KAVA

KAVA (1480 AM) is a radio station broadcasting a Regional Mexican format. Licensed to Pueblo, Colorado, United States, it serves the Pueblo area.

KAVA
CityPueblo, Colorado
Broadcast areaPueblo
Frequency1480 kHz
Programming
FormatRegional Mexican
Ownership
OwnerLatino Communications, LLC
Sister stationsKBNO Denver
History
First air date1960 (as KTUX)
Former call signsKTUX (1960–1963)
KPUB (1963–1982)
KGMQ (1982–1983)
KAYK (1983-1988)
KRRU (1988–1998)
Technical information
Facility ID54259
ClassD
Power1,000 watts day
107 watts night
Translator(s)K298CG 107.5 MHz Pueblo
Links
WebsiteKAVA website

History

1480 kHz in Pueblo went on the air in 1960 as KTUX. It was owned by the Steel City Broadcasting Company and broadcast as a daytime-only station. Steel City declared bankruptcy in 1962, and KTUX fell silent on October 24 of that year. When Donald W. Reynolds, Jr., bought the station in 1963 and returned it to the air, he renamed it KPUB and aired a country format.

Quixote Broadcasting, KPUB's owner, was sold to L.W. Newcomb, Rex R. Miller and Clifton H. Gardiner in 1969. In 1975, KPUB spawned an FM station, KPUB-FM 99.9, which was a simulcast of KPUB and continued its programming after sunset.[1] The trio sold the station in 1978 to the Rocky Mountain Broadcasting Company of Colorado, owned by Leo Smentowski and William J. Engler; the FM station was sold separately. In 1981, Smentowski bought out Engler's interest.

The Gunter Corporation bought KPUB in 1982 and renamed it KGMQ, the first of nine license assignments for the frequency in a 14-year span. Gunter sold the station to Erway Communications in 1983, at which point the new owners renamed the station KAYK; Erway sold it to the Colorado Community Wireless Radio Company, which declared bankruptcy in 1988; Yonker and Turner Broadcasting acquired the station out of bankruptcy and renamed it KRRU; Yonker and Turner itself went into bankruptcy, and Joyce Erway acquired the station again, only to sell to Quetzal Communications Corporation within four months; and Quetzal sold KRRU to Polarcomm in 1996. Polarcomm changed the call letters to KAVA on September 18, 1998. Successive owners, including Council Tree Communications and Latino Communications, have maintained Spanish-language formats.

KAVA formerly was a simulcast with KXRE in the Colorado Springs area; that station is now owned by Colorado Public Radio. Both stations once simulcast Denver's KBNO.[2]

gollark: Thus, praise ~~Rust~~ ~~Ferris~~ Nim?
gollark: It compiles in reasonable time *and* makes a 600KB binary in debug mode which is much nicer than equivalent Rust.
gollark: I only need something like two routes so a full web framework is overkill.
gollark: ```nimimport optionsimport asyncdispatchimport httpximport tiny_sqliteimport macrosimport karax/[karaxdsl, vdom]import ./dbmacro includeFile(x: string): string = newStrLitNode(readFile(x.strVal))const css = includeFile("./src/style.css")let database = openDatabase("./monitoring.sqlite3")migrate(database)var threadDB {.threadvar.}: Option[DbConn]proc openDB(): DbConn = if isNone threadDB: threadDB = some openDatabase("./monitoring.sqlite3") get threadDBproc mainPage(): string = let vnode = buildHtml(html()): head: style: text css text "Bee deployed" $vnodeproc onRequest(req: Request) {.async.} = if req.httpMethod == some(HttpGet): case req.path.get() of "/": req.send(body=mainPage(), code=Http200, headers="Content-Type: text/html") else: req.send(Http404) else: req.send(Http404)echo "Starting up"run(onRequest, initSettings(Port(7800), "", 0))```This is what I have so far.
gollark: One per thread is likely sort of better ish slightly anyway.

References

  1. Broadcasting Yearbook 1976 page C-31
  2. "KBNO owner buys two southern Colorado stations". Denver Business Journal. November 18, 2002. Retrieved June 13, 2019.


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