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{{More citations needed|date=April 2010}}
{{More citations needed|date=April 2010}}
{{Infobox radio station
{{Infobox radio station
| name = KAAY
| name = KAAY
| image = KAAY logo.png
| logo = KAAY logo.png
| image_size = 150px
| logo_size = 150px
| city = [[Little Rock, Arkansas]]
| city = [[Little Rock, Arkansas]]
| area = [[Little Rock metropolitan area]]
| area = [[Little Rock metropolitan area]]
| branding = 1090 AM KAAY
| branding = 1090 AM KAAY
| slogan = Hear The Word
| airdate = {{start date and age|1924|12|20}} (as KTHS at 800 AM)
| airdate = December 20, [[1924 in radio|1924]]
| frequency = 1090 [[kilohertz|kHz]]
| frequency = 1090 [[Kilohertz|kHz]]
| format = [[Christian radio]]
| format = [[Brokered programming|Brokered]] [[Christian radio|Religion]]
| power = 50,000 [[watt]]s
| power = 50,000 [[watt]]s
| class = A
| class = A ([[clear-channel]])
| facility_id = 33253
| coordinates = {{Coord|34|36|00|N|92|13|30|W|format=dms|region:US-AR_type:landmark}}
| facility_id = 33253
| callsign_meaning = Similarity to onetime sister station WAKY in [[Louisville, Kentucky]], now [[WKRD (AM)]]
| coordinates = {{Coord|34|36|00|N|92|13|30|W|display=it|format=dms|region:US-AR_type:landmark}}
| former_frequencies = 800 kHz (1924-1927)<br>780 kHz (1927-1928)<br>600 kHz (1928-1929)<br>1040 kHz (1929-1934)
| former_frequencies = 800 kHz (1924–1927)<br/>780 kHz (1927–1928)<br/>600 kHz (1928–1929)<br/>1040 kHz (1929–1934)
| sister_stations = [[KARN (AM)|KARN]], [[KARN-FM]], [[KIPR]], [[KLAL]] [[KPZK (AM)|KPZK]], [[KURB]]
| sister_stations = [[KARN (AM)|KARN]], [[KARN-FM]], [[KIPR]], [[KLAL]], [[KFOG (AM)|KFOG]], [[KURB]]
| former_callsigns = KTHS (1924-1962)
| former_callsigns = KTHS (1924–1962)
| owner = [[Cumulus Media]]
| owner = [[Cumulus Media]]
| licensee = Radio License Holding CBC, LLC
| licensee = Radio License Holding CBC, LLC
| webcast = [http://www.1090kaay.com/ontheair/ Listen Live]
| webcast = {{listen live|https://player.listenlive.co/20291}}
| website = [http://www.1090kaay.com www.1090kaay.com]
| website = {{url |https://www.1090kaay.com/ |1090kaay.com }}
}}
}}


'''KAAY''' (1090 [[Hertz|kHz]]) is a commercial [[AM radio|AM]] [[radio station]] in [[Little Rock, Arkansas]], owned by [[Cumulus Media]].<ref>[http://licensing.fcc.gov/cgi-bin/ws.exe/prod/cdbs/pubacc/prod/sta_det.pl?Facility_id=33253 FCC.gov/KAAY]</ref> It airs a [[Christian radio|religious]] format of instruction and preaching, with most of the schedule made up of paid [[brokered programming]], featuring local and national religious leaders, including [[Charles Stanley]], [[Jim Daly (evangelist)|Jim Daly]], [[John F. MacArthur]] and [[Albert Pendarvis]]. Overnight, [[automation|automated]] [[Contemporary Christian]] music is heard. The station's studios are located in West Little Rock, and the [[transmitter]] is located off McDonald Road in [[Wrightsville, Arkansas]].<ref>[https://radio-locator.com/cgi-bin/patg?id=KAAY-AM&h=N Radio-Locator.com/KAAY]</ref>
'''KAAY''' (1090 [[AM broadcasting|AM]]) is a commercial [[radio station]] in [[Little Rock, Arkansas]], owned by [[Cumulus Media]].<ref>{{cite web|url=https://licensing.fcc.gov/cgi-bin/ws.exe/prod/cdbs/pubacc/prod/sta_det.pl?Facility_id=33253 |title=KAAY |website=Federal Communications Commission}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web |title=KAAY|url=https://encyclopediaofarkansas.net/entries/kaay-radio-station-6228/ |access-date=2024-06-06 |website=Encyclopedia of Arkansas |language=en-US}}</ref> It airs a [[Christian radio]] format of instruction and preaching, with most of the schedule made up of [[brokered programming]] featuring local and national religious leaders, including [[Charles Stanley]], [[Jim Daly (evangelist)|Jim Daly]], [[John F. MacArthur]], and [[Albert Pendarvis]]. Overnight, [[Automation|automated]] [[contemporary Christian music]] is heard. The station's studios are located in West Little Rock, and the transmitter is located off McDonald Road in [[Wrightsville, Arkansas|Wrightsville]]. KAAY is Arkansas's primary entry point station for the [[Emergency Alert System]].

