fbpx
Wikipedia

KKOL (AM)

KKOL (1300 kHz) is an AM radio station in Seattle, Washington. It is owned by Salem Media Group. It airs a conservative talk radio format, branded as "1300 The Answer," featuring nationally syndicated Salem Radio Network hosts including Dennis Prager, Mike Gallagher, Sebastian Gorka, Hugh Hewitt, Brandon Tatum and Charlie Kirk. The radio studios and offices are on Fifth Avenue South. KKOL is the oldest radio station in Seattle, first licensed on May 23, 1922.

KKOL
Broadcast areaSeattle metropolitan area
Frequency1300 kHz
BrandingAM 1300 The Answer
Programming
FormatConservative talk radio
Affiliations
Ownership
Owner
KGNW
History
First air date
May 23, 1922; 101 years ago (1922-05-23)
Former call signs
  • KDZE (1922–1924)
  • KFOA (1924–1928)
  • KOL (1928–1975)
  • KMPS (1975–1997)
Former frequencies
  • 833 kHz (1922–1923)
  • 660 kHz (1923–1927)
  • 670 kHz (1927–1928)
  • 1270 kHz (1928–1941)
Technical information[1]
Licensing authority
FCC
Facility ID20355
ClassB
Power
  • 50,000 watts (day)
  • 3,200 watts(night)
Transmitter coordinates
47°39′19″N 122°31′06″W / 47.65528°N 122.51833°W / 47.65528; -122.51833
Links
Public license information
  • Public file
  • LMS
WebcastListen Live
Websitetheanswerseattle.com

The transmitter site is on North Madison Avenue on Bainbridge Island, co-located with KLFE 1590 AM. By day, KKOL transmits 35,000 watts, the maximum for AM radio stations in the U.S., using a two-tower array directional antenna. At night it switches to non-directional operation, but to protect other stations on 1300 AM from interference, it reduces power to 3,200 watts.[2]

History edit

KDZE edit

KKOL was first licensed, with the sequentially assigned call letters KDZE, on May 23, 1922. It was owned by the Rhodes Company Department Store at 1321 Second Avenue in Seattle.[3] In the early days of broadcasting, some stations were owned by department stores and electronics stores, to promote the sale of receivers.

C. B. Williams, the department store's advertising manager, coordinated the installation of the initial 50-watt transmitter.[4] The station's glass-enclosed studio was located on the second floor of the store, where shoppers could observe its operation.[5]

At this time there was only a single wavelength, 360 meters (833 kHz) available for "entertainment" broadcasts, so KDZE was required to make a time-sharing agreement with the other stations already in operation. On June 23, Seattle stations were scheduled to operate from noon to 10:30 pm, with KDZE assigned the 3:30 to 4:15 p.m time period.[6]

In May 1923, the U.S. Commerce Department, which regulated radio at this time, made a range of frequencies available to "Class B" stations that had higher powers and better programming. The Seattle region was initially assigned 610 kHz, with 660 kHz assigned to Portland.[7] These two assignments were soon swapped, and in the summer of 1923 KDZE moved to 660 kHz.[8]

KFOA edit

In early 1924, in conjunction with an upgrade in facilities, the station's call sign was changed to KFOA.[9] At this time the department store was issued a license to operate a second radio station, with 100 watts on 1110 kHz, which inherited the original KDZE call letters.[10] This second KDZE was primarily used to broadcast the weekly Chamber of Commerce luncheons,[11] and was deleted in March 1925.[12]

On November 11, 1928, under the provisions of a major reallocation resulting from the Federal Radio Commission's (FRC) General Order 40, KFOA was reassigned from 660 kHz to 1270 kHz, sharing the assignment with KTW (now KKDZ).[13]

KOL edit

 
KOL radio broadcast with announcer Dudley Williamson and Seattle City Light Superintendent Eugene Hoffman, 1939

The next month the station was sold to the Seattle Broadcasting Company, headed by Archie Taft, with the call letters changing to KOL. The studios were moved to the Northern Life Tower.[14] In 1931, KTW moved to 1220 kHz, giving KOL unlimited use of 1270 kHz.[15]

From 1930 to 1938, KOL was Seattle's CBS Radio Network affiliate.[16] In 1934 the station abandoned the T-wire antenna on the Rhodes Department Store building's roof, moving to a new transmitter site on Harbor Island, which featured a 490-foot (150 m) self-supporting tower, which at the time was the tallest of its type in the United States.[17] The studios were moved to the transmitter site in 1952.[18]

