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KIRO (AM)

KIRO (710 kHz "Seattle Sports") is a commercial AM radio station in Seattle, Washington, owned by Salt Lake City–based Bonneville International. The station airs a sports radio format and is an ESPN Radio Network affiliate. The station's studios and offices are located on Eastlake Avenue in Seattle's Eastlake district.

KIRO
Broadcast areaSeattle-Tacoma-Puget Sound region
Frequency710 kHz
BrandingSeattle Sports
Programming
FormatSports
Affiliations
Ownership
Owner
KTTH, KIRO-FM
History
First air date
April 27, 1927; 96 years ago (1927-04-27) (as KPCB at 650)
Former call signs
KPCB (1927–1935)
Former frequencies
650 kHz (1927–1937)
Call sign meaning
Sounds like Cairo
Technical information
Facility ID6362
ClassA
Power50,000 watts
Transmitter coordinates
47°23′55″N 122°26′0″W / 47.39861°N 122.43333°W / 47.39861; -122.43333 (KIRO-AM tower)
Repeater(s)97.3 KIRO-FM HD2 (Tacoma)
Links
WebcastListen live
Websitesports.mynorthwest.com

KIRO is a Class A clear channel station. It broadcasts at the maximum power for U.S. AM radio stations, 50,000 watts. By day, it uses a non-directional antenna. To protect the other Class A station on AM 710, WOR in New York City, and the previously allocated Class B station on 710, KSPN in Los Angeles, KIRO must use a directional antenna at night, thereby protecting those two stations. The transmitter is off Dockton Road SW on Vashon Island.[1] KIRO is Washington State's primary entry point station in the Emergency Alert System.

History edit

650 KPCB (1927 to 1937) edit

The station began broadcasting on April 27, 1927, as KPCB on 650 kilocycles. Its founder was Moritz Thomsen of the Pacific Coast Biscuit Company (hence the call sign KPCB) and it was powered at 100 watts. Among its announcers was Chet Huntley, later of television's Huntley-Brinkley Report. In 1935, Saul Haas's Queen City Broadcasting Company took over the station. Queen City increased the power to 500 watts.[2] Haas, who was well connected in liberal politics and the business community, wanted a simple, pronounceable, and recognizable call sign for his new station. He chose KIRO, which is usually pronounced like the capital of Egypt, "Cairo", not like the Illinois city.

710 KIRO (1937 to 1960) edit

In 1937, KIRO was assigned the AM 710 frequency and was granted an increase in power to 1,000 watts. Soon after, KIRO acquired the Seattle CBS Radio Network affiliation rights from KOL. Known as "The Friendly Station," KIRO personalities broke from the formal announcing style that was commonplace during the early days of radio. KIRO carried CBS's dramas, comedies, news, sports, soap operas, game shows and big band broadcasts during the "Golden Age of Radio."

On June 29, 1941, a new, 50,000-watt transmitter on Maury Island became operational. From the 1930s through the 1950s, KIRO recorded countless hours of CBS programming for time-delayed rebroadcast to its Pacific Time Zone listeners. These electrical transcriptions are, in many cases, the only recordings made of World War II-era news coverage over the CBS Network. The discs were donated to the University of Washington in the early 1960s and are now held at the National Archives as the Milo Ryan Phonoarchive Collection.

In 1948, the original KIRO-FM went on the air at 100.7 MHz. It initially simulcast its AM sister's programming but in the 1960s it became a beautiful music outlet. In 1975, it changed its call letters to KSEA and today is KKWF. Preparing for a future television allocation, KIRO moved in 1952 from downtown studios to a larger building on Queen Anne Hill. This peak was already home to the KING-TV transmitter and would soon be the site for KOMO-TV as well. Queen City Broadcasting was awarded Seattle's last remaining VHF TV license in 1958, and signed on as CBS affiliate KIRO-TV on February 8. Aside from a short two-and-a-half year period from 1995 to 1997 when it served as a UPN station, KIRO-TV has served as Seattle's CBS television affiliate since.

