KNIT

KNIT

Infobox Radio station
name = KNIT


city = Dallas, Texas
area = Dallas/Fort Worth Metroplex
branding = "ESPN Deportes 1480"
slogan =
airdate = January 25