In 1941, the North American Regional Broadcasting Agreement (NARBA) was enacted. On March 29, 1941, KOL, along with all the other stations on 1270 kHz, moved to 1300 kHz.[19]

In 1962, the Taft interests sold KOL to television producers and game show moguls Mark Goodson and Bill Todman.[20] KOL briefly adopted a Top 40 format which was dropped within a year due to the strong ratings of Top 40 leader AM 950 KJR, and reverted to a Middle of the Road (MOR) format.[21][22][23] By 1965, KOL's Top 40 format had returned.[24] In 1967, the station was sold to Buckley Broadcasting.[25] From 1965 to 1975, KOL, favoring more progressive rock programming, battled KJR as the number-one popular music station in Seattle.[26][27]

KMPS edit

In 1975, the format flipped to country music. The call sign was changed to KMPS (for "Kountry Music Puget Sound") following another change in ownership.[28][29] The country format was also added to 94.1 KMPS-FM (now KSWD and formerly KOL-FM) in February 1978. The Harbor Island studio and transmitter site was demolished in 1981.[30][31]

While KMPS-FM concentrated on contemporary country music with continuous music sweeps, KMPS 1300 had more personality and a playlist with older country hits.

KKOL edit

After then-owners EZ Communications sold AM 1300 KMPS to Salem Communications in December 1996, the station's call sign was changed to KKOL in 1997, and a conservative talk format was adopted at that time.[32][33]

In 2002, after losing its transmitter site, KKOL installed a temporary 1,000-watt transmitter on a moored 175-foot (53-meter) cargo ship, and began to operate from a Seattle waterway. This was the only floating broadcasting station antenna in the U.S.[34] This unique configuration was used for almost five years.

In 2007, a new 50,000-watt transmitter was built. However, there was a complaint from a nearby U.S. Oil and Refining petroleum facility about the transmitter. There was concern that its proximity to the refinery produced electrical fields that exceeded safe limits at the loading docks, creating a potential source of ignition for the combustibles handled there. In particular, there was concern that a spark caused by the flow of radio frequency (RF) energy (a high-frequency alternating current) within cranes, acting as receiving antennas, could trigger an explosion.[35] (This issue is a rarity in broadcast engineering, though a similar situation regarding fuel occurred at AM 1010 KIQI in Oakland, California.)[36]

U.S. Coast Guard standards specified that materials may not be handled with a signal strength of greater than 0.7 volts per square meter (700mV/m2), while the industry recommendation is 0.5V/m2. U.S. Oil's request was for the station to introduce a null toward the facility. However this was in the direction of downtown Seattle, which would necessitate a waiver of the regulation which requires radio stations to cover their community of license with a grade A "city-grade" signal. In addition, the proposed pattern had the effect of reducing KKOL's potential audience by 700,000 listeners.[37]

Business news and conservative talk edit

On November 3, 2008, KKOL switched from its news/talk format to all-business radio.[38] A portion of the station's programming was derived from Bloomberg Radio and CNBC.

In May 2018, Salem agreed to swap KKOL to Tron Dinh Do's Intelli LLC in exchange for KPAM in Troutdale/Portland, Oregon. Salem had been operating KPAM via a local marketing agreement (LMA) since March 2018. KPAM is conservative talk "860 The Answer" with much of the same programming as "1590 The Answer" KLFE in Seattle.[39]

KKOL went silent on February 28, 2018, following the loss of its transmitter site, and need to find a new site to resume broadcasting.[40] After a year of being silent while the station changed transmitter locations to Bainbridge Island, KKOL signed back on in February 2019, playing contemporary Christian music, before going silent again in September 2019.[41]

In June 2021, KKOL returned to the air simulcasting KNTS. The simulcast was then changed to KLFE in October 2021. On August 1, 2022, KKOL became the originating station of the conservative talk format.[42] Effective December 1, 2022, Intelli LLC sold KKOL to Salem Media Group for $500,000.

