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KPTR (AM)

KPTR (1090 kHz) is a commercial AM radio station in Seattle, Washington. It airs a Conservative talk format and is owned by iHeartMedia. The studios and offices are in the Belltown neighborhood northwest of Downtown Seattle.

KPTR
Broadcast areaSeattle metropolitan area
Frequency1090 kHz
Branding1090 The Patriot
Programming
FormatConservative talk
NetworkNBC News Radio
Affiliations
Ownership
Owner
KBKS-FM, KHHO, KJAQ, KJEB, KJR, KJR-FM, KZOK-FM
History
First air date
1927; 97 years ago (1927)
Former call signs
  • KGBS (1927–1928)
  • KVL (1928–1936)
  • KEEN (1936–1940)
  • KEVR (1940–1947)
  • KING (1947–1995)
  • KINF (1995)
  • KNWX (1995)
  • KRPM (1995–1999)
  • KMPS (1999)
  • KYCW (1999–2004)
  • KPTK (2004–2012)
  • KFNQ (2012–2022)
Call sign meaning
"Patriot"
Technical information[1]
Licensing authority
FCC
Facility ID6387
ClassB
Power50,000 watts
Transmitter coordinates
47°23′38″N 122°25′25″W / 47.39389°N 122.42361°W / 47.39389; -122.42361
Repeater(s)96.5 KJAQ-HD3 (Seattle)
Links
Public license information
  • Public file
  • LMS
WebcastListen live (via iHeartRadio)
Website1090thepatriot.iheart.com

KPTR is powered at 50,000 watts, the maximum for AM stations in the U.S., and is a Class B station. Because AM 1090 is a clear-channel frequency reserved for Class A KAAY in Little Rock, WBAL in Baltimore and XEPRS in Rosarito-Tijuana, KPTR must use a directional antenna at all times to avoid interference. The transmitter is off Dockton Road SW on Vashon Island.[2] KPTR also airs on the HD3 sub-channel of co-owned KJAQ.[3]

Programming edit

Most of KPTR's schedule is nationally syndicated talk shows. Weekdays begin with an hour of financial news from Bloomberg Radio. That's followed by The Glenn Beck Radio Program, The Clay Travis and Buck Sexton Show, The Sean Hannity Show, The Jesse Kelly Show and Our American Stories with Lee Habeeb.

Weekends feature specialty shows, mostly from co-owned Premiere Networks, as well as repeats of weekday programs. Syndicated weekend shows include At Home with Gary Sullivan, Rich DeMuro on Tech, Bill Handel on the Law, The Mark Moss Show and The Ben Ferguson Show. Most hours begin with an update from NBC News Radio.

History edit

Early years edit

The station signed on the air in 1927; 97 years ago (1927). The original call sign was KGBS.[4] It is considered the third oldest radio station in Seattle, following KJR, which began broadcasting in 1922, and KOMO, now KNWN, which began in 1926. KIRO started broadcasting later in 1927, as KPCB.

The following year, KGBS changed its call letters to KVL.[5] In the 1930s, it broadcast on 1370 kilocycles with only 100 watts of power.[6] The studios were in the L.C. Smith Tower in downtown Seattle.

The call letters became KEEN in 1936 and KEVR in 1940.[4] When the North American Regional Broadcasting Agreement (NARBA) took effect in 1941, KEVR moved to 1090 kHz.[7] It got a boost to 250 watts, but still only a fraction of its current output. In the early 1940s, the station was owned by the Evergreen Broadcasting Company, with its studios still in Smith Tower.

KING edit

In 1947, broadcasting pioneer Dorothy Bullitt bought KEVR and almost immediately asked for permission to change the call letters to KING (for King County, Washington). Bullitt was a rare female executive in the male-dominated broadcasting industry. After Bullitt bought the call sign from a merchant ship, the FCC granted the request to change to KING a few months later. Bullitt incorporated her broadcast holdings as King Broadcasting Company.

In 1948, King Broadcasting acquired KRSC-TV and KRSC-FM, changing their call letters to KING-TV and KING-FM. KRSC-TV had only been on the air eight months before King Broadcasting took it over. KING-FM first signed on in 1947. After initially simulcasting KING (AM), KING-FM began adding classical music in the evening and eventually classical became its full-time format.

