KADS
KADS (1240 AM, "The Sports Animal") is a radio station licensed to serve Elk City, Oklahoma, United States. The station, established in 1929,[1] is currently owned by Paragon Communications, Inc.
City | Elk City, Oklahoma |
---|---|
Frequency | 1240 kHz |
Branding | The Sports Animal |
Programming | |
Format | Sports |
Ownership | |
Owner | Paragon Communications, Inc. |
History | |
First air date | 1932 |
Technical information | |
Facility ID | 29030 |
Class | C |
Power | 1,000 watts (unlimited) |
Transmitter coordinates | 35°22′51″N 99°24′25″W |
Translator(s) | K251CN (98.1 MHz, Elk City) |
Links | |
Website | kadsam |
KADS broadcasts a sports talk format, largely as a simulcast of KWPN (640 AM) in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma.[2]
The station was assigned the KADS call sign by the Federal Communications Commission.[3]
Translators
Call sign | Frequency (MHz) | City of license | Facility ID | ERP (W) | Height (m (ft)) | Class | FCC info |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
K251CN | 98.1 MHz | Elk City, Oklahoma | 200877 | 250 | 175 m (574 ft) | D | FCC |
gollark: It's a shame we can't just set up "test civilizations" somewhere and see how well each thing works.
gollark: I mean. Maybe it could work in small groups. But small tribe-type setups scale poorly.
gollark: 1. Is that seriously how you read what I was saying? I was saying: fix our minds' weird ingroup/outgroup division.2. That is very vague and does not sound like it could actually work.
gollark: I'm pretty sure we *have* done the ingroup/outgroup thing for... forever. And... probably the solutions are something like transhumanist mind editing, or some bizarre exotic social thing I can't figure out yet.
gollark: I mean that humans are bad in that we randomly divide ourselves into groups then fiercely define ourselves by them, exhibit a crazy amount of exciting different types of flawed reasoning for no good reason, get caught up in complex social signalling games, come up with conclusions then rationalize our way to a vaguely sensible-looking justification, sometimes seemingly refuse to be capable of abstract thought when it's politically convenient, that sort of thing.
References
- "Directory of Radio Stations in the United States and Canada". Broadcasting Yearbook 1979. Washington, DC: Broadcasting Publications, Inc. 1979. p. C-176.
- "Station Information Profile". Arbitron. Retrieved June 24, 2009.
- "Call Sign History". FCC Media Bureau CDBS Public Access Database. Retrieved June 24, 2009.
External links
- KADS official website
- K251CN in the FCC's FM station database
- K251CN on Radio-Locator
- KADS in the FCC's AM station database
- KADS on Radio-Locator
- KADS in Nielsen Audio's AM station database
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