Jump to content

KFRO (AM)

Coordinates: 32°30′7″N 94°42′12″W / 32.50194°N 94.70333°W / 32.50194; -94.70333
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by Mlaffs (talk | contribs) at 02:20, 25 November 2016 (Unlinked: KFRO (2)). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

KFRO
Broadcast areaLongview-Marshall area
Frequency1370 kHz
Programming
FormatSports Talk
AffiliationsFox, Former-Moody Bible Institute, Mutual (MBS), NBC-Blue/ABC, Keystone, TSN, CBS
Ownership
Owner
  • A.1 Investco LLC (Todd Boehly, CEO Gugenheim Finance)(Sale Pending to RCA Broadcasting LLC
  • (A.1 Investco LLC (Sale Pending to RCA Broadcasting LLC))
History
First air date
February 6, 1935
Former call signs
KFRO (1935-Present)
Call sign meaning
"Keep Forever Rolling On"
Technical information
Facility ID70455
ClassB
Power1,000 watts
Transmitter coordinates
32°30′7″N 94°42′12″W / 32.50194°N 94.70333°W / 32.50194; -94.70333

KFRO (1370 AM) is an American radio station broadcasting a Sports Talk format. Licensed to Longview, Texas, USA, the station serves the Longview-Tyler-Kilgore-Marshall area. The station is owned by A.1 Investco LLC (Formerly Access.1). 2015 marks the 80th anniversary of KFRO Radio in Longview, Texas. [2]

History

James R. Curtis received a license in 1924 to operate KFRO on 1220 kilocycles in Ft. Worth, Texas. However, financial problems forced Curtis to abandon the plans for the Ft. Worth station, and later revive the KFRO license on 1370 kHz in Longview. According to legend, Carl Estes (late owner of the Longview News Journal) and R.J. LeTourneau (owner of LeTourneau Industries) offered to finance the station if Curtis would move the license to Longview. The hope of Estes and LeTourneau was that if Longview had its own station it would turn Longview into a big city and put it on the map. Which in turn would bring more readers to the Longview News Journal, and more quality employees to LeTourneau Industries.

On October 30, 1933 Voice of Longview received a construction permit to build a 100 watt radio station on 1370 KC in Longview, Texas. The location was listed as a generic "local hotel" for both transmitter and studios (as that was what the larger market stations were doing, renting space in hotels).

The call letters KFRO stand for

"Keep Forever Rolling On"

KFRO "The Voice of Longview" signed on the air on February 6, 1935 on 1370 kilocycles with a power of 100 watts daytime by owner J.R. Curtis. The original studio building and transmitter for KFRO was at the SW corner of S. Green St. (then known as Texas State Highway 149) and Radio St. on the southern edge of town.

In 1935 KFRO tried to move its frequency to 1210, but was stopped after an experimental period on 1210.

In 1935 First Baptist Church of Longview first started to broadcast its services on KFRO. This made the First Baptist Church Broadcast the thirrd longest-running program in broadcasting (The Grand Ole Opry (November 28, 1925) on WSM is longest-running show and Music and the Spoken Word (July 15, 1929) on KSL are the second longest). First Baptist ceased the broadcasts after 73 years.

On October 7, 1936 KFRO powered up from 100 watts to 250 watts from the location on Radio Street in South Longview.

For two years (until 1937), Rogers Peterson (legendary oil wildcater in Longview) was partners with J.R. Curtis. On July 24, 1937 James R. Curtis became full owner of "The Voice Of Longview".

On March 18, 1937, KFRO covered the New London school explosion, in which approximately 300 students and teachers were killed in the deadliest school building disaster in US history.

In 1937, KFRO's studios moved to 620 Glover-Crim Building Suite 411 in downtown Longview.

In 1938 Jerry Doggett, LA Dodgers announcer, got his start on KFRO. He left KFRO in 1941 to go to WRR in Dallas.

In 1939 KFRO's transmitter moved to its current site, the property behind the J.R. Curtis mansion at 2118 East Marshall Avenue (Hwy 80). At the new transmitter site there were three towers erected, which allowed KFRO to be a full-time station. KFRO's new transmitter was an RCA BTA-1D. At that time KFRO was an RCA turn key station. KFRO runs 1 kilowatt with one tower daytime, and 1 kilowatt three tower directional at night.

In 1940 Grant Turner of Baird, Texas joined the KFRO air staff. Turner was known as the "Voice of the Grand Ole Opry. In 1981 Turner was inducted into the Country Music Hall of Fame. Turner also sang, and had several duet albums with Helen Carter on the Tennessee and Republic labels. He also performed on the Grand Ole Opry.

