KDSP

For the Kurdish political party, see Kurdistan Democratic Solution Party.
KDSP
City of license Greenwood Village, Colorado
Broadcast area Denver, Colorado
Branding 102.3 FM Open Air Radio
Slogan "New Music From Colorado Public Radio"
Frequency 102.3 MHz
Repeaters 96.9 K245AD (Arvada)
102.3 KDSP-FM2 (Boulder)
First air date 1996 (as KAGM)
Format Public; Adult album alternative
Language(s) English
ERP 1,000 watts
HAAT 238 meters
Class A
Facility ID 37028
Transmitter coordinates 39°43′59″N 105°14′10″W / 39.73306°N 105.23611°WCoordinates: 39°43′59″N 105°14′10″W / 39.73306°N 105.23611°W
Callsign meaning Denver SPorts (former branding)
Former callsigns KAGM (1992-2005)
KJEB (3/2005-11/2005)
KCUV-FM (2005-2006)
KCUV (2006-2010)
Affiliations NPR
Owner Colorado Public Radio
Website Open Air at 102.3

KDSP (102.3 FM) is a non-commercial radio station located in Denver, Colorado, at 102.3 FM and broadcasts a Public radio format under the ownership of Colorado Public Radio.

Station History

KCUV (as the station was previously known) originally began on 1510 AM, and moved to the 102.3 FM signal in 2005, replacing the former KAGM (licensed to Strasburg, Colorado) that aired a contemporary country format for many years. The station's city of license was moved to the Denver suburb of Greenwood Village.

KCUV featured a very large and diverse playlist, including a mix of rhythm and blues, classic rock, folk, alternative, modern rock, and blues and soul. The station's lineup included "KCUV's Live From Ebbets Field," a concert show featuring live, intimate performances from the best bands performing at Chuck Morris' Ebbets Field concert club in downtown Denver. KCUV also periodically had CD releases of "Live From Ebbets Field" performances in cooperation with Chuck Morris and Listen Up, with proceeds going to the Morgan Adams Foundation.

On September 1, 2008 at 12:00 AM, KCUV ended broadcasting and became a simulcast of sister station KJAC (licensed to Timnath, Colorado), which aired the Jack FM-branded adult hits format (the first United States radio station to be so branded). The simulcast gave KJAC better coverage in the Denver area.

In the Summer of 2010, after KCUV and KJAC were purchased by Moreland Properties, LLC, from NRC Broadcasting, KCUV dropped the Jack FM simulcast and began stunting. The Denver Post revealed in a July 15, 2010 report that KCUV would be adopting an all-sports format under the new call sign of KDSP, which would make it the 4th all-sports station in the Denver market.[1] The format is scheduled to launch on July 26, 2010, and confirmed talent on the station include longtime KCNC and KEPN personalities Vic Lombardi and Gary Miller in an expected 7-9AM weekday slot.[2][3]

On July 26, 2010 The Denver Post is reporting that the sports format originally set to take place on KDSP will make a last minute switch to another Denver station at 87.7.[4]

On July 27, 2010 KDSP changed their format to ESPN Deportes Spanish sports.

In May 2010, the station was sold to Front Range Sports Network, LLC.[5] In June 2011, Front Range Sports sold translator K245AD (licensed to Arvada, Colorado) to media investor Chuck Lontine.

On March 31, 2011, KXDP-LP and KDSP switched formats and titles, with KXDP-LP becoming the ESPN Deportes affiliate and KDSP becoming 102.3 The Ticket. On January 1, 2012, KDSP became an ESPN Radio affiliate.[6]

On January 5, 2015, Colorado Public Radio acquired KDSP and converted it to non-commercial status as a simulcast of AM sister KVOQ's "Open Air" Adult Album Alternative format on January 27. Former sister station KJAC/Fort Collins continues to air the ESPN Radio format.[7]

Former Logo

References

  1. Saunders, Dusty (July 15, 2010). "Shakeup in Denver sports talk radio, FM dial has new station". The Denver Post.
  2. "Dealin' Doug Moreland talks about KDSP, new sports-talk station debuting next week", from Westword, 7/21/2010
  3. "Vic Lombardi on making the jump from ESPN Radio to the new KDSP", from Westword, 7/23/2010
  4. Dusty Saunders: New names, dial places for Denver's sports-talk radio
  5. "KDSP Ownership Record". United States Federal Communications Commission, audio division. Retrieved 2010-12-10.
  6. Denver Business Journal (March 27, 2011). "ESPN Radio switching from The Fan to The Ticket". Retrieved 2011-04-04.
  7. "Colorado Public Radio Acquires ESPN 102.3 Denver" from Radio Insight (January 5, 2015)

External links