Riverfront Broadcasting LLC

Riverfront Broadcasting LLC is a privately held company in Yankton, South Dakota, United States.

Stations

Riverfront Broadcasting stations
FrequencyCall signFormatCity
92.7 FMKLGA-FMAdult ContemporaryAlgona, IA
1600 AMKLGZCountryAlgona, IA
1060 AMKWBGNews/TalkBoone,IA
97.7 FMKHBTAdult ContemporaryHumboldt,IA
1240 AMKCCR (AM)VarietyPierre, SD
104.5 FMKCCR-FMActive RockPierre, SD
95.3 FMKLXS-FMCountryPierre, SD
1570 AMKZWCOldiesWebster City, IA
95.7 FMKQWC-FMAdult ContemporaryWebster City, IA
1450 AMKYNTAdult ContemporaryYankton, SD
93.1 FMKKYACountryYankton, SD
94.3 FMKDAMHot ACYankton, SD
98.1 FMKBEWCountryBlue Earth, MN
1560 AMKBEW (AM)VarietyBlue Earth, MN
94.3 FMKDOM-FMCountryWindom, MN
1580 AMKDOM-AMVarietyWindom, MN
1380 AMKOTANews/TalkRapid City, SD
92.3 FMKQRQ-FMClassic HitsRapid City, SD
106.3 FMKZLKVarietyRapid City, SD
101.1 FMKDDXRockSpearfish, SD
95.9 FMKZZICountrySpearfish, SD

On March 1, 2008, six radio stations were added to the broadcasting stable of Riverfront Broadcasting: KYNT (AM), Yankton, South Dakota; KK93 (FM), Yankton, South Dakota; KQRN (FM), Mitchell, South Dakota; KORN (AM), Mitchell, South Dakota; KLXS (FM), Pierre, South Dakota, KCCR (AM), Pierre, South Dakota, and KCCR-FM in Blunt, South Dakota.

Radio stations KNCY (AM) and KNCY-FM broadcasting country music from Nebraska City, Nebraska were already part of the Riverfront holdings.

On July 1, 2010 Riverfront Broadcasting LLC put KDAM FM on the air. KDAM is playing mainstream rock from the 80's to today. On December 31, 2013 Riverfront broadcasting Sold KNCY and KNCY-FM to Flood Communications

In late 2016, Riverfront Broadcasting LLC sold their Mitchell-market stations KORN, KQRN, and KORN-FM to Mitchell-market General Manager, Nancy Nedved, and her husband Steve Nedved. Effective Sunday, January 1, 2017, the three Mitchell-market stations are now known as Nedved Media, LLC.[1] The three Mitchell stations sold for $3.35 million USD, and the sale was consummated on April 1, 2017.[2]

gollark: We're stuck on concepts like memory being a giant linear array, programs having one thread of control, and probably other things I can't think of now.
gollark: CPUs are basically just "execute C-like-code really fast" machines instead of, well, something else, like GPUs.
gollark: Kind of a shame stuff is generally just forced to map onto really outdated machines from ye olden C era.
gollark: Though this is perhaps more of an issue of programmers, languages and tooling more than hardware issues.
gollark: The thing is that the GPU isn't really integrated into normal compute use very much, even when it could probably be used effectively.

References

  1. Press Release, AM 1490 KORN (2016-12-23). "Mitchell Radio Stations Return to Local Ownership". KORN News Radio 1490.
  2. Jacobson, A. (2016-12-30). "How Much Did This South Dakota Trio Sell For?". Radio + Television Business Report.


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