KCMO (AM)

KCMO (710 kHz) is a commercial AM radio station licensed to Kansas City, Missouri. Owned by Cumulus Media, the station airs a talk radio format. The studios and offices are located in Overland Park, Kansas.[1] KCMO is also heard on FM translator 103.7 MHz K279BI and on the HD-2 subchannel of co-owned KCFX 101.1 MHz.

KCMO
CityKansas City, Missouri
Broadcast areaKansas City Metropolitan Area, and parts of Missouri, Kansas, Iowa, and Nebraska
BrandingKCMO Talk Radio 710 AM & 103.7 FM
SloganKansas City's Most Stimulating Talk
Frequency710 kHz AM
Translator(s)103.7 MHz K279BI
Repeater(s)101.1 KCFX-HD2
First air date1925 (as KWKC at 1370)
FormatTalk
Power10,000 watts (day)
5,000 watts (night)
ClassB
Facility ID33391
Transmitter coordinates39°19′08″N 94°29′48″W
Call sign meaningKansas City, MissOuri
Former call signsKWKC (1925-1936)
Former frequencies1370 kHz (1925-1939)
1450 kHz (1939-1941)
1480 kHz (1941-1947)
810 kHz (1947-1998)
AffiliationsWestwood One Network
Westwood One News
OwnerCumulus Media
(CMP Houston-KC, LLC)
Sister stationsKCHZ, KCFX, K279BI, KCJK, KCMO-FM, KMJK
WebcastListen Live or
Listen Live on iHeart
Website710kcmo.com

The transmitter is off North Eastern Road, near Interstate 435, on Kansas City's Northeast side.[2] KCMO broadcasts with 10,000 watts by day and 5,000 watts at night, using a directional antenna at all times. The station is heard around the Kansas City metropolitan area, in sections of Missouri and Kansas. With a good radio, the signal can also be heard in sections of Iowa and Nebraska.

Programming

Weekdays begin with a local news and information show hosted by Pete Mundo. Nationally syndicated conservative talk shows the rest of the day, most of which come from the Westwood One Network, a subsidiary of parent company Cumulus Media. Hosts include Chris Plante, Dave Ramsey, Ben Shapiro, Mark Levin, John Batchelor, Red Eye Radio, First Light and America in The Morning. Weekends feature shows on money, health, religion, cooking, travel, gardening and horses, some of which are brokered programming.

At various times in its history, KCMO has carried hourly newscasts from either CBS Radio News or Fox News Radio. At the beginning of 2015, KCMO and most Cumulus talk stations switched to Westwood One News, a Cumulus network.

History

Early years

The station started in 1925 by Wilson Duncan Broadcasting as AM 1370 KWKC. In 1936 it changed its call letters to KCMO (Kansas City Missouri). In 1939 it moved to 1450 AM and then 1480 AM in 1941. In November, 1947 it moved to 810 AM.[3] It stayed at 810 for more than half a century. During much of that time, KCMO was a CBS Radio Network affiliate, carrying its line up of dramas, comedies, news, sports, soap operas, game shows and big band broadcasts during the "Golden Age of Radio."

Walter Cronkite was a sports announcer at the station in 1936 with the on air name of "Walter Wilcox".[4] While at KCMO, Cronkite met his wife, Mary Elizabeth Maxwell, and later left to become a reporter for United Press International, before becoming a long-time TV anchor for CBS News.

Acquisition by Meredith Corp.

In 1953, television station KCMO-TV (now KCTV) was launched. The Meredith Corporation acquired both the radio and television stations in October 1953, less than a month after the television station went on the air. Meredith later acquired what became KCMO-FM, 94.9 FM.

In 1978 Meredith built a new facility for its broadcasting stations in Fairway, Kansas. The radio stations were spun off from the television station in 1983. Later, the TV station changed its call letters to KCTV. (Meredith continues to own KCTV to this day.) That year, Richard Fairbanks (a one-time owner of what is today WXIA-TV in Atlanta, Georgia) bought both KCMO and KCMO-FM.

The stations were then sold to the Summit Communications Group in 1985, then to the Gannett Company in 1986. Bonneville International, which already owned rival stations KMBZ and KLTH (now KZPT), acquired both KCMO stations in 1993.

Sale to Entercom and switch to AM 710

In 1997, Bonneville sold its entire Kansas City cluster plus three radio stations in Seattle to Entercom Communications. On October 3, 1997, shortly after Entercom assumed control of the KCMO stations, KCMO swapped frequencies with WHB, with KCMO moving to its present-day dial position of 710 AM and WHB relocating to 810 AM. Due to the way the switch was structured, the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) considers KCMO to be legally the same station as the old WHB.[5]

In 2000, Entercom was forced to sell both KCMO stations to Susquehanna Radio after its purchase of Sinclair Broadcasting's Kansas City properties, KQRC-FM, KXTR-FM and WDAF-FM. The acquisition left Entercom two stations over the FCC's single-market ownership limit. Cumulus Media became the owner of both KCMO and its FM sister station in 2006 with its acquisition of Susquehanna.

Changes under Cumulus ownership

When Cumulus assumed control of the station in mid-2006, local morning host Van Patrick quit on air, apparently upset over the firing of his producer as well as others in the building, during a national layoff of Cumulus employees. On September 12, the station began a new morning show, hosted by Chris Stigall. Stigall has since left the station, being replaced by Rob Carson. Carson was later replaced by Gregg Knapp as morning host. Pete Mundo is the latest morning drive time personality.

On April 30, 2012, KCMO began simulcasting on FM translator 103.7 K279BI via KCFX-HD2.

Controversy

In light of Michael Savage's controversial remarks concerning Islam, a group of 70 representatives from various local religious groups including Christianity, Buddhism, Judaism and Islam, gathered in a May 2008 interfaith meeting against alleged bigotry and urged KCMO to drop Savage's program.[6] Savage's show, "The Savage Nation," was syndicated by Westwood One Network, co-owned with KCMO, and heard afternoons on AM 710.

Former hosts


See also

References

  1. "Contact - KCMO Talk Radio". kcmotalkradio.com. Retrieved 28 August 2019.
  2. "KCMO-AM 710 kHz - Kansas City, Missouri". radio-locator.com. Retrieved 28 August 2019.
  3. http://www.fybush.com/sites/2005/site-051202.html Kansas City's KCMO, WHB and KCXL
  4. The Duh Awards: In This Stupid World, We Take the Prize By Bob Fenster p. 176 Andrews McMeel Publishing (April 1, 2005) ISBN 0-7407-5021-6
  5. "KCMO, WHB bring new meaning to the phrase 'changing stations'", The Kansas City Star, October 3, 1997.
  6. Religious group wants KCMO 710-AM to drop Michael Savage’s program
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.