KGBC wasn't worth a hill of beans in 1994, let alone in 2024. It hasn't even targeted Galvestonians in now 2 generations, minus that one year after Ike devastated the island and they tried to recapture past glories. That lasted all of a year, then went back to brokered. If ever there was a candidate for license surrender, this is it. Is the building even standing anymore? I would wager everything related to the two towers have been ravaged by the salt water.To compare the powerful signals of Houston to KGBC and 101.7 is not even fair. However, I am confident that the AM signal effectively reaches areas such as south Houston, Pasadena, Baytown, Sugar Land, Pearland, Friendswood, Alvin, and Galveston. Additionally, the FM signal provides good coverage in Pasadena. Perhaps it could serve as a valuable addition to a northern-side translator or station requiring coverage in the south. Talk politics, Spanish religious, radio shows /brokerage, as well as the oldies "Ranchera" format all have the potential to well.
Considering your hypothesis, it may be better for them to shut off the the station or return control of the CP back to the FCC.KGBC wasn't worth a hill of beans in 1994, let alone in 2024. It hasn't even targeted Galvestonians in now 2 generations, minus that one year after Ike devastated the island and they tried to recapture past glories. That lasted all of a year, then went back to brokered. If ever there was a candidate for license surrender, this is it. Is the building even standing anymore? I would wager everything related to the two towers have been ravaged by the salt water.
What is the price tag? Any incoming $$$$$
I know there are suckers born every day, but...Already checked. $11,500 a month
If you're going to do anything with a small FM signal, it has to be hyper-local. The South Asian translators do well because their audience lives and works within the signal. Same for the Asian LPTV stations.A solid coverage in PASADENA would make way more sense money-wise.