KMA (AM)

Last updated
KMA
KMA KMALAND960-99.1 logo.png
Frequency 960 kHz
BrandingKMAland 960 AM and 99.1 FM
Programming
Format Talk
Affiliations
Ownership
OwnerKMAland Broadcasting, LLC
KMA-FM
History
First air date
August 12, 1925 (1925-08-12) (first license granted)
Former frequencies
  • 650 kHz (1925–1927)
  • 1110 kHz (1927)
  • 760 kHz (1927–1928)
  • 930 kHz (1928–1941) [1]
Call sign meaning
named for original owner Earl May
Technical information [2]
Licensing authority
FCC
Facility ID 35107
Class B
Power 5,000 watts
Transmitter coordinates
40°46′48″N95°21′23″W / 40.78000°N 95.35639°W / 40.78000; -95.35639 (KMA)
Repeater(s) 99.1  KMA-FM (Clarinda)
Links
Public license information
Webcast Listen Live
Website www.kmaland.com

KMA (960 kHz) is an AM radio station licensed to serve Shenandoah, Iowa.

Contents

History

The station was founded in 1925 by seed salesman Earl May. In 1925 Henry A. Field, owner of Field's Nursery in Shenandoah and a business rival of May, founded a competing radio station, KFNF. While both stations offered farm news, the two were to become most competitive by offering live productions of hillbilly music. According to KMA's website, more than a million people traveled to small-town Shenandoah to hear the music.

May built the station headquarters and Mayfair Auditorium at the Mayfair Theatre (the theatre being closed in 1963, the studio demolished in 1964 due to its being declared structurally unsafe by the Iowa State Fire Marshall, and the entire building being demolished in 1966) across the street from the nursery business. Between music sets, May would pitch his seeds and tell nostalgic stories. In 1926 May won the third annual Radio Digest Gold Cup Award, after being voted the "World's Most Popular Radio Announcer" by over 452,000 people throughout the United States. [3]

The KMA shows which were broadcast in the afternoons were called the "KMA Country School" and according to the format emanated from the fictional KMA District No. 9 school with the shows beginning with the ringing of a school bell.

Performers would often go to Council Bluffs, Iowa, after the show where they would perform at night.[ citation needed ]

The most famous celebrities in KMA's history were the Everly Brothers, Don and Phil. In their early teen years, the brothers and their parents would appear on KMA to sing as "The Everly Family", but by 1952, they were discovered by a talent agent, and made their way to fame in Nashville with such hit songs as "Wake Up, Little Susie".

With the high visibility KMA operated on a slogan of "Keep Millions Advised", which was adopted in early 1926, after sorting through a reported 4,000 suggestions. [4] KFNF was to operate on "Keep Friendly, Never Frown".

In 1949, May Broadcasting company started KMTV in Omaha, the second-oldest television station in Nebraska. May Broadcasting originally wanted to call the television station KMA-TV. The Federal Communications Commission, however, would not allow the two outlets to share call letters as the cities of Shenandoah and Omaha were too far apart (61 miles (98 km)). In 1968, May acquired a second TV outlet, KGUN-TV in Tucson, Arizona. [5] May Broadcasting sold both KMTV and KGUN-TV to Lee Enterprises in 1986; both stations are now owned by the E. W. Scripps Company.

The county school shows were discontinued in the 1950s and the station continued to offer its farm show and farm housewife shows until the late 1990s; the current format revolves around ABC News Radio at the top of each hour, with some agricultural news, regional high school sports and their "Elephant Shop" where listeners can buy, sell, trade or give away personal property on the air.

In March 2010, [6] KMA Broadcasting launched a new 100,000-watt FM station, KMA-FM 99.1, licensed to Clarinda, Iowa, and broadcasting from facilities north of neighboring Hawleyville. KMAland Broadcasting also owns Hometown Cable in southwest Iowa.

The Earl May Seed and Nursery Company is still family-owned. Earl May's granddaughter, Betty Jane Shaw, is the current[ when? ] head of the company. Field eventually sold KFNF and its seed business;[ when? ] the current holder of the KFNF callsign, an FM station in Oberlin, Kansas, is unrelated to the former KFNF. The 920 AM frequency formerly occupied by KFNF is now KYFR, a Christian radio station owned by Family Radio.

Effective December 16, 2019, the May family sold the radio station and its assets to KMAland Broadcasting, LLC, a group consisting of local investors. The sale marked the end of over 94 years of family ownership.

In the book The Bridges of Madison County , which sold more than 60 million copies, the characters listen to KMA. In the 1995 movie directed by Clint Eastwood references to this station were removed and the format of the radio station in the film was switched to jazz.

Related Research Articles

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KMA could refer to:

Leanna Field Driftmier (1886–1976) was an American radio personality and writer based in Shenandoah, Iowa. Driftmier’s daily 30-minute show Kitchen-Klatter was broadcast around the midwestern United States for five decades. It was the longest-running homemaker show in US radio history.

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The Shenandoah Pin Rollers were a minor league baseball team based in Shenandoah, Iowa. Shenandoah first played as members of the Class D level 1903 Southwest Iowa League, winning the league championship in a shortened season. The Pin Rollers played in the Class D level Missouri-Iowa-Nebraska-Kansas League in 1910 and 1911. Shenandoah teams hosted home minor league games at Sportsman's Park.

KUSD was a non-commercial educational radio station in Vermillion, South Dakota, United States, licensed to the University of South Dakota (USD) from 1922 until 1992. It was deleted two years later after the university decided not to replace a transmission tower that had fallen and shuttered the station. At the time of its deletion, KUSD was the oldest broadcasting station in the state of South Dakota; it was the predecessor to the present radio service of South Dakota Public Broadcasting.

References

  1. "FCC History Cards for KMA".
  2. "Facility Technical Data for KMA". Licensing and Management System. Federal Communications Commission.
  3. "Earl May Wins Gold Cup Award", Radio Digest, First October Number 1926, page 3. May received a total of 452,901 votes, besting Patrick H. Barnes of WHT in Chicago by 11,522 votes.
  4. "KMA is Heard Across Pacific" by H. P. Brown, Radio Digest, February 20, 1926, page 6.
  5. "TV Transfers" (PDF). 1972 Broadcasting Yearbook. Retrieved 2009-01-12.[ permanent dead link ]
  6. "KMA-FM 99.1 MHz - Clarinda, IA". radio-locator.com. Retrieved 2021-08-23.