As KET's original Louisville station When Kentucky Educational Television began broadcasting in 1968, it was built to provide the widest statewide coverage with the fewest transmitters possible. Network officials expected that the transmitters in
Elizabethtown (WKZT-TV, channel 23) and
Owenton (WKON-TV, channel 54) would provide sufficient service in the Louisville area. Reception, however, was poorer than expected, prompting KET in March 1969 to announce plans to file for UHF channel 68 and strike a deal with
NBC affiliate
WAVE-TV (channel 3) for a new tower, which would also house a stronger transmitter for independently owned educational station
WKPC-TV (channel 15). The station, with the callsign WKMJ (the -TV suffix was added in 1983), began test broadcasts on August 17, 1970, and full service began two weeks later. Channel 68 originally went off the air when the rest of the KET network was airing the same programming as WKPC-TV. Duplication remained low, and at the end of 1982, an agreement was reached for WKPC-TV to be the primary PBS outlet in Louisville. However, after this arrangement, duplication returned. In 1995, after WKPC-TV experienced a series of financial reversals caused by for-profit ventures intended to bolster station income, talks about a merger between WKPC-TV and KET began, with the stronger channel 15 becoming KET's primary station in Louisville. An agreement was reached in December 1996, by which KET acquired certain technical assets, including the license, and the land to the Floyds Knobs tower it still shared with WKPC-TV.
The launch of KET2 On July 1, 1997, KET's main programming moved to WKPC-TV. WKMJ-TV simultaneously suspended operations for a transmitter overhaul; it returned a month later at increased power, carrying a new service called KET2, which initially featured additional children's programs, adult education programming and local productions. Outside of Louisville, KET2 was seen on cable systems statewide; in Lexington, KET2 also replaced the cable-only KET Etc. service, which was an earlier attempt in launching a second programming service.
Digital subchannel history In 2009, WKMJ-DT2 began broadcasting the
Kentucky Channel, simulcasting the DT3 subchannel of KET's other stations. At the same time,
KET ED, the Education Channel became available on WKMJ-DT3 on a 24-hour-a-day basis; this ended in September 2009, when WKMJ-DT3 went silent for four years following that linear service's discontinuation. In 2013, WKMJ-DT3 began broadcasting the
World network by
American Public Television (APT). As the only KET station broadcasting that network, Louisville was the only major market in Kentucky to receive that channel until 2023, when the network began offering it on WCVN-TV's ATSC 3.0 signal in
Covington. In late 2020, WKMJ-TV's main channel was upgraded to 720p HD, with KETKY on 68.2 upgraded to widescreen standard definition. This upgrade also took place on the DT2 and DT3 feeds of all other KET satellites. ==Programming==