KMBZ (AM)

KMBZ
City Kansas City, Missouri
Broadcast area Kansas City metropolitan area
Branding Talk 980
Slogan The Talk Station
Frequency 980 kHz
Repeater(s) 98.1 KMBZ-FM-HD2
First air date April 5, 1922 (as WPE)
Format Talk
Power 5,000 watts
Class B
Facility ID 6382
Transmitter coordinates 39°02′17″N 94°36′55″W / 39.03806°N 94.61528°W / 39.03806; -94.61528
Callsign meaning K Midland Broadcasting Z (former owner)
Former callsigns WPE (1922-1923)
KLDS (1923-192?)
KFIX (192?-1928)
KMBC (1928-1967)
Affiliations Premiere Networks
ABC News Radio
Owner Entercom Communications
(Entercom License, LLC)
Sister stations KCSP, KRBZ, KMBZ-FM, KQRC, KWOD, KZPT, WDAF-FM
Webcast Listen Live
Website KMBZ website

KMBZ (980 kHz; "Talk 980"), is a commercial AM radio station licensed to Kansas City, Missouri. KMBZ is owned by Entercom Communications and it airs a talk radio format. Its studios and transmitter tower are in suburban Mission, Kansas, at separate locations.

After a local morning drive time news show, simulcast with co-owned 98.1 KMBZ-FM, KMBZ's weekday schedule is made up of nationally syndicated talk programs including Rush Limbaugh, Glenn Beck, Sean Hannity, Tom Sullivan, Joe Pags, Laura Ingraham and Coast to Coast AM with George Noory. World and national news is supplied at the beginning of each hour by ABC News Radio. Weekend programming includes shows on money, health, computers and cooking. Some weekend hours are paid brokered programming. KMBZ's sister station, KMBZ-FM, airs mostly local talk shows.

KMBZ operates at 5,000 watts around the clock.[1] It uses a non-directional antenna by day; at night, however, it broadcasts using a directional antenna to protect other stations on AM 980 from interference. On January 14, 2015, KMBZ was granted an FCC construction permit to move to the KCCV transmitter site and increase the daytime power to 9,000 watts.[2] Its signal covers the Kansas City metropolitan area, including parts of Missouri and Kansas.[3]

History

KMBZ is the oldest surviving station in Kansas City, beginning experimental broadcasts in 1921.[4] The station officially signed on as a commercially licensed station on April 5, 1922, with the call sign WPE. It was the second radio station in the state of Missouri, behind only St. Louis' WEW.

In its history it has been owned by two rival branches of the Latter Day Saint movement although it has no church affiliation now. The Reorganized Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (RLDS Church based in Independence, Missouri) bought the station in 1923 and renamed it KFIX and later KLDS (with the LDS standing for "Latter Day Saints").

In 1928, Midland Broadcasting bought the station and renamed it KMBC for Midland Broadcasting Company. In 1953, Midland put Channel 9 KMBC-TV on the air as a shared time arrangement with another local radio station owner. Cook Paint and Varnish Company bought the Midland holdings in 1954. KMBC-AM-TV operated out of the Lyric Theatre.

In 1961, Cook sold the radio and television stations to Metromedia. In 1962, Metromedia signed on 99.7 KMBC-FM (later KMBR and KLTH, now KZPT). In 1967, Metromedia sold both radio stations to Bonneville International but kept the television station. Bonneville is owned by The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (the Mormons based in Salt Lake City). So for the second time, the station was owned by a Mormon church organization. Since Metromedia held the rights to the KMBC call letters, Bonneville changed the AM station's call letters to KMBZ. The choice was deliberate; "Z" rhymes with "C", allowing Bonneville to continue trading on the old call letters. In the 1970s and early 1980s, the station's nickname was "Z-98". During those years, the station aired a full service middle of the road music format.

In 1997, Bonneville sold its entire Kansas City cluster, which by then consisted of KMBZ, KLTH, and KCMO-AM-FM, to Entercom Communications.

Paul Henning, who created The Beverly Hillbillies, was a writer, actor, disc jockey and newsreader at the station early in his career.[5]

After having worked as Director of Promotion for the Kansas City Royals baseball team, Rush Limbaugh got his start in political commentary on the station in 1983. He continues to be heard on KMBZ in his live 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. time slot. For many years KMBZ also repeated Limbaugh's show overnight.

KMBZ was the Royals flagship station for some time. For a time in the 1980s, it ceded flagship status to WIBW in Topeka, Kansas. In 2008, Royals games switched to co-owned sports radio station 610 KCSP. Beginning in 2009, some Royals games returned to KMBZ, when KCSP is committed to another sporting event. KMBZ is also the Kansas City affiliate for the Missouri Tigers radio network, broadcasting football, men's and women's basketball and the "Tiger Talk" coach's show.

In 2009, KMBZ began simulcasting its programming on the HD3 subchannel of sister station 98.1 KUDL. On March 24, 2011, Entercom announced that on March 30, KUDL's analog FM broadcasts would become a full-time simulcast of KMBZ as KMBZ-FM.[6] On December 24, 2014, Entercom announced that the KMBZ simulcast would split on January 5, 2015. On that date, KMBZ became "Talk 980," carrying mostly syndicated shows, while KMBZ-FM began airing a mostly locally-oriented programming schedule.[7]

Former hosts

References

  1. FCC.gov
  2. "Application for Construction Permit for Commercial Broadcast Station". CDBS Public Access. Federal Communications Commission. January 14, 2015. Retrieved May 9, 2017.
  3. Radio-Locator.com
  4. Broadcasting Yearbook page C-122
  5. "Paul Henning". The Independent. London. April 19, 2005. Retrieved May 7, 2010.
  6. http://www.radioink.com/Article.asp?id=2143445&spid=24698
  7. KMBZ to Break Simulcast; Split Talk Formats

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.