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Old Cable Lineups from Missouri

The Missourian subscribed to a listing service which possibly had outdated information.
Some things never change... As a Missourian subscriber about a decade ago, I noticed their listings were woefully inaccurate for the various cable systems in the area and I asked them about it. They confirmed they just got them from the listing service and they'd have to ask their provider how it got so bad. A couple of weeks later the listings got a massive refresh.

Around that time, Columbia proper was served by four different TV services not counting satellite providers. Mediacom (ex-TCI) had the area bounded by I-70, Stadium, and 63 as well as some areas to the northwest, southwest, and immediately east of 63. Charter (ex-Falcon) had the north-central, northeast, far east, southeast, and south-central areas, some exclusively and some neighborhoods where you had a choice between Mediacom and Charter. CenturyTel/CenturyLink also began offering Prism services in the 2000s and Columbia was a major distribution point for that service. And finally, Socket launched an IPTV product around that time in fiber areas.
 
Some things never change... As a Missourian subscriber about a decade ago, I noticed their listings were woefully inaccurate for the various cable systems in the area and I asked them about it. They confirmed they just got them from the listing service and they'd have to ask their provider how it got so bad. A couple of weeks later the listings got a massive refresh.
This wasn't uncommon. Cable TV finally came to Columbia in 1977 after more than a decade of contentious discussions. In that year, the Tribune started getting its listings from an outside service; the Missourian probably followed shortly thereafter. With the rise of satellite services, compiling TV listings would have become more time-consuming; ultimately making it less expensive to just get the paste-up copy from somewhere else. Both newspapers were fully offset and photocomp by then, so that would have been fairly easy to do, and less time-consuming than having someone sit at a terminal and type it all in manually.

... Columbia proper was served by four different TV services not counting satellite providers. Mediacom (ex-TCI) had the area bounded by I-70, Stadium, and 63 as well as some areas to the northwest, southwest, and immediately east of 63. Charter (ex-Falcon) had the north-central, northeast, far east, southeast, and south-central areas, some exclusively and some neighborhoods where you had a choice between Mediacom and Charter. CenturyTel/CenturyLink also began offering Prism services in the 2000s and Columbia was a major distribution point for that service. And finally, Socket launched an IPTV product around that time in fiber areas.
Basically look at the city boundaries in 1977 and, inside those boundaries, that's where Cablevision/Group W/TCI was the only traditional cable provider. Falcon had the perimeter of subdivisions around Columbia; where Columbia annexed (generally small areas that volunteered in order to get city services), that's where both companies were available. Falcon never imported St. Louis and Kansas City stations, though, since it didn't have access to the microwave relay station where Cablevision also put its head-end. In the early days of Columbia Cablevision, the St. Louis and Kansas City channels were the big reason for people to subscribe.

Columbia basically dominates the trade area any more, but it took a surprisingly long time to happen.
 
TeleCable had the A/B system and thus had more capacity. American Cablevision was also wracked by ingress - which is why WDAF, KCTV, and KMBC were on channel numbers not matching their over-the-air broadcasts. Part of the problem, at least with the first two, was their transmitter sites right in the heart of Kansas City - at 31st & Summit and 31st & Grand, respectively.

The "KCXL" listing in the FM service is a little odd since that station actually went off the air in 1990.
You wouldn't happen to know anything more about KCXL by chance, would you!?!?
 
You wouldn't happen to know anything more about KCXL by chance, would you!?!?
You sent me down a rabbit hole, but that's OK, since I found I made an error: KCXL actually went off the air in March 1992. I was living in Kansas City at the time - actually, just a few blocks away from the station's studios and offices - but the pulling of the plug took me by surprise and even the Kansas City Star by surprise. The station went off the air March 4 but the Star didn't report on it until the 10th, and the Star was usually pretty good on coverage of other media.

KCXL started as KBIL in Liberty in 1967, with "Town and Country" programming aimed to the Kansas City suburban areas north of the Missouri River. As it remains today, the station was a 500-watt daytimer at 1140. Eventually, after the FM station in Lexington, Mo. moved from 106.3 to 107.3, KBIL was able to apply for an FM station at 106.5. KBIL changed its call letters to KFIX, and the FM became KFIX-FM. The FM tower was at Excelsior Springs and had some signal issues in the main part of the Kansas City metropolitan area, leading to jokes about "FIX" standing for what the station needed to do for its signal. The pair was bought by Dean Goodman in 1979 - apparently his first foray into station ownership - with the FM becoming album-rock station KSAS. The AM station remained KFIX with a country format. Neither station did particularly well. After an ownership change, KSAS became KKCI, under a new general manager, John Beck, who tightened up the format, brought in consultant Bob Hattrik from St. Louis, and the result was a better-performing station. (Beck went to KSHE as general manager when Emmis bought it in 1984, and was well-regarded there.) KFIX, on the other hand, didn't do much. The AM and FM stations began simulcasting in 1982 and the AM station was put up for sale with an asking price of $600,000.

The AM station was sold to two prominent black Kansas City businessmen in March 1984 for $280,000. They changed the format to "urban contemporary" and established studios and offices on East 63rd Street in Kansas City. The general manager was Chuck Moore, a Kansas City broadcasting stalwart who also hosted a public-affairs program, "Urban Matters", on KCTV. The station got good publicity for its public-service efforts. However, according to the Star, "the station received most of its revenue by selling time to churches and by selling advertising spots before and after the church broadcasts". It often did not show up with the minimum audience share necessary to appear in Arbitron reports. It went off the air in 1992 as mentioned in the start of this post. A Small Business Administration loan had been used to buy the station; the SBA foreclosed on the station. The contents of the studios and offices were auctioned off in August 1992. The station stayed off the air until Pete Schartel bought it and returned to the air from Liberty on September 23, 1994.

