KNHC-FM

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KNHC
C89.5FM Worldwide Logo
City of license Seattle
Broadcast area Seattle, Washington and surrounding area
Branding "C-89.5"
Slogan Seattle's Hottest Music
First air date Dec 1969 (at 1210 AM)
Jan 1971 (at 89.5 FM)
Frequency 89.5 (MHz)
Format Dance Top 40
ERP 8,500 watts
Class C1
Callsign meaning K Nathan Hale Communications
Owner Seattle Public Schools
Webcast 32kbps SHOUTcast,
New 128kbps SHOUTcast
32kbps Windows Media,
128kbps Windows Media
Website C-89.5 Homepage

KNHC FM (C-89.5) is a student-run Class C1 Non-Commercial FM radio station based in Seattle, Washington, primarily broadcasting dance and contemporary hit music. Its best coverage is in the Seattle metro area[1].

Contents

[edit] Operations and funding

KNHC is owned by Seattle Public Schools and is operated primarily by students of Nathan Hale High School in the Lake City area of north Seattle, many of whom work at the station as part of a radio broadcasting course. Production, programming, music selection, Gregg Neilson's panties, copy, and on-air hosting are done by the student staff, with assistance and supervision when necessary by adult staff members and volunteers. Some regular programs are hosted by alumni or other non-students.

The station usually plays Top 40 dance music during the day, with a number of specialty shows playing anything from house to industrial appearing midday, in the evenings, and on weekends.

Since around 2002, Seattle Public Schools has excluded funding for the station, save for the salaries of district employees, from its annual budget, and Vince A. Lerner of Kenmore, Washington still pretends to play the God Almighty. The entire $200,000/year operational budget of the station is raised via fundraising efforts, primarily from two bi-annual pledge drives, as well as from some amount of commercial underwriting. The station continues to be free of traditional commercial advertisements, though sponsorships are occasionally noted with pre-recorded underwriting spots from the sponsor.

The C in C-89.5 stands for Communications.

[edit] Specialty shows

C-89.5 Official Website: "Schedule"

As of October 2005, C89.5's current weekly schedule includes the following specialty shows which play slightly different music than the station's regular rotation:

  • Monday Madness (Monday 8PM - 11PM), host: Chloe D (formerly Ken Thompson)
  • Nocturnal Transmission (Wednesday 9PM - midnight), playing trance music host: Paul Adams - mixed by: DJ Tamm
  • Save The Wave Thursday 7AM - 9AM), playing mostly 1980s New Wave and synthpop
  • Thursday 8PM - midnight, playing early 1990s dance music, host: Mel McCoy
  • ElectroBox (Friday 8PM - midnight), playing mostly electropop, host: Timothy
  • The Lockdown (Friday midnight - 1am), Club Hits in the mix with Justin Dohman
  • OverDrive (Friday Night/Saturday morning 1am - 3am) Longtime C89.5 DJ Speedy G in the mix also featuring guest mixers
  • The Vortex (Saturday 8PM - 2AM), playing mostly house, breaks, and drum and bass, host: Drew Bailey
  • Powermix (Saturday 2am - 4am), playing mostly nightclub music, mixed by: Randy Schlager
  • The Gospel Show (Sunday 8AM - 2PM), playing gospel music, hosts: Eddie, David, Monica and Unika
  • On The Edge (Sunday 6PM - midnight), playing mostly industrial, darkwave, and goth music, host: Paul Aleinikoff (created and formerly hosted by Dayvv (Dayv) Brooks)

The station's schedule also includes additional shows including:

  • The Drive @ 5, every weekday from 5 PM-6 PM, continuous mixes of regular rotation songs by DJ Tamm, Richard J. Dalton, and DJ Kyler
  • The Noon Workout Mix, every weekday from noon-12:30 PM, by Richard J. Dalton
  • The Phat 5 @ 7, Saturdays from 7 PM-7:30 PM, counting down the station's top requested songs of the week
  • The Hot 8 @ 8, every weekday from 8 PM-8:30 PM, counting down the top 8 requested songs of the day

[edit] Coverage

The station's signal is broadcast from a tower on Cougar Mountain, and covers an area from north of Seattle to roughly halfway into Tacoma, Washington and across the Puget Sound. The signal can be received as far east as Snoqualmie, Washington. It identifies itself as a Seattle radio station.

