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KOIL

Coordinates:41°11′20″N96°00′21″W / 41.18889°N 96.00583°W /41.18889; -96.00583
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Radio station in Omaha, Nebraska
For the Bellevue, Nebraska radio station that held the call sign KOIL at 1180 AM from 1993 to 2003 and from 2009 to 2012, seeKZOT.

KOIL
Broadcast areaOmaha-Council Bluffs metropolitan area
Frequency1290kHz
BrandingNews Talk 1290 KOIL
Programming
FormatTalk
NetworkABC News Radio
AffiliationsFox News Talk
Compass Media Networks
Premiere Networks
Salem Radio Network
Westwood One
Kansas City Chiefs Radio Network
Omaha LancersHockey
Ownership
Owner
KOZN,KZOT,KMMQ,KQKQ-FM,KOOO,KOPW
History
First air date
July 10, 1925; 99 years ago (July 10, 1925) (original license)
December 16, 1976; 48 years ago (1976-12-16) (Interim Operation)
January 13, 1983 (relicensed)
Former call signs
KOIL (1925–1993)
KKAR (1993–2012)
Call sign meaning
K-OIL (original owner was the Mona Oil Company of Council Bluffs, Iowa.)
Technical information[1]
Licensing authority
FCC
Facility ID542
ClassB
Power5,000watts
Links
Public license information
WebcastListen Live
Websitenewstalk1290koil.com

KOIL (1290kHz) is acommercialAMradio station,licensed toOmaha, Nebraska. It airs atalk radioformat and is owned byNRG Media, headquartered inCedar Rapids. The studios are on Dodge Street at 50th Avenue inMidtown Omaha.

KOIL is aClass B station powered at 5,000watts. At night, it uses adirectional antenna with a three-tower array to protect other stations on1290 AM. Thetransmitter is off Harrison Street, near Big Papillion Creek inBellevue, Nebraska.[2]

Programming

[edit]

KOIL's schedule is mostlynationally syndicated talk shows. Weekdays begin with two news magazines,America in the Morning with John Trout andThis Morning, America's First News with Gordon Deal. The rest of the weekday schedule includesBrian Kilmeade and Friends,The Sean Hannity Show,The Mark Levin Show,The Chris Plante Show, Ground Zero with Clyde Lewis andAmerica at Night with Rich Valdés.

Weekends feature shows on money, health, the law, technology, guns and home repair. Syndicated weekend programs includeThe Kim Komando Show,Bill Handel on The Law andAt Home with Gary Sullivan. KOIL airs live sports includingKansas City Chiefsfootball andOmaha Lancersjunior ice hockey.[3] Most hours begin with an update fromABC News Radio.

History

[edit]

Establishment

[edit]

KOIL was initially licensed to the Monarch Manufacturing Company ofCouncil Bluffs, Iowa, andsigned on the air on July 10, 1925. It was one of the earliest stations in the Omaha area. Its owner was an oil company, hence the "OIL" in the call letters. It originally broadcast at 1080 AM, before moving to 1290 AM.

KOIL was one of the stations that participated in the firstCBS network radio broadcast on September 18, 1927.[4] Itsaffiliation switched to theNBC Blue Network on December 1, 1931.[5] KOIL carried its schedule of dramas, comedies, news and sports during the "Golden Age of Radio."

The station was moved to Omaha in 1937. It was purchased by salesman and promoter Don Burden in 1953. As network programming moved from radio to television, the station adopted aTop 40 format. KOIL was a popular station for Omaha's teens and young adults. It became part of Burden'sStar Stations.

License cancelation

[edit]

TheFederal Communications Commission (FCC) began an investigation into allegations involving Burden and his stations. They included reports of bribes Burden made to officials in charge of renewing the licenses of his stations, supervision of on-air contests, and lack of candor with the FCC.[6]

Star Stations was forced to surrender its radio licenses, and KOIL was ordered to gooff the air as of 12:01 a.m. September 2, 1976.[7] The last two songs played byDJ Gene Shaw wereNeither One of Us (Wants to Be the First to Say Goodbye) byGladys Knight & The Pips. This was followed by the very last song,Simon & Garfunkel's "The Sound of Silence." The engineer on duty who turned off the transmitter after 51 years was Don Eliason. OnTom Becka's last segment, he also played the song as hesigned off.