Under the Bullitts' watch, the once-small station became a powerhouse in Seattle during the 1950s and 1960s. The "Mighty 1090" featured legendary radio personalities such as Frosty Fowler, Ray Court, Mark Wayne, Buzz Lawrence, and late night talk with Irving Clark's Clark on King. The station was an NBC Radio Network affiliate. Its local news often used KING-TV anchors. The format of music was middle of the road (MOR), but also mixed in jazz, bossa nova and some swing. When compared to its chief rival KJR, KING had a light-hearted and upbeat direction, an opposition to KJR's more hip direction, but not being as staid as KIRO. Some late 1960s personalities defected to KIRO. Bob and Jim, a duo team, was brought in from KREM in Spokane, and personality Larry Nelson came aboard from KOMO.

Top 40 era edit

During the 1970s, the station flipped to top 40 music and changed monikers to "Musicradio 11 KING", putting it in close competition with KJR. The line-up at the time included such Seattle radio personalities as Gary Lockwood (who later defected to KJR) and Bruce Murdock, with the Murdock in the Morning Show. (Murdock later moved to KLSY.)

When KJR unveiled its yellow "Sunshine" window sticker, KING followed with its own red "Sunburst" sticker. KING-AM-FM-TV were located in studios on Aurora Avenue in Seattle.

Adult contemporary edit

In April 1980, KING experienced a major change. As AM music radio lost younger listeners to FM, KING gave up on top 40 and flipped to soft adult contemporary, while retaining the "Musicradio 11 KING" moniker. KING's slogan was "Soft Rock and More". The station's tagline used in advertising was "You grew up with us, now we've grown up for you".[8][9]

Talk and all-news edit

On October 4, 1982, at 4 a.m., KING switched to a talk radio format, mostly with local personalities.[10][11] It was branded simply as "KING NewsTalk 1090". Personalities included Jim Althoff, Carl Dombek, Jeff Ray, Randy Rowland, Freddy Mertz, Mike Siegel, Candace Siegel (no relation) and Pat Cashman. This format produced moderately high ratings, though never as successful as the top 40 format had been.

On September 2, 1994, at noon, the station fired all on-air personalities and switched to an all-news radio format, carrying programming from the AP News radio service "All News Radio."[12][13]

In February 1995, the Bullitts sold KING AM-FM to Bonneville, the commercial broadcasting arm of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, based in Salt Lake City. (The family had already sold KING-TV to the Providence Journal Company in 1991.) Bonneville, in turn, sold KING-AM-FM to EZ Communications later that year. The FM station was then sold by EZ to a non-profit organization that pledged to continue its Classical music format as a commercial station. The TV and FM stations retained the KING call letters; for the AM station, the long-running KING call sign was dropped for KINF, followed by KNWX.

Country music edit

In November 1995, the station swapped formats (but not call letters) with KULL (which was simulcasting country music station KRPM (106.1 FM)). 1090 became KRPM, an AM simulcast for KRPM-FM/KCIN (now KBKS-FM). The simulcast continued after KCIN's flip to rhythmic AC in March 1996, as well as the shift to Top 40 (CHR) in May 1997. (EZ merged with American Radio Systems in July 1997; subsequently, Westinghouse/CBS bought American Radio Systems' stations (including KRPM) on September 19, 1997.[14] In June 1998, CBS split off the radio division under the revived Infinity Broadcasting name, which would be renamed CBS Radio in December 2005.)

On February 1, 1999, the station broke from the KBKS simulcast and flipped to a locally programmed classic country format with a simulcast of the morning show on sister KMPS-FM.[15][16] At that time, the station's call letters became KMPS, and then KYCW. The station began broadcasting in AM stereo in March 2001.

Hot talk/back to classic country/progressive talk edit

Beginning August 4, 2001, the station ran announcements promoting a new format that advised listeners to "listen at their own risk". At 5 a.m. on Monday, August 6, the station flipped to hot talk as "Extreme Radio 1090" featuring Bob Rivers' Twisted Radio in mornings (simulcast from KZOK-FM). After morning drive time, the station aired nationally syndicated shows from Jim Rome, Ron and Fez, Opie & Anthony, Don and Mike and Phil Hendrie. On weekends, the station carried sports programming from Sporting News Radio (now SB Nation).[17][18] As with nearly all hot talk-formatted stations, the station's ratings were abysmal, especially with the format change occurring a month before 9/11.