1960 to 1980 edit

Haas sold KIRO to The Deseret News Publishing Company, part of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, in 1963. He earned a handsome return on his investment 28 years earlier. When the LDS Church reorganized its broadcasting properties as Bonneville International Corporation, Haas joined Bonneville's board. Bonneville executives Lloyd Cooney and Ken Hatch arrived in Seattle to lead KIRO-AM-FM-TV, in 1964. Like many network radio affiliates following the demise of full-time block programming, KIRO spent the 1960s playing middle of the road music in addition to long-form news and interview shows.

Morning host Jim French spent several years broadcasting from the rotating restaurant atop the Space Needle and was live on the air from that perch during a 6.7-magnitude earthquake in April 1965. Bonneville moved its Seattle radio and TV stations to the newly constructed "Broadcast House" at Third and Broad Streets in 1968.

In 1973, KIRO ended a 35-year affiliation with CBS and switched to the Mutual Broadcasting System.[3] Around this time, KIRO also picked up Herb Jepko's "Nitecap," a groundbreaking overnight telephone-talk show from Salt Lake City sister station KSL, a 50,000-watt "flamethrower" like KIRO.

"Newsradio 71 KIRO" debuted in June 1974, with news and talk segments replacing most music programming. In September 1974, KIRO switched affiliations again from Mutual, becoming an NBC Radio Network affiliate, but switched back to CBS in November 1976.[4][5]

1980 to 2008 edit

In 1980, Lloyd Cooney left KIRO to run for the United States Senate. Ken Hatch became President, CEO and Chairman, a position he held until 1995. Under Hatch's leadership, KIRO Inc. acquired KING AM, KING-FM, and Third Avenue Productions. KIRO, Inc. became one of the nation's premier regional broadcast groups, and was led by general manager Joe Abel during this period.[citation needed]

KIRO was a full service adult contemporary radio station by the mid 1970s, playing music during the day, talk in the evenings, and more music intensive on weekends with exception of times when sporting events were broadcast. By 1980, the station played music during the day with talk heard night and overnights. The station added talk middays during the week in 1985. By then amounts of music during drive times were down to about 4 songs an hour and during the day, with weekends playing 12 songs an hour. In 1986, KIRO was reclassified as a news and talk station, adding more news programming and dropping music altogether.

In 1993, Bonneville attempted to merge the staff of KIRO radio with that of then-sister station KIRO-TV in an attempt at synergy (the staffs merged in June 1992, with KIRO radio's general manager and news director Andy Ludlum at the helm). Dubbed the "KIRO News Network", this meant that KIRO-TV anchors and reporters would be heard on the radio, while KIRO radio personalities would be seen during KIRO-TV newscasts; during this period, KIRO's radio programming originated from a massive newsroom especially constructed for what was called "News Outside the Box", sharing space with their TV co-workers. Local independent station KTZZ (currently KZJO) simulcast KIRO radio in the mornings with cameras mounted in-studio showing the KIRO staffers on-screen during this time.[6] The effort was a failure and was scrapped completely by September of that year.[7][8][9][10]

For 25 years, KIRO's morning news, anchored by Bill Yeend, consistently placed at or near the top of the Seattle Arbitron ratings. Gregg Hersholt was the station's morning news anchor for the next 10 years until he left the station on May 28, 2010, ending his 26-year career there. Dave Ross now hosts Seattle's Morning News.

Sports broadcasts edit

Sports play-by-play has been a staple of the KIRO schedule throughout its history. Since the team's inception in 1976, KIRO has been the flagship radio station for the NFL Seattle Seahawks. About that same time, it was also the flagship station for the Seattle Sounders of the North American Soccer League.[citation needed] From 1985 to 2002, and again since 2009, the station airs Seattle Mariners games. From 1978 to 1987, KIRO was the flagship station of the Seattle SuperSonics. Additionally, KIRO has carried Washington Huskies and Washington State Cougars college football for stints during the '80s and '90s.