Interim operation

[edit]

After KOIL's license was canceled, there were multiple applications filed to continue operations, either temporarily under an Interim Operation authorization, or as a relicensed station.[7] On November 24, the FCC awarded an Interim Operation authorization to Beneficial Broadcasting Inc.[8] Beneficial, headed by Nathan Novak, was the sole applicant to apply for only Interim Operation, and also pledged to donate all profits to charity. On December 16, 1976, the station, still KOIL, resumed broadcasting.[9]

Relicensing

[edit]

While the Interim Operation of the station was ongoing, the FCC held competitive hearings among the applicants for a permanent relicencing of the station. A May 1981 ruling favored Nebraska-Iowa Broadcasting, but a January 1982 review changed the decision to Omaha Broadcasting.[10] Following a merger of the applicants, the new license was ultimately granted to NewKOIL, Inc., which took over operations on January 13, 1983.[11] Although technically this was a new station, its continued operation as KOIL on 1290 kHz meant that it was considered to be the same station as the original KOIL established in 1925.

In December 1990, KOIL dropped local programming and began airing the "Pure Gold"oldies format fromSatellite Music Networks. By May 1993, KOIL was simulcasting FM sister stationKXKT, was the Omaha-Council Bluffs affiliate for theKansas City Royals Radio Network, and aired an eveningsports talk show. The station would go off the air for several months due to a lightning strike that caused a fire.[12] In August, after Valley Broadcasting sold the station to Aegeus, Inc. (which was owned in part by John Mitchell, president and principal owner of Mitchell Broadcasting, the owner of KKAR andKQKQ), the station returned to the air, with KOIL moving to1180 AM (and flipping to anadult standards format), while 1290 AM became KKAR, and adopted anews/talk format.[13][14][15][16]

In April 2003, KKAR moved to 1020 AM, replacing KKSC (nowKMMQ).[17] The call sign resumed broadcasting on 1180 kHz in January 2009. On June 4, 2012, KOIL was returned to 1290 AM and rebranded as "The Mighty 1290" KOIL.[18]

Past personalities

[edit]

Announcers who once worked for KOIL include Roger W. Morgan,Gene Okerlund, Gary Michael Ross, Dr.Don Rose,[19] Dick Sainte, and formerShindig! hostJimmy O'Neill.

Other personalities to spend time at KOIL includeThe Real Don Steele,Gary Owens, Kris Erik Stevens, Lyle Dean, Frank "Coffeehead" Allen, Joe Light, Dave Wingert, Sandy Jackson, andTom Becka.

References

[edit]
  1. ^"Facility Technical Data for KOIL".Licensing and Management System.Federal Communications Commission.
  2. ^Radio-Locator.com/KOIL
  3. ^"The Mighty 1290 KOIL".www.newstalk1290koil.com. Archived fromthe original on April 4, 2016.
  4. ^"CBS Radio News Celebrates 75th Anniversary".Radio Online. September 17, 2002.
  5. ^"KOIL Joins NBC"(PDF). Broadcasting. November 15, 1931. RetrievedSeptember 30, 2014.
  6. ^"The Mighty 1290 KOIL Tribute". RetrievedOctober 31, 2022.
  7. ^ab"Burden facilities are much in demand",Broadcasting, September 13, 1976, page 66.
  8. ^"Other Actions",Broadcasting, December 13, 1976, page 80.
  9. ^"KOIL Back On the Air 'For Good'", by Doug Smith,Omaha Herald, December 16, 1976, page 1.
  10. ^"Omaha Broadcasting gets KOIL License",Lincoln (Nebraska) Star, January 12, 1982, page 5.
  11. ^"KOIL Radio Permanent License Won by NewKOIL, Inc." by Steve Millburg,Omaha World-Tribune, January 13, 1983, page 41.
  12. ^Jeff Bahr, "KOIL Still Off the Air,"The Omaha World-Herald, May 29, 1993.
  13. ^"KOIL May Leave Mighty 1290,"The Omaha World-Herald, May 21, 1993.
  14. ^Jeff Bahr, "'Duopoly' Will Move KKAR,"The Omaha World-Herald, August 7, 1993.
  15. ^Jeff Bahr, "KOIL Format Still a Mystery,"The Omaha World-Herald, August 28, 1993.
  16. ^Jeff Bahr, "KOIL to Air 'Great Songs',"The Omaha World-Herald, September 8, 1993.
  17. ^"Radio News Search".Radio Online. April 29, 2003.
  18. ^"News Talk 1290 KOIL". RetrievedOctober 31, 2022.
  19. ^"Legendary Morning Air Personality Dr. Don Rose Dies".Radio Online. March 30, 2005.

External links

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41°11′20″N96°00′21″W / 41.18889°N 96.00583°W /41.18889; -96.00583

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