KPCC

KPCC (89.3 FM) – branded 89.3 KPCC – is a non-commercial educational radio station licensed to Pasadena, California, primarily serving Greater Los Angeles and the San Fernando Valley. KPCC also reaches much of Santa Barbara, Ventura County, Palm Springs and the Coachella Valley, and extends throughout Southern California with five low-power broadcast relay stations and three full-power repeaters. Owned by Pasadena City College and operated by the American Public Media Group via Southern California Public Radio, KPCC broadcasts a mix of public radio and news, and is an owned-and-operated station for American Public Media; in addition to serving as an affiliate for NPR and Public Radio International; and is the radio home for Sandra Tsing Loh and Larry Mantle. Besides a standard analog transmission, KPCC broadcasts over two HD Radio channels,[1] and is available online. The KPCC studios are located in Pasadena, while the station transmitter is on Mount Wilson.

KPCC
CityPasadena, California
Broadcast areaGreater Los Angeles
Frequency89.3 MHz (HD Radio)
Branding89.3 KPCC
SloganThe Voice of Southern California
Programming
Language(s)English
FormatPublic radio/News
HD2: Alternative rock (KCMP simulcast)
AffiliationsAmerican Public Media
NPR
Public Radio International
Ownership
OwnerPasadena City College
(Pasadena Area Community College District)
OperatorAmerican Public Media Group
Sister stationsKUOR-FM
History
First air dateAugust 2, 1957 (1957-08-02)
Former call signsKPCS (195779)
Call sign meaningPasadena City College
Technical information
Facility ID51701
ClassB
ERP600 watts
HAAT891 meters
Transmitter coordinates34°13′36″N 118°03′58″W
Translator(s)89.3 KPCC-FM1 (Santa Clarita)
89.3 KPCC-FM2 (West Los Angeles)
89.3 KPCC-FM3 (West Los Angeles)
89.9 K210AD (Santa Barbara)
93.3 K227BX (Palm Springs)
Repeater(s)89.1 KUOR (Redlands)
90.3 KVLA (Coachella)
89.5 KJAI (Ojai)
Links
WebcastListen Live
Websitescpr.org

History

The station originally signed on the air in 1957 from the Pasadena City College campus as KPCS; the call sign stood for Pasadena City Schools, which operated the college before the advent of the state-controlled Pasadena Area Community College District. It used the former KWKW-FM 250-watt transmitter and studio equipment, and a small antenna on the roof of the campus administration building that provided limited coverage. The station was operated by, and for, students who were studying broadcasting at the college. KPCS changed to KPCC on December 1, 1979.[2]

Formerly, the station broadcast from a transmitter in Orange County, later from Downtown Los Angeles (at the Frank Stanton Studios), and on the PCC campus.

KPCC's Mohn Broadcast Center in June 2011

The station originally broadcast from the campus of Pasadena City College in Pasadena. KPCC decided to invest in a $24.5 million modern facility. In February 2010, the station moved to a 35,000-square-foot (3,300 m2) converted office building on Raymond Avenue in Pasadena named the Mohn Broadcast Center and Crawford Family Forum.

The station is operated by Southern California Public Radio, a group owned by American Public Media Group (the parent organization of Minnesota Public Radio). However the license remains in the hands of Pasadena City College; the station is usually identified as a "public service of Pasadena City College" at the top of each hour. Since the APM takeover, PCC student participation has been reduced to internships supported by American Public Media.

PCC's contract with American Public Media permits either side to terminate the arrangement after giving sufficient notice, APM with six months notice and PCC with five years notice after 2015 (effectively making it a 20-year contract with an unlimited option to renew). PCC gets on air recognition and funding for a broadcast internship program (along with the traditional responsibility of maintaining FCC-related issues as the licensee), while APM controls the station and all the pledges, grants, and corporate underwriting revenues.

KPCC reaches 600,000 listeners each week.[3]

Current programming

Weekday programming on KPCC includes:Take Two with A Martínez; AirTalk with Larry Mantle; The Frame with John Horn; and Off-Ramp with John Rabe. The programs The Madeleine Brand Show and Patt Morrison were replaced in 2012. The station also produces Sandra Tsing Loh's The Loh Down on Science, a 60-second science feature on weekdays, and The Loh Life on weekends, which features her commentary on various issues.

HD broadcasting

KPCC broadcasts over two HD Radio channels:

Translators

KPCC also extends its signal via full-power satellites KUOR Redlands (89.1 FM),[4] KVLA Coachella (90.3 FM), and KJAI Ojai (89.5 FM), as well as low-power translators KPCC-FM1 Santa Clarita (89.3 FM), KPCC-FM2 West Los Angeles (89.3 FM), KPCC-FM3 West Los Angeles (89.3 FM), K210AD Santa Barbara (89.9 FM) and K227BX Palm Springs (93.3 FM). KUOR is licensed to the University of Redlands, while KVLA and KJAI are licensed to American Public Media Group's SCPR. All three of the station's full-power repeaters also broadcast two HD Radio signals.

gollark: For now it'd be neat if there were actually good AR glasses available. Google Glass got killed off, and there was this company called North doing similar stuff but... Google bought them and killed them off too.
gollark: Brains are very adaptable, so perhaps you could just dump data into some neurons in some useful format and hope it learns to decode it.
gollark: I'd be *interested* in brain-computer-interface stuff, but it'll probably be a while before it develops into something useful and the security implications are very ææææaa.
gollark: It's still stupid. If the data is *there*, you can read it, no way around that.
gollark: This is something where you could probably make it actually-secure-ish through asymmetric cryptography, but just using a symmetric algorithm and hoping nobody will ever dump the keys is moronically stupid.

References

  1. https://hdradio.com/station_guides/widget.php?latitude=34.052230834961&longitude=-118.24368286133 Archived 2017-08-08 at the Wayback Machine HD Radio Guide for Los Angeles
  2. "KPCC Call Sign History". FCC Media Bureau CDBS Public Access Database. Retrieved April 3, 2011.
  3. SCPR.org page: "About"
  4. "KUOR-FM Call Sign History". FCC Media Bureau CDBS Public Access Database. Retrieved April 3, 2011.

Further reading

Translators
Repeaters
  • KJAI in the FCC's FM station database
  • KUOR in the FCC's FM station database
  • KVLA in the FCC's FM station database
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.