KAAY is a 50,000 [[watt]] [[clear-channel]] [[List of North American broadcast station classes|Class A]] radio station. But because 1090 AM is shared with two other Class A stations, [[WBAL (AM)|WBAL]] [[Baltimore]] and [[XEPRS-AM|XEPRS]] Rosarita-[[Tijuana]], KAAY uses a [[directional antenna]] at night, nulling its signal away from the east and west.


==History==
==History==

===Early years in Hot Springs===
===Early years in Hot Springs===
KAAY first [[sign-on|signed on]] as '''KTHS''' on December 20, 1924, in [[Hot Springs, Arkansas]].<ref>[http://www.americanradiohistory.com/Archive-BC-YB/1935/Stations-by-State-Broadcasting%20Yearbook%201935%20Complete.pdf Broadcasting Yearbook 1935 page 24]</ref> It operated on 600, 780, 800 and 1040 [[kilocycle]]s at different times in its early days. By the 1930s, it moved to its current dial position at 1090&nbsp;kHz, and was powered at 10,000 watts in the daytime, allowing it to be easily heard in the larger capital city of Little Rock, about 50 miles to the northeast. KTHS was an [[network affiliate|affiliate]] of the [[NBC Blue Network]], carrying its dramas, comedies, news, sports, [[soap opera]]s, [[game show]]s and [[big band]] remote broadcasts during the [[Golden Age of Radio]]. It stayed with that network when it became [[American Broadcasting Company|ABC]] in 1945.
KAAY first signed on as KTHS on December 20, 1924, in [[Hot Springs, Arkansas]].<ref>{{Cite web |url=https://www.worldradiohistory.com/Archive-BC-YB/1935/Stations-by-State-Broadcasting%20Yearbook%201935%20Complete.pdf |title=Broadcasting Yearbook 1935 page 24 |access-date=2021-02-09 |archive-date=2021-09-26 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210926042458/https://worldradiohistory.com/Archive-BC-YB/1935/Stations-by-State-Broadcasting%20Yearbook%201935%20Complete.pdf |url-status=dead }}</ref> It operated on 600, 780, 800 and 1040 [[kilocycle]]s at different times in its early days. By the 1930s, it moved to its current frequency of 1090&nbsp;kHz, with 10,000 [[watt]]s in the daytime, allowing it to be easily heard in the larger capital city of Little Rock, about 50 miles to the northeast. KTHS was an affiliate of the [[NBC Blue Network]], continuing with the affiliation when the network was renamed [[American Broadcasting Company|ABC]] in 1945.
KTHS was the founding station for the ''Lum and Abner Show'' in 1932.


===Move to Little Rock===
===Move to Little Rock===
In 1953, KTHS got a big boost in power, going to its current 50,000 watts, and it also switched its [[city of license]] to Little Rock. It became an affiliate of the [[CBS Radio News|CBS Radio Network]].<ref>[http://www.americanradiohistory.com/Archive-BC-YB/1953/Radio%20A-M%20BC%20YB%201953.pdf Broadcasting Yearbook 1953 page 76]</ref> Two years later, it signed on Channel 11 [[KTHV]] which affiliated with the [[CBS]] Television Network. In 1962, the TV station and radio station were sold to separate owners, with KTHS bought by [[LIN Broadcasting]].
In 1953, KTHS got a big boost in power, going to its current 50,000 watts, and it also switched its [[city of license]] to Little Rock. It became an affiliate of the [[CBS Radio News|CBS Radio Network]].<ref>[https://www.worldradiohistory.com/Archive-BC-YB/1953/Radio%20A-M%20BC%20YB%201953.pdf Broadcasting Yearbook 1953 page 76]</ref> Two years later, it signed on [[KTHV]] (channel 11) which affiliated with the [[CBS]] television network. In 1962, the TV and radio stations were sold to separate owners, with KTHS bought by [[LIN Broadcasting]].