KIRO was also the radio home to popular sportscaster Wayne Cody, who did live sideline reports during Seattle Seahawks football games, Washington Huskies college football play-by-play, NASL Seattle Sounders pro soccer play-by-play, and hosted a sports radio talk show weeknights that was the only one of its kind at the time in Seattle. In January 2020, KIRO announced it would serve as the flagship station for the Seattle Dragons of the XFL; the wording of the press release made it ambiguous as to whether or not they would carry live games.[11]

Dave Ross edit

Dave Ross joined KIRO as a reporter from Atlanta station WSB in 1978 and took over as noon to 3 p.m. talk host in 1987. He moved to the 9 a.m. to noon time slot after the retirement of Jim French in 1992. Ross unsuccessfully ran for Washington's eighth Congressional district as a Democratic candidate in 2004. While Ross unofficially announced his candidacy in May, he did not leave his on-air position until just prior to the July filing deadline. In response to complaints from state Republican party officials, Ross claimed that he was contractually bound to continue working for KIRO until he formally filed to become a candidate.

Ross returned to the air immediately following the November election. He was moved to the afternoon drive-time shift in February 2005. Ross moved back to his 9am-noon shift in May 2006. Since January 2012, Ross has hosted Seattle's Morning News from 5-9 a.m. In addition to his KIRO work, Ross does a daily commentary on the CBS Radio Network and is also substituted for Charles Osgood on CBS Radio's "Osgood File" segments.

 
KIRO's logo, when the station broadcast only in AM, prior to August 2008.

After selling KIRO-TV to the A.H. Belo Corp. in 1995, Bonneville's Seattle radio stations moved to facilities on Eastlake Avenue. KIRO (AM), KIRO-FM (now KKWF) and KNWX (now KTTH) were sold to Entercom Communications of Bala Cynwyd, Pennsylvania, in 1997. Bonneville reacquired KIRO, KTTH, and KBSG (now KIRO-FM) from Entercom in 2007.[12]

Talk on FM, sports on AM edit

 
Logo as "710 ESPN Seattle", used from April 1, 2009, to March 7, 2022

On August 12, 2008, KIRO began simulcasting its programming on sister station KBSG-FM, which dropped its long-running classic hits format. This began the transition of KIRO Newsradio from AM to FM.[13] To complete the transition, KIRO AM switched to a sports radio format, as "710 ESPN Seattle," on April 1, 2009. It regained the rights to broadcast Seattle Mariners games, beginning in the 2009 season.[14] KIRO also simulcasts the Seattle Seahawks games with KIRO-FM, and has extensive team-related programming throughout the year. KIRO-FM continues the news/talk format.[15] In addition, 710 ESPN Seattle is the play-by-play home for the Washington State Cougars college football and basketball broadcasts.

Mike Salk was named Program Director of 710 ESPN Seattle on March 13, 2014, returning to the station after a stint in Boston. Before leaving for Boston, Salk had been a co-host on the station.[16]

On March 7, 2022, KIRO rebranded as "Seattle Sports". The rebranding, which coincided with rival KJR moving its programming to FM station KUBE, was not accompanied by any programming changes.[17]