KYCW would return to classic country at 11 p.m. on May 19, 2002.[19] The station's second version of the classic country format included the return of personalities previously heard the first time, including "Tall" Paul Fredericks, Mike Preston, program director Becky Brenner, "Buffalo" Phil Harper, and Sheldon Smith. The station, however, still had low ratings, usually peaking at a 1.3.

On October 25, 2004, at midnight, the station flipped to progressive talk and changed its call sign to KPTK days later.[20][21][22][23] During its tenure as "Seattle's Progressive Talk," KPTK carried syndicated progressive/liberal talk programs hosted by personalities such as Ed Schultz, Mike Malloy, Randi Rhodes, Thom Hartmann, Norman Goldman, Rachel Maddow, Stephanie Miller, Leslie Marshall, and Bill Press. KPTK was also the flagship station of Air America Radio's Ron Reagan Show.[24][25] Beginning in 2011, KPTK became the flagship station of Seattle Storm and Seattle Thunderbirds broadcasts, though it was met with some controversy. The station's weekend programming included a mix of specialty syndicated and local programs, such as The Ric Edelman Show (a financial advice show), Ring of Fire, Democracy Now!, Swirl Radio (a show targeting the LGBT community), Community Matters with CBS Seattle's director of public affairs and morning traffic reporter Lee Callahan, Gardening In the Northwest with Scott Conner, The Tina and Drew Show, and Crash Talk with Mike Harber.

Sports radio edit

In July 2012, CBS and Cumulus Media announced a new sports radio network named CBS Sports Radio to be launched in January 2013. The initial affiliate list that carried the network's full lineup included most of CBS' owned and operated low-performing AM stations, while others were CBS-owned sports stations that would carry certain programs and hourly "CBS Sports Minute" updates. After much speculation, on November 14, 2012, CBS announced that KPTK would flip to the new network on January 2, 2013, branded as "1090 The Fan." (This was further confirmed by the station changing call letters to KFNQ on the same day.)

This was met with much controversy on the station's Facebook page, as well as being brought up by several of the station's hosts. To please displaced listeners, Lakewood radio station KLAY announced that it would carry Ed Schultz' and Stephanie Miller's programs after the station's flip, as well as KBCS picking up Thom Hartmann's program.[26]

After the station's flip to all-sports, KFNQ aired a local afternoon show hosted by Steve Sandmeyer and Bill Swartz (later replaced by Jason Churchill). However, on July 11, 2015, the show was cancelled, resulting in KFNQ airing the entire CBS Sports Radio program lineup around the clock.

iHeart ownership edit

On February 2, 2017, CBS Radio announced its merger with Entercom (which locally owns KHTP, KISW, KKWF, and KNDD).[27] On October 10, CBS Radio announced that as part of the process of obtaining regulatory approval of the merger, KFNQ would be one of sixteen stations to be divested by Entercom, along with KJAQ and KZOK. (KMPS-FM was retained by Entercom.)[28]

On November 1, iHeartMedia announced its acquisition of KFNQ, KJAQ, and KZOK. To meet ownership limits set by the FCC, KFNY (formerly KFOO) and KTDD (formerly KUBE) were divested to the Ocean Stations Trust in order to be sold to a different owner.[29] Until the completion of the divestment of KFNY and KTDD to the trust, CBS placed KFNQ, KJAQ, and KZOK into the Entercom Divestiture Trust. The merger of CBS and Entercom was approved on November 9, and was consummated on November 17.[30][31] iHeart then began operating KFNQ under a local marketing agreement.[32][33] The sale of KFNQ to iHeart was completed on December 19, 2017.[34]

On February 8, 2018, the station dropped the "Fan" branding and relaunched as "1090 KJR", a brand extension of co-owned KJR. With the change, KFNQ added the syndicated Fox Sports Radio programs The Dan Patrick Show, The Herd with Colin Cowherd, and The Doug Gottlieb Show.[35]

On March 16, 2022, the station changed callsigns to KPTR, foreshadowing a flip to conservative talk as "1090 The Patriot", which would occur on April 10.[36] The new format would include conservative programming from Premiere Networks, such as The Clay Travis and Buck Sexton Show, the Glenn Beck Radio Program, and The Sean Hannity Show, with an early morning hour of financial news from Bloomberg Radio. KFNQ's former lineup of CBS Sports Radio and Fox Sports Radio programming was concurrently moved to KJR, whose local programming had migrated to KUBE as "93.3 KJR-FM" earlier in March.

