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1954–1958 1958–1963 1963–1967 1967–1971 1971–1974
1954–1958 1958–1963 1963–1967 1967–1971 1971–1974
1974–1980 1980–1994 1994–2007 2007–2014 2014–present
1974–1980 1980–1994 1994–2007 2007–2014 2014–present

1954–1958[]

Picture-72

Originally signed on the air on October 29, 1954, as a primary ABC affiliate on VHF channel 2. It was originally owned by Cole Wylie alongside KREM radio (AM 970, now KTTO; and FM 92.9, now KZZU-FM). The King Broadcasting Company, run by Seattle businesswoman Dorothy Bullitt, bought the KREM stations from Wylie in 1957; the radio stations were sold off in 1984. (Coincidentally, the former KREM-FM is now a sister station to KXLY-TV.) However, channel 2 retained the -TV suffix in its callsign until 2009.

1958–1963[]

Krem0263

1963–1967[]

Krem tv

This logo was also used by KTVU in Oakland–San Francisco from 1967–1975, and similar logo with BBC Two from 1967-1974.

1967–1971[]

Kremcrown

1971–1974[]

Abc2krem

1974–1980[]

Kremtv

On August 8, 1976, KREM-TV swapped affiliations with KXLY-TV and became a CBS affiliate; CBS had dropped KXLY-TV for constantly pre-empting or delaying its network shows; the staton kept its 1974 logo even with the change.

1980–1994[]

KREM Circle 2 1980s

During the use of this logo, the Bullitts would sell their broadcasting assets to the Providence Journal Company in 1992. The logo was similar to WJBK from 1978-1983.

1994–2007[]

KREM 2 logo

This logo was based on the logo used for KCBS-TV in Los Angeles, KSTW in Tacoma–Seattle, and KTVT in Fort Worth–Dallas.

2007–2014[]

KREM 2 2007

2014–present[]

KREM 2014

On June 16, 2014, KREM's Facebook Page revealed a new logo. The red 'greater than' part of the logo was kept, but now the KREM letters are more compact, in addition to a different '2'.

External links[]


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