KJIM
City | Sherman, Texas |
---|---|
Broadcast area | Sherman-Denison |
Branding | K-JIM AM 1500 |
Slogan | The Memory Maker |
Frequency | 1500 kHz |
First air date | 12/19/1947 |
Format | Adult Standards |
Power | 1,000 watts Daytime Only |
Class | D |
Facility ID | 21598 |
Transmitter coordinates | 33°41′30″N 96°33′30″W / 33.69167°N 96.55833°W |
Callsign meaning | Resurrected From 870 KJIM |
Former callsigns | KTAN, KTXO |
Affiliations | Westwood One - America's Best Music |
Owner | Bob Mark Allen Productions, Inc. |
Website | www.kjimradio.com |
KJIM AM 1500 is a Radio Station In Sherman, Texas broadcasting a Nostalgia/Oldies Format.
History
KJIM originally held the call letters KTAN and was established on December 19, 1947. Its original format was Classical music.
Owners: Joe Carroll and Elmer Scarborough (1947–48,) Tony Anthony and E. T. Fant Jr (1948-?,) Charles L. Cain (?-1953,) Col. Howard L. Burris (1953–55; operated under an LMA to Howard Davis,) Galen O. Gilbert (1955–57; Gilbert later owned KDNT-Denton,) J. Lou Groves (1957; Groves was a theater operator,) Senator William J. Samples (1957–58,) and King Fisher/Jimmy Fisher/Harry O'Conner dba O'Conner Broadcasting (1958.) Programs: "An Ear for Corn" (morning show,) "Concerts in Miniature" (hosted by Bill Jaco,) Notables: Bill Jaco (who was the first to broadcast on the station, and was PD,) Otis McKenzie, Bill Collins, Louise Cobbler, Sue Hill, Paul Phillips, Stafford E. Davis. Located at 2024 N. US 75, south of US 82.
In 1958 the station adopted the call letters KTXO, and began airing a Country and Western format (one of the first Texas stations to go C&W.). Its call letters stood for Texas and Oklahoma.
Owners: King Fisher/Jimmy Fisher/Harry O'Conner/Paul Carter dba O'Conner Broadcasting (1958–60,) Bill Jaco and Tom Spellman (1960–69; Jaco was a disc jockey,) Floyd Shelton (1969-?,) Larry Henderson (co-owned with his wife.) Notables: David Sprowl, John Scott, Bill Jaco, Gary King. Increased power to 1,000 watts in 1968. Sister station to KWSM-FM. Located on US 75, south of US 82, then to the Grayson Bank Building, then to near the Woodlawn Country Club (1968–present.)
On July 31, 1991 the station adopted the call letters KJIM and began airing an Oldies format. Calls resurrected from KJIM-870.
On September 22, 1995, Bob Allen dba Bob Mark Allen Productions, Inc. became licensee after the transfer of ownership was approved the FCC. "Bobbin'" Bobby Allen began his radio career in Oklahoma City, OK in the 1950s. He later worked on air at a number of stations in the Midwest including, KIOA-AM and KSO-AM Des Moines, IA, KRMG-AM and KELI-AM in Tulsa, OK. Allen later became a well-known Top 40 DJ and talk show host in Fort Worth, Texas.
On March 16, 2016 the Federal Communications Commission assigned a license (K233CV) to Bob Mark Allen Productions, Inc. to simulcast the programming of KJIM-AM 1500 as part of the AM Revitalization Act. The low power translator FM signal will broadcast on 101.3 and will operate at up to 250 watts, 24 hours a day. The station is expected to be operating full-time by summer 2016.
External links
- DFW Radio/TV History
- Query the FCC's AM station database for KJIM
- Radio-Locator Information on KJIM
- Query Nielsen Audio's AM station database for KJIM