Fully embracing its new partnership with PBS, Orange County-based KOCE — which will pipe Public Broadcasting Service shows to Santa Barbara’s Cox customers come January 1 instead of KCET — is changing its name to PBS SoCal. The new marketing strategy, explained KOCE president Mel Rogers, is just another move made by his station to embrace its budding relationship with what he called “the best media brand in the country.” The new name will become official right after the New Year. The station’s call letters will remain the same.
Cox’s new channel lineup, said a company spokesperson, will look like this: PBS SoCal, Channel 10; PBS SoCal HD, Channel 710; KCET, Channel 129; and KCET HD, Channel 708.
Los Angeles-based KCET dropped its beloved lineup of PBS shows after failed contract negotiations earlier this year. The decision, said Rogers, is “bewildering” to many considering the undeniable popularity of shows like Nova, Frontline, and Antiques Roadshow, though industry insiders have speculated that KCET’s increasingly L.A.-centric attitude may have played a role in dissolving the 40-year pairing. Rogers said he’s not worried about the KOCE-PBS merger going the way of the failed KCET-PBS partnership, explaining he has nothing but the highest respect for the people working at the Public Broadcasting Service and that all their dealings together so far have been without complaint.
KOCE will also relocate its headquarters from Huntington Beach to Costa Mesa, a move already in the works before the station announced it would become the South Coast’s main PBS carrier. Rogers, who’s nothing if not giddy about the new partnership and increasing his station’s five million monthly viewers by thousands more, said KOCE will cut back on reruns of its Orange County-specific shows to make room for more PBS airings. But while the station plans on expanding its slate of daytime kids’ shows, it won’t be able to air Charlie Rose or Need to Know episodes for another year because of prior commitments to other programs.
Rogers emphasized that a “vast majority” of the PBS lineup currently brought to Santa Barbara by KCET will remain the same. The way it looks right now, 60-70 percent of Santa Barbara’s PBS watchers will notice little or no difference in their viewing experience come January 1, he said, explaining over-the-air (think rooftop antennas) and satellite customers may have to wait a month or two longer for PBS SoCal’s signal to reach their homes.
Here is a list of what and when primetime shows will be broadcast when the switch happens:
Sunday:
8 p.m. – Nature
9 p.m. – Masterpiece
Monday:
7 p.m. – British Antiques Roadshow
8 p.m. – Antiques Roadshow
9 p.m. – American Experience
11 p.m. – Tavis Smiley
Tuesday:
8 p.m. – Nova through 1/12, after 1/12 PBS Specials
9 p.m. – Frontline
11 p.m. – Tavis Smiley
Wednesday:
9 p.m. – Nova beginning 1/19
9 p.m. – Great Performances at the Met (once a month)
10 p.m. – Nova Science Now
11 p.m. – Tavis Smiley
Thursday:
7 p.m. – This Old House Hour
8 p.m. – Huell Howser
11 p.m. – Tavis Smiley
Friday:
7 p.m. – McLaughlin Group
7:30 p.m. – Inside OC
8 p.m. – Washington Week in Review
8:30 p.m. – Keeping Up Appearances
9 p.m. – As Time Goes By
11 p.m. – Tavis Smiley
Saturday:
7 p.m. – Lawrence Welk
9 p.m. – Great Performances (as available)
Check out PBS SoCal’s new Web site for more information on show times and offerings.
Related Links
This article has been amended to include Cox's new channel lineup.


Print friendly
E-mail story
Tip Us Off
Comments
Share Article
Myspace






Previous Month



Comments
So which channel with this be on Cox cable?
Will Cox move KOCE or PBS SoCal a high channel number that requires paying more to get it? They just did that with Hallmark Channel, moving it off channel 65 to something in the 200s.
David_Pritchett (David Pritchett)
December 16, 2010 at 3:06 p.m. (Suggest removal)
Now that SB is assured of getting the national PBS line-up, what about noncommercial programming that serves SB locally? (I suppose this is where those cable access channels are supposed to make us happy, but seriously the production values on those channels is atrocious.) Here's the thing: KCET's move to go independent *could* be a major break for Santa Barbara *if* KCET were to devote some commitment to our coverage needs. LET'S CALL ON KCET AND INSIST ON STRONG COVERAGE OF THE SANTA BARBARA AREA!
mvm (anonymous profile)
December 17, 2010 at 9:30 a.m. (Suggest removal)
This is great news! KCET has not met the recent interests of viewers outside the LA basin and has not met the production standards of PBS affiliates in Boston, New York and Chicago. We have been 26-year financial supporters of KCET [beyond basic membership] but it has been harder and harder each year as the station's horizons have narrowed. KCET's "SoCal" is really "LA" like the LA Times' "California" section is really SOUTHERN California. We're looking forward to KOCE.
rick (anonymous profile)
December 20, 2010 at 7:45 p.m. (Suggest removal)
The channel numbers listed are for those with cable boxes or DVR's. For those who subscribe to basic cable with no cable box, the "physical" channel and sub-channel numbers will be needed.
For example, this article says KCET HD will be moved to "mapped" channel 708 on your cable box. But for those without cable boxes, the real ("physical") channel number they need to enter on their TV sets is 111-100.
You can get around the problem by "rescanning" for channels, but sometimes this messes with manually-entered station ID's put in by the user. Quite the pain to re-enter them all again.
For basic cable users, I recommend using this online tool to find out out channel numbers (KOCE SD & HD are listed):
http://www.silicondust.com/support/ch...
Enter your zip code and select provider in the spin-box at top of page.
EastBeach (anonymous profile)
January 4, 2011 at 5:39 p.m. (Suggest removal)