• 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

How is KLMO after a year and a half?

A

AnyHuman

Guest
KLMO Tejano 98.9 launched in San ANtonio in April 2019.
http://klmo989fm.com/

Is it doing well, does anyone know? It doesn't show up in the ratings... https://ratings.****************/content/arb059
Maybe they just don't subscribe to Neilsen.
 
KLMO Tejano 98.9 launched in San ANtonio in April 2019.
http://klmo989fm.com/

Is it doing well, does anyone know? It doesn't show up in the ratings... https://ratings.****************/content/arb059
Maybe they just don't subscribe to Neilsen.

KLMO is not a San Antonio station. It is in Frio County which is not in the Metro Survey Area. It only covers small pieces of adjacent Atacosa and Medina counties, neither of which add up to many people, particularly in the area bordering Frio County. The station only has 25,000 people in its 70 dbu coverage area.

And the Tejano format is done. Stick a fork in it.

Unsubscribed stations only show in the subscriber reports if they get a rating (not share) of 0.1 or more. They didn't. They won't. They can't.
 
Last edited:
It looks like their booster, KLMO-FM1, is upgrading to 6000 watts.
https://fccdata.org/?lang=en&facid=191114
How do you think this will help the reception in SA?

Pardoning the expression, but they are pissing into the wind. The booster will not add any significant number of potential listeners in the San Antonio Metro Survey Area. And the format is extremely dead anyway.

A waste of money, in other words.
 
If there is any area where Tejano can get some listeners it would be in this area of Texas where Tejano evolved to a distinct music form. Still, I hope they can sell a bunch of $3 spots!
 
If there is any area where Tejano can get some listeners it would be in this area of Texas where Tejano evolved to a distinct music form. Still, I hope they can sell a bunch of $3 spots!

It was deader than an armadillo that tried to cross Interstate 10 in front of a semi near Fort Stockton...

KXTN, the first really big Tejano station is now on a dreadful AM signal just to placate old Tejano partisans. But it gets no numbers.

The only music type I have seen die faster is disco.

As a sidebar, what many blame for the decline in Tejano is the entry of big record labels. They tried to modernize Tejano so it could be presented outside of Texas. What they did was castrate it so nobody liked it any more.
 
It did die just as fast as it took off. I recall hearing nothing of Tejano for years working at border stations. All of the sudden all these former English CHR listeners are nuts for Tejano. I recall in Eagle Pass, the station went Tejano after 6pm instead of staying Top 40. The commercial load until about 10pm was roughly what it was during the day and most of the advertisers came from Spanish language formats. Local dances attracted hundreds of people...not far from 1,000 depending on the band (ie: Gary Hobbs, Selena, Latin Breed, etc.). As I recall, the big label was Freddy Records out of Corpus Christi. Even stations across the river were trying to get Tejano hits by any way they could. It was said recording it off the radio was a possibility leading to the jocks talking up the intros and tossing in a quick ID in the instrumental bridge. It was like one day everybody woke up and no longer liked Tejano although they loved the old songs. Love the armadillo analogy. Man they make a terrible noise when you hit one! You'd swear you hit a big rock.
 
Love the armadillo analogy. Man they make a terrible noise when you hit one! You'd swear you hit a big rock.

Been there, done that. You remember it a long time. But it's sorta' like hitting an armored rat.
 
It did die just as fast as it took off. I recall hearing nothing of Tejano for years working at border stations. All of the sudden all these former English CHR listeners are nuts for Tejano. I recall in Eagle Pass, the station went Tejano after 6pm instead of staying Top 40. The commercial load until about 10pm was roughly what it was during the day and most of the advertisers came from Spanish language formats.

I believe that was Del Rio, not Eagle Pass, as KTDR 96.3 went tejano in the evenings. It also aired Rush Limbaugh after the morning show. It was a strange station. AM 1230 there went tejano 24/7 shortly afterward.
 
The station I managed was KEPS and KINL in Eagle Pass. Actually KTDR was not pure Tejano in the evening (at least not while I was there). What had been country KLKE 1230 switched to Tejano in the 1990s well after I left in 1992. I started at KINL in Eagle Pass in 1978, worked KTDR in 1987 and spent the next 5 years at KDLK and KLKE in Del Rio before going to KEPS/KINL.
 