References edit

  1. ^ "Facility Technical Data for KPTR". Licensing and Management System. Federal Communications Commission.
  2. ^ "KPTR-AM 1090 kHz - Seattle, WA". radio-locator.com.
  3. ^ HD Radio Guide for Seattle-Tacoma 2015-07-22 at the Wayback Machine
  4. ^ a b "KING (KPTR) history cards" (PDF). CDBS Public Access. Federal Communications Commission. Retrieved October 11, 2017.
  5. ^ 1937 Seattle City Directory shows Gellermann, Vincent as "opr KVL Broadcasting Sta"
  6. ^ Information from the Broadcasting Yearbook 1935 page 66
  7. ^ Broadcasting Yearbook 1943 page 152
  8. ^ "Radio KING AM1090 (1977)". YouTube. Archived from the original on 2021-12-22.
  9. ^ "Kenny Morse in KING RADIO (Seattle) commercial". YouTube.
  10. ^ "RadioInsight.com". Retrieved 2007-02-14.
  11. ^ "Joe Cooper says Goodbye to KING-Radio". YouTube. Archived from the original on 2021-12-22.
  12. ^ "Radio & Records, September 9, 1994" (PDF). worldradiohistory.com.
  13. ^ "Why The Sudden Change Regarding King-Am Radio? | The Seattle Times". archive.seattletimes.com.
  14. ^ "Radio & Records, September 26, 1997" (PDF). worldradiohistory.com.
  15. ^ "RADIO WAVES". products.kitsapsun.com.
  16. ^ "Radio & Records, February 5, 1999" (PDF). worldradiohistory.com.
  17. ^ Virgin, Bill; SEATTLE POST-INTELLIGENCER REPORTER (2001-08-06). "Country gets the boot, 'extreme talk' is in at KYCW". seattlepi.com.
  18. ^ "Radio & Records, August 10, 2001" (PDF). worldradiohistory.com.
  19. ^ "Radio & Records, May 24, 2002" (PDF). worldradiohistory.com.
  20. ^ "Northwest Progressive Institute Archive: Air America Radio,Now in Seattle!".
  21. ^ "Radio & Records, October 29, 2004" (PDF). worldradiohistory.com.
  22. ^ FCC Internet Services Staff. "Call Sign History". licensing.fcc.gov.
  23. ^ "Classic Country 1090 KYCW becomes Progressive Talk KPTK". Format Change Archive. 2005-01-20.
  24. ^ Ron Reagan added as permanent Air America host, ltradio.blogspot.com
  25. ^ KPTK Weekday Program Lineup
  26. ^ 1090 KPTK Seattle Gets New Calls; To Join CBS Sports Radio
  27. ^ CBS Radio to Merge with Entercom
  28. ^ Venta, Lance (October 10, 2017). "Entercom Narrows Down 16 Stations To Be Divested To Complete CBS Radio Merger". RadioInsight. Retrieved October 11, 2017.
  29. ^ Entercom Trades Boston/Seattle Spin-Offs to iHeartMedia for Richmond/Chattanooga
  30. ^ "Entercom Receives FCC Approval for Merger with CBS Radio". Entercom. November 9, 2017. Retrieved November 17, 2017.
  31. ^ Venta, Lance (November 17, 2017). "Entercom Completes CBS Radio Merger". Radio Insight. Retrieved November 17, 2017.
  32. ^ Venta, Lance (December 10, 2017). "Alt 102.9 & KUBE 104.9 Tacoma Move To Placeholder Formats". RadioInsight. Retrieved December 11, 2017. While iHeart has begun operating 1030 WBZ, 97.7 WKAF, and 100.7 WZLX in the Boston market and Sports "1090 The Fan" KFNQ Seattle via LMA…
  33. ^ iHeart Begins Operating Remainder of Boston & Seattle Acquisitions
  34. ^ "Consummation Notice". CDBS Public Access. Federal Communications Commission. December 19, 2017. Retrieved December 20, 2017.
  35. ^ Venta, Lance (February 8, 2018). "iHeart Launches 1090 KJR and South Sound Talk 850 Seattle". RadioInsight. Retrieved February 8, 2018.
  36. ^ "1090 The Patriot Launches In Seattle; KJR Moves Exclusively To 93.3". RadioInsight. Retrieved 2022-04-10.

