KETR
City of license | Commerce, Texas |
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Slogan | "Your Station" |
Frequency | 88.9 (MHz) |
First air date | April 8th, 1975 |
Format | Public radio |
ERP | 100,000 Watts |
HAAT | 116 meters |
Class | C1 |
Transmitter coordinates | 33°14′17″N 95°55′27″W / 33.23806°N 95.92417°W |
Callsign meaning | East Texas Radio |
Affiliations | National Public Radio, American Public Media, Associated Press |
Owner |
Texas A&M University-Commerce (The Texas A&M University Board of Regents) |
Website | http://www.ketr.org/ |
KETR (88.9 FM), is a professionally staffed 100 kW non-commercial broadcast operation in Commerce, Texas, licensed in 1975 to East Texas State University, now Texas A&M University-Commerce.
KETR provides local and national news and information as well as music and entertainment to a potential and approximate 200,000 homes in Northeast Texas. Anchor programs include Morning Edition and All Things Considered from National Public Radio, and A Prairie Home Companion from American Public Media. KETR also produces original long-form and short-form radio programming (i.e.: Notably Texan, The Bluegrass Special, The Lead.)
KETR serves a threefold purpose: To serve the needs of those who live in and travel through Northeast Texas, to provide a professional broadcast atmosphere and workplace for students interested in the field of broadcast, and to act as a marketing tool for Texas A&M University-Commerce.[citation needed]
History
The history of KETR began in the early 1970s as the director of the East Texas State University radio-television program, Dr. David Rigney, developed an FCC application for an FM station that would be a teaching-laboratory for students. By the time KETR actually went on the air, April 7, 1975, Dr. Rigney had moved on. The station operated in a former classroom on the first floor of the Journalism Building, with Phil Wayne Ebensberger, a veteran Texas commercial radio broadcaster, as general manager and morning show host.
KETR weekday programming originally emphasized local news, information and middle-of-the-road music from early-morning sign-on to early afternoon; classical music in the early afternoon (this was soon replaced by jazz); National Public Radio’s All Things Considered in the late afternoon; various public affairs programs in the early evening, including live broadcasts of Commerce City Commission meetings; and “Freeform,” a student-hosted rock music program from 9 p.m. to midnight. Weekend programs predominantly featured classical music or opera, such as the long-running “Texaco Metropolitan Opera” broadcasts.
Early on, KETR emphasized local news. A half-hour local and regional news program, “ATC (All Things Considered) Commerce” started in the fall of 1975, and produced the first of the station’s many Texas Associated Press Broadcasters and Texas Association of Broadcasters awards for local news and public affairs programming in 1976.
KETR sports programming also began in the fall of 1975, with student-produced broadcasts of Commerce Tigers football, and Ebensberger and former ET All-American quarterback (and then ETSU Security chief) Sam McCord as the voices of ET Lions football. The first Commerce Tigers broadcast featured the Tigers playing at Honey Grove, with future NFL quarterback Wade Wilson leading the Commerce offense. The first ET broadcast was the Lions’ 42-10 win over Prairie View A&M in the Cotton Bowl. KETR also broadcast Commerce Tigers basketball for many years, and, of course, ET basketball, continuing to this day. With Ebensberger behind the mic, KETR followed the Lions to NAIA basketball tournament appearances in Kansas City in 1977 and 1978.
In 1977, the station moved from its cramped quarters in the Journalism Building, to new studios in the Performing Arts Center, where it shared facilities with the Radio-TV program. KETR remained in the Performing Arts Center until it moved to new facilities in Binnion Hall in 2008.
In the early 1980s, after Ebensberger departed, general manager Bill Oellermann obtained FCC approval and a grant to raise KETR’s tower height and to increase power from about 7,500 watts to 100,000 watts. This increased the station’s broadcast range from about 20 miles to 75 miles.
In 1982, the station adopted a format of adult contemporary music in the daytime hours, abandoning jazz in the afternoon hours. This eventually evolved into the station’s identity as “The Mint,” playing oldies rock. Around the same time, Mark Chapman began hosting the weeknight “Art of Sound” jazz program, which continued until 2008. “The Art of Sound” was replaced by “Notably Texan,” hosted by Matt Meinke, who started “Notably Texan” as a weekend program several years earlier.
Also in the early ’80s, KETR began its long-running Sunday night bluegrass program, first with volunteer Dave Heath, and later, until August 26th, 2012, Dr. W. R. "Railroad Bill" Ogden.
After moving away from National Public Radio programming in the mid-1980s, KETR has recently rejoined NPR and once again features “All Things Considered” and “Morning Edition,” among other NPR programs. KETR was one of the original stations carrying “Morning Edition” when it debuted in 1979.
In recent years, under the guidance of general manager Jerrod Knight, KETR has conducted several highly successful membership drives and has aggressively moved in the direction of online and digital programming, with KETR.org and a new digital transmitter, which offers the opportunity to begin HD Radio broadcasts in the future.
External links
- Query the FCC's FM station database for KETR
- Radio-Locator information on KETR
- Query Nielsen Audio's FM station database for KETR
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