KHNR

KHNR is a News/Talk radio station serving Honolulu, Hawaii. The Salem Communications outlet broadcasts at 690 kHz with a power level of 10,000 watts. Its studios are in Honolulu's Kalihi district, and its transmitter is in the Kakaako neighborhood.

KHNR
CityHonolulu
Broadcast areaHonolulu, Hawaii
Frequency690 kHz
BrandingAM 690 The Answer
Slogan"News. Opinion. Insight."
Programming
FormatNews/Talk
Ownership
OwnerSalem Communications
(Salem Media of Hawaii, Inc.)
Sister stationsKAIM, KKOL, KGU, KHCM, KHCM-FM, KGU-FM
History
First air dateMay 14, 1947 (1947-05-14)[1]
Former call signsKVPO (CP)
KULA (1947–1967)
KKUA (1967–1987)
KQMQ (1987–2002)
KORL (2002–2006)
KHCM (2006–2007)
Call sign meaningHawaii's News Radio
Technical information
Facility ID16742
ClassB
Power10,000 watts unlimited
Translator(s)K232FL (94.3 FM)
Links
WebcastListen Live
WebsiteKHNR's homepage

History

KHNR's history at 690 AM can be traced back to its early days as the original home of Top 40 KKUA during the 1960s, 1970s and early 1980s. They later moved their Top 40 format to KQMQ-FM and switched to Adult Contemporary, only to have both stations simulcast the Top 40 from 1987 into early 1999, when the AM became the Hawaii affiliate for Radio Disney, picking up the call letters of former Top 40 rival KORL. In 2005 Visionary Related Entertainment sold KORL, who then flipped it to a multicultural format. In 2006 Salem and KORL's owners swapped signals, and in the process moved the KHCM calls and Country format over to the 690 from the 1180 frequency, which in turn became the new home for KORL.

In 2004, Salem acquired Rock station KPOI-FM and dropped the format, giving Hawaii its first FM News/Talk station. KAIM/870 became its simulcast after the switch was made. On Sept. 3, 2007 KHCM switched to both 870 AM and 97.5 FM, keeping its country music format and taking the KHCM calls for both stations. The News/Talk format and KHNR call letters moved to 690 AM. KPOI today is now owned by Visionary Related Entertainment and continues to stream classic rock.

gollark: Yes. Most things could.
gollark: "Ubuntu is stable" - someone somewhere who was WRONG.
gollark: Unicode seems to mostly work, apart from the mess of ways to represent some characters.
gollark: English isn't. We have loads of regional dialects. They're all *fairly* close, at least.
gollark: Ah yes, because you can totally just modify a language with hundreds of millions of speakers, Solar, totally practical.

References

  1. "Radio Station KULA Goes On Air Tonight With Elaborate Program". Honolulu Star-Bulletin. May 14, 1947. p. 5. Retrieved July 10, 2020.


This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.