Locations edit

Notes and references edit

  1. ^ Radio-Locator.com/KIRO-AM
  2. ^ Broadcasting Yearbook 1936 page 92
  3. ^ Victor Stredicke, "KIRO-AM Becomes Mutual Affiliate," The Seattle Times, March 25, 1973, TV Showtime, p. 23
  4. ^ Victor Stredicke, "KIRO-AM Becomes N.B.C. Affiliate," The Seattle Times, September 8, 1974, TV Showtime, p. 26.
  5. ^ Victor Stredicke, "N.B.C. for KIXI; KIRO Reclaims C.B.S.," The Seattle Times, November 28, 1976, TV Showtime, p. 30.
  6. ^ "Ktzz-TV To Feature Radio News | The Seattle Times". archive.seattletimes.com. Retrieved January 10, 2021.
  7. ^ "News In Motion -- Is Kiro's New Format Of Walk-And-Talk Broadcasting Cutting-Edge Television With A Better Brand Of News, Or Just More Theatrics? | The Seattle Times". archive.seattletimes.com. Retrieved January 10, 2021.
  8. ^ "American Journalism Review - Archives". ajrarchive.org. Retrieved January 10, 2021.
  9. ^ "Remembering Seattle's 'news out of the box'". MyNorthwest.com. February 15, 2017. Retrieved January 10, 2021.
  10. ^ "Seattle Radio History - 710AM (KIRO)".
  11. ^ "710 ESPN Seattle becomes home of XFL Seattle Dragons shows, programming". mynorthwest.com. January 30, 2020. Retrieved January 30, 2020.
  12. ^ Virgin, Bill (January 18, 2007). "Entercom trades radio stations". Seattle Post-Intelligencer. Retrieved November 10, 2013.
  13. ^ Bonneville International (July 30, 2008). "KIRO Radio to begin simulcast on 710 AM and 97.3 FM". Retrieved November 10, 2013.
  14. ^ Evans, Jayda (November 14, 2008). "Seattle gains a second all-sports radio station". Seattle Times. Retrieved November 10, 2013.
  15. ^ Evans, Jayda (November 12, 2008). "Sources: KIRO-AM to shift to all sports". Seattle Times. Retrieved November 10, 2013.
  16. ^ Henderson, Brady (March 13, 2014). "Mike Salk returning to 710 ESPN Seattle". 710sports.com. Retrieved March 13, 2014.
  17. ^ KIRO Rebrands As Seattle Sports Radioinsight - March 7, 2022

External links edit

  • KIRO (Seattle Sports)
  • KIRO in the FCC AM station database
  • KIRO in Nielsen Audio's AM station database
  • FCC History Cards for KIRO


