KYCR (AM)

KYCR
City Golden Valley, Minnesota
Broadcast area Minneapolis-St. Paul
Branding Twin Cities Business Radio
Frequency 1440 kHz
First air date May 1948 (as KEYD)
Format Business Talk
Power 5,000 watts (day)
500 watts (night)
Class B
Facility ID 35504
Transmitter coordinates 44°59′20″N 93°21′6″W / 44.98889°N 93.35167°W / 44.98889; -93.35167Coordinates: 44°59′20″N 93°21′6″W / 44.98889°N 93.35167°W / 44.98889; -93.35167
Callsign meaning Former callsign of sister station KDIZ (K Your Christian Radio)
Former callsigns KEYD (1948-1956)
KEVE (1956-1964)
KQRS (1964-1982)
KGLD (1982-1984)
KQRS (1984-1996)
KDIZ (1996-2015)
Affiliations Wall Street Business Network
Owner Salem Media Group
(Common Ground Broadcasting, Inc.)
Sister stations KDIZ, KKMS, WWTC
Webcast Listen Live
Website twincitiesbusinessradio.com

KYCR (1440 AM) is a radio station serving the Minneapolis-St. Paul metropolitan area. It is owned by Salem Media Group, and is carrying a business radio format.

KYCR's studios are located in Eagan, while its transmitter is located in Golden Valley.

History

Radio Disney 1440 logo used from 2010 to 2013.

The original call letters were KEYD and the station played country music for many years. The station was launched in May 1948 by former management and advertisers of WDGY, who had become disenchanted with the owners of that station over the discontinuance of religious programming. Family Broadcasting basically started the station as a new home for the spurned WDGY programming. KEYD got a sister TV station in 1955, KEYD-TV 9 (now KMSP-TV), and the two stations were co-owned by Family Broadcasting until mid-1956. The original KEYD radio studios were located in downtown Minneapolis on 9th Street off of Hennepin Avenue practically next to the Orpheum Theater (see photo link below). According to the 1955 Broadcasting Yearbook, both the AM and TV stations were co-located in the Foshay Tower by the end of 1955.

The call sign was changed to KEVE in June 1956[1] and the studios moved to the station's transmitter and antenna site at 917 Lilac Drive in Golden Valley. During that time, the station played country music. KEVE-FM (92.5 FM) signed on September 1, 1962, and by October 1963, it was given the call letters KADM to match its AM sister as the pair became known as "Adam and Eve in the Valley"; the city of license for the two stations is the suburb of Golden Valley. A gradual shift from country music to a mix of classical music, show tunes and adult standards began in 1960 and was completed on both stations by March 1963.[2] On December 1, 1964, the call letters for both stations became KQRS for "Quality Radio Stations".

In 1967, the stations began experimenting with freeform rock music from midnight to 5 AM every night via the "Night Watch" program, playing R&B, jazz and psychedelic rock. The foray proved successful and by the end of 1968 it became the full-time format.

The two KQs were a simulcast until 1982, when the AM briefly switched to an oldies format as KGLD before returning to the simulcast. The KGLD calls became effective November 22, 1982, with the KQRS calls returning on March 28, 1984.

In 1985, ABC Radio Network, then a division of the original ABC, Inc. bought the station and its main FM counterpart with it from previous owner Hudson Communications Corporation, a radio broadcasting company owned by Washington D.C. lawyer Joe McKenna, which owned the station from 1956 to 1985. Along with its main FM sister, it was ABC's first foray into the Minnesota broadcast market. At first, ABC programmed the station with a classic rock format, albeit essentially being an AM simulcast of its FM sister at the time from 1985 until 1996.

The station again broke away from the simulcast in late 1996, this time permanently, when it became one of the four initial affiliates of the new Radio Disney with a children's format that competed with WWTC, then the flagship station of "Radio Aahs," which had its own children's format. The station's call letters changed to KDIZ on November 15, 1996.

Disney had previously been collaborating with Radio Aahs, which was based in Minneapolis and had launched its children's format in 1990. Radio Aahs had grown to approximately 30 affiliate stations around the country. Disney withdrew from the Aahs contract and began competing against Aahs with Radio Disney. Children's Broadcasting Corp. sued Disney and was awarded $9.5 million in 2002. Disney appealed, and after the court upheld the judgement, it was paid in 2005; with accumulated interest, the total was $12.4 million.

On November 12, 2005, the station made world news when a riot erupted at its "Jingle Jam Concert" featuring B5, forcing the venue, Brookdale Mall, to be closed. Members of the group were stripped of shirts, shoes and earrings.

On August 13, 2014, Disney put KDIZ and twenty-two other Radio Disney stations up for sale, in order to focus more on digital distribution of the Radio Disney network.[3][4]

It held the distinction of being not only the longest-tenured Radio Disney station in its history, but also one of ABC's longest-tenured non-mainstream radio stations in its history. It was also the last-remaining Disney/ABC broadcast property in Minnesota, having had sold the others in 2007, with ABC Radio going to Citadel Broadcasting (KXXR, acquired in 1993, Love 105, acquired in 1997, and KQRS-FM, acquired in 1985).

On September 15, it was announced that Salem Media Group acquired the last five Radio Disney owned-and-operated stations for sale (including KDIZ) for $2.225 million.[5] KDIZ was acquired through Common Ground Broadcasting, Inc., for $375.000.[6] Salem put a business format on the station in December 2015 (taken from 1570 AM),[7] after a brief period of silence. The format features Dave Ramsey and other business-talk oriented shows.[8] The sale of KDIZ was completed on December 15, 2015.[9] The station changed its callsign to KYCR on December 24.[10]

References

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Monday, May 02, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.