Wasn't there a 5 or 6 figure "minimum" bid? Then you had to build it. No wonder nobody bid. Assuming there isn't a significant land cost, somebody might bite. Most likely IF the 770 CP is ever built some kind of Salem style programming.
That was in January 1958, when the station's DJs claimed they were breaking records on the air. The station later, um, clarified that by saying the unwanted records would be donated to charity. The Globe-Democrat's Pete Rahn wrote on January 16 of that year (a Thursday):And there were some stations, including St. Louis' own KWK if memory serves, that after playing the genre for a bit burned their R&R recordings.
AM in St. Louis is a non-factor. The conversion of WHHL to KMOX-FM just put a bow on it. KMOX's stellar performance in the 1980s and 1990s simply covered up the fact that all the other AMs were struggling. Some found niches, but even those ran out of runway after a while.It might have some value if you could afford to build out the Construction Permit. The real issue is do you have to build everything or is there a site you can duplex off of. The 2028 date could be an issue too.
AM in St. Louis is a non-factor. The conversion of WHHL to KMOX-FM just put a bow on it.
You'd have to have an FM translator and, even then, your audience would be limited. For example, a translator high up enough on the Kenrick Seminary tower might get you into a little bit of St. Charles County, where much of the metro growth has been for the past few decades, but it's probably something that few people there would find, or even find listenable. Of course, this is theoretical, since other translators and LPFMs now are camped out on most if not all of the channels available for low-power broadcasting.to make a go of this, and attract any kind of audience, youd have to have some kind of mainstream format during the week and load up weekends with paid programs.. and even then itd be a stretch and youd have to have a very lean operation....
There's some ambiguity in what I can find, but just focusing on translators that would cover most of the "core" of the metro (St. Louis City, St. Louis County), I come up with:How many AMs have translators?
There's some ambiguity in what I can find, but just focusing on translators that would cover most of the "core" of the metro (St. Louis City, St. Louis County), I come up with:
KFUO (LCMS), KATZ (iHeart), KSIV (Bott), KHOJ (Covenant), KTRS (the former KSD).
There may be a couple of others; I'm also not counting stations truly based on the Illinois side of the metro, such as WBGZ in Alton.
Other possible slots are taken up with LPFMs and translators for HD-x channels.
Someone who's actually in or near the St. Louis area may be more helpful here.
KSIV is on 1320 kHz and has an FM translator on 95.9 MHz. That station is commercial, while non-commercial KSIV-FM is on 91.5 MHz and programs the Bott Radio Network.Bott has both AM and FM outlets in St. Louis. Are they being programmed separately? If not, then why keep an AM at all unless you have terrain blockage with the FM or the AM can be received at a greater distance than the FM. And, more to the point of the last response, why have an AM translator at all inside the city unless (again) there is terrain blocking somewhere.
KSIV is on 1320 kHz and has an FM translator on 95.9 MHz. That station is commercial, while non-commercial KSIV-FM is on 91.5 MHz and programs the Bott Radio Network.
KSIV is on 1320 kHz and has an FM translator on 95.9 MHz. That station is commercial, while non-commercial KSIV-FM is on 91.5 MHz and programs the Bott Radio Network.
The FM and AM didn't simulcast in the past. Both stations carried Christian teaching, though the AM had been run locally. The FM had been promoting itself as "Bott Radio Network" when it took over the 91.5 MHz frequency from KSLH--which had lent/leased (?) its signal to Webster University for a brief time in 1994.there is zero difference in type/style of programming between 1320 and 91.5.... both carry christian talk/preaching
And, from what I can tell, KSIV-AM is simulcasting the programming of KSIV-FM. Even though the AM license is a commercial one, it is being operated as a non-commercial station.
St. Louis has several open spaces for HD subchannels, if the owners of those stations chose to lease them. WBGZ has an unusual arrangement with Hubbard's WIL to program an oldies HD-3 feeding an Alton, IL translator on 94.3 MHz.There's some ambiguity in what I can find, but just focusing on translators that would cover most of the "core" of the metro (St. Louis City, St. Louis County), I come up with:
KFUO (LCMS), KATZ (iHeart), KSIV (Bott), KHOJ (Covenant), KTRS (the former KSD).
There may be a couple of others; I'm also not counting stations truly based on the Illinois side of the metro, such as WBGZ in Alton.
Other possible slots are taken up with LPFMs and translators for HD-x channels.
Someone who's actually in or near the St. Louis area may be more helpful here.