- KRVA (AM)
Infobox Radio station
name = KRVA
city =Cockrell Hill, Texas
area =Dallas/Fort Worth Metroplex
branding = "La Buena 1600 AM"
slogan =
airdate = 1947 as KMAE
frequency = 1600 kHz
format = Spanish
power = 25,000Watt s (Daytime)
930 Watts (Night time).
erp =
class = B
callsign_meaning =
former_callsigns = KMAE (1947-1965)
KYAL (1965-1976)
KXVI (1976-1985)
KTNS (1985-1987)
KSSA (1987-1993)
owner =Mortenson Broadcasting
licensee = Mortenson Broadcasting Co. of Texas, Inc.
webcast =
website = [http://www.krvaam.com/ krvaam.com]
affiliations =
sister_stations =KGGR ,KHVN ,KKGM ,KTNO KRVA, branded as "La Buena 1600", is a
Spanish language radio station , broadcasting in theDallas/Fort Worth Metroplex . This station is licensed inCockrell Hill, Texas and it's under ownership ofMortenson Broadcasting .History
This station started their broadcasting activities in 1947 as KMAE on an
Entertainment format operating during the daytime hours only inMcKinney, Texas . Then in 1965, the station changed to KYAL (call letters stood for "y'all"), playingCountry music . Over a decade later, the station has moved toPlano, Texas , as the branding and formats changed once again to KXVI (callsign stood for "16" in Roman numbers) under various religious formats. Recently, the KXVI calls were re-used at 100.5 FM in Pittsburg (not to be mistaken forPittsburgh, Pennsylvania ) for "The Bridge Network," a DFW-based religious broadcaster serving East Texas. In 1985, the station changed to an all-news station as KTNS. It went off the air afterJanuary 7 , 1987.About 7 months later, the station was revived by Spanish Radio Pioneer
Marcos Rodriguez, Sr. as KSSA (recently resurrected from 1270 AM) on a Spanish format, relocated to Cockrell Hill (which has a high Hispanic population) and a sister station to Kansas City-based KSSA-FM. In1993 , Z-Spanish Media and Entravision bought KSSA and changed the callsign to KRVA while maintaining its Spanish format to this day. In the 1990s, it has simulcasted News 8 at 6:00PM (CT) fromWFAA-TV in Spanish.There was also a period, including summer and autumn of 2005, during which 1600 am broadcast an Asian format (including Punjabi, Hindi, Urdu and English languages), with music, talk, games and advertising relating to the Asian community in the D/FW area.
On November 2006, Entravision sold KRVA to Mortenson Broadcasting after selling the other stations to
Liberman Broadcasting .External links
* [http://www.krvaam.com/ Station website]
* [http://www.knus99.com Mike Shannon's Dallas-Fort Worth Radio and TV History]
* [http://www.dfwradioarchives.com DFW Radio Archives]*AMQ|KRVA
*AML|KRVA
*AMARB|KRVA
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