References edit

  1. ^ "Facility Technical Data for KKOL". Licensing and Management System. Federal Communications Commission.
  2. ^ "KKOL-AM 1300 kHz - Seattle, WA". radio-locator.com.
  3. ^ "New Stations", Radio Service Bulletin, June 1, 1922, page 4. Limited Commercial license, serial No. 417, issued May 23, 1922, for a three-month period for operation on 360 meters to the Rhodes Company in Seattle, Washington.
  4. ^ "KFOA, Seattle, Toastmaster of Northwest", Radio Digest, January 16, 1926, page 6.
  5. ^ "Rhodes Radio Unique in N.W.", Seattle Star, May 20, 1922, page 2.
  6. ^ "Radio Broadcasts", Seattle Star, June 23, 1922, page 2.
  7. ^ "Radio Conference Recommendations: New Wave Lengths", Radio Age, May 1923, page 11. Beginning with these assignments radio stations ended the practice of broadcasting their market reports and weather forecasts on the separate 485-meter wavelength.
  8. ^ "Alterations and Corrections", Radio Service Bulletin, August 1, 1923, page 8.
  9. ^ "Alterations and Corrections", Radio Service Bulletin, February 1, 1924, page 10.
  10. ^ "New Stations", Radio Service Bulletin, February 1, 1924, page 3.
  11. ^ "Radio Program", The Seattle Times, January 18, 1924, p. 24.
  12. ^ "Strike out all particulars", Radio Service Bulletin, April 1, 1925, page 11.
  13. ^ "Alterations and Corrections", Radio Service Bulletin, November 30, 1928, page 7.
  14. ^ "KFOA is Sold, Call Letters Changed to KOL", The Seattle Times, December 9, 1928, p. 20.
  15. ^ "Alterations and Corrections", Radio Service Bulletin, June 30, 1931, page 22.
  16. ^ John F. Schneider, Seattle Radio, (Charleston SC: Arcadia Publishing, 2013), p. 64.
  17. ^ "Radio Antenna of KOL Now is Tallest in U.S.", The Seattle Times, November 18, 1934, p. 32.
  18. ^ Schnieder, p. 104.
  19. ^ Radio Broadcast Stations, Federal Communications Commission (March 29, 1941, edition), page 23.
  20. ^ "Changing Hands", Broadcasting, October 29, 1962, p. 62.
  21. ^ Warren Guykema, "KOL is Swinging Station With Some Serious Aims", The Seattle Times, November 17, 1963, TV Section, p. 4.
  22. ^ Marty Loken, "Like It or Loop It, KJR's Still No. 1", The Seattle Times, April 12, 1964, p. 19
  23. ^ Schneider, op. cit., p. 108.
  24. ^ Marty Loken, "KOL's New Sound-Rock and Roll from the Mudflats", The Seattle Times, June 13, 1965, TV Section, p. 17
  25. ^ S.J. Skreen, "Leathernecks Land Again", The Seattle Times, March 21, 1967, p. 23.
  26. ^ "KOL-FM inaugurates underground format on June 17, 1968. - HistoryLink.org".
  27. ^ "Seattle Radio History - 1300AM (KOL)". October 18, 2010.
  28. ^ Victor Stredicke, "Multiple Messages behind Radio Station Call Letters", The Seattle Times, June 15, 1975, TV Section, p. 26.
  29. ^ Victor Stredicke, "Country air staff, others get Labor Day Workout", The Seattle Times, September 1, 1975, p. B-6.
  30. ^ Schneider, op. cit., p. 103.
  31. ^ 1983 KMPS AM 1300 Willie Nelson Commercial (youtube.com)
  32. ^ Chuck Taylor, "Summertime and News Just Keep Dribbling In", The Seattle Times, August 8, 1997, p. F-3
  33. ^ "Transactions: Washington", Radio & Records, December 12, 1996, page 9.
  34. ^ "Aboard the Coastal Ranger: Seattle's KKOL Goes Maritime Mobile", December 17, 2002 (radioworld.com)
  35. ^ "KKOL moves to bolster its signal power, format and market share" by Bill Virgin, April 18, 2007 (seattlepi.com)
  36. ^ "Big Oil: Primary Issue Is Public Safety", November 6, 2007 (radioworld.com)
  37. ^ "KKOL Fights to Keep Transmitter Site" by Scott Fybush, June 19, 2007 (radioworld.com)
  38. ^ Virgin, Bill (November 5, 2008). "On Radio on Radio: KKOL-AM shifts to business news; Owner sees a market for new format". Seattle Post-Intelligencer.
  39. ^ "Salem Swaps KKOL/Seattle To Intelli For KPAM/Portland" May 15, 2018 (allaccess.com)
  40. ^ "Notification of Suspension of Operations / Request for Silent STA". CDBS Public Access. Federal Communications Commission. March 5, 2018. Retrieved June 27, 2018.
  41. ^ "1300 KKOL... | RadioDiscussions".
  42. ^ THE ANSWER MOVES IN SEATTLE Radioinsight - August 1, 2022

