• 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

What's going on with the KJR trimulcast?

I referred to it as Felony Way. Had a car stolen and stripped to the shell when I lived there in very early 2000s.

Felony Way. That's PERFECT! My family still lives there and in the Valley. I can't believe what a s***-hole it has become. Growing up in So. King Co. in the 80's I could walk anywhere at night without fear of getting shot. Not these days.
 
I haven't read this whole thread yet, but I am from out of state, but rely on KJR for Sounders matches I can't/don't want to watch. I've kind of messed up from time to time because all these frequencies use the KJR calls (same for San Jose Earthquakes MLS matches. KNBR branding for at least two frequencies). I wish there were some way to rebrand as (as peculiar as this is in America) KJR-1, KJR-2, KJR-3, etc.
 
I haven't read this whole thread yet, but I am from out of state, but rely on KJR for Sounders matches I can't/don't want to watch. I've kind of messed up from time to time because all these frequencies use the KJR calls (same for San Jose Earthquakes MLS matches. KNBR branding for at least two frequencies). I wish there were some way to rebrand as (as peculiar as this is in America) KJR-1, KJR-2, KJR-3, etc.
Local sports on KJR-FM 93.3; national sports on KJR-AM 950. KPTR (ex-KFNQ) 1090 is now Conservative Talk; 95.7 The Jet (ex-KJR-FM) is now KJEB-FM.
 
I wish there were some way to rebrand as (as peculiar as this is in America) KJR-1, KJR-2, KJR-3, etc.
I know that Canada will allow AM's and FM's to employ boosters that will copy the main callsign in the way that you suggest, and the repeaters can be on any frequency they wish, whether that would be the same channel, or on a different one entirely. So you have CKRY on 105.1, and CKRY-FM-2 on 93.9, or you have national networks like the CBC and the ICI (or CBC's French arm of broadcasting). It would be possible, then, that a Canadian KJR could be CJR in 950 CJR-2 on 1090, CJR-FM-1 on 93.3, and possibly CJR-FM-2 on 95.7. On top of that, you also can apply for an auxiliary signal on the same frequency (a nested signal, as it's called up there), to place closer to downtown to help service that area. And some stations have up to 10 rebroadcasters!

In the United States, the practical equivalent of this is applying for FM-boosters, however, we are stricter about this because you have to make them a certain percentage of the original power, and they must be within the FCC defined 60 dbu contour of the primary station. Also, all boosters must be on channel, or it's called a translator, and translators get their own callsigns.

However, you could still theoretically brandish a station however you would like. For example, you would mention the callsign at the top-of-the-hour as normal, but the rest of the time, you could refer to the station is KJR-AM2, KJR-FM3, 2KJR-FM, or any other combo you can think of, as it is practically the same as calling your station 95.7 The Jet, or Froggy, or Kool, or Kiss, or Hot, etc. as so long as your TOTH (top-of-the-hour-id) is the legal callsign that the FCC gave you.

With those rules in mind, imagine this stop-set: "We'll be right back to Seattle Kraken hockey on KJR-3, but first our legal id: KJR Seattle, KJR-FM and HD1 Seattle, KJEB-HD2 Seattle. And now a word from our KJR-3 sponsors". We can see here that the official call-signs have been read aloud legally and clearly, however, the station refers to itself as KJR-3. Completely legal to do, and I'm surprised people don't do this anyways. Also, of course, EMF has WPLJ, WCKL, KKLQ, and KLVP, plus hundreds of stations coast to coast, but everyone calls it K-Love. That's how you game the system right there.
 
There's no gaming involved. If iHeart wanted to brand their entire Seattle group stations KJR, they could. Technically, as long as they bury the actual call sign somewhere near the TOH, they're legal beagles.
I'm going a little off topic/location here, but KRRR used to have 2 full-power stations and 1 translator all branded the same. KKAW Albin, at the time, would identify at the top of the hour, and then the rest of the time, it would identify as KRRR.
 
I'm going a little off topic/location here, but KRRR used to have 2 full-power stations and 1 translator all branded the same. KKAW Albin, at the time, would identify at the top of the hour, and then the rest of the time, it would identify as KRRR.
Seems like they should market with a 'Pirate Radio'-theme. K-RRRRRRRR..
 
Seems like they should market with a 'Pirate Radio'-theme. K-RRRRRRRR..
There's a station 40 miles south of me that calls itself "Pirate 93.5", and it is a translator of a licensed low-power service on 104.7.
 
A friend and I were talking about call letters the other day, there are some that just scream things like this. It got started with a format change at WDUL, why don't they just call the thing W-Dull?
 
Status
This thread has been closed due to inactivity. You can create a new thread to discuss this topic.


Back
Top Bottom