| Broadcast area | Oklahoma City Metroplex |
|---|---|
| Frequency | 1220kHz |
| Branding | Key To Living Victoriously |
| Programming | |
| Format | Urban Gospel -Christian talk and teaching |
| Ownership | |
| Owner | First Choice Broadcasting, Inc. |
| History | |
First air date | April 1973 |
Former call signs | KRMC (1973–1987) |
Call sign meaning | KeyToLivingVictoriously |
| Technical information[1] | |
Licensing authority | FCC |
| Facility ID | 21555 |
| Class | D |
| Power | 250watts day 5 watts night |
Transmitter coordinates | 35°23′50.00″N97°27′4.00″W / 35.3972222°N 97.4511111°W /35.3972222; -97.4511111 |
| Links | |
Public license information | |
| Webcast | Listen live |
| Website | Official website |
KTLV (1220AM) is aradio station broadcasting anUrban Gospel andChristian talk and teachingradio format.Licensed toMidwest City, Oklahoma, the station serves theOklahoma City Metroplex. The station is currently owned by First Choice Broadcasting, Inc.[2][3]
M. W. Cooper and his Mid West Broadcasting Corporation, also part-owned by Tulsa state senatorGene C. Howard andGene Stipe, putKRMC on the air in April 1973.[4] A year later, the station changed formats and became one of the smallest-market all-news outlets in the country.[5] A daytime-only outlet ona Mexican clear channel, the station's news service utilized the resources ofUnited Press International.[5] However, all-news was a financial failure losing $8,000 a month, prompting KRMC to change to gospel on October 13, 1975.[6] One of the reasons cited by station management for the change was that an all-news format did not work well on a daytime-only station.[6] Another was a change in operation; while not reflected in the records of theFederal Communications Commission, the Oklahoma City Counseling Center acquired the station in 1975.[4]
In the early 1980s, KRMC almost negotiated an agreement withOscar Rose Junior College by which Rose broadcasting students would have operated the station.[7] However, this did not come to pass. The call letters were changed to the presentKTLV on November 12, 1987, as the ownership renamed itself Twelve-Twenty Communications Corporation; the licensee name was changed to First Choice Broadcasting in 1992 as part of an internal reorganization.[8]
1220 kHz in Oklahoma City was almost shut down as part of a 2002 deal withClear Channel Communications that would have seen KTLV's intellectual unit move to1340 kHz and Clear Channel moveKGYN to Oklahoma City fromGuymon, Oklahoma.[9]