Dan Strassberg wrote: > ...or implied that KKMO ever operated from the boat. KKOL did that. Of > course, I was writing about both KKMO and KKOL in the same message (stations > that originally bore the calls KMO and KOL, that are adjacent on the > Seattle/Tacoma dial, that are licensed to cities only about 20 miles apart, > that now both transmit from the same city--Tacoma, that are currently > co-owned, and that--for all I know--run similar formats). > Well, no...the formats aren't all that similar: KKMO is Spanish and KKOL is talk. Also, to get picky, KKMO's transmitter site might be a few blocks outside the Tacoma city limits > And that's not even the end of the list of similarities. It's got to be > really easy to get > them confused. I could easily have written KKMO when I meant KKOL or vice > versa--but I don't think I did that. Or what I wrote might not have been > clear, or... One further connection between the two stations - in the early 80's, KMO tried unsuccessfully for a call change to KOL. This was a few years after KOL become KMPS. From what I heard, KMO's management thought some listeners might be confusing KMO with KOMO and writing the wrong call letters in their Arbitron diaries. Both calls had existed in the same market for 50+ years by then, so it's not clear why the similarity had suddenly become a problem. Anyway, the FCC said no to the KOL idea, so KMO became KAMT and its Arbitron ratings stayed about the same.
Bruce _______________________________________________ IRCA mailing list [email protected] http://arizona.hard-core-dx.com/mailman/listinfo/irca Opinions expressed in messages on this mailing list are those of the original contributors and do not necessarily reflect the opinion of the IRCA, its editors, publishing staff, or officers For more information: http://www.ircaonline.org To Post a message: [email protected]
