There is KXO 1230, which is an oldies/full service station...CBS and local news at TOH. You could see them add Yuma news and weather (which is the same as El Centro) to their newscastsCan people in Yuma pick up El Centro stations?
There is KXO 1230, which is an oldies/full service station...CBS and local news at TOH. You could see them add Yuma news and weather (which is the same as El Centro) to their newscastsCan people in Yuma pick up El Centro stations?
There is KXO 1230, which is an oldies/full service station...CBS and local news at TOH. You could see them add Yuma news and weather (which is the same as El Centro) to their newscastsCan people in Yuma pick up El Centro stations?
Fairbanks is the second-largest city in Alaska and the nearest major supply point for the oil fields in that state. At least for now, oil = prosperity. Yuma doesn't have that.If Fairbanks can support two AM talk stations, as well as nearly a dozen commercial FM stations, certainly the English-speaking population of Yuma can support at least PART of what Fairbanks supports.
A buddy of mine is Ops Manager for KXO-AM and FM. I visited a couple of times. The AM has a huge old school studio that is still mostly live and local while the FM, which is AC or Hot AC and #1 in the market runs off a PC on top of a filing cabinet and is voicetracked. I THINK there is one more English station in El Centro, with the rest being Spanish, plus the large handful of stations in Mexicali that serve the area well, and a bilingual CHR from La Rumorosa with studios in Mexicali (very good CHR rotation, but no live talent) that has a good signal serving both the El Centro area and Yuma. I would assume the Mexicali stations get in to Yuma okay, not sure about the El Centro stations, and San Luis is a good sized city with several Spanish stations. I forgot that KPBS/San Diego runs a full power FM in Calexico with KQVO/97.7 - I don't know how strong they are in Yuma, but there is another NPR station in the area that simulcasts San Diego full time. So you have (or will have) about five English live and local stations serving this entire area about 60 miles wide with the two areas, plux XHMIX (the CHR station in Rumorosa that is technically bilingual, but no live talent). It's a sadly depressed region and even though these stations command big numbers, they probably bill very poorly. There was once a great, well-run CHR in Brawley (near El Centro), Q-96, that was live, local, and sounded great. They could be heard well in Yuma too. I also think Z-93 in Yuma was CHR or Hot AC with a live and local staff in the early 90s and they didn't sound too bad as I recall (I live in San Diego and would drive out there on occasion or on my way to Phoenix). Q-96 moved West to San Diego with a much crappier signal and became an automated shell of its former self until Air 1/EMF bought them. To hear how good an unrated market like El Centro could do radio at one time in history, check out this clip from 26 years ago. They dropped put of the market in 2010 I think, and dropped the format two or three years later for Air 1.There is KXO 1230, which is an oldies/full service station...CBS and local news at TOH. You could see them add Yuma news and weather (which is the same as El Centro) to their newscasts
San Luis Río Colorado is across the border sort of like Juárez and El Paso are sister border cities. SLRC has stations.OK, admittedly everyone in Fairbanks speaks English. Yuma is divided between two languages. But hey, there aren't a lot of U.S. based stations broadcasting in Spanish either. I guess Yuma's Spanish-dominant listeners can hear Mexicali FM stations but they are 50 miles away. They don't pay any attention to Yuma.
The market is close to two-thirds Hispanic. Around 70% of Hispanics are born in the US, so they are later generation and likely don't use Spanish language radio.In a market with 203,000 residents, wouldn't someone have rescued Yuma's one AM talk station or put it on FM? Again, Fairbanks has two AM talk stations and an AM Sports station serving half the population of Yuma.
That station, at 1 kw in poor desert conductivity, does not come close to covering El Centro.There is KXO 1230, which is an oldies/full service station...CBS and local news at TOH. You could see them add Yuma news and weather (which is the same as El Centro) to their newscasts
That KXO has a pretty good signal for a graveyard frequency during the day. As far as in-vehicle listening, it doesn't fade out completely until you're past the Foothills on I-8.There is KXO 1230, which is an oldies/full service station...CBS and local news at TOH. You could see them add Yuma news and weather (which is the same as El Centro) to their newscasts
Remember, "speaking Spanish" does not mean the person is Spanish dominant. The vast majority of Hispanics in Yuma were born here, and are second generation. That is a group that may speak Spanish with their family and, maybe, some childhood friends... but they don't use Spanish much for anything else and don't use Spanish language media much, if at all.In Yuma County, 52.3% speak a language other than English. (data from 10 years ago, but seriously doubt things have changed in a decade)
This is like the ones that go to Quartzsite, AZ. Lots of mobile homes.Prior to this season, there were also a pretty significant influx of foreign "snowbirds" from many regions of Canada. Reasons why are well-known by anyone who pays attention to what happens in DC.
