KFTH-DT
KFTH-DT is a television station licensed to Alvin, Texas, United States, serving as the Houston-area outlet for the Spanish-language network UniMás. It is owned and operated by TelevisaUnivision alongside Rosenberg-licensed Univision station KXLN-DT. The two stations share studios near the Southwest Freeway on Houston's southwest side; KFTH's transmitter is located near Missouri City, in unincorporated northeastern Fort Bend County. KFTH's main subchannel is also broadcast by KXLN-DT from its transmitter.
Channel 67 was put on the air by Four Star Broadcasting as KTHT, greater Houston's fourth independent station, on January 27, 1986. Its owners sold it to the Home Shopping Network later that year, and it broadcast home shopping programming from November 1986 to January 2002 as KHSH. Univision acquired the group of former HSN-owned stations, USA Broadcasting, and used it to launch Telefutura in January 2002.
History
In April 1982, the Federal Communications Commission assigned channel 67 to Alvin, Texas, at the petition of David Eugene Brown. Four groups applied for the channel, with Four Star Broadcasting winning the construction permit in a settlement approved in November 1983. The winning applicant was a consortium of state legislator Harold Dutton, Boston-based investor Don Moore, and Warburg Pincus—and managed by Jack Moffitt, who arrived in Alvin from WUAB in Cleveland.KTHT signed on the air on January 27, 1986. Operating as the Houston market's fourth independent station, it had studios in Alvin and an advertising sales office near the Astrodome and broadcast primarily older and cheaper syndicated programs and movies. The existing three independents in Houston—KTXH, KRIV, and KHTV—had bought up enough children's programs that no such shows appeared on channel 67's lineup.
In September, less than nine months after starting up, Four Star agreed to sell KTHT to the Home Shopping Network for $15 million as its seventh broadcast TV station. The station began airing 24-hour home shopping programming on November 13 and changed its call sign to KHSH, incorporating an H and S for "home shopping", on January 23, 1987.
Barry Diller acquired Silver King Broadcasting, HSN's stations division, in 1995 with plans to eventually roll out a new format, "CityVision", on the stations in the portfolio. However, after the format failed to take off where it was introduced and the company registered operating losses of $62 million in 2000, Diller opted to sell the stations to Univision in 2001. KHSH changed its call sign to KFTH on January 14, 2002, when it became part of Univision's new secondary network, Telefutura. Telefutura rebranded as UniMás in 2013.
Newscasts
On April 4, 2011, sister station KXLN debuted a weekday morning news program for KFTH, called Vive La Mañana. Like the newscasts on KXLN, it was broadcast in high definition, and was produced out of the station's current news set. Dallas–Fort Worth sister station KUVN-DT used the same brands for their newscasts that are simulcast on sister station KSTR-DT; Vive La Mañana featured a different graphics and music package that is shared by both stations. The program was canceled in March 2015.Technical information
Subchannels
The station's signal is multiplexed:| Channel | Res. | Aspect | Short name | Programming |
| 67.1 | 720p | 16:9 | KFTH-DT | UniMás |
| 67.2 | 480i | 4:3 | GetTV | Get |
| 67.3 | 480i | 16:9 | GRIT | Grit |
| 67.4 | 480i | 16:9 | HSN | HSN |
| 67.5 | 720p | 16:9 | KXLN-HD | Univision |
| 67.6 | 480i | 4:3 | BT2 | Infomercials |
| 20.3 | 480i | 16:9 | QVC-2 | QVC2 |