KKNT

KKNT (960 AM, "960 The Patriot") is a radio station broadcasting a talk radio format. KKNT is licensed to Phoenix, Arizona, United States, and broadcasts at 5000 watts. The station is owned by Salem Communications Holding Corporation, a subsidiary of the Salem Media Group.[1]

KKNT
CityPhoenix, Arizona
Broadcast areaPhoenix area
Frequency960 kHz
Branding960 The Patriot
Programming
FormatTalk radio
AffiliationsSalem Radio Network, Westwood One
Ownership
OwnerSalem Media Group
(Salem Communications Holding Corporation)
Sister stations1010 KXXT, 1360 KPXQ
History
First air date1947
Former call signsKOOL (1947-1979,
1983-1996)
KARZ (1979-1983)
KPXQ (1996-1999)
KCTK (1999-2002)
Call sign meaningK K News Talk
Technical information
Facility ID13508
ClassB
Power5,000 watts
Transmitter coordinates33°41′34″N 112°0′9″W
Links
WebcastListen Live
Websitewww.960thepatriot.com

Most of the programs heard weekdays on KKNT are nationally syndicated hosts from the Salem Radio Network: Dennis Prager, Sebastian Gorka, Mike Gallagher, Hugh Hewitt and Larry Elder. KKNT also airs Mark Levin from Westwood One and a local show with host Seth Leibsohn. Weekends include programs on money, health, finances, the outdoors, firearms and brokered programming.

History

The station signed on in 1947 as KOOL. The station changed its call letters to KARZ in 1979, but reverted to KOOL in 1983.[2] For many years, the station aired an adult contemporary format, but would change to 1950s/1960s oldies (though not simulcasting its long-time FM sister station) on January 7, 1987.[3]

In late 1995, KOOL began simulcasting KOOL-FM, getting rid of "older-leaning oldies".[4]

On October 7, 1996, the call letters changed to KPXQ; on October 14, 1999 to KCTK; and on September 1, 2002 to the current KKNT.[2] The station adopted its current format in 2002; before that, it was the Christian instruction and talk station KPXQ, or "Q96." The KPXQ call sign was moved to 1360AM.

gollark: I agree.
gollark: Which seems quite understanding-y.
gollark: The subjective experience of a language model experiencing "humor" is not very testable, but PaLM can apparently explain jokes.
gollark: They don't have enough gollark joke training data. Such a shame.
gollark: And?

References


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