| Broadcast area | Greater Houston |
|---|---|
| Frequency | 610kHz |
| Branding | Sports Radio 610 |
| Programming | |
| Language | English |
| Format | Sports radio |
| Affiliations | |
| Ownership | |
| Owner |
|
| History | |
First air date | January 31, 1948; 77 years ago (1948-01-31) |
Former call signs |
|
Call sign meaning | Nickname/ethnicity of former owner,Gordon "Old Scotchman" McLendon |
| Technical information[1] | |
Licensing authority | FCC |
| Facility ID | 25440 |
| Class | B |
| Power | 2,700 watts |
Transmitter coordinates | 29°55′4″N95°25′33″W / 29.91778°N 95.42583°W /29.91778; -95.42583 |
| Repeater | 100.3 KILT-FM HD2 (Houston) |
| Links | |
Public license information | |
| Webcast | Listen live (via Audacy) |
| Website | www |
KILT (610kHz, "SportsRadio 610") is acommercialAMradio station inHouston, Texas. The station is owned byAudacy, Inc. and carries asportsradio format. KILT shares itscall sign with itssister stationKILT-FM (100.3 FM), which airs acountry musicradio format. Its studios are located in theGreenway Plaza district.
KILT transmits with5,000 watts. It uses adirectional antenna at all times. Thetransmitter is on West Road at Ella Boulevard in North Houston.[2] Programming is also heard on co-owned KILT-FM'sHD2 sub-channel.
On weekdays, KILT has local hosts from morningdrive time through the evening, withCBS Sports Radiosyndicated national programming heard late nights and weekends. KILT is theflagship station of theNFL'sHouston Texans and theMLS'Houston Dynamo. It has aired every Texans game since the team's inception into the league in 2002.
Sean Pendergast and Seth Payne host mornings 6-10a. In the Loop with John Lopez and Reginald Adetula airs 10a-2p. The Drive with Clint Stoerner and Ron Hughley runs from 2-6p. Area 45 with Shaun Bijani and Patrick Creighton airs from 7-11p.
610 AMsigned on the air on January 31, 1948.[3] It was owned by W. Albert Lee. The station chose thecall sign KLEE to reflect the owner's name. The studios were in the Milby Hotel, which Lee owned.
The following year, Lee added a television station, KLEE-TV. It was Houston's first television station and the second one inTexas. Lee sold KLEE-TV to the Hobby Family in 1950, owners of theHouston Post daily newspaper, but he kept his radio station since the Post already ownedKPRC (950 AM). (KLEE-TV is nowKPRC-TV.)
In 1952, KLEE was sold toGordon McLendon, who initially changed the call letters to KLBS, to represent his network, the "Liberty Broadcasting System." McLendon had great success programmingTop 40 hits onKLIF inDallas. That prompted McLendon to turn other stations in his chain into Top 40 outlets, including AM 610 in Houston, in 1957.
The station took the call letters KILT as a nod to McLendon, who often called himself "The Old Scotsman" on the air. (Scottish men are known for wearingkilts instead of pants.) For 24 years, KILT was the leading Top 40 station in Houston, called "The Big 610 KILT". It usedPAMSjingles that featured the call letters being sung out over the air. Notable personalities in the 1960s and 1970s included Steve Lundy, Sheila Mayhew, Beau Weaver, Butch Brady, Jay West, K.O. Bailey, Barry Kaye, Captain Jack and others.
On February 16, 1981,sister station KILT-FM droppedalbum rock for country during the "Urban Cowboy" craze that swept through Houston, and the United States in general.[4] The AM station continued with its adult Top 40 format. However, in the 1980s, young listeners were increasingly tuning in FM stations to hear their favorite hits. Competition fromKRBE (104.1 FM) andKRLY (93.7 FM) prompted KILT to end its Top 40 format.
On June 1, 1981, KILT switched to country music, partiallysimulcastingKILT-FM, then known as "FM 100". Over time, KILT played moreclassic country titles among current and recent hits, while KILT-FM concentrated on current country music. KILT AM included more news and features while KILT-FM stressed its more-music approach. In addition, the morning show was heard on both stations.
In 1989, KILT-AM-FM were acquired byWestinghouse Broadcasting.[5] Westinghouse kept KILT as an AM country station for another five years. As AM radio declined as a source for music, management decided to make a change.
The current sports-talk format debuted in September1994.[6][7] The moniker for the new format was "Star 610 SportsRadio KILT." The initial hosts were Mike Edmonds & Ed Fowler in the afternoon from 4-7 p.m. and the Bob Stevenson Outdoors Show, airing Tuesday-Friday mornings 4 am-5 am and Saturdays & Sundays from 4 am-7 am. Prime Sports Radio, based inDallas, aired for all other hours.
In 1995, Edmonds & Fowler moved to the mornings 6 am-9 am and Rich Lord & Kenny Hand were paired together for "Section 610" from 4 pm-7 pm. Lord & Hand also alternated hosting duties for the locally produced Astros Clubhouse Extra post-game shows from 1996 to 1998. KILT also became one of Jim Rome's most prominent affiliates in the mid & late 1990s. At one point, between 1996-1999 KILT aired Rome's show twice a day, live at 11 am, and then replayed at night at 7pm. KILT's local sports talk programming was expanded in the late 1990s as Nate Griffin, Lance Zierlein, John Granato, Tony Ortiz (as of 2024 at WWJ-AM in Detroit), Michael P. Davis, Adam Wexler, Russ Small, Jeremy Foster and Matt Jackson all joined the station for various timeslots. The network affiliation was also changed from Prime Sports to Chicago-based One on One Sports.
In 2001, KILT signed a 10-year agreement with the expansion Houston Texans of the NFL to become their first-ever flagship radio station when the team began play in 2002. Marc Vandermeer was hired as the Voice of the Texans and was also added to the roster of station hosts. Vandermeer teamed with former Heisman Trophy winner Andre Ware on the game broadcasts and Lord, along with his new co-host in afternoon drive, Charlie Pallillo, served as co-host of the Texans first-ever pre-game and post-game shows. In 2007, Lord moved on to a new role, serving seven seasons as the Texans in-game sideline reporter before giving way to John Harris.
As of 2024, longtime local hosts on SportsRadio 610 included: Sean Pendergast, Seth Payne, and John P. Lopez.
On February 2, 2017, CBS Radio announced it would merge withEntercom.[8] The merger was approved on November 9, 2017, and was consummated on November 17.[9][10]
KILT has remained Houston's top rated sports station for most of its history. Co-ownedKIKK (650 AM) carried the CBS Sports Radio (nowInfinity Sports Network) in the daytime until 2021 when making the switch tosports gambling asThe Bet, while KILT runs local sports shows. On late nights and weekends, KILT carries Infinity Sports Network programming.
