KOMY

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KOMY
City of license La Selva Beach, California
Broadcast area Santa Cruz area
Branding Good Time Oldies
Frequency 1340 kHz
Format Oldies
Audience share 0.4, #38 (Fa'07, R&R[1])
ERP 1000 watts day, 850 watts night
Class C
Facility ID 22694
Transmitter Coordinates 36°57′43.00″N 121°58′51.00″W / 36.9619444, -121.9808333
Affiliations AP Radio, Jones Satellite Network
Owner Zwerling Broadcasting System, Ltd
Webcast Listen Live
Website ksco.com

KOMY (1340 AM) is a radio station broadcasting an oldies format. Licensed to La Selva Beach, California, USA, the station serves the Santa Cruz area. The station is currently owned by Zwerling Broadcasting System, Ltd and features programing from AP Radio.[2] KOMY was originally licensed to Watsonville, CA for many years. Damage occurred to KOMY's original transmitter site as a result of the October 17, 1989 Loma Prieta earthquake, and subsequently, new owners moved the facilities to the Santa Cruz area.

KOMY is owned by the Zwerling family and originates from sister-station KSCO's 1080 AM's facilities. KOMY was acquired shortly after the Zwerlings acquired KSCO on January 31, 1991.

In the Fall of 2005, following different music and other programming over the years, KOMY began airing a progressive talk format, becoming an Air America Radio affiliate. Thus, KOMY was considered the "liberal version" of sister-station KSCO, which primarily aired conservative programming.

On June 28, 2006, KOMY dropped The Majority Report with Janeane Garofalo. According to station owner Michael Zwerling, this decision was because the show had failed to gain a single advertiser during the year that it was on the station. After three consecutive Arbitron zero ratings periods between January and November in 2006, KOMY would change formats in January 2007.


[edit] Format Change

On Thursday, January 25, 2007, at 10 a.m., KOMY 1340 dropped the progressive talk format and went to a 1950s/1960s 'oldies' format. For nearly two months, beginning on January 25, the original Oldies programming broadcast on the air by KOMY was fed via the Bay Area Radio Museum's Internet audio server, with custom "Komy 1340" PAMS jingles that were freshly recorded for the station.

On March 20, 2007, KOMY began 'stunting,' using construction sound effects and promoting roughly every four minutes that KOMY would return with a better signal and programming. Two days later, KOMY adopted the Jones Satellite Network's oldies format, which continues to this day.

The format is a return to the roots of KOMY 1340, a popular Top-40 station back in the 1960s - and was very briefly the home of radio legend Robert W. Morgan early in his career.

[edit] References

  1. ^ "Santa Cruz Market Ratings", Radio and Records. 
  2. ^ KOMY Facility Record. United States Federal Communications Commission, audio division.

[edit] External links