External links edit

  • KKOL in the FCC AM station database
  • KKOL in Nielsen Audio's AM station database
  • FCC History Cards for KKOL (covering 1927-1981 as KFOA / KOL / KMPS)

kkol, kkol, 1300, radio, station, seattle, washington, owned, salem, media, group, airs, conservative, talk, radio, format, branded, 1300, answer, featuring, nationally, syndicated, salem, radio, network, hosts, including, dennis, prager, mike, gallagher, seba. KKOL 1300 kHz is an AM radio station in Seattle Washington It is owned by Salem Media Group It airs a conservative talk radio format branded as 1300 The Answer featuring nationally syndicated Salem Radio Network hosts including Dennis Prager Mike Gallagher Sebastian Gorka Hugh Hewitt Brandon Tatum and Charlie Kirk The radio studios and offices are on Fifth Avenue South KKOL is the oldest radio station in Seattle first licensed on May 23 1922 KKOLSeattle WashingtonBroadcast areaSeattle metropolitan areaFrequency1300 kHzBrandingAM 1300 The AnswerProgrammingFormatConservative talk radioAffiliationsSalem Radio Network TownhallOwnershipOwnerSalem Media Group Inspiration Media Inc Sister stationsKGNWHistoryFirst air dateMay 23 1922 101 years ago 1922 05 23 Former call signsKDZE 1922 1924 KFOA 1924 1928 KOL 1928 1975 KMPS 1975 1997 Former frequencies833 kHz 1922 1923 660 kHz 1923 1927 670 kHz 1927 1928 1270 kHz 1928 1941 Technical information 1 Licensing authorityFCCFacility ID20355ClassBPower50 000 watts day 3 200 watts night Transmitter coordinates47 39 19 N 122 31 06 W 47 65528 N 122 51833 W 47 65528 122 51833LinksPublic license informationPublic fileLMSWebcastListen LiveWebsitetheanswerseattle com The transmitter site is on North Madison Avenue on Bainbridge Island co located with KLFE 1590 AM By day KKOL transmits 35 000 watts the maximum for AM radio stations in the U S using a two tower array directional antenna At night it switches to non directional operation but to protect other stations on 1300 AM from interference it reduces power to 3 200 watts 2 Contents 1 History 1 1 KDZE 1 2 KFOA 1 3 KOL 1 4 KMPS 1 5 KKOL 1 6 Business news and conservative talk 2 References 3 External linksHistory editKDZE edit KKOL was first licensed with the sequentially assigned call letters KDZE on May 23 1922 It was owned by the Rhodes Company Department Store at 1321 Second Avenue in Seattle 3 In the early days of broadcasting some stations were owned by department stores and electronics stores to promote the sale of receivers C B Williams the department store s advertising manager coordinated the installation of the initial 50 watt transmitter 4 The station s glass enclosed studio was located on the second floor of the store where shoppers could observe its operation 5 At this time there was only a single wavelength 360 meters 833 kHz available for entertainment broadcasts so KDZE was required to make a time sharing agreement with the other stations already in operation On June 23 Seattle stations were scheduled to operate from noon to 10 30 pm with KDZE assigned the 3 30 to 4 15 p m time period 6 In May 1923 the U S Commerce Department which regulated radio at this time made a range of frequencies available to Class B stations that had higher powers and better programming The Seattle region was initially assigned 610 kHz with 660 kHz assigned to Portland 7 These two assignments were soon swapped and in the summer of 1923 KDZE moved to 660 kHz 8 KFOA edit In early 1924 in conjunction with an upgrade in facilities the station s call sign was changed to KFOA 9 At this time the department store was issued a license to operate a second radio station with 100 watts on 1110 kHz which inherited the original KDZE call letters 10 This second KDZE was primarily used to broadcast the weekly Chamber of Commerce luncheons 11 and was deleted in March 1925 12 On November 11 1928 under the provisions of a major reallocation resulting from the Federal Radio Commission s FRC General Order 40 KFOA was reassigned from 660 kHz to 1270 kHz sharing the assignment with KTW now KKDZ 13 KOL edit nbsp KOL radio broadcast with announcer Dudley Williamson and Seattle City Light Superintendent Eugene Hoffman 1939 The next month the station was sold to the Seattle Broadcasting