External links edit

  • Official website
  • KPTR in the FCC AM station database
  • KPTR in Nielsen Audio's AM station database

kptr, kptr, 1090, commercial, radio, station, seattle, washington, airs, conservative, talk, format, owned, iheartmedia, studios, offices, belltown, neighborhood, northwest, downtown, seattle, kptrseattle, washingtonbroadcast, areaseattle, metropolitan, areafr. KPTR 1090 kHz is a commercial AM radio station in Seattle Washington It airs a Conservative talk format and is owned by iHeartMedia The studios and offices are in the Belltown neighborhood northwest of Downtown Seattle KPTRSeattle WashingtonBroadcast areaSeattle metropolitan areaFrequency1090 kHzBranding1090 The PatriotProgrammingFormatConservative talkNetworkNBC News RadioAffiliationsBloomberg RadioPremiere NetworksSeattle ThunderbirdsOwnershipOwneriHeartMedia Inc iHM Licenses LLC Sister stationsKBKS FM KHHO KJAQ KJEB KJR KJR FM KZOK FMHistoryFirst air date1927 97 years ago 1927 Former call signsKGBS 1927 1928 KVL 1928 1936 KEEN 1936 1940 KEVR 1940 1947 KING 1947 1995 KINF 1995 KNWX 1995 KRPM 1995 1999 KMPS 1999 KYCW 1999 2004 KPTK 2004 2012 KFNQ 2012 2022 Call sign meaning Patriot Technical information 1 Licensing authorityFCCFacility ID6387ClassBPower50 000 wattsTransmitter coordinates47 23 38 N 122 25 25 W 47 39389 N 122 42361 W 47 39389 122 42361Repeater s 96 5 KJAQ HD3 Seattle LinksPublic license informationPublic fileLMSWebcastListen live via iHeartRadio Website1090thepatriot wbr iheart wbr com KPTR is powered at 50 000 watts the maximum for AM stations in the U S and is a Class B station Because AM 1090 is a clear channel frequency reserved for Class A KAAY in Little Rock WBAL in Baltimore and XEPRS in Rosarito Tijuana KPTR must use a directional antenna at all times to avoid interference The transmitter is off Dockton Road SW on Vashon Island 2 KPTR also airs on the HD3 sub channel of co owned KJAQ 3 Contents 1 Programming 2 History 2 1 Early years 2 2 KING 2 3 Top 40 era 2 4 Adult contemporary 2 5 Talk and all news 2 6 Country music 2 7 Hot talk back to classic country progressive talk 2 8 Sports radio 2 9 iHeart ownership 3 References 4 External linksProgramming editMost of KPTR s schedule is nationally syndicated talk shows Weekdays begin with an hour of financial news from Bloomberg Radio That s followed by The Glenn Beck Radio Program The Clay Travis and Buck Sexton Show The Sean Hannity Show The Jesse Kelly Show and Our American Stories with Lee Habeeb Weekends feature specialty shows mostly from co owned Premiere Networks as well as repeats of weekday programs Syndicated weekend shows include At Home with Gary Sullivan Rich DeMuro on Tech Bill Handel on the Law The Mark Moss Show and The Ben Ferguson Show Most hours begin with an update from NBC News Radio History editEarly years edit The station signed on the air in 1927 97 years ago 1927 The original call sign was KGBS 4 It is considered the third oldest radio station in Seattle following KJR which began broadcasting in 1922 and KOMO now KNWN which began in 1926 KIRO started broadcasting later in 1927 as KPCB The following year KGBS changed its call letters to KVL 5 In the 1930s it broadcast on 1370 kilocycles with only 100 watts of power 6 The studios were in the L C Smith Tower in downtown Seattle The call letters became KEEN in 1936 and KEVR in 1940 4 When the North American Regional Broadcasting Agreement NARBA took effect in 1941 KEVR moved to 1090 kHz 7 It got a boost to 250 watts but still only a fraction of its current output In the early 1940s the station was owned by the Evergreen Broadcasting Company with its studios still in Smith Tower KING edit In 1947 broadcasting pioneer Dorothy Bullitt bought KEVR and almost immediately asked for permission to change the call letters to KING for King County Washington Bullitt was a rare female executive in the male dominated broadcasting industry After Bullitt bought the call sign from a merchant ship the FCC granted the request to change to KING a few months later Bullitt incorporated her broadcast holdings as King Broadcasting Company In 1948 King Broadcasting acquired KRSC TV and KRSC FM