• Get involved.
    We want your input!
    Apply for Membership and join the conversations about everything related to broadcasting.

    After we receive your registration, a moderator will review it. After your registration is approved, you will be permitted to post.
    If you use a disposable or false email address, your registration will be rejected.

    After your membership is approved, please take a minute to tell us a little bit about yourself.
    https://www.radiodiscussions.com/forums/introduce-yourself.1088/

    Thanks in advance and have fun!
    RadioDiscussions Administrators

Here's a good one......

Unbelieveable

http://www.tvspy.com/shoptalk.cfm?page=1#honolulu

K-WHAT?

Unbuilt Maui TV station lands questionable call letters...from Erika Engle at the Star Bulletin:

THE call letters KUNT have landed at a yet-unbuilt low-power digital television station in Wailuku, Maui.
Alarmingly similar to a word the dictionary says is obscene, the call letters were among a 15-page list of new call letters issued by the Federal Communications Commission and released this week.

The same station owner also received KWTF for a station in Arizona.

From Skokie, Ill., comes a sincere apology "to anyone that was offended," said Kevin Bae, vice president of KM Communications Inc., who requested and received KUNT and KWTF. It is "extremely embarrassing for me and my company and we will file to change those call letters immediately."

He thanked your columnist for bringing the matter to his attention and pledged to, "make sure I don't fall asleep on the job when selecting call signs again."

One might understand how Bae's eyes could glaze over during selection, as KM has some 80 sets of call letters and alpha-numeric callsigns for TV and radio stations in several states.

No KM station is yet on the air in Hawaii but its mainland TV stations carry programming from America One Network, My Network TV and the CW.

The call letter snafu was a source of great mirth for Bae's attorney.

"I can't tell you how long he laughed at me when he learned of my gaffe," Bae said.

Broadcasters for generations have joked among themselves about call letters resembling off-color words or acronyms knowing the FCC would never approve their assignment -- but that was before computerization.

KCUF-FM near Aspen, Colo. got its F-word-in-reverse call letters in August of 2005 and has been on the air since December, "Keeping Colorado Uniquely Free," its Web site says. Uh, yeah.

Station officials could not be reached, but the automated pop-music slinger has been written about twice in the Aspen Daily News. The paper said radio regulators "blessed the call letters."

However, assignment of call letters actually is an automated process, according to Mary Diamond of the FCC's Office of Media Relations. Broadcasters use the FCC Web site to request and receive call letters with no oversight from Beavis, his partner, or any FCC regulator.

Dude, seriously. Even after years of concerns over broadcast indecency and the debate about fines for fleeting profanities that hit the air.

The Code of Federal Regulations allows applicants to request call letters of their choice as long as the combination is available. Further, "objections to the assignment of requested call signs will not be entertained at the FCC," it states.
:D
 
Kohoutek said:
Unbuilt Maui TV station lands questionable call letters...from Erika Engle at the Star Bulletin:

THE call letters KUNT have landed at a yet-unbuilt low-power digital television station in Wailuku, Maui.
Alarmingly similar to a word the dictionary says is obscene, the call letters were among a 15-page list of new call letters issued by the Federal Communications Commission and released this week.

The same station owner also received KWTF for a station in Arizona.

From Skokie, Ill., comes a sincere apology "to anyone that was offended," said Kevin Bae, vice president of KM Communications Inc., who requested and received KUNT and KWTF. It is "extremely embarrassing for me and my company and we will file to change those call letters immediately."

Are you kidding me ? The Federal Clone Commission actually granted those call letters? I almost fell out of my chair laughing so loud !

That's it I'm applying for the call letters WASS. The station logo will be "We're full of sh** and so is our programming!
 
This thread begs submissions for wacky, rude and suggestive call letters. WOMB could have been call letters for a financial format: Office of Managemenet and Budget.

Then there's: WWTF, WTFU, WFAQ, WFUQ, WGAF, WKMA, KRAP, KRUD, and scores of other call letters we can only imagine. Any set of call letters could stand for something obscene. In the Air Force, the B-52 bomber was tagged with the nickname "BUF," which had nothing to do with Buffalo as it did with Big, Ugly... errr, Fortress... yeah, "Fortress."

-9-
 
Don't forget that Perdue University used to have radio station WFUC 101.3, which is now WBAA-FM. I don't think they ever broadcast with those calls, but that's what they were first assigned. 92.7 in Arlington Heights, IL was WSEX for several years, and it had to fight the FCC to get those calls if I remember correctly. Of course, at that time, the FCC actually cared about call letters.
 
Moving over to our neighbors to the north, let's not forget in nearby Hamilton, Ont. there is CKOC. A pretty good Top 40 station in it's day - now they're oldies. Did they ever dare to give a top of the hour ID that went: "CKOC, Hamilton. It's 9 O'Clock at the Big C***" ??

There's an hispanic station in Bridgeport, Ct. - WCUM.
 
cee said:
Moving over to our neighbors to the north, let's not forget in nearby Hamilton, Ont. there is CKOC. A pretty good Top 40 station in it's day - now they're oldies. Did they ever dare to give a top of the hour ID that went: "CKOC, Hamilton. It's 9 O'Clock at the Big C***" ??

Actually, when CKOC first made the switch to Oldies it was in new hands. The first thing the new owner did was change the calls to CKMO, as in CK Most Oldies, but the calls were quickly switched back before CKOC could be noticed on the shelf.

Historic calls being the reason.
 
Status
This thread has been closed due to inactivity. You can create a new thread to discuss this topic.


Back
Top Bottom