Company headed by Archie Taft with the call letters changing to KOL The studios were moved to the Northern Life Tower 14 In 1931 KTW moved to 1220 kHz giving KOL unlimited use of 1270 kHz 15 From 1930 to 1938 KOL was Seattle s CBS Radio Network affiliate 16 In 1934 the station abandoned the T wire antenna on the Rhodes Department Store building s roof moving to a new transmitter site on Harbor Island which featured a 490 foot 150 m self supporting tower which at the time was the tallest of its type in the United States 17 The studios were moved to the transmitter site in 1952 18 In 1941 the North American Regional Broadcasting Agreement NARBA was enacted On March 29 1941 KOL along with all the other stations on 1270 kHz moved to 1300 kHz 19 In 1962 the Taft interests sold KOL to television producers and game show moguls Mark Goodson and Bill Todman 20 KOL briefly adopted a Top 40 format which was dropped within a year due to the strong ratings of Top 40 leader AM 950 KJR and reverted to a Middle of the Road MOR format 21 22 23 By 1965 KOL s Top 40 format had returned 24 In 1967 the station was sold to Buckley Broadcasting 25 From 1965 to 1975 KOL favoring more progressive rock programming battled KJR as the number one popular music station in Seattle 26 27 KMPS edit In 1975 the format flipped to country music The call sign was changed to KMPS for Kountry Music Puget Sound following another change in ownership 28 29 The country format was also added to 94 1 KMPS FM now KSWD and formerly KOL FM in February 1978 The Harbor Island studio and transmitter site was demolished in 1981 30 31 While KMPS FM concentrated on contemporary country music with continuous music sweeps KMPS 1300 had more personality and a playlist with older country hits KKOL edit After then owners EZ Communications sold AM 1300 KMPS to Salem Communications in December 1996 the station s call sign was changed to KKOL in 1997 and a conservative talk format was adopted at that time 32 33 In 2002 after losing its transmitter site KKOL installed a temporary 1 000 watt transmitter on a moored 175 foot 53 meter cargo ship and began to operate from a Seattle waterway This was the only floating broadcasting station antenna in the U S 34 This unique configuration was used for almost five years In 2007 a new 50 000 watt transmitter was built However there was a complaint from a nearby U S Oil and Refining petroleum facility about the transmitter There was concern that its proximity to the refinery produced electrical fields that exceeded safe limits at the loading docks creating a potential source of ignition for the combustibles handled there In particular there was concern that a spark caused by the flow of radio frequency RF energy a high frequency alternating current within cranes acting as receiving antennas could trigger an explosion 35 This issue is a rarity in broadcast engineering though a similar situation regarding fuel occurred at AM 1010 KIQI in Oakland California 36 U S Coast Guard standards specified that materials may not be handled with a signal strength of greater than 0 7 volts per square meter 700mV m2 while the industry recommendation is 0 5V m2 U S Oil s request was for the station to introduce a null toward the facility However this was in the direction of downtown Seattle which would necessitate a waiver of the regulation which requires radio stations to cover their community of license with a grade A city grade signal In addition the proposed pattern had the effect of reducing KKOL s potential audience by 700 000 listeners 37 Business news and conservative talk edit On November 3 2008 KKOL switched from its news talk format to all business radio 38 A portion of the station s programming was derived from Bloomberg Radio and CNBC In May 2018 Salem agreed to swap KKOL to Tron Dinh Do s Intelli LLC in exchange for KPAM in Troutdale Portland Oregon Salem had been operating KPAM via a local marketing agreement LMA since March 2018 KPAM is conservative talk 860 The Answer with much of the same programming as 1590 The Answer KLFE in Seattle 39 KKOL went silent on February 28 2018 following the loss of its transmitter site and need to find a new site to resume broadcasting 40 After a