There's a minor irony here: KCXL had far more stable ownership and programming than its former FM station. The KKCI format declined after Beck left the station. It first announced plans to become an urban contemporary station but ultimately went to soft AC as KLTY. Two announced sales fell through, though the second sale finally did take place about half a year after it first became known (so whether the earlier announcement actually fell through may be a matter of intepretation). Then it became KXXR and rocketed to the top-tier of Kansas City FM station with a "Rock 40", but that success only lasted a year. The station went to CHR, challenging longtime incumbent KBEQ, at just the time when CHR was going through another of its periodic programming doldrums. The format and ownership shifts on 106.5 in the 1990s are too numerous to mention here.

That probably told you more than you ever wanted to know about KCXL!
 
You sent me down a rabbit hole, but that's OK, since I found I made an error: KCXL actually went off the air in March 1992. I was living in Kansas City at the time - actually, just a few blocks away from the station's studios and offices - but the pulling of the plug took me by surprise and even the Kansas City Star by surprise. The station went off the air March 4 but the Star didn't report on it until the 10th, and the Star was usually pretty good on coverage of other media.

KCXL started as KBIL in Liberty in 1967, with "Town and Country" programming aimed to the Kansas City suburban areas north of the Missouri River. As it remains today, the station was a 500-watt daytimer at 1140. Eventually, after the FM station in Lexington, Mo. moved from 106.3 to 107.3, KBIL was able to apply for an FM station at 106.5. KBIL changed its call letters to KFIX, and the FM became KFIX-FM. The FM tower was at Excelsior Springs and had some signal issues in the main part of the Kansas City metropolitan area, leading to jokes about "FIX" standing for what the station needed to do for its signal. The pair was bought by Dean Goodman in 1979 - apparently his first foray into station ownership - with the FM becoming album-rock station KSAS. The AM station remained KFIX with a country format. Neither station did particularly well. After an ownership change, KSAS became KKCI, under a new general manager, John Beck, who tightened up the format, brought in consultant Bob Hattrik from St. Louis, and the result was a better-performing station. (Beck went to KSHE as general manager when Emmis bought it in 1984, and was well-regarded there.) KFIX, on the other hand, didn't do much. The AM and FM stations began simulcasting in 1982 and the AM station was put up for sale with an asking price of $600,000.

The AM station was sold to two prominent black Kansas City businessmen in March 1984 for $280,000. They changed the format to "urban contemporary" and established studios and offices on East 63rd Street in Kansas City. The general manager was Chuck Moore, a Kansas City broadcasting stalwart who also hosted a public-affairs program, "Urban Matters", on KCTV. The station got good publicity for its public-service efforts. However, according to the Star, "the station received most of its revenue by selling time to churches and by selling advertising spots before and after the church broadcasts". It often did not show up with the minimum audience share necessary to appear in Arbitron reports. It went off the air in 1992 as mentioned in the start of this post. A Small Business Administration loan had been used to buy the station; the SBA foreclosed on the station. The contents of the studios and offices were auctioned off in August 1992. The station stayed off the air until Pete Schartel bought it and returned to the air from Liberty on September 23, 1994.

There's a minor irony here: KCXL had far more stable ownership and programming than its former FM station. The KKCI format declined after Beck left the station. It first announced plans to become an urban contemporary station but ultimately went to soft AC as KLTY. Two announced sales fell through, though the second sale finally did take place about half a year after it first became known (so whether the earlier announcement actually fell through may be a matter of intepretation). Then it became KXXR and rocketed to the top-tier of Kansas City FM station with a "Rock 40", but that success only lasted a year. The station went to CHR, challenging longtime incumbent KBEQ, at just the time when CHR was going through another of its periodic programming doldrums. The format and ownership shifts on 106.5 in the 1990s are too numerous to mention here.

That probably told you more than you ever wanted to know about KCXL!
WOW!!! It MUST have been quite the messy, sloppy station at one point in time or another...
 
WOW!!! It MUST have been quite the messy, sloppy station at one point in time or another...
I listened to it about 20-25 years ago and at that time it had a doo wop show on Sundays, a gun show, and some other shows I don’t remember. I never listened to it during the week so I don’t know what was on it weekdays. I remember they had advertising regarding stuff for sale at their offices, I want to say it was vitamins and that kind of thing. It was the weirdest station I had ever heard. Now they have 2 FM translators and run Radio Sputnik and I don’t know what else.
 
I listened to it about 20-25 years ago and at that time it had a doo wop show on Sundays, a gun show, and some other shows I don’t remember. I never listened to it during the week so I don’t know what was on it weekdays. I remember they had advertising regarding stuff for sale at their offices, I want to say it was vitamins and that kind of thing. It was the weirdest station I had ever heard. Now they have 2 FM translators and run Radio Sputnik and I don’t know what else.
I realized that it will have been 30 years ago later this month that KCXL came back on the air. In its early days after its return, the station was mostly satellite-delivered oldies from Jones Radio Networks. There was "Tradio" with J. P. Morgan, a Kansas City radio personality who had been around a while, on Saturday mornings. I think it got weirder later.
 
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