KXYZ

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KXYZ
iHeartMedia, Inc.
  • (iHM Licenses, LLC)
  • KBME, KODA, KPRC, KQBT, KTBZ-FM, KTRH
    History
    First air date
    August 24, 1926; 97 years ago (1926-08-24)
    Former call signs
    KTUE (1926–1930)
    Call sign meaning
    XYZ, last three letters of the alphabet; once the sister station to WXYZ Detroit
    Technical information
    Facility ID234009
    ClassB
    Power8,400 watts day
    2,800 watts night
    Transmitter coordinates
    29°42′39″N 95°10′30″W / 29.71083°N 95.17500°W / 29.71083; -95.17500
    Links
    WebcastListen live (via iHeartRadio)
    Websitehouston.binnews.com

    KXYZ (1320

    African American community, as an affiliate of the co-owned Black Information Network
    . In addition to carrying the national network, there are cut-ins for Houston-area news, traffic and weather.

    By day, KXYZ transmits with 8,400 watts. To protect other stations on 1320 AM from interference, it reduces power at night to 2,800 watts. It uses a directional antenna at all times. The transmitter is currently located in the Settegast neighborhood of Houston.

    History

    Early years

    In 1926, the station

    kilocycles. In 1930, Uhalt sold the station to the Harris County Broadcasting Company, which changed the call sign
    to KXYZ and built a new 100-watt facility. In 1932, KXYZ absorbed another station, KTLC, and moved to 1440 kHz at 250 watts. Further increases to 500 watts, then 1,000, soon followed.

    With the enactment of the North American Regional Broadcasting Agreement (NARBA), the station relocated to 1470 kHz in 1941. When KTRH moved to 740 kHz, KXYZ took over the former KTRH transmission site, and began broadcasting with 5,000 watts on 1320.

    Ownership changes

    On June 17, 1948, the Federal Communications Commission approved the purchase of Harris County Broadcasting Company by Shamrock Broadcasting Company, owned by Glenn H. McCarthy.[1] The Houston Broadcasting Corporation bought KXYZ in 1957.

    During the 1960s, KXYZ was owned by ABC and played beautiful music. The station was well known in the 1960s for its vividly descriptive station identification promos, such as:

    "In Houston's downtown area, lifeless mannequins draped in the latest attire stand stiff and silent in the shops, which a few hours ago buzzed with the excitement of bargain-hunting shoppers... now relaxing at home to Beautiful KXYZ Music."
    "The almost-deserted parking garage is lonely and unfamiliar to a late-staying office worker, whose footsteps echo as he walks to his car and turns on the radio. And the lonely feeling is dispelled by Beautiful KXYZ Music."

    In the mid-1970s, the format changed to middle of the road (MOR) music. Around 1980, it changed over to a Christian radio station after KXYZ was acquired by Slater Broadcasting the year prior.

    Regional Mexican

    In 1983, Infinity Broadcasting (later CBS Radio) absorbed KXYZ. Throughout the 1980s and 1990s, it was a Spanish language station, playing Regional Mexican music and was known as "Radio 13." During this period, KXYZ carried Houston Astros and Houston Rockets games in Spanish. KXYZ then carried the Spanish talk format of satellite network Radio Unica.

    In July 1998, Multicultural Broadcasting bought KXYZ from Infinity/CBS, and Biz Radio made its debut in the early years of the 2000s, carrying a business talk format.

    Biz Radio left KXYZ for KTEK in Alvin, Texas. Multicultural purchased KTEK and began signal testing in November 2007 simulcasting with KXYZ until December 11, 2007. KXYZ returned to Spanish language programming at that point.

    Multilingual and BIN

    On November 4, 2019, KXYZ began airing

    Hindi language
    ); Geetanjali Radio (Hindi); and Radio Me Hang Cuu Giup (Vietnamese).

    On December 17, 2020, after the station was acquired by iHeartMedia, KXYZ flipped to the African-American oriented all-news radio format of the Black Information Network. The sale of KXYZ by Multicultural Broadcasting to iHeartMedia was consummated on March 31, 2021 at a price of $1.4 million.

    References

    1. ^ "McCarthy Completes Purchase of KXYZ" (PDF). Broadcasting. June 28, 1948. Retrieved 21 December 2014.

    External links

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