changing their call letters to KING TV and KING FM KRSC TV had only been on the air eight months before King Broadcasting took it over KING FM first signed on in 1947 After initially simulcasting KING AM KING FM began adding classical music in the evening and eventually classical became its full time format Under the Bullitts watch the once small station became a powerhouse in Seattle during the 1950s and 1960s The Mighty 1090 featured legendary radio personalities such as Frosty Fowler Ray Court Mark Wayne Buzz Lawrence and late night talk with Irving Clark s Clark on King The station was an NBC Radio Network affiliate Its local news often used KING TV anchors The format of music was middle of the road MOR but also mixed in jazz bossa nova and some swing When compared to its chief rival KJR KING had a light hearted and upbeat direction an opposition to KJR s more hip direction but not being as staid as KIRO Some late 1960s personalities defected to KIRO Bob and Jim a duo team was brought in from KREM in Spokane and personality Larry Nelson came aboard from KOMO Top 40 era edit During the 1970s the station flipped to top 40 music and changed monikers to Musicradio 11 KING putting it in close competition with KJR The line up at the time included such Seattle radio personalities as Gary Lockwood who later defected to KJR and Bruce Murdock with the Murdock in the Morning Show Murdock later moved to KLSY When KJR unveiled its yellow Sunshine window sticker KING followed with its own red Sunburst sticker KING AM FM TV were located in studios on Aurora Avenue in Seattle Adult contemporary edit In April 1980 KING experienced a major change As AM music radio lost younger listeners to FM KING gave up on top 40 and flipped to soft adult contemporary while retaining the Musicradio 11 KING moniker KING s slogan was Soft Rock and More The station s tagline used in advertising was You grew up with us now we ve grown up for you 8 9 Talk and all news edit On October 4 1982 at 4 a m KING switched to a talk radio format mostly with local personalities 10 11 It was branded simply as KING NewsTalk 1090 Personalities included Jim Althoff Carl Dombek Jeff Ray Randy Rowland Freddy Mertz Mike Siegel Candace Siegel no relation and Pat Cashman This format produced moderately high ratings though never as successful as the top 40 format had been On September 2 1994 at noon the station fired all on air personalities and switched to an all news radio format carrying programming from the AP News radio service All News Radio 12 13 In February 1995 the Bullitts sold KING AM FM to Bonneville the commercial broadcasting arm of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter day Saints based in Salt Lake City The family had already sold KING TV to the Providence Journal Company in 1991 Bonneville in turn sold KING AM FM to EZ Communications later that year The FM station was then sold by EZ to a non profit organization that pledged to continue its Classical music format as a commercial station The TV and FM stations retained the KING call letters for the AM station the long running KING call sign was dropped for KINF followed by KNWX Country music edit In November 1995 the station swapped formats but not call letters with KULL which was simulcasting country music station KRPM 106 1 FM 1090 became KRPM an AM simulcast for KRPM FM KCIN now KBKS FM The simulcast continued after KCIN s flip to rhythmic AC in March 1996 as well as the shift to Top 40 CHR in May 1997 EZ merged with American Radio Systems in July 1997 subsequently Westinghouse CBS bought American Radio Systems stations including KRPM on September 19 1997 14 In June 1998 CBS split off the radio division under the revived Infinity Broadcasting name which would be renamed CBS Radio in December 2005 On February 1 1999 the station broke from the KBKS simulcast and flipped to a locally programmed classic country format with a simulcast of the morning show on sister KMPS FM 15 16 At that time the station s call letters became KMPS and then KYCW The station began broadcasting in AM stereo in March 2001 Hot talk back to classic country progressive talk edit Beginning