===Top 40 era===
===Top 40 era===
The new owners turned it into a [[Contemporary hit radio|Top 40]] station in 1962, switching the [[call sign]] to '''KAAY'''. In the 1960s, KAAY had plans to put a co-owned [[FM broadcasting|FM]] station on the air at 98.5 [[Hertz|MHz]], but due to the limited number of FM radios in those days, the project didn't get off the ground. KAAY was sold to [[Multimedia (media company)|Multimedia Radio]] in 1975, and the following year, Multimedia bought an FM station at 94.1 (now [[KKPT]]). The FM station aired [[beautiful music]] as KEZQ.<ref>[http://www.americanradiohistory.com/Archive-BC-YB/1977/C-1%20Radio%20Broadcasting%20Yearbook%201977.pdf Broadcasting Yearbook 1977 page C-13]</ref>
The new owners turned KTHS into a [[Contemporary hit radio|top 40]] station in 1962, switching the [[call sign]] to KAAY. In the 1960s, KAAY had plans to put a co-owned [[FM broadcasting|FM]] station on the air at 98.5 [[Hertz|MHz]], but due to the limited number of FM radios in those days, the project didn't get off the ground. KAAY was sold to [[Multimedia (media company)|Multimedia Radio]] in 1975; the following year, Multimedia bought an FM station at 94.1&nbsp;MHz, [[KKPT|KEZQ]], that aired a [[beautiful music]] format.<ref>[https://www.worldradiohistory.com/Archive-BC-YB/1977/C-1%20Radio%20Broadcasting%20Yearbook%201977.pdf Broadcasting Yearbook 1977 page C-13]</ref>


During the station's heyday, KAAY featured a [[full service (radio format)|full-service]] Top-40 format, and was the dominant contemporary station for most of the state of Arkansas. During the 1960s and 1970s, on-air personalities included Mike McCormick, Doc Holiday, Jonnie King, Buddy Karr, Ken Knight, Sonny Martin, newscasters George J. Jennings, [[Wayne Moss]], Phil North and Ray Lincoln of the "Ray and Ram Program." The station also broadcast [[Arkansas Razorbacks football|University of Arkansas football]] games.
During the station's heyday, KAAY featured a [[full service (radio format)|full-service]] top 40 format and was the dominant contemporary station for most of the state of Arkansas. During the 1960s and 1970s, on-air personalities included Mike McCormick, Doc Holiday, Jonnie King, Buddy Karr, Ken Knight, Sonny Martin, and newscasters George J. Jennings, [[Wayne Moss]], Phil North and Ray Lincoln of the ''Ray and Ram Program''. The station also broadcast [[Arkansas Razorbacks football|University of Arkansas football]] games.


KAAY's cult status was forged in the late 1960s, when, after 11pm, the station abandoned the standard Top 40 format for three hours of [[underground music]] with the program ''[[Beaker Street]]'' hosted by [[Clyde Clifford]].[http://www.todaysthv.com/news/search/results.aspx?storyid=14818] Its nighttime signal extended well beyond Little Rock and Arkansas, covering much of the [[Great Plains]], North Central, and [[Mississippi Valley]] regions of the United States, leading to its nickname "The Mighty Ten Ninety." KAAY was an inspiration to [[Cuba]]n rock musicians and rock fans who tuned into Beaker Street late at night, keeping themselves informed about American music and underground music in the 1970s. They listened undercover with [[Soviet Union|Soviet]]-made [[transistor radio]]s. In the late 1960s the jingle started out with roaring thunder followed by a deep voice... "FIFTY THOUSAND WATTS OF MUSIC POWER K>>DOUBLE-A Y, LITTLE ROCK."
KAAY's cult status was forged in the late 1960s, when, after 11p.m., the station abandoned the standard top 40 format for three hours of [[underground music]] with the program ''[[Beaker Street]]'' hosted by [[Clyde Clifford]].<ref name="KUAR 2018">{{cite news |url=https://www.ualrpublicradio.org/post/celebration-planned-legendary-little-rock-radio-station-kaay-mighty-1090 |last=Hibblen |first=Michael |title=Celebration Planned For Legendary Little Rock Radio Station KAAY, The Mighty 1090 |website=UA Little Rock Public Radio |location=[[Little Rock, Arkansas]] |date=June 29, 2018 |access-date=February 17, 2019 }}</ref> Its nighttime signal extended well beyond Little Rock and Arkansas, covering much of the [[Great Plains]] and [[Mississippi Valley]] regions of the United States.