kiro, kiro, seattle, sports, commercial, radio, station, seattle, washington, owned, salt, lake, city, based, bonneville, international, station, airs, sports, radio, format, espn, radio, network, affiliate, station, studios, offices, located, eastlake, avenue. KIRO 710 kHz Seattle Sports is a commercial AM radio station in Seattle Washington owned by Salt Lake City based Bonneville International The station airs a sports radio format and is an ESPN Radio Network affiliate The station s studios and offices are located on Eastlake Avenue in Seattle s Eastlake district KIROSeattle WashingtonBroadcast areaSeattle Tacoma Puget Sound regionFrequency710 kHzBrandingSeattle SportsProgrammingFormatSportsAffiliationsESPN RadioSeattle Mariners Radio NetworkSeattle SeahawksWashington State Cougars football and men s basketball OwnershipOwnerBonneville International Bonneville International Corporation Sister stationsKTTH KIRO FMHistoryFirst air dateApril 27 1927 96 years ago 1927 04 27 as KPCB at 650 Former call signsKPCB 1927 1935 Former frequencies650 kHz 1927 1937 Call sign meaningSounds like CairoTechnical informationFacility ID6362ClassAPower50 000 wattsTransmitter coordinates47 23 55 N 122 26 0 W 47 39861 N 122 43333 W 47 39861 122 43333 KIRO AM tower Repeater s 97 3 KIRO FM HD2 Tacoma LinksWebcastListen liveWebsitesports wbr mynorthwest wbr comKIRO is a Class A clear channel station It broadcasts at the maximum power for U S AM radio stations 50 000 watts By day it uses a non directional antenna To protect the other Class A station on AM 710 WOR in New York City and the previously allocated Class B station on 710 KSPN in Los Angeles KIRO must use a directional antenna at night thereby protecting those two stations The transmitter is off Dockton Road SW on Vashon Island 1 KIRO is Washington State s primary entry point station in the Emergency Alert System Contents 1 History 1 1 650 KPCB 1927 to 1937 1 2 710 KIRO 1937 to 1960 1 3 1960 to 1980 1 4 1980 to 2008 1 5 Sports broadcasts 1 6 Dave Ross 1 7 Talk on FM sports on AM 2 Locations 3 Notes and references 4 External linksHistory edit650 KPCB 1927 to 1937 edit The station began broadcasting on April 27 1927 as KPCB on 650 kilocycles Its founder was Moritz Thomsen of the Pacific Coast Biscuit Company hence the call sign KPCB and it was powered at 100 watts Among its announcers was Chet Huntley later of television s Huntley Brinkley Report In 1935 Saul Haas s Queen City Broadcasting Company took over the station Queen City increased the power to 500 watts 2 Haas who was well connected in liberal politics and the business community wanted a simple pronounceable and recognizable call sign for his new station He chose KIRO which is usually pronounced like the capital of Egypt Cairo not like the Illinois city 710 KIRO 1937 to 1960 edit In 1937 KIRO was assigned the AM 710 frequency and was granted an increase in power to 1 000 watts Soon after KIRO acquired the Seattle CBS Radio Network affiliation rights from KOL Known as The Friendly Station KIRO personalities broke from the formal announcing style that was commonplace during the early days of radio KIRO carried CBS s dramas comedies news sports soap operas game shows and big band broadcasts during the Golden Age of Radio On June 29 1941 a new 50 000 watt transmitter on Maury Island became operational From the 1930s through the 1950s KIRO recorded countless hours of CBS programming for time delayed rebroadcast to its Pacific Time Zone listeners These electrical transcriptions are in many cases the only recordings made of World War II era news coverage over the CBS Network The discs were donated to the University of Washington in the early 1960s and are now held at the National Archives as the Milo Ryan Phonoarchive Collection In 1948 the original KIRO FM went on the air at 100 7 MHz It initially simulcast its AM sister s programming but in the 1960s it became a beautiful music outlet In 1975 it changed its call letters to KSEA and today is KKWF Preparing for a future television allocation KIRO moved in 1952 from downtown studios to a larger building on Queen Anne Hill This peak was already home to the KING TV transmitter and would soon be the site for KOMO TV as well Queen City Broadcasting was awarded Seattle s last remaining VHF TV license in 1958 and signed on as CBS affiliate KIRO TV on February 8 Aside from a short two and a half year period from 1995 to 1997 when it served as a UPN station KIRO TV has served as Seattle s CBS television affiliate since 1960 to 1980 edit Haas sold KIRO to The Deseret News Publishing Company part of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter day Saints in 1963 He earned a handsome return on his investment 28 years earlier When the LDS Church reorganized its broadcasting properties as Bonneville International Corporation Haas joined Bonneville