August 4 2001 the station ran announcements promoting a new format that advised listeners to listen at their own risk At 5 a m on Monday August 6 the station flipped to hot talk as Extreme Radio 1090 featuring Bob Rivers Twisted Radio in mornings simulcast from KZOK FM After morning drive time the station aired nationally syndicated shows from Jim Rome Ron and Fez Opie amp Anthony Don and Mike and Phil Hendrie On weekends the station carried sports programming from Sporting News Radio now SB Nation 17 18 As with nearly all hot talk formatted stations the station s ratings were abysmal especially with the format change occurring a month before 9 11 KYCW would return to classic country at 11 p m on May 19 2002 19 The station s second version of the classic country format included the return of personalities previously heard the first time including Tall Paul Fredericks Mike Preston program director Becky Brenner Buffalo Phil Harper and Sheldon Smith The station however still had low ratings usually peaking at a 1 3 On October 25 2004 at midnight the station flipped to progressive talk and changed its call sign to KPTK days later 20 21 22 23 During its tenure as Seattle s Progressive Talk KPTK carried syndicated progressive liberal talk programs hosted by personalities such as Ed Schultz Mike Malloy Randi Rhodes Thom Hartmann Norman Goldman Rachel Maddow Stephanie Miller Leslie Marshall and Bill Press KPTK was also the flagship station of Air America Radio s Ron Reagan Show 24 25 Beginning in 2011 KPTK became the flagship station of Seattle Storm and Seattle Thunderbirds broadcasts though it was met with some controversy The station s weekend programming included a mix of specialty syndicated and local programs such as The Ric Edelman Show a financial advice show Ring of Fire Democracy Now Swirl Radio a show targeting the LGBT community Community Matters with CBS Seattle s director of public affairs and morning traffic reporter Lee Callahan Gardening In the Northwest with Scott Conner The Tina and Drew Show and Crash Talk with Mike Harber Sports radio edit In July 2012 CBS and Cumulus Media announced a new sports radio network named CBS Sports Radio to be launched in January 2013 The initial affiliate list that carried the network s full lineup included most of CBS owned and operated low performing AM stations while others were CBS owned sports stations that would carry certain programs and hourly CBS Sports Minute updates After much speculation on November 14 2012 CBS announced that KPTK would flip to the new network on January 2 2013 branded as 1090 The Fan This was further confirmed by the station changing call letters to KFNQ on the same day This was met with much controversy on the station s Facebook page as well as being brought up by several of the station s hosts To please displaced listeners Lakewood radio station KLAY announced that it would carry Ed Schultz and Stephanie Miller s programs after the station s flip as well as KBCS picking up Thom Hartmann s program 26 After the station s flip to all sports KFNQ aired a local afternoon show hosted by Steve Sandmeyer and Bill Swartz later replaced by Jason Churchill However on July 11 2015 the show was cancelled resulting in KFNQ airing the entire CBS Sports Radio program lineup around the clock iHeart ownership edit On February 2 2017 CBS Radio announced its merger with Entercom which locally owns KHTP KISW KKWF and KNDD 27 On October 10 CBS Radio announced that as part of the process of obtaining regulatory approval of the merger KFNQ would be one of sixteen stations to be divested by Entercom along with KJAQ and KZOK KMPS FM was retained by Entercom 28 On November 1 iHeartMedia announced its acquisition of KFNQ KJAQ and KZOK To meet ownership limits set by the FCC KFNY formerly KFOO and KTDD formerly KUBE were divested to the Ocean Stations Trust in order to be sold to a different owner 29 Until the completion of the divestment of KFNY and KTDD to the trust CBS placed KFNQ KJAQ and KZOK into the Entercom Divestiture Trust The merger of CBS and Entercom was approved on November 9 and was consummated on November 17 30 31 iHeart then began