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Frequency | 1450 kHz |
Branding | TUDN Radio Albuquerque |
Programming | |
Language | Spanish |
Format | Sports |
Ownership | |
Owner |
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KRZY-FM | |
History | |
First air date | May 9, 1956 |
Former call signs | KLOS (1956–1964) |
Technical information [1] | |
Licensing authority | FCC |
Facility ID | 12634 |
Class | C |
Power | 1,000 watts unlimited |
Transmitter coordinates | 35°07′56″N106°37′18″W / 35.13222°N 106.62167°W |
Links | |
Public license information | |
Website | www |
KRZY (1450 AM) is a radio station licensed to Albuquerque, New Mexico, United States, serving the Albuquerque metropolitan area. The station is owned by Entravision Communications. [2] KRZY broadcasts a Spanish-language sports format.
On February 24, 1956, E. Boyd Whitney and D. K. McGregor, doing business as B and M Broadcasters, obtained a construction permit for a new radio station at 1450 kHz in Albuquerque, which would broadcast with 250 watts. [3] With a country music format, KLOS began broadcasting on May 9. [4] Ownership shifted several times in the station's first few years on the air, and by 1960, the station was owned by Whitney and George Oliver. [3]
On August 2, 1964, Whitney and Oliver's KLOS—by this point airing Top 40—traded frequencies and facilities with KRZY, a country music station owned by Burroughs Broadcasting, a company owned by former governor John Burroughs. For $50,500, Burroughs paid to move KRZY's programming from 1580 kHz to 1450 kHz, where it could broadcast at night; KLOS became a daytime-only station on 1580. [5]
In its first fall on 1450 kHz, KRZY got into a heated dispute over the rights to broadcast University of New Mexico football games. After KRZY had broadcast coverage of a game against the University of Utah, the UNM Board of Regents had awarded an exclusive three-year contract for Lobos football and basketball to KOB—a move KRZY contested, claiming that, as a public institution, the university could not award exclusive rights to cover games. Undeterred, station manager Ray Moran and a salesman traveled to Provo, where the Lobos would play the BYU Cougars. Moran and a salesman set up shop in a nearby motel, while the announcers—one wearing a BYU sweatshirt and sitting in the BYU student section—brought equipment, covered by a blanket, into the stadium and relayed their commentary using wireless microphones to the motel, where it was sent by telephone back to Albuquerque. [6] In response, the university and KOB obtained an order against the station, blocking it from any further game broadcasts. [7]
Beyond the controversial football broadcasts, Burrough set out to improve the new KRZY. A new circular studio building was constructed at 2401 Quincy NE late in 1964, [8] and a companion FM station, KRST 92.3, was launched the next year, from a transmitter atop Sandia Crest. [9] While KRST changed formats to album-oriented rock in 1968, [10] KRZY remained a country station throughout the late 1960s and 1970s, adding CBS Radio programming in 1974. [11] By Burroughs's death in 1978, KRZY and KRST were his last remaining radio properties. [12] [10]
In 1980, at the height of the "Urban Cowboy" trend, Burroughs flipped KRST to country. [10] KRZY differentiated itself from its FM sister by playing a more traditional mix of country music. [13] KRZY's ratings steadily slid during the course of the decade, going from a 6.4 percent share of the market in 1980 to a 2.4 in 1987—even as KRST became one of the market's top radio stations. [14]
It was not until 1987, nearly a decade after the death of John Burroughs, that Burroughs Broadcasting sold KRZY and KRST to Wagontrain Communications, owner of the Drake-Chenault syndication company, acquiring the pair for $5.25 million. [10] Wagontrain owned the stations for a year, selling them for $8.1 million to Commonwealth Broadcasting of San Diego in late 1988. [15]
After 30 years of country music on 1450 AM, a new format launched on the frequency in 1994. The station became known as "Sports Radio 1450 AM" and added several new sports talk programs and Colorado Rockies baseball. [16] On July 1, the station went all-sports and adopted a now-familiar moniker in Albuquerque radio: "The Sports Animal". [17] In addition to several local shows, KRZY was the Albuquerque home for Imus in the Morning and Jim Rome; the station made an attempt to pursue UNM athletics rights, which were still held by KOB. [17]
Rapid consolidation in the broadcasting industry in the mid-1990s would see KRZY get several new owners. In 1995, Commonwealth sold its two Albuquerque stations and an FM outlet in the Las Vegas market to Crescent Communications for $25.73 million. [18] In 1996, Citadel Communications acquired Crescent's three New Mexico properties—KRZY, KRST, and KRZY-FM 105.9—in a $23 million transaction. [19] For Citadel, the prize was KRST, which had become Albuquerque's top-rated and top-billing station in the 1990s. [14] Citadel did not want or need KRZY-AM-FM, and it could not keep them, because KRST alone pushed the company past the eight-station limit in the Albuquerque market, and at least one FM needed to be divested. [20]
Citadel's immediate spin-off of KRZY-AM-FM brought as its buyer EXCL Communications of California, marking its first purchase of broadcasting properties in the state of New Mexico. [20] EXCL programmed exclusively Spanish-language stations and immediately announced plans to flip its purchases to Hispanic-oriented formats. [20] Citadel retained the Sports Animal format and name and moved it to KHFN (1050 AM), which changed call letters to KNML, on October 9, 1996. [21]
When EXCL took over, KRZY AM became "Radio Tricolor", airing a Regional Mexican format. Entravision acquired EXCL in 2000. In 2002, Radio Tricolor moved to KRZY-FM, and KRZY AM took on a Spanish oldies format as "La Consentida". [22] The 2002 format changes also brought with them more extensive use of satellite-fed formats from Entravision, replacing local DJs and news updates. [23] The station then shifted to "Radio Visa", a talk-based format. [24]
In 2005, KRZY AM was one of five Entravision stations that adopted the then-new José format, a Spanish-language version of adult hits. [24] "La Tricolor" returned to 1450 in November 2008, when the station swapped formats with KRZY-FM, and was replaced three years later with ESPN Deportes Radio, including Spanish-language play-by-play of UNM athletics. [25]
In September 2019, with the looming shutdown of the ESPN Deportes Radio network, all six of its Entravision-owned affiliates flipped to José—the brand having been recycled for a format of norteño and ranchera music. [26] KRZY has since returned to Spanish-language sports programming with programming from TUDN Radio as of August 2020.