KCOU

For the airport in Columbia, Missouri assigned the ICAO code KCOU, see Columbia Regional Airport.
KCOU
City of license Columbia, Missouri
Frequency 88.1 MHz
First air date 1973-10-31 on 88.3 MHz, 16 watts, monaural
Format College
ERP 430 watts
HAAT 44.0 meters
Class A
Facility ID 28513
Transmitter coordinates 38°56′23″N 92°19′20″W / 38.93972°N 92.32222°W / 38.93972; -92.32222Coordinates: 38°56′23″N 92°19′20″W / 38.93972°N 92.32222°W / 38.93972; -92.32222
Former callsigns KEJJ (1993–1994)
Owner Missouri Students Association
(The Curators of the University of Missouri)
Webcast radio.kcou.fm - shoutcast stream
Website kcou.fm

KCOU (88.1 FM) is a radio station broadcasting the College radio format. Licensed to Columbia, Missouri, USA, the station is currently owned by the Missouri Students Association at the University of Missouri.

History

Originally known as KCCS (the Kampus Carrier Current Station), the station was founded in a dorm broom closet in 1963 as a carrier current AM station at 580 kHz. In 1973, the Independent Residence Halls Association was granted a broadcast license by the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) to operate in monaural at 88.3 MHz FM with 16 watts. Historically, this was the first license ever issued to a student group within a university, instead of to a university's administration. Operation began Halloween evening, playing the oddball tune "They're Coming to Take Me Away Ha-Haaa!".

In the mid-1990s, the Missouri Students Association bought the station from the Residence Halls Association, who deemed it a financial burden for the organization.

The student-run station gained notoriety during the 1970s, 1980s, and 1990s by promoting alternative music/college rock and providing a platform for new artists and new trends. It has broken or been among the first radio stations to play bands such as Death Cab for Cutie, Uncle Tupelo, White Rabbits (band) and Ditch Witch.

In 1993, the station reunited the cult favorite Big Star as part of its annual Springfest concert. That show featured original bandmembers Alex Chilton and Jody Stephens, along with Jon Auer and Ken Stringfellow of the Posies.[1] A recording of that reunion show was released as Columbia: Live at Missouri University 4/25/93.[2]

The 2008–2009 staff included General Manager John Dobson and Program Director/Chief Engineer Jonathan Hutcheson.

Innovations at KCOU as of fall 2008 include a new Web site, kcou.fm. The site features live audio streaming worldwide. In February 2009, KCOU launched a news department, which provides on-the-hour news updates every weekday. For the 2008–2009 school year, the station had more than 120 student volunteers.

In January 2009, power to KCOU's FM signal was shut off when Hudson Hall, the MU residence hall where the station's broadcasting tower and transmitter sit, went offline for renovation. Through the Missouri Students Association, the station secured funding to construct a new tower atop Schurz Hall on the MU campus. KCOU was off the airwaves for most of the Spring 2009 semester and through part of the following summer. However, while off the air, KCOU still maintained a live, online broadcast 24/7 which was and continues to be made available through its website.

The station returned to the radio airwaves with full its FM broadcast capability on July 9, 2009 after experiencing some construction, equipment, and engineering delays.[3][4][5]

News department

In spring of 2009, KCOU launched its news department under the slogan "Your only source for live campus news." The department began broadcasting news updates at the top of the hour throughout the day. In fall 2009, KCOU News launched its main 15-minute newscast, "The Pulse," during evening drive-time. The station later expanded the show to a half-hour. Then, in January 2011, it started broadcasting a full hour of news from 4:30–5:30 p.m., making it mid-Missouri's earliest evening newscast.

The newscast features live reports and radio stories, including those from KCOU's statehouse news service, Missouri Digital News. In spring 2010, The Pulse began featuring live traffic reports and weather forecasts every 10 minutes. KCOU is home to the only student-produced weathercast on the MU campus, through the University of Missouri Campus Weather Service. With traffic and weather "together on the 1s," plus live sports updates, The Pulse is fully in the newsradio format.

The news department also features a Sunday afternoon news review called "NewsHour" from 1 to 2 p.m. that features in depth interviews with important figures from the MU campus and Columbia. Two commentators host a political debate show called "Point-Counterpoint" from 3 to 4 p.m. Sundays. Theo Keith was the News Director for the 2009–2010 school year. Blake Hanson is the News Director for the 2010–2011 school year.

In summer 2009, KCOU News received two Communicator Awards of Distinction for its coverage of the 2008 election. The station won awards in the "overall newscast" and "student produced programming" categories. Thousands of entries vied for distinction in the competition. KCOU also won a Communicator Award of Distinction a year later for its coverage of elections in the 2009–2010 school year.

In the 2009–2010 school year, the station carried Missouri men's basketball games for the first time.

In the 2013-2014 school year, the station plans to carry all Missouri football games live at home and the road, along with a live slate of Missouri Men's basketball games, specifically home conference games, select non-conference opponents, and potentially the SEC Tournament. Football coverage typically begins 1 hour before kick-off under the moniker "Tiger Pre-Game Live", while basketball coverage starts 30 minutes before tip-off under the moniker "Tiger Tip-Off Live", expanded to an hour for Conference and NCAA Tournament Coverage. The postgame reports for both sports are branded "Tiger Postgame Report."

Current executive staff

General Manager Kyle Norris
Business Director Mark McDaniel
Chief Engineer Pierce Porterfield
Assistant Chief Engineer Anthony Greer
Music Director Evan Campbell
Program Director Steve Mainzer
Assistant Program Director Zach Gee
Promotions Director Max Mitchem
Live Events Director Mikal Slatton
News Director Jackson Bollinger
Sports Director Andy Humphrey
Production Director Jonathan Janas
Alumni / Recruitment Director Nate Gatter
Digital Communications Director Tommy Walzer
Communications Director Branden Tatum

[6]

References

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Thursday, January 07, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.