Edwin Brand's Honey Creek Broadcasting has filed to sell KCOG(AM) and FM translator K280GY to the Iowa Media Network for $100,000. The AM tower west of Centerville is included in the sale, but the tower for the FM translator near Rathbun is not.
The Iowa Media Network is also based in Centerville, operating an Internet-based service, GoPitchTV, that streams high-school sports in the region as well as a local weekly newspaper that took the place of the Daily Iowegian, which closed down in 2020.
Honey Creek retains FM station KMGO. Brand had earlier sold KEDB(FM), licensed to Chariton, to the operators of Iowa Catholic Radio. KMGO has been associated with KCOG since the FM station went on the air in 1974. Interesting, considering Centerville's size, is that KMGO has always been a 100,000-watt station. KCOG broadcasts with just under 500 watts daytime and just under 1,000 watts nighttime on 1400 kHz.
When I last was in Centerville a couple of months ago, KCOG was broadcasting a syndicated hot-AC format. KMGO broadcasts a syndicated country format. Neither has much local content. This move is interesting in that it could bring some local content back to Appanoose County.
The Iowa Media Network is also based in Centerville, operating an Internet-based service, GoPitchTV, that streams high-school sports in the region as well as a local weekly newspaper that took the place of the Daily Iowegian, which closed down in 2020.
Honey Creek retains FM station KMGO. Brand had earlier sold KEDB(FM), licensed to Chariton, to the operators of Iowa Catholic Radio. KMGO has been associated with KCOG since the FM station went on the air in 1974. Interesting, considering Centerville's size, is that KMGO has always been a 100,000-watt station. KCOG broadcasts with just under 500 watts daytime and just under 1,000 watts nighttime on 1400 kHz.
When I last was in Centerville a couple of months ago, KCOG was broadcasting a syndicated hot-AC format. KMGO broadcasts a syndicated country format. Neither has much local content. This move is interesting in that it could bring some local content back to Appanoose County.