Owing to its 50,000-watt [[Clear-channel station|clear channel]] signal that could be received in [[Cuba]], KAAY provided residents of the island nation an important cultural link to the outside world in the years following the [[Cuban Revolution]]. During the 1962 [[Bay of Pigs Invasion]], the United States government used the station to broadcast anti-Castro propaganda while working to win the release of Cuban exiles who participated in the failed exercise. KAAY was an inspiration to Cuban rock musicians and rock fans who tuned into ''Beaker Street'' late at night, keeping themselves informed about American music and underground music in the 1970s.<ref name="KUAR 2018" /> They listened undercover with [[Soviet Union|Soviet]]-made [[transistor radio]]s. In the late 1960s the station's jingle started out with roaring thunder followed by a deep voice: "Fifty thousand watts of music power, K-double-A-Y, Little Rock".


===Switch to religion===
===Switch to religion===
By 1980, listening to contemporary hits was shifting from AM to FM. The station tried moving to [[adult contemporary music]] and some [[country music]]. Eventually the station switched to an [[oldies]] sound, calling itself "Oldies 1090." At night, when the station's 50,000-watt signal could be heard over a large territory, the station aired nine hours of paid religious programming. In April 1985, KAAY was sold to the [[Beasley Broadcasting Group]], which switched to a format of [[Southern Gospel]] music and brokered religion. (The FM station was sold to Signal Media, which owned 1010 WHLT.)
By 1980, listening to contemporary hits was shifting from AM to FM. The station tried moving to [[adult contemporary music]] and some [[country music]]. Eventually the station switched to an [[oldies]] sound, calling itself "Oldies 1090". At night, when the station's 50,000-watt signal could be heard over a large territory, the station aired nine hours of paid religious programming. In April 1985, KAAY was sold to the [[Beasley Broadcasting Group]], which switched to a format of [[Southern gospel]] music and brokered religion. The FM station was sold to Signal Media, which owned KLRA.


In 1998, KAAY was bought by [[Citadel Broadcasting]] for $5 million.<ref>[http://www.americanradiohistory.com/Archive-BC-YB/2005/Radio-AL-MT-2005-BC-YB.pdf Broadcasting Yearbook 2005 page D-62]</ref> In 2011, Citadel Broadcasting merged with [[Cumulus Media]], which continued the religious format on KAAY.<ref name=abj-citadelcumulus>{{cite news|title=Cumulus now owns Citadel Broadcasting|url=http://www.bizjournals.com/atlanta/news/2011/09/16/cumulus-now-owns-citadel-broadcasting.html|accessdate=September 16, 2011|newspaper=Atlanta Business Journal|date=September 16, 2011}}</ref> Cumulus Media owns scores of radio stations across the country, but KAAY is its only religious outlet.
In 1998, KAAY was bought by [[Citadel Broadcasting]] for $5 million.<ref>[https://www.worldradiohistory.com/Archive-BC-YB/2005/Radio-AL-MT-2005-BC-YB.pdf Broadcasting Yearbook 2005 page D-62]</ref> In 2011, Citadel Broadcasting merged with [[Cumulus Media]], which continued the Christian programming.<ref name=abj-citadelcumulus>{{cite news |title=Cumulus now owns Citadel Broadcasting |url=https://www.bizjournals.com/atlanta/news/2011/09/16/cumulus-now-owns-citadel-broadcasting.html |access-date=September 16, 2011 |newspaper=Atlanta Business Journal |date=September 16, 2011 }}</ref> KAAY is Cumulus' only station with a religious format.