KXTN, the first really big Tejano station is now on a dreadful AM signal just to placate old Tejano partisans. But it gets no numbers.
Sounds about right for any music format on AM. So let's be fair to KXTN on that one. If the station were still on a local FM station, it could be profitable with the right staff and investment. Unfortunately in the dying realm of radio, no major company has that type of patience or is willing to take a risk. Every corporate broadcaster has shareholders to answer to so they'll go with the safest and easiest format they can make money off of.

I remember when Tex Mex could be heard in stations across the Southwest. It was all the rage until Regional Mexican formats took over. We have to remember that Tejano peaked around the same time that Mexican migration to the US was exploding. I don't think Tejano died overnight. It just got suffocated out of existence with the Mexican-ification of the American Hispanic demographic.
 
Sounds about right for any music format on AM. So let's be fair to KXTN on that one. If the station were still on a local FM station, it could be profitable with the right staff and investment. Unfortunately in the dying realm of radio, no major company has that type of patience or is willing to take a risk. Every corporate broadcaster has shareholders to answer to so they'll go with the safest and easiest format they can make money off of.

KLMO which is family-owned has a bit of a following on Facebook. I believe they hired at least 1 former KXTN DJ since KXTN downgraded. KLMO 98.9 FM
 
KLMO Tejano 98.9 launched in San ANtonio in April 2019.
Home

Is it doing well, does anyone know? It doesn't show up in the ratings... Nielsen Audio Ratings
Maybe they just don't subscribe to Neilsen.
They only get a partial 60 dbu into Medina and Atacosa counties, which together are just under 4% of the San Antonio MSA. They don't show because they are not a usable signal in 96% of the market.

And, the format is dead.
 
Sounds about right for any music format on AM. So let's be fair to KXTN on that one. If the station were still on a local FM station, it could be profitable with the right staff and investment. Unfortunately in the dying realm of radio, no major company has that type of patience or is willing to take a risk. Every corporate broadcaster has shareholders to answer to so they'll go with the safest and easiest format they can make money off of.
Tejano was moved to AM instead of just dropping it because there are influential older San Antonians who like and defend the format. But the format was dead as could be.

The station was not profitable, despite loads of perceptual and music research. The listeners were, by then, mostly over 55 and the buyers would not touch it. Nobody could make money in that market with the format just as "Music of Your Life" or 60's Oldies can't make money.
I remember when Tex Mex could be heard in stations across the Southwest. It was all the rage until Regional Mexican formats took over. We have to remember that Tejano peaked around the same time that Mexican migration to the US was exploding. I don't think Tejano died overnight. It just got suffocated out of existence with the Mexican-ification of the American Hispanic demographic.
Tejano never made it in the "Southwest". It was successful in the area within a few hundred miles of San Antonio, and sustainable as far north as Dallas and as far west as Lubbock and Odessa. That's it.

Regional Mexican formats have existed in some form or another since music radio hit Mexico in the mid 50's. XEBS 1410 and XELZ were pure regional in 1964 when I interned in the group that owned "La L-Z" in 1963.

At that time, the format was mostly ranchera in Central Mexico, with a blend of ranchera and norteña in the north. In the US, it was mostly ranchera in CA, NV, AZ and more Norteña in Texas. Then modern banda hit in the earliest 90's and stations started blending. But in Mexico it was never called "regional Mexican". That name is a construct of confused U.S. record retailers who wanted to differentiate between "that Mexican stuff" and José Jose and Julio Iglesias and Camilo Sesto. So they invented in the regional term to create sections in their record departments.

Tejano is an extension of Tex-Mex, a creation of later generation residents of Texas of Mexican heritage and it goes back to the 50's and 60's. Most of the artists are English primary... Selena had to perfect her Spanish to start her career!

But Tejano has never been a broad appeal format outside of markets like Corpus, the Rio Grande Valley, San Antonio, Austin and the like. It started to die when immigration increased in the 80's because none of the immigrants knew the music and the artists.
 
Carlos Lopez is assigning KLMO and other stations to Minerva Lopez.
 
Status
This thread has been closed due to inactivity. You can create a new thread to discuss this topic.


Back
Top Bottom