year of being silent while the station changed transmitter locations to Bainbridge Island KKOL signed back on in February 2019 playing contemporary Christian music before going silent again in September 2019 41 In June 2021 KKOL returned to the air simulcasting KNTS The simulcast was then changed to KLFE in October 2021 On August 1 2022 KKOL became the originating station of the conservative talk format 42 Effective December 1 2022 Intelli LLC sold KKOL to Salem Media Group for 500 000 References edit Facility Technical Data for KKOL Licensing and Management System Federal Communications Commission KKOL AM 1300 kHz Seattle WA radio locator com New Stations Radio Service Bulletin June 1 1922 page 4 Limited Commercial license serial No 417 issued May 23 1922 for a three month period for operation on 360 meters to the Rhodes Company in Seattle Washington KFOA Seattle Toastmaster of Northwest Radio Digest January 16 1926 page 6 Rhodes Radio Unique in N W Seattle Star May 20 1922 page 2 Radio Broadcasts Seattle Star June 23 1922 page 2 Radio Conference Recommendations New Wave Lengths Radio Age May 1923 page 11 Beginning with these assignments radio stations ended the practice of broadcasting their market reports and weather forecasts on the separate 485 meter wavelength Alterations and Corrections Radio Service Bulletin August 1 1923 page 8 Alterations and Corrections Radio Service Bulletin February 1 1924 page 10 New Stations Radio Service Bulletin February 1 1924 page 3 Radio Program The Seattle Times January 18 1924 p 24 Strike out all particulars Radio Service Bulletin April 1 1925 page 11 Alterations and Corrections Radio Service Bulletin November 30 1928 page 7 KFOA is Sold Call Letters Changed to KOL The Seattle Times December 9 1928 p 20 Alterations and Corrections Radio Service Bulletin June 30 1931 page 22 John F Schneider Seattle Radio Charleston SC Arcadia Publishing 2013 p 64 Radio Antenna of KOL Now is Tallest in U S The Seattle Times November 18 1934 p 32 Schnieder p 104 Radio Broadcast Stations Federal Communications Commission March 29 1941 edition page 23 Changing Hands Broadcasting October 29 1962 p 62 Warren Guykema KOL is Swinging Station With Some Serious Aims The Seattle Times November 17 1963 TV Section p 4 Marty Loken Like It or Loop It KJR s Still No 1 The Seattle Times April 12 1964 p 19 Schneider op cit p 108 Marty Loken KOL s New Sound Rock and Roll from the Mudflats The Seattle Times June 13 1965 TV Section p 17 S J Skreen Leathernecks Land Again The Seattle Times March 21 1967 p 23 KOL FM inaugurates underground format on June 17 1968 HistoryLink org Seattle Radio History 1300AM KOL October 18 2010 Victor Stredicke Multiple Messages behind Radio Station Call Letters The Seattle Times June 15 1975 TV Section p 26 Victor Stredicke Country air staff others get Labor Day Workout The Seattle Times September 1 1975 p B 6 Schneider op cit p 103 1983 KMPS AM 1300 Willie Nelson Commercial youtube com Chuck Taylor Summertime and News Just Keep Dribbling In The Seattle Times August 8 1997 p F 3 Transactions Washington Radio amp Records December 12 1996 page 9 Aboard the Coastal Ranger Seattle s KKOL Goes Maritime Mobile December 17 2002 radioworld com KKOL moves to bolster its signal power format and market share by Bill Virgin April 18 2007 seattlepi com Big Oil Primary Issue Is Public Safety November 6 2007 radioworld com KKOL Fights to Keep Transmitter Site by Scott Fybush June 19 2007 radioworld com Virgin Bill November 5 2008 On Radio on Radio KKOL AM shifts to business news Owner sees a market for new format Seattle Post Intelligencer Salem Swaps KKOL Seattle To Intelli For KPAM Portland May 15 2018 allaccess com Notification of Suspension of Operations Request for Silent STA CDBS Public Access Federal Communications Commission March 5 2018 Retrieved June 27 2018 1300 KKOL RadioDiscussions THE ANSWER MOVES IN SEATTLE Radioinsight August 1 2022External links editKKOL in the FCC AM station database KKOL in Nielsen Audio s AM station database FCC History Cards for KKOL covering 1927 1981 as KFOA KOL KMPS Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title KKOL AM amp oldid 1221097518, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.