===Transmitter vandalism===
KAAY's noted transmission facilities in Wrightsville have been vandalized several times. Copper thieves stole a large amount of transmission line, degrading the stations signal significantly. Roof damage allowed water to enter the 50,000-watt transmitter, knocking it off the air. Since then, the transmission line has been replaced and buried deeper underground to deter thieves, and Cumulus has announced plans to restore the station's nighttime signal. Currently, KAAY is operating at 50,000-watt service during the day, but engineers have yet to rebuild the tower directional array, so nighttime service remains under [[special temporary authority]] with 10,000 watts [[omni-directional antenna|non directional]].


===KAAY Rewound===
===KAAY Rewound===
On Labor Day weekend of 2003, the station returned to its roots with a historical segment called "KAAY Rewound". KAAY's Barry Mac and sister station KARN's Grant Merrill played 1960s and '70s hits and took calls from all over the South. Clyde Clifford returned to talk about "Beaker Street". The station at various times broadcasts a feature called "Radio Yesterday" which includes the memories of the station's Top 40 heyday.
On Labor Day weekend of 2003, the station returned to its roots with a historical segment called "KAAY Rewound". KAAY's Barry Mac and sister station KARN's Grant Merrill played 1960s and 1970s hits and took calls from all over the South. Clyde Clifford returned to talk about ''Beaker Street''. The station at various times broadcasts a feature called "Radio Yesterday" which includes the memories of the station's top 40 heyday.

===Transmitter site issues===
The KAAY transmission facilities in Wrightsville have been vandalized several times. Copper thieves stole a large amount of transmission line, degrading the station's signal significantly. Roof damage allowed water to enter the MW-5 5,000-watt transmitter, knocking it off the air with a shorted high voltage power transformer. Station staff reportedly "wanted way too much for a new transformer", and ended up getting a [[Rockwell Collins|Collins]] 5,000-watt transmitter from their sister station in Dallas. Technical staff couldn't run the MW-50A, only having a 7/8-inch coax purchased to get something on the air. In 2015, the station purchased a {{convert|3+1//8|in|cm|adj=on}} transmission line and buried it {{convert|4|ft|m}} underground to deter thieves and put the MW-50 back on at 50,000 watts day and 10,000 watts night. In 2017, KAAY purchased a new [[Nautel]] NX-50 transmitter, new coax cable and a new phasor to connect the end towers. Mike Patton was contracted to install and tune the phasor. That June, Daniel Appellof, assistant chief engineer for KAAY Citadel/Cumulus Media Little Rock from July 2006 to September 2017, was tasked to remove the old RCA transmitter to make room for the phasor and the NX50. He had left the company to move to Las Vegas to be closer to his family. In December 2017, there was a major shake up in the engineering department and Appellof was asked to return to Little Rock to finish the project. The new Nautel transmitter and the phasor were installed in early 2018, and in late February KAAY was back to 50,000 watts day and 50,000 watts directional at night. In May 2020, the westernmost tower collapsed, and the station filed for special temporary authority (STA) to operate at a reduced night power of 12,500 watts non-directional.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://licensing.fcc.gov/cgi-bin/ws.exe/prod/cdbs/forms/prod/cdbsmenu.hts?context=25&appn=101818086&formid=911&fac_num=33253|title = CDBS Print}}</ref> As of July 2021, the station is still waiting on the owner of the tower site, Vertical Bridge, to make the repairs.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://licensing.fcc.gov/cgi-bin/ws.exe/prod/cdbs/forms/prod/cdbsmenu.hts?context=25&appn=101826418&formid=911&fac_num=33253|title = CDBS Print}}</ref> In February, 2022, KAAY applied to the commission to transmit permanently with eighty (80) watts omnidirectionally during nighttime hours, but still 50,000 watts daytime.


==References==
==References==
Line 57: Line 59:


==External links==
==External links==
* [http://transition.fcc.gov/fcc-bin/HistoryCards/33253.pdf FCC History Cards for KAAY]
*[https://licensing.fcc.gov/cgi-bin/prod/cdbs/forms/prod/getimportletter_exh.cgi?import_letter_id=50968&.pdf FCC History Cards for KAAY]
* [http://www.1090kaay.com/ Official web site]
*{{official website |https://www.1090kaay.com/ }}
*{{AM station data|KAAY}}
* [http://kaay1090.blogspot.com/ KAAY 1090 Blog]
*{{url |https://kaay1090.blogspot.com/ |KAAY 1090 Blog }}
{{AM station data|KAAY}}


{{Little Rock Radio}}
{{Little Rock Radio}}
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{{Clear Channel AM}}
{{Clear Channel AM}}


