KYAL (AM)

KYAL (1550 AM) is a Sports radio formatted radio station in Tulsa, Oklahoma, and licensed to serve Sapulpa, Oklahoma. The station is owned by Michael Perry Stephens. Its studios are located at the CityPlex Towers in South Tulsa.

KYAL
CitySapulpa, Oklahoma
Broadcast areaTulsa, Oklahoma
Frequency1550 kHz
BrandingThe Sports Animal
Programming
FormatSports
AffiliationsESPN Sports Radio
Ownership
OwnerMichael Perry Stephens
Sister stationsKYAL-FM, KITO-FM, KEOJ
History
First air date1962
Technical information
Facility ID35974
ClassD
Power2,500 watts (day)
40 watts (night)
Translator(s)K260CR 99.9 (Sapulpa)
Links
Websitesportsanimalradio.com

History

KYAL's format history includes Urban Contemporary as KXOJ in the 1980s targeting Tulsa, later changing its call letters to KBLK as "Power 1550". It was a simulcast of the Urban format from a cable radio station called "Radiovision" that aired on Tulsa Cable's Wanted Ads channel at the time and also bought time on 1550 to broadcast its station. The 1550 signal did not cover Tulsa very well being that the transmitter was in Sapulpa, Oklahoma and was only 500 watts at the time and was also a daytimer. By the late 1980s–early 1990s the station upgraded its power to 2,500 watts in the day and 47 watts at night (Still not enough to cover all of Tulsa at night) and giving the station the permission to broadcast 24 hours with its Urban format.

By the early 1990s, the lease was not renewed for Radiovision to broadcast on 1550 and the Urban format was dropped along with Radiovision shutting down its operation. KBLK flipped to a religious radio format and the call letters back to KXOJ, it briefly simulcasted Contemporary Christian with FM sister station KXOJ-FM and later aired a Southern Gospel format. In 2002 Southern Gospel was dropped for a Sports format as "ESPN Radio" simulcasting with KWPN in Oklahoma City.

Translators

Call signFrequency
(MHz)
City of licenseFacility
ID
ERP
(W)
Height
(m (ft))
ClassFCC info
K260CR99.9 MHzSapulpa, Oklahoma140431250189 m (620 ft)DFCC
gollark: The anarchocommunist-or-whatever idea of everyone magically working together for the common good and planning everything perfectly and whatnot also sounds nice but is unachievable.
gollark: I mean, theoretically there are some upsides with central planning, like not having the various problems with dealing with externalities and tragedies of the commons (how do you pluralize that) and competition-y issues of our decentralized market systems, but it also... doesn't actually work very well.
gollark: I do, but that isn't really what "communism" is as much as a nice thing people say it would do.
gollark: I don't consider it even a particularly admirable goal. At least not the centrally planned version (people seem to disagree a lot on the definitions).
gollark: I don't think that makes much sense either honestly. I mean, the whole point of... political systems... is that they organize people in some way. If they don't work on people in ways you could probably point out very easily theoretically, they are not very good.


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