In 1947, KFRO moved into former home of the Hurst Eye, Ear, Nose, and Throat Hospital on Methvin St. in downtown Longview and renamed the building The Curtis Building. The new studios were very plush, with grand piano, harp, and room for a full band. The Hurst Hospital building was built in 1919 by Dr. V.R. Hurst, and was located on Methvin St, between the U.S. Post Office and The Hilton Hotel.

In 1941 the U.S. Federal Communications Commission shifted all of the frequencies above 710 kilocycles to make room for more stations, and more Clear Channel frequencies, but 1370 KFRO was never moved off of its original frequency. It is unknown how J.R. Curtis achieved this.

In 1953, The East Texas Hillbilly Jamboree debuted on KFRO. The show opened at the Rita Theatre starring Claude King and the Roadrunners, and some 30 other entertainers. The East Texas Hillbilly Jamboree was started to capitalize on the popularity of the WSM Grand Ole Opry in Nashville, and the KWKH Louisiana Hayride in Shreveport. With the close proximity of Longview to Shreveport KFRO was hoping to siphon some of the Louisiana Hayride's talent and audience. But due to KFRO's limited signal the show failed. WSM and KWKH had national audiences due to the 50,000 watt signals.

In the 1980s, Curtis moved KFRO to new facilities at 481 East Loop 281 near N. Fourth St, in northeast Longview.

The Curtis Building and the former Hilton Hotel were torn down in the early 1990s and the site is now occupied by Heritage Plaza.

In the mid-1980s J.R. Curtis Jr. bought 95.3 KNIF Gilmer, on December 5, 1986 95.3 became KAEZ, and moved the studios to Longview. 95.3 then became KLSQ on September 17, 1990. On March 1, 1993 95.3 was rebranded as KFRO-FM, and the format changed to oldies (1950s and 1960s rock and roll and pop), and was called "The Frog". On December 7, 1998 95.3 became KCGL, and then back to 95.3 KFRO-FM February 15, 1999. 95.3 has been just about every format in the book, Beautiful Music, Easy Listening, Country, Top-40, Oldies, Spanish, Smooth Jazz, Soft Rock, and now a Top-40 mix variety format. The most successful time in 95.3's history was the oldies era when the station was known as "The Frog".

Throughout KFRO's history it has been every network affiliation (except NBC/NBC Red). It has been Mutual, TSN, Keystone, ABC/NBC Blue, CBS, CNN, ESPN, and Fox. KFRO was last a Fox news affiliate. Until May 2013 KFRO was an affiliate of the Moody Bible Institute, but has since dropped the service in favor of Fox Sports Radio.

KFRO remained in the Curtis family for 63 years until the late J.R. Curtis Jr. sold the station in 1998.

Sunburst years

On June 15, 1998, the KFRO stations were bought by Sunburst, who moved KYKX into the KFRO building on the Loop. The Sunburst group included 105.7 KYKX Longview, 104.1 KKUS Tyler, 100.7 KPXI Overton, 1370 KFRO Longview, and 95.3 KFRO-FM Gilmer. At that point "Voice of Longview" Broadcasting ceased to exist. A few months after the sale, J.R. Curtis Junior died in a motorcycle accident. A few months after that J.R. Curtis Senior, founder of KFRO died.

Waller years

On October 18, 2000 KFRO, KFRO-FM, KKUS, and KYKX were sold to Waller Media of Jacksonville. Sunburst's KPXI was sold to Salem, and lowered power so that they could raise the power on their Dallas station 100.7 KWRD-FM. Under Waller's ownership KFRO's format changed many times. From Urban AC, to ESPN, to Music Of Your Life (standards), Oldies, and talk. The Waller group of stations included 1370 KFRO Longview, 95.3 KFRO-FM Gilmer, 105.7 KYKX Longview, 104.1 KKUS Tyler, 106.5 KOOI Jacksonville, 1400 KEBE Jacksonville, 96.7 KOYE Frankston, and 102.3 KLJT Jacksonville. In 2004 Waller leased and bought 103.1 KDVE and 100.3 KXAL.

Access.1/East Texas Radio Group Years

On January 7, 2005, KFRO was purchased by Access.1 (East Texas Radio Group), and was a tri-mulcast of Classic Country 104.1 KKUS, Tyler. Access.1 moved KFRO from its 20+ year home in the Curtis Building at 481 E Loop 281, to its current home at 4408 North US Highway 259 in Longview where the audio loops through and is shared with KCUL-FM, KYKX is also in the building. KFRO is now being run from a small six-channel mixer in the KKUS control room in Tyler.

January 1, 2015, Access.1 entered into a 3-year LMA with Alpha Media. Alpha Media will run KFRO, while Access.1 will retain ownership of the station. Alpha Media purchased KFRO's sister stations KYKX, KKUS, KOOI, and KOYE. Alpha also purchased the Access.1 stations in Shreveport, Louisiana.