[[Category:Radio stations in Arkansas|AAY]]
[[Category:Cumulus Media radio stations]]
[[Category:Cumulus Media radio stations]]
[[Category:Radio stations established in 1924]]
[[Category:Radio stations established in 1924]]
[[Category:Christian radio stations in Arkansas|AAY]]
[[Category:Clear-channel radio stations]]

Revision as of 03:56, 6 June 2024

KAAY
Broadcast areaLittle Rock metropolitan area
Frequency1090 kHz
Branding1090 AM KAAY
Programming
FormatChristian radio
Ownership
Owner
KARN, KARN-FM, KIPR, KLAL, KFOG, KURB
History
First air date
December 20, 1924; 99 years ago (1924-12-20) (as KTHS at 800 AM)
Former call signs
KTHS (1924–1962)
Former frequencies
800 kHz (1924–1927)
780 kHz (1927–1928)
600 kHz (1928–1929)
1040 kHz (1929–1934)
Call sign meaning
Similarity to onetime sister station WAKY in Louisville, Kentucky, now WKRD (AM)
Technical information
Facility ID33253
ClassA
Power50,000 watts
Transmitter coordinates
34°36′00″N 92°13′30″W / 34.60000°N 92.22500°W / 34.60000; -92.22500
Links
WebcastListen live
Website1090kaay.com

KAAY (1090 AM) is a commercial radio station in Little Rock, Arkansas, owned by Cumulus Media.[1][2] It airs a Christian radio format of instruction and preaching, with most of the schedule made up of brokered programming featuring local and national religious leaders, including Charles Stanley, Jim Daly, John F. MacArthur, and Albert Pendarvis. Overnight, automated contemporary Christian music is heard. The station's studios are located in West Little Rock, and the transmitter is located off McDonald Road in Wrightsville. KAAY is Arkansas's primary entry point station for the Emergency Alert System.

History

Early years in Hot Springs

KAAY first signed on as KTHS on December 20, 1924, in Hot Springs, Arkansas.[3] It operated on 600, 780, 800 and 1040 kilocycles at different times in its early days. By the 1930s, it moved to its current frequency of 1090 kHz, with 10,000 watts in the daytime, allowing it to be easily heard in the larger capital city of Little Rock, about 50 miles to the northeast. KTHS was an affiliate of the NBC Blue Network, continuing with the affiliation when the network was renamed ABC in 1945. KTHS was the founding station for the Lum and Abner Show in 1932.

Move to Little Rock

In 1953, KTHS got a big boost in power, going to its current 50,000 watts, and it also switched its city of license to Little Rock. It became an affiliate of the CBS Radio Network.[4] Two years later, it signed on KTHV (channel 11) which affiliated with the CBS television network. In 1962, the TV and radio stations were sold to separate owners, with KTHS bought by LIN Broadcasting.

Top 40 era

The new owners turned KTHS into a top 40 station in 1962, switching the call sign to KAAY. In the 1960s, KAAY had plans to put a co-owned FM station on the air at 98.5 MHz, but due to the limited number of FM radios in those days, the project didn't get off the ground. KAAY was sold to Multimedia Radio in 1975; the following year, Multimedia bought an FM station at 94.1 MHz, KEZQ, that aired a beautiful music format.[5]

During the station's heyday, KAAY featured a full-service top 40 format and was the dominant contemporary station for most of the state of Arkansas. During the 1960s and 1970s, on-air personalities included Mike McCormick, Doc Holiday, Jonnie King, Buddy Karr, Ken Knight, Sonny Martin, and newscasters George J. Jennings, Wayne Moss, Phil North and Ray Lincoln of the Ray and Ram Program. The station also broadcast University of Arkansas football games.

KAAY's cult status was forged in the late 1960s, when, after 11p.m., the station abandoned the standard top 40 format for three hours of underground music with the program Beaker Street hosted by Clyde Clifford.[6] Its nighttime signal extended well beyond Little Rock and Arkansas, covering much of the Great Plains and Mississippi Valley regions of the United States.

