KMOO-FM

KMOO-FM (99.9 FM, "K-Moo") is a radio station broadcasting a country music format. Licensed to Mineola, Texas, United States, the station serves the Tyler-Longview area. The station is currently owned by Hightower Radio, Inc.[2] Studios and transmitter are located in Mineola.

KMOO-FM
CityMineola, Texas
Broadcast areaTyler-Longview area
Frequency99.9 MHz
Branding99.9 K-Moo
SloganThe Genuine East Texas' Original
Programming
FormatCountry
Ownership
OwnerHightower Radio, Inc.
History
First air dateDecember 16, 1977 (@ 96.7 MHz)
Former frequencies96.7 MHz (1977-2000)
Call sign meaningK-Moo[1]
Technical information
Facility ID35150
ClassA
ERP6,000 watts
HAAT90.0 meters
Transmitter coordinates32°45′4″N 95°33′18″W
Links
Websitekmoo.com

History

KMOO-FM began broadcasting on 96.7 MHz December 16, 1977. It was owned by Sam and Joyce Curry, and was the FM sister station to 1510 KMOO. Under Curry's tenure, the station was referred to by its ownership and on air personalities solely as, "K M Double O," and not allowed to call the station "KMOO," with the last three letters pronounced in a manner similar to a noise made by cattle.

Sam Curry sold the station in 1995 when he planned to embark on a race for Wood County Judge as a Democrat, a race he ultimately lost.

In May 2000, KMOO-FM was moved from its original 96.7 operating frequency to 99.9, as part of a multi-station frequency swap, which resulted in 94.3 KLIS Palestine, Texas moving to KMOO-FM's 96.7 frequency, where it continues to operate as Regional Mexican "La Invasora", KMOO-FM moving to 99.9, displacing KGRI-FM in Henderson, Texas, which in turn moved to 100.3, and now operates as Standards/Oldies "QX-FM", licensed to Tatum, Texas.

gollark: And is also not doing this for altruistic reasons.
gollark: Anyway, he clearly *could* have misused it, especially given his, well, claimed (for edginess?) lack of ethical standards.
gollark: R10, regardless of your opinion on it, was violated, hence that is a "crime".
gollark: Actually, no.
gollark: It did make school Latin lessons more exciting, but it's inconvenient for regular use.

References

  1. "Call Letter Origins". Radio History on the Web.
  2. "KMOO-FM Facility Record". United States Federal Communications Commission, audio division.


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