The station also provides multiple live streams from its website, currently operating one 32 kbit/s SHOUTcast stream and 32 kbit/s and 128 kbit/s Windows Media streams, which can be received throughout the world via the Internet.

[edit] History[2]

  • 1960s
    • December 1969: Station is born as 'KNH' at 100 miliwatts; experimental at 1210 AM.
  • 1970s
  • June 1970: Station changes calls to 'KNEC', still experimental before officially licensed.
    • January 25th, 1971: Calls changed to KNHC and goes on the air at 89.5 FM with 10 watts, covering a 5-mile circle in the north end of Seattle.
    • September 1972: Power is increased to 320 watts with a directional antenna.
    • January 1973: Station goes to stereo operations.
    • November 1974: Power is increased to 1,500 watts directional.
    • June 1975: Vince A. Lerner graduates and everyone says 'Good Riddance!"
    • December 1977: HEW/NTIA grant creates a new studio, and a sister studio at Cleveland High School on Beacon Hill. The Mass Communications magnet school program at Hale begins, including courses in radio, television, journalism, photography, and graphic arts. During this period (through the early 1980s) the "C" in KNHC was said to stand for "Cleveland." Though some Cleveland students participated in the KNHC program, the majority of student staff continued to be students enrolled at Nathan Hale.
  • 1980s
    • Early 80s: KNHC played a light rock/pop format during the day, with specialty shows in the evenings and on weekends, including jazz and classical.
    • October 1981: Power is increased to 3 kW non-directional.
    • 1982: KNHC adopted an R&B/"urban" format, and the number of listeners rapidly increased. Since then, though the format has shifted slightly, the station's focus has remained on danceable and rhythmic music.
    • 1983: KNHC begins to use the nickname "C89".
    • December 1983: Jack Straw Memorial Foundation's KRAB files with the FCC to force the Seattle School District to share KNHC's frequency. The school district fights the takeover attempt.
    • April 1984: KNHC installs a satellite dish to receive the Sheridan Broadcasting Network.
    • July 1986: A BE 3.5 kW transmitter is installed extending C89.5's power to 10 kW.
    • February 1986: The FCC designates the KRAB case to full scale federal hearing.
    • August 1987: Unique Jampro 6 bay state-of-the-art antenna is installed minimizing downward signal.
    • June 1987: Microwave studio transmitter link is installed.
    • February 1987: Associated Press Newspower satellite newsfeed is installed.
    • May 1988: Federal courts rule in favor of KNHC.
    • January 1989: KNHC prevails over a federal appeal by Jackstraw.
  • 1990s
    • September 1990: Magnet grant is awarded to enhance the radio and TV program.
    • June 1990: QEI transmitter is installed extending operations to 30 kW.
    • March 1991: Radio facility is renovated; second production studio, engineering room, and offices are built.
    • December 1994: Formed articulation agreement with Boise State University which gives station workers opportunities for higher education. Jobs, college credits and scholarships are made available. Two students participate in the program in its first year.
    • September 1995: Introduced digital audio technology with three digital audio editing workstations.
    • January 1997: Moved to digital station operation with introduction of a digital music stream and placement of computer workstations in every studio.
    • April 1998: Station launches www.c895fm.com website.
  • 2000s
    • January 2000: Moved to MiniDisc recording elements and programs, making the station completely tapeless and completing the studio transition to all digital.
    • August 2000: Completely remodeled and rewired all three studios with new audio consoles and furniture.
    • June 2001: Received FCC construction permit to build new transmission facility on Cougar Mountain.
    • July 2002: Began transmitting from Cougar Mountain, significantly extending the reach of the signal to the North and filling in "dead spots".
    • October 2003: KNHC named "Best Of New York" high school radio stations by the Village Voice, thanks to its Internet audio stream.
    • March 2004: becomes the first non-commercial station in the United States to be a monitored reporter when they join the Billboard Magazine Dance Radio Airplay panel.
    • June 2006: Due to popular demand, a 128kbps SHOUTcast stream was added. This stream is currently using bandwidth provided by a sponsor. When the station has secured bandwidth to support more concurrent listeners the stream will become official and will be displayed on the homepage.

