KMOD-FM

KMOD-FM

Infobox Radio Station
name = KMOD
city = Tulsa, Oklahoma
area = Tulsa, Oklahoma
airdate = 1959
frequency = 97.5 MHz HD Radio
branding = 97.5 KMOD
slogan = Tulsa's Rock Station
format = Rock
erp = 96,000 watts
haat = 405 meters
class = C
facility_id = 11957
callsign_meaning =
owner = Clear Channel Communications
webcast = [http://www.kmod.com/cc-common/streaming_new/index.html?refreshed=yes Listen Live]
website = http://www.kmod.com/|

KMOD (97.5 FM) is a rock music radio station in Tulsa, Oklahoma, owned by Clear Channel Communications. The station plays a wide variety of rock music from the 1960s through today.

The station is best known as the home of Brent Douglas and Phil Stone, disk jockeys who originated the character Roy D. Mercer, the notorious and popular prank caller who regularly threatened to "open a can of whup-ass" on the person he called (for some fabricated wrong the person supposedly had done), only for the person to find out the call was a prank. Actress Jeanne Tripplehorn was also a DJ at this station, known as Jeannie Summers, back in the 80s before she made her break in the movies.

KMOD, Modesto, California

The original radio station KMOD, Modesto, California, went on the air in 1950 at 1360 kilocycles AM as an affiliate of the American Broadcasting Company Radio Network at 1,000 watts. Although for a brief period of time it had studios in the Hotel Covel in downtown Modesto, the main studios and transmitter site were on east Orangeburg Avenue five miles outside of Modesto in the midst of walnut and fruit orchards and pasture land on which was erected three towers for the directional signal. The station was housed in a cinderblock building and had a General Manager's office, his secretary's office which was also the repository of all papers, including original commercials, a general office room with a half-dozen desks used by air salesmen and other staff. There was one main studio, an announcer's booth which was also an auxiliary control room, and the control room used by the combination men, "i.e.", the announcer-engineers, from where most program originated. It had up-to-date Ampex reel-to-reel tape machines and a combination of RCA and General Electric equipment ranging from microphones to the audio board. There was also a large room used to hold several transcription libraries and thousands of LP and 45 rpm records and, later, a workshop was added where the news teletype machines were put.

The station was owned by Radio Modesto, Inc., owned by John Schott, a businessman, Judd Stutevant, a local farmer and others. The station called itself "Variety Radio" which it certainly was broadcasting from 5 a.m. to a little after midnight daily numerous programs ranging from Porteguese, Italian and Spanish language programs in the early morning to live country and western music. It carried most of the ABC Radio Network's offerings including "The Breakfast Club" to "The Lone Ranger." Paul Harvey and Martin Agronsky were heard with their unique brand of news reporting. Local shows were primarily popular recorded music shows, local newscasts and special programs from time to time. One of the most popular evening shows was syndicated "Lucky Lager Dance Time," a show done locally by local announcers, but following a scripted format and music list so that a listener traveling north or south in California would hear the exact same show even though it was not a networked program.

Local personalities heard on the station included Gene D'Acardo, who was the news director, chief announcer and part time programmer. He had been associated with the large independent radio station KTRB for years before KMOD went on the air. Mickey Hart, also known on-air as Jim Brroks, was primarily known as the host of "Teen Turtable Time" although he did numerous other shows. Gene Williams, an expert with regard to popular music and the recording industry, was a popular disk jockey. The names of other personalities has faded from memory.

KMOD was sold in 1957 and the call letters were changed to KFIV, which represented music, news, weather, time and temperature. It was a strict Top-40 station, but broadened out it's play list and eventually was a popular rock and roll station. In 1980, the format was changed to Adult Contemporary. It was later sold again and became KZUN, "Modesto's Country Cousin" station featuring popular country and western music in 1984. In September of 1985 KZUN changed its call letters back to KFIV and its format back to Adult Contemporary but this time they utilized the Satellite Music Network's Starstation AC. In 1987, KFIV dropped Adult Contemporary to CHR simulcast of its FM sister station, KFIV-102.3. Early in 1989, KFIV changed its call letters to KASH and its format to Business News And Talk. On October 15, 1989 to News/Talk. From AM KMOD, to KFIV, to KZUN, back to KFIV, then to KASH and again back to KFIV and again affiliated with ABC's Radio Network and others, KMOD has travelled a long way to an FM radio serving Tulsa, Oklahoma.

External links

* [http://www.kmod.com/ KMOD official website]
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