November 30, 2015 Access.1 ceased to exist, and the last three remaining stations, KFRO, KCUL-FM, and KSYR, were folded into a new holding company, A.1 Investco LLC. A.1 Investco is controlled directly by Todd Boehly, the CEO of Gugenheim Capital.

RCA Broadcasting

On November 1st, 2016 RCA Broadcasting (owner of 1410 KZEY), and A.1 Invesco entered into an agreement to sell 1370 KFRO, and it's assets to RCA Broadcasting. The filing with the FCC is pending approval. Once the sale is complete, January 1, 2017 Fox Sports programming will cease on 1370 KFRO

Present programming

1370 KFRO is airing Fox Sports Radio.

Former programming

Until May 2013 KFRO and 1410 KCUL simulcast the Moody Bible Institute's satellite radio feed called "The Way". The station stunted in preparation for the format change for over two weeks.

The former KFRO/Ranch on air staff included East Texas radio broadcasting legend Tom Perryman. Tom Perryman is East Texas' only true radio legend. In the late 1940s Tom started his career at 1400 KEBE "The KEBE Corral" in Jacksonville, Texas. In the mid-1950s Tom was at KSIJ (now KEES)1430 in Gladewater, Texas. It was at KSIJ that Tom brought Elvis Presley to East Texas, and gave Elvis some of his first work. It was also at KSIJ that Tom met Jim Reeves, Floyd Cramer, and Johnny Horton. Then Tom went on to host the Opry Star Spotlight on The Air Castle of the South 650 WSM in Nashville, and became one of the most famous Opry announcers of all time. Before leaving WSM he hired his replacement, Ralph Emery. Tom and Jim Reeves then bought KGRI AM/FM in Henderson, Texas. Later Tom and Mary Reeves bought WMTS AM/FM in Murfreesboro, Tennessee. The Perryman's and Mary Reeves sold WMTS AM/FM in the early 1980s, and Tom went into retirement. Tom was convinced to come back to East Texas by Dudley Waller (former owner of KKUS) and Rick Guest (former GM of Waller and Access.1/East Texas Radio Group), to boost the ratings of the fledgling classic country station (The Ranch). Tom agreed to join the Ranch, and has kept "The Ranch" consistently at the top of the ratings.

Sports

KFRO was the first Longview radio home of the Dallas Cowboys. KFRO was the original home of the Lobos, but was lost to 95.3 KFRO-FM, 105.7 KYKX, 100.3 KXAL, and 102.3 KLJT.

Engineering

1370 KFRO is a class B station. KFRO is 1 kilowatt day non-directional (1 tower), 1 kilowatt night directional (3 towers). The KFRO towers are 177 feet tall. The current KFRO transmitter building was built in 2003. KFRO signed on in 1935 with a 100 watt homemade transmitter. In 1935 KFRO increased its power to 250 watts with a Western Electric transmitter. In 1941 power was increased to 1,000 watts and a new RCA BTA-1D was installed, it stayed in service until 1983, when it was replaced by a Rockwell Collins 820-D2. The Rockwell Collins transmitter was made to run C-Quam AM Stereo, which made KFRO the first AM stereo station in East Texas. The Collins-Rockwell was replaced in 2003 with a used 1975 Harris MW-1 solid state transmitter which is still in service.

Former Sister stations

1370 KFRO Longview is owned by A.1 Invesco of New York City, its East Texas former sister stations are

1410 KZEY Marshall (Sold to RCA Broadcasting, soon KFRO will rejoin KZEY as sister stations)

104.1 KKUS Tyler (sold to Alpha Media)

105.7 KYKX Longview (sold to Alpha Media)

96.7 KOYE Frankston (sold to Alpha Media)

106.5 KOOI Jacksonville (sold to Alpha Media)

KFRO Legend

The longtime program director of 1370 KFRO, Charlie Thomason (from 1983–2004), died at the control board of KFRO in the main control room at 481 East Loop 281, on June 6, 2004. When Thomason died a stain appeared on the carpet. The concrete was treated and carpet replaced, but the stain continues to reappear. The building was last the home of KFRO 1370, KFRO-FM 95.3, KYKX 105.7, KXAL 100.3, and KDVE 103.1. The Waller family sold the building in 2011, and it is a Panera Bread restaurant. No word as to whether the stain has reappeared?

80th Anniversary

February 6th, 2015, marked the 80th anniversary of the first air date of KFRO in Longview, to date nothing has been done on or off the air for the milestone in the history of KFRO.

References

  1. ^ "Tyler-Longview, TX (Arbitron)". Radio-Info.com. {{cite news}}: Cite has empty unknown parameter: |coauthors= (help)
  2. ^ "KFRO Facility Record". United States Federal Communications Commission, audio division.