operating KFNQ under a local marketing agreement 32 33 The sale of KFNQ to iHeart was completed on December 19 2017 34 On February 8 2018 the station dropped the Fan branding and relaunched as 1090 KJR a brand extension of co owned KJR With the change KFNQ added the syndicated Fox Sports Radio programs The Dan Patrick Show The Herd with Colin Cowherd and The Doug Gottlieb Show 35 On March 16 2022 the station changed callsigns to KPTR foreshadowing a flip to conservative talk as 1090 The Patriot which would occur on April 10 36 The new format would include conservative programming from Premiere Networks such as The Clay Travis and Buck Sexton Show the Glenn Beck Radio Program and The Sean Hannity Show with an early morning hour of financial news from Bloomberg Radio KFNQ s former lineup of CBS Sports Radio and Fox Sports Radio programming was concurrently moved to KJR whose local programming had migrated to KUBE as 93 3 KJR FM earlier in March References edit Facility Technical Data for KPTR Licensing and Management System Federal Communications Commission KPTR AM 1090 kHz Seattle WA radio locator com HD Radio Guide for Seattle Tacoma Archived 2015 07 22 at the Wayback Machine a b KING KPTR history cards PDF CDBS Public Access Federal Communications Commission Retrieved October 11 2017 1937 Seattle City Directory shows Gellermann Vincent as opr KVL Broadcasting Sta Information from the Broadcasting Yearbook 1935 page 66 Broadcasting Yearbook 1943 page 152 Radio KING AM1090 1977 YouTube Archived from the original on 2021 12 22 Kenny Morse in KING RADIO Seattle commercial YouTube RadioInsight com Retrieved 2007 02 14 Joe Cooper says Goodbye to KING Radio YouTube Archived from the original on 2021 12 22 Radio amp Records September 9 1994 PDF worldradiohistory com Why The Sudden Change Regarding King Am Radio The Seattle Times archive seattletimes com Radio amp Records September 26 1997 PDF worldradiohistory com RADIO WAVES products kitsapsun com Radio amp Records February 5 1999 PDF worldradiohistory com Virgin Bill SEATTLE POST INTELLIGENCER REPORTER 2001 08 06 Country gets the boot extreme talk is in at KYCW seattlepi com Radio amp Records August 10 2001 PDF worldradiohistory com Radio amp Records May 24 2002 PDF worldradiohistory com Northwest Progressive Institute Archive Air America Radio Now in Seattle Radio amp Records October 29 2004 PDF worldradiohistory com FCC Internet Services Staff Call Sign History licensing fcc gov Classic Country 1090 KYCW becomes Progressive Talk KPTK Format Change Archive 2005 01 20 Ron Reagan added as permanent Air America host ltradio blogspot com KPTK Weekday Program Lineup 1090 KPTK Seattle Gets New Calls To Join CBS Sports Radio CBS Radio to Merge with Entercom Venta Lance October 10 2017 Entercom Narrows Down 16 Stations To Be Divested To Complete CBS Radio Merger RadioInsight Retrieved October 11 2017 Entercom Trades Boston Seattle Spin Offs to iHeartMedia for Richmond Chattanooga Entercom Receives FCC Approval for Merger with CBS Radio Entercom November 9 2017 Retrieved November 17 2017 Venta Lance November 17 2017 Entercom Completes CBS Radio Merger Radio Insight Retrieved November 17 2017 Venta Lance December 10 2017 Alt 102 9 amp KUBE 104 9 Tacoma Move To Placeholder Formats RadioInsight Retrieved December 11 2017 While iHeart has begun operating 1030 WBZ 97 7 WKAF and 100 7 WZLX in the Boston market and Sports 1090 The Fan KFNQ Seattle via LMA iHeart Begins Operating Remainder of Boston amp Seattle Acquisitions Consummation Notice CDBS Public Access Federal Communications Commission December 19 2017 Retrieved December 20 2017 Venta Lance February 8 2018 iHeart Launches 1090 KJR and South Sound Talk 850 Seattle RadioInsight Retrieved February 8 2018 1090 The Patriot Launches In Seattle KJR Moves Exclusively To 93 3 RadioInsight Retrieved 2022 04 10 External links editOfficial website KPTR in the FCC AM station database KPTR in Nielsen Audio s AM station database Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title KPTR AM amp oldid 1199503420, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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