KRKK

KRKK is a commercial AM radio station broadcasting from Rock Springs, Wyoming on 1360 kHz. KRKK broadcasts from two towers near its studios on Yellowstone Road in Rock Springs, Wyoming and is owned by Big Thicket Broadcasting Company of Wyoming. The current programming format is oldies under the branding Unforgettable Memories.

KRKK
CityRock Springs, Wyoming
Broadcast areaSouthwestern Wyoming
Frequency1360 kHz
Branding1360 KRKK
SloganUnforgettable Memories
Programming
FormatOldies
AffiliationsESPN Radio
Ownership
OwnerBig Thicket Broadcasting Company of Wyoming, Inc.
Sister stationsKMRZ-FM, KQSW, KSIT
History
First air dateSeptember 12, 1938
Former frequencies1400 kHz (1942-1974)
Technical information
Facility ID5301
ClassB
Power5,000 watts day
1,000 watts night
Transmitter coordinates41°37′12″N 109°14′20″W
Links
WebcastListen live
Website1360krkk.com

History

Prior to 1974, KRKK was known as KVRS and was operating on 1400 kHz. That station signed on in 1942, but was licensed in 1938.[1][2]

On April 1, 1942, it became an affiliate of the Mutual Broadcasting System.[3]

The station became KRKK at 5:30 AM on September 1, 1974. During its beginnings, the station carried top 40 programming, but switched to oldies some time in the 1980s. The station aired an oldies format from Cumulus Media.

The switch to talk occurred the first week of the May 2009 and the station became a conservative talk station.

On December 14, 2014, the station changed formats to ESPN Radio, becoming 1360 ESPN.

After three years of sports talk, the station returned to an oldies format, rebranding as Unforgettable Memories.

Signal

At 5,000 watts during the day, KRKK drops to 1,000 watts at night with a directional signal to protect other stations on 1360 kHz. Reception of the station begins to fade near the Sweetwater County line to the east and west, however under the right conditions KRKK can be heard much farther distances.[4] KRKK has three sister stations KSIT 99.7, KQSW 96.5 and KMRZ-FM 106.7 FM.

In 2018, the station added a translator on 103.5 FM. The translator was broadcasting from Aspen Mountain.[5]

Former logos

gollark: Of course it does.
gollark: This is actually a *great* esolang, more so than lots of actual things intended as esolangs.
gollark: How do you pronounce `|=`, "pipe equals"?
gollark: Nonsense, "urbit" is 5.
gollark: ```|= end=@ :: 1=/ count=@ 1 :: 2|- :: 3^- (list @) :: 4?: =(end count) :: 5 ~ :: 6:- count :: 7$(count (add 1 count)) ```This is some utterly hellish hybrid of Lisp and... I don't even know.

References

  1. US AM Stations as of 1942
  2. Whites Radio Guide Fall 1942 (PDF)
  3. "MBS Adds Three" (PDF). Broadcasting. March 20, 1944. p. 63. Retrieved 7 January 2017.
  4. Salt Lake City DX Logs
  5. "FCCdata.org". Rec Broadcast Services.


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