Owing to its 50,000-watt clear channel signal that could be received in Cuba, KAAY provided residents of the island nation an important cultural link to the outside world in the years following the Cuban Revolution. During the 1962 Bay of Pigs Invasion, the United States government used the station to broadcast anti-Castro propaganda while working to win the release of Cuban exiles who participated in the failed exercise. KAAY was an inspiration to Cuban rock musicians and rock fans who tuned into Beaker Street late at night, keeping themselves informed about American music and underground music in the 1970s.[6] They listened undercover with Soviet-made transistor radios. In the late 1960s the station's jingle started out with roaring thunder followed by a deep voice: "Fifty thousand watts of music power, K-double-A-Y, Little Rock".

Switch to religion

By 1980, listening to contemporary hits was shifting from AM to FM. The station tried moving to adult contemporary music and some country music. Eventually the station switched to an oldies sound, calling itself "Oldies 1090". At night, when the station's 50,000-watt signal could be heard over a large territory, the station aired nine hours of paid religious programming. In April 1985, KAAY was sold to the Beasley Broadcasting Group, which switched to a format of Southern gospel music and brokered religion. The FM station was sold to Signal Media, which owned KLRA.

In 1998, KAAY was bought by Citadel Broadcasting for $5 million.[7] In 2011, Citadel Broadcasting merged with Cumulus Media, which continued the Christian programming.[8] KAAY is Cumulus' only station with a religious format.

KAAY Rewound

On Labor Day weekend of 2003, the station returned to its roots with a historical segment called "KAAY Rewound". KAAY's Barry Mac and sister station KARN's Grant Merrill played 1960s and 1970s hits and took calls from all over the South. Clyde Clifford returned to talk about Beaker Street. The station at various times broadcasts a feature called "Radio Yesterday" which includes the memories of the station's top 40 heyday.

Transmitter site issues

The KAAY transmission facilities in Wrightsville have been vandalized several times. Copper thieves stole a large amount of transmission line, degrading the station's signal significantly. Roof damage allowed water to enter the MW-5 5,000-watt transmitter, knocking it off the air with a shorted high voltage power transformer. Station staff reportedly "wanted way too much for a new transformer", and ended up getting a Collins 5,000-watt transmitter from their sister station in Dallas. Technical staff couldn't run the MW-50A, only having a 7/8-inch coax purchased to get something on the air. In 2015, the station purchased a 3+1/8-inch (7.9 cm) transmission line and buried it 4 feet (1.2 m) underground to deter thieves and put the MW-50 back on at 50,000 watts day and 10,000 watts night. In 2017, KAAY purchased a new Nautel NX-50 transmitter, new coax cable and a new phasor to connect the end towers. Mike Patton was contracted to install and tune the phasor. That June, Daniel Appellof, assistant chief engineer for KAAY Citadel/Cumulus Media Little Rock from July 2006 to September 2017, was tasked to remove the old RCA transmitter to make room for the phasor and the NX50. He had left the company to move to Las Vegas to be closer to his family. In December 2017, there was a major shake up in the engineering department and Appellof was asked to return to Little Rock to finish the project. The new Nautel transmitter and the phasor were installed in early 2018, and in late February KAAY was back to 50,000 watts day and 50,000 watts directional at night. In May 2020, the westernmost tower collapsed, and the station filed for special temporary authority (STA) to operate at a reduced night power of 12,500 watts non-directional.[9] As of July 2021, the station is still waiting on the owner of the tower site, Vertical Bridge, to make the repairs.[10] In February, 2022, KAAY applied to the commission to transmit permanently with eighty (80) watts omnidirectionally during nighttime hours, but still 50,000 watts daytime.

References

  1. ^ "KAAY". Federal Communications Commission.
  2. ^ "KAAY". Encyclopedia of Arkansas. Retrieved 2024-06-06.
  3. ^ "Broadcasting Yearbook 1935 page 24" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2021-09-26. Retrieved 2021-02-09.
  4. ^ Broadcasting Yearbook 1953 page 76
  5. ^ Broadcasting Yearbook 1977 page C-13
  6. ^ a b Hibblen, Michael (June 29, 2018). "Celebration Planned For Legendary Little Rock Radio Station KAAY, The Mighty 1090". UA Little Rock Public Radio. Little Rock, Arkansas. Retrieved February 17, 2019.
  7. ^ Broadcasting Yearbook 2005 page D-62
  8. ^ "Cumulus now owns Citadel Broadcasting". Atlanta Business Journal. September 16, 2011. Retrieved September 16, 2011.
  9. ^ "CDBS Print".
  10. ^ "CDBS Print".