City of license | Reedsport, Oregon |
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Branding | K-dune |
Frequency | 1030 kHz |
First air date | June 2, 1961 |
Format | Oldies |
Power | 50,000 watts (day) 630 watts (night) |
Class | B |
Facility ID | 33779 |
Callsign meaning | "Dune" |
Former callsigns | KRAF (1961-1970)[1] KDUN (1970-1997) KLLU (1997-2002)[2] |
Former frequencies | 1470 kHz (1961-1998) |
Owner | Sand & Sea Broadcasting, LLC |
Website | kdune.com |
KDUN (1030 AM, "K-dune") is a radio station licensed to serve Reedsport, Oregon, USA. The station, which began broadcasting in June 1961, is currently owned by Sand & Sea Broadcasting, LLC.
KDUN broadcasts an oldies music format.[3]
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Oregon Coast Broadcasters was granted the initial construction permit by the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) in 1960 for a new daytime-only AM station, assigned call letters KRAF, broadcasting with 5,000 watts of power on a frequency of 1470 kHz.[4] KRAF began regular broadcasting on June 2, 1961, with Walter J. Kraus as the president and owner of Oregon Coast Broadcasters and Gless Connoy as the station's general manager.[5] The KRAF callsign represented the "Reedsport and Florence" coverage area of the station.[6] The station was marketed with the slogan, "Listening is heavenly on 1470".[6]
In 1966, Gless Connoy purchased the station outright from Kraus.[7] Wayne A. Moreland bought KRAF from the Connoy family on July 1, 1968.[8]
Moreland's ownership of KRAF would prove short-lived as Steve and Jerome Kenagy's Communications Broadcasting, Inc., acquired the station on September 1, 1970.[1] The new owners implemented a "middle of the road" music format and had the FCC change the station's call letters to KDUN.[1] The Kenagy brothers shifted ownership of KDUN in March 1972 to a new company named KDUN Radio, Inc.[9] The brothers maintained the "middle of the road" music format through the rest of the 1970s.[9]
In March 1982, the station applied to the FCC for authorization to change their broadcast frequency from 1470 kHz to 1030 kHz, increase daytime signal power to 10,000 watts, and make some technical changes in their antenna system.[10] The FCC finally granted the station a construction permit to make these changes on May 7, 1987.[10] KDUN began broadcasting at the lower frequency and higher power in February 1998 and received their license to cover the upgrades on April 18, 1998.[11]
In April 1982, the Kenagy brothers applied to the FCC to transfer ownership of KDUN Radio, Inc., to their now-larger software company, Custom Business System, Inc. The transfer was approved by the FCC on April 23, 1982.[12] In November 1985, CBSI announced that it was selling KDUN Radio, Inc., to Lyle and Eleanor A. Irons so that it could focus on the traffic and billing business.[13] The deal was approved by the FCC on February 11, 1986, and the transaction was consummated on April 23, 1986.[14]
After a quarter-century of continuous corporate ownership, KDUN Radio, Inc., reached an agreement in June 1997 to sell this station to Shae Partners, LLC. The deal was approved by the FCC on August 5, 1997, and the transaction was consummated on September 15, 1997.[15] The station's callsign was changed to KLLU on November 21, 1997.[2]
In July 1999, Shae Partners, LLC, reached an agreement to sell this station to the F & L Broadcast Development Corporation for $200,000.[16] The deal was approved by the FCC on August 24, 1999, and the transaction was consummated on August 29, 1999.[17] Less than two weeks later, in early September 1999, F & L Broadcast Development Corporation reached an agreement to sell this station to Pamplin Communications Corporation subsidiary Pamplin Broadcasting-Oregon, Inc., for $350,000.[18] The deal was approved by the FCC on October 29, 1999, and the transaction was consummated on November 1, 1999.[19]
The station was granted a new construction permit in August 2000, this time to increase the daytime signal to 50,000 watts and the nighttime signal to 630 watts.[20] KLLU began broadcasting at the higher power in March 2001 and the station received its license to cover the changes on June 18, 2001.[21] The station was re-assigned its heritage KDUN call letters by the Federal Communications Commission on September 25, 2002.[2]
In January 2006, Pamplin Broadcasting-Oregon, Inc., CEO Robert Boisseau Pamplin Jr. reached an agreement to sell this station to Bill Schweitzer, doing business as WKS Broadcasting, Inc., for a cash price of $220,000.[22][23] The deal was approved by the FCC on June 5, 2006, and the transaction was consummated on August 29, 2006.[24] At the time of the sale, KDUN was broadcasting a country music format.[22]
KDUN went temporarily silent on November 27, 2007, when the station's owners were unable to pay their electricity bill due to "financial problems with its operations".[25] According to their April 2008 filing with the FCC, new owners for KDUN were being sought.[25]
In May 2008, WKS Broadcasting, Inc., reached an agreement to sell this station to Sand & Sea Broadcasting, LLC, for a reported cash price of $135,000.[26] The deal was approved by the FCC on June 23, 2008, and the transaction was consummated on August 6, 2008.[27] At the time of the sale, the station's most recent format had been news/talk radio.[26]
Delilah Rene, a native of Reedsport, Oregon, and host of a nationally-syndicated American radio show featuring song requests and dedications, got her first job in radio at KDUN in the mid-1970s after winning a speech contest.[28][29][30] While still attending junior high school, she reported local news and sports as the host of "Delilah, On the Warpath".[28][29] In 2007, Rene was a finalist for the Radio & Records Industry Achievement Award as Syndicated Personality/Show of the Year.[31]
In 1975, KDUN's owners were frustrated by the volume of paperwork then required for scheduling advertising, billing advertisers, and producing each day's commercial lineup, they purchased a Wang Laboratories minicomputer and, along with engineer Wes Lockard, invented software to handle these traffic and billing tasks.[32] As the brothers took on these tasks for other stations in the area, they realized that a market for computerized traffic and billing existed and, in 1978, they founded Custom Business Systems, Inc.[32] At its peak in the mid-1990s, CBSI software was in use by roughly one-third of the commercial radio stations in the United States and by broadcasters in 24 other countries.[32] In 1999, it was described as the "world's largest supplier of business software for the radio broadcast industry".[13] CBSI and the Kenagy brothers sold their interest in KDUN in 1985. CBSI itself is now a part of Marketron Broadcast Solutions.
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