It's actually in an agricultural valley. The transmitter is located at the I-8 and 4th Ave exit in El Centro, south of downtown.That station, at 1 kw in poor desert conductivity, does not come close to covering El Centro.
Locally, due to the river and irrigation, it is agricultural. But, like the area from Calexico up to Palm Springs, the underlying conductivity is very low. The FCC map shows the area at 8, but the reality based on actual coverage of stations is vastly less.It's actually in an agricultural valley. The transmitter is located at the I-8 and 4th Ave exit in El Centro, south of downtown.
But Yuma is about 60 miles from Calexico. No (former) Class IV station is going to cover that far unless it is in Kansas!That KXO has a pretty good signal for a graveyard frequency during the day. As far as in-vehicle listening, it doesn't fade out completely until you're past the Foothills on I-8.
But remember where the transmitter is...the agriculturally rich soil of the Imperial Valley. No different than Central Valley AM reception. Also,keep in mind, this is in-vehicle reception. Inside a Yuma stucco home, that would be a different story.But Yuma is about 60 miles from Calexico. No (former) Class IV station is going to cover that far unless it is in Kansas!
I'm pretty sure I've seen KXO AM/FM listed for saleThere is KXO 1230, which is an oldies/full service station...CBS and local news at TOH. You could see them add Yuma news and weather (which is the same as El Centro) to their newscasts
They have been for sale for a very long time.I'm pretty sure I've seen KXO AM/FM listed for sale
I guess this also reflects the poor economic state of the region. Yuma is a city of almost 95,000 and the metropolitan area is 203,000. Yet it will now have only two commercial radio stations, 1400 KCYK Classic Country and 93.1 KLJZ Hot AC. (KCYK doesn't even have a translator.) Everything else on the local radio dial is non-commercial: 1320 and 88.9 are public radio/NPR formats, 104.5 airs a Farm Workers' Campesina format and there are two non-commercial Christian stations, 91.9 in Spanish and 88.1 in English. They'll soon be joined by K-Love and Air 1.
Surprisingly, though it's pretty close, the San Luis Rio (I still don't know how to create the proper Spanish accents using the QWERTY keyboard)
While I haven't seen any articles on this, I also suspect that Eldorado Broadcasting is in Financial trouble. Back around 2010 or so, that company owned radio stations in the San Luis Obispo and Victorville, CA markets as well as those in Yuma. The company dumped its San Luis Obispo outlets a few years back and it has now dumped all of its Yuma properties making the only radio stations the company owns being in the Victorville area. It wouldn't surprise me to learn that Eldorado is trying to sell those Victorville stations if that is what is happening behind the scenes.
About 30 years ago, I had a friend in college who was from Victorville, and she said it didn't have much. I can't imagine it offers more today than it did back then. She called the local college, where she had gone to school before transferring to my school, "Tumbleweed Tech." Of the three markets where El Dorado used to operate, Victorville would seem to be the hardest place to make money.
Surprisingly, though it's pretty close, the San Luis Rio (I still don't know how to create the proper Spanish accents using the QWERTY keyboard)
I've always been told that, with the exception of the "ñ" (which isn't really an accent), you will look more fluent by not typing the accents when typing in Spanish.
And the city is "San Luis Río Colorado". That means "The town of San Luis on the Colorado River". Without the "Colorado" it could be "San Luis Río Mississippi" for all I know!Huh. David (Eduardo) Gleason and I e-mail back and forth all the time in Spanglish (I am partially fluent in Spanish) and he never complains when I do that.
But, since Ted sort of asked:
á - Alt-0225
é - Alt-0233
í - Alt-0237
ó - Alt-0243
ú - Alt-0250
ñ - Alt-0241
¿ - Alt-0191
¡ - Alt-0161