KSTC (AM)

KSTC
City Sterling, Colorado
Branding Sterling Silver
Frequency 1230 kHz
First air date 1938
Format Oldies
Power 1,000 watts
Class C
Facility ID 35639
Transmitter coordinates 40°37′04″N 103°10′31″W / 40.617777°N 103.1752°W / 40.617777; -103.1752Coordinates: 40°37′04″N 103°10′31″W / 40.617777°N 103.1752°W / 40.617777; -103.1752
Callsign meaning STerling Colorado
Former callsigns KGEK
Owner Wayne Johnson
(Media Logic LLC)
Sister stations KNNG

KSTC (1230 AM, "Sterling Silver") is a radio station broadcasting an oldies format. Licensed to the city of Sterling, Colorado, it serves the northeastern Colorado area. It first began broadcasting in 1938 under the call sign KGEK. The station is currently owned by Wayne Johnson, through licensee Media Logic LLC.

History

The radio station was founded in 1938 by Harry Behler and was first licensed as KGEK in Yuma, Colorado, about 60 miles southeast of Sterling. In the 1950s it was moved to Sterling. For the next 30 years the station occupied an adobe building and, later, double-wide mobile home at the east edge of Sterling.

The station went through a series of ownership transfers during that time, In 1974 an FM station was added (104.5 MHz), with call letters KYOT ("Country Coyote") and in the late 1970s the stations' call letters were changed to KSTC and KNNG-FM.

The station was moved into a new facility on West Main Street in Sterling in 1983, and remains at that location.

Over the years, KGEK/KSTC has had a number of music and programming formats. In the late 1960s and early 1970s the station experimented with a multi-format concept, playing "easy listening" music in the mornings, country music in the afternoon and rock/pop in the evenings. At present, KSTC plays oldies from the 1950s, 1960s and 1970s, while KNNG-FM plays crossover country music.

References

    External links

    This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 6/19/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.