67012 | 40.727694°N 96.614139°W |
KNEN-LD | Norfolk | 35 (PSIP 35 (UHF) | 2015 | North East Nebraska | kW | 544 m (1,785 ft) | 185612 | 42.028028°N 97.340222°W |
KOHA-LD | Omaha | 27 27 (UHF) | 2018 | OmaHA | 15 kW | 475 m (1,558 ft) | 33144 | 41.308889°N 96.026167°W |
KBWF-LD | South Sioux City Siouxland | 15 29 (UHF) | 2016 | Blake William Flood, Mike Flood's youngest son | 15 kW | 380 m (1,247 ft) | 181673 | 42.4725°N 96.422167°W |
KMLF-LD | Grand Island | 21 30 (UHF) | 2017 | Mandi Lynn Flood, Mike Flood's wife | 15 kW | 188582 | 41.452556°N 97.252667°W |
Digital television
Digital channels
The digital signals of NCN's stations are multiplexed:
Channel | Video | Aspect | Short name | Programming |
---|---|---|---|---|
xx.1 | 720p 1080i | 16:9 | NCN TMNDONEB | Main NCN Programming / Independent / Main Telemundo Nebraska Programming as Omaha & Lincoln affiliate |
xx.2 | 720p 480i | NCN TMNDONEB KCAU-TV | Main NCN Programming / Independent as Omaha & Lincoln affiliate / Main Telemundo Nebraska Programming as Columbus, Grand Island, Hastings, and Sioux City in Norfolk, 35.2 rebroadcasts KCAU-TV/Sioux City, Iowa and maps to 9.1[6] | |
xx.3 | 1080i 480i | 16:9 4:3 | DayStar WEATNATNTV 3ABN | Daystar as Omaha affiliate WeatherNation TV as Beatrice and Norfolk affiliate 3ABN as Lincoln affiliate |
References
- https://www.facebook.com/FoxNCN
- "News Channel Nebraska".
- "Sports Now - Nebraska Sports".
- "Republican Mike Flood says he has raised more than $400K". rivercountry.newschannelnebraska.com. Retrieved 2022-08-22.
- Hammel, Paul (August 23, 2020). "'Quarantine Tonight' show, Facebook concerts a hit with Nebraskans stuck at home". Omaha World-Herald. Retrieved 2021-12-23.
- Feenstra, Danielle (1 July 2021). "KCAU 9 expands over-the-air coverage in Norfolk, Nebraska". KCAU-TV. Retrieved 27 July 2021.