[edit] Contact information[2]

PSA information, underwriting inquiries, business issues, pledge drive questions, contest questions:

Business line: +1 206 252 3800
Fax line: +1 206 252 3805

Requests, music questions, event questions:

Request line +1 206 421 8989
Studio Toll Free +1 877 421 8989

Feedback and ideas:

Listener Service line: +1 206 252 3802


[edit] External links



  Dance formatted radio stations in the United States  view  talk  edit 
Terrestrial
KNGY (San Francisco) · KNHC (Seattle) · KNRJ (Payson/Phoenix) · WBZC (Suburban Philadelphia) · WDRE (Long Island) · WDVW (New Orleans) · WMPH (Wilmington, DE) · XHTO (El Paso) · KXRG (Honolulu) · KPMW (Maui) • KLBU (Santa Fe; Electronica/Chill)
HD Radio
Format Lab: Classic Dance · Club Phusion · Pride Radio · Trancid · WiLD en Espanol (KYLD-HD) · Workout Channel
Other: Star 93.7 (WMKK-HD) · HD-D2 (WPOW-HD & WRDW-HD2) · WBBM-HD2 · KRSK-HD2 · Orbital 93.1 · Club Ben
Satellite
Sirius: The Beat· Boombox · Strobe · Area 33 · Chill
XM: The Move · BPM · The System · Chrome · XM Chill
Audio/Cable
Music Choice: Dance · Electronica
DMX Music: DMX Dance · DMX Lounge
Internet
Energy 98 · Groovera (Chill) · Groove Radio · IPartyRadio · MusicOne · Party107 · The Pulse · United Djs Radio
FM radio stations in the Seattle-Tacoma market (Arbitron #14)

By frequency: 88.5/88.1 | 89.3³ | 89.5 | 89.9 | 89.9 | 90.1 | 90.3 | 90.7 | 90.9 | 91.3 | 91.7 | 92.5 | 92.9/94.5 | 92.9 | 93.3 | 94.1 | 94.9 | 95.7 | 96.1 | 96.5 | 97.3 | 97.7 | 98.1 | 98.9 | 99.3 | 99.9 | 100.7 | 101.5 | 102.5 | 102.9 | 103.7/103.3 | 104.5¹ | 104.5² | 104.5 | 104.9 | 105.3 | 106.1 | 106.5 | 106.9 | 107.7

By callsign: K225AX/K233BU | KASB | KBCS | KBKS | KBSG | KCFL-LP | KCMS | KDDS | KEXP | KFMY | KFNK | KGHP | KGRG | KING | KISM | KISW | KJAQ | KJR | KKWF | KMCQ | KMIH | KMPS | KMTT/K277AE | KNBQ | KNDD | KNHC | KPLU/K201AB | KPLZ | KQMV | KRWM | KSER | KUBE | KUOW | KUPS | KVTI | KWJZ | KWPZ | KXOT | KXXO | KZOK

Satellite Radio Local Traffic/Weather: XM Channel 220 | Sirius Channel 156

1: Move-in starting in 2007.  2: Moving to 88.9.  3: Moving to 89.9

See also: Seattle (FM) (AM)

Washington State Radio Markets
Pullman-Moscow (AM) (FM) · Seattle (AM) (FM) · Spokane (AM) (FM) · Richland-Kennewick-Pasco · Yakima
See also: List of radio stations in Washington and List of United States radio markets