s board Bonneville executives Lloyd Cooney and Ken Hatch arrived in Seattle to lead KIRO AM FM TV in 1964 Like many network radio affiliates following the demise of full time block programming KIRO spent the 1960s playing middle of the road music in addition to long form news and interview shows Morning host Jim French spent several years broadcasting from the rotating restaurant atop the Space Needle and was live on the air from that perch during a 6 7 magnitude earthquake in April 1965 Bonneville moved its Seattle radio and TV stations to the newly constructed Broadcast House at Third and Broad Streets in 1968 In 1973 KIRO ended a 35 year affiliation with CBS and switched to the Mutual Broadcasting System 3 Around this time KIRO also picked up Herb Jepko s Nitecap a groundbreaking overnight telephone talk show from Salt Lake City sister station KSL a 50 000 watt flamethrower like KIRO Newsradio 71 KIRO debuted in June 1974 with news and talk segments replacing most music programming In September 1974 KIRO switched affiliations again from Mutual becoming an NBC Radio Network affiliate but switched back to CBS in November 1976 4 5 1980 to 2008 edit In 1980 Lloyd Cooney left KIRO to run for the United States Senate Ken Hatch became President CEO and Chairman a position he held until 1995 Under Hatch s leadership KIRO Inc acquired KING AM KING FM and Third Avenue Productions KIRO Inc became one of the nation s premier regional broadcast groups and was led by general manager Joe Abel during this period citation needed KIRO was a full service adult contemporary radio station by the mid 1970s playing music during the day talk in the evenings and more music intensive on weekends with exception of times when sporting events were broadcast By 1980 the station played music during the day with talk heard night and overnights The station added talk middays during the week in 1985 By then amounts of music during drive times were down to about 4 songs an hour and during the day with weekends playing 12 songs an hour In 1986 KIRO was reclassified as a news and talk station adding more news programming and dropping music altogether In 1993 Bonneville attempted to merge the staff of KIRO radio with that of then sister station KIRO TV in an attempt at synergy the staffs merged in June 1992 with KIRO radio s general manager and news director Andy Ludlum at the helm Dubbed the KIRO News Network this meant that KIRO TV anchors and reporters would be heard on the radio while KIRO radio personalities would be seen during KIRO TV newscasts during this period KIRO s radio programming originated from a massive newsroom especially constructed for what was called News Outside the Box sharing space with their TV co workers Local independent station KTZZ currently KZJO simulcast KIRO radio in the mornings with cameras mounted in studio showing the KIRO staffers on screen during this time 6 The effort was a failure and was scrapped completely by September of that year 7 8 9 10 For 25 years KIRO s morning news anchored by Bill Yeend consistently placed at or near the top of the Seattle Arbitron ratings Gregg Hersholt was the station s morning news anchor for the next 10 years until he left the station on May 28 2010 ending his 26 year career there Dave Ross now hosts Seattle s Morning News Sports broadcasts edit Sports play by play has been a staple of the KIRO schedule throughout its history Since the team s inception in 1976 KIRO has been the flagship radio station for the NFL Seattle Seahawks About that same time it was also the flagship station for the Seattle Sounders of the North American Soccer League citation needed From 1985 to 2002 and again since 2009 the station airs Seattle Mariners games From 1978 to 1987 KIRO was the flagship station of the Seattle SuperSonics Additionally KIRO has carried Washington Huskies and Washington State Cougars college football for stints during the 80s and 90s KIRO was also the radio home to popular sportscaster Wayne Cody who did live sideline reports during Seattle Seahawks football games Washington Huskies college football play by play NASL Seattle Sounders pro soccer play by play and hosted a sports radio talk show weeknights that was the only one of its kind at the time in Seattle In January 2020 KIRO announced it would serve as the flagship station for the Seattle Dragons of the XFL the wording of the press release made it ambiguous as to whether or not they would carry live games 11 Dave Ross edit Dave Ross joined KIRO as a reporter from Atlanta station WSB in 1978 and took over as noon to 3 p m talk host in 1987 He moved to the 9 a m to noon time slot after the retirement of Jim French in 1992 Ross unsuccessfully ran for Washington s eighth Congressional district as a Democratic candidate in 2004 While Ross unofficially announced his candidacy in May he did not leave his on air position until just prior to the July filing deadline In response to complaints from state Republican party officials Ross claimed that he was contractually bound to continue working for KIRO until he formally filed to become a candidate Ross returned to the air immediately following the November election He was moved to the afternoon drive time shift in February 2005 Ross moved back to his 9am noon shift in May 2006 Since January 2012 Ross has hosted Seattle s Morning News from 5 9 a m In addition to his KIRO work Ross does a daily commentary on the CBS Radio Network and is also substituted for Charles Osgood on CBS Radio s Osgood File segments nbsp KIRO s logo when the station broadcast only in AM prior to August 2008 After selling KIRO TV to the A H Belo Corp in 1995 Bonneville s Seattle radio stations moved to facilities on Eastlake Avenue KIRO AM KIRO FM now KKWF and KNWX now KTTH were sold to Entercom Communications of Bala Cynwyd Pennsylvania in 1997 Bonneville reacquired KIRO KTTH and KBSG now KIRO FM from Entercom in 2007 12 Talk on FM sports on AM edit nbsp Logo as 710 ESPN Seattle used from April 1 2009 to March 7 2022On August 12 2008 KIRO began simulcasting its programming on sister station KBSG FM which dropped its long running classic hits format This began the transition of KIRO Newsradio from AM to FM 13 To complete the transition KIRO AM switched to a sports radio format as 710 ESPN Seattle on April 1 2009 It regained the rights to broadcast Seattle Mariners games beginning in the 2009 season 14 KIRO also simulcasts the Seattle Seahawks games with KIRO FM and has extensive team related programming throughout the year KIRO FM continues the news talk format 15 In addition 710 ESPN Seattle is the play by play home for the Washington State Cougars college football and basketball broadcasts Mike Salk was named Program Director of 710 ESPN Seattle on March 13 2014 returning to the station after a stint in Boston Before leaving for Boston Salk had been a co host on the station 16 On March 7 2022 KIRO rebranded as Seattle Sports The rebranding which coincided with rival KJR moving its programming to FM station KUBE was not accompanied by any programming changes 17 Locations editMap all coordinates using OpenStreetMapDownload coordinates as KML GPX all coordinates GPX primary coordinates GPX secondary coordinates Towers 47 23 55 N 122 26 0 W 47 39861 N 122 43333 W 47 39861 122 43333 KIRO AM tower Vashon Island Washington Headquarters 47 38 8 N 122 19 29 W 47 63556 N 122 32472 W 47 63556 122 32472 KIRO studios Seattle Washington near lt https www google com maps place Bonneville Seattle 47 6357055 122 3274274 17z data 3m1 4b1 4m5 3m4 1s0x5490152053d98791 0xba4811b38c4adfae 8m2 3d47 6357051 4d 122 32515 gt the shore of Lake UnionNotes and references edit Radio Locator com KIRO AM Broadcasting Yearbook 1936 page 92 Victor Stredicke KIRO AM Becomes Mutual Affiliate The Seattle Times March 25 1973 TV Showtime p 23 Victor Stredicke KIRO AM Becomes N B C Affiliate The Seattle Times September 8 1974 TV Showtime p 26 Victor Stredicke N B C for KIXI KIRO Reclaims C B S The Seattle Times November 28 1976 TV Showtime p 30 Ktzz TV To Feature Radio News The Seattle Times archive seattletimes com Retrieved January 10 2021 News In Motion Is Kiro s New Format Of Walk And Talk Broadcasting Cutting Edge Television With A Better Brand Of News Or Just More Theatrics The Seattle Times archive seattletimes com Retrieved January 10 2021 American Journalism Review Archives ajrarchive org Retrieved January 10 2021 Remembering Seattle s news out of the box MyNorthwest com February 15 2017 Retrieved January 10 2021 Seattle Radio History 710AM KIRO 710 ESPN Seattle becomes home of XFL Seattle Dragons shows programming mynorthwest com January 30 2020 Retrieved January 30 2020 Virgin Bill January 18 2007 Entercom trades radio stations Seattle Post Intelligencer Retrieved November 10 2013 Bonneville International July 30 2008 KIRO Radio to begin simulcast on 710 AM and 97 3 FM Retrieved November 10 2013 Evans Jayda November 14 2008 Seattle gains a second all sports radio station Seattle Times Retrieved November 10 2013 Evans Jayda November 12 2008 Sources KIRO AM to shift to all sports Seattle Times Retrieved November 10 2013 Henderson Brady March 13 2014 Mike Salk returning to 710 ESPN Seattle 710sports com Retrieved March 13 2014 KIRO Rebrands As Seattle Sports Radioinsight March 7 2022External links editKIRO Seattle Sports KIRO in the FCC AM station database KIRO in Nielsen Audio s AM station database Pictures and information about the KIRO transmitter facility FCC History Cards for KIRO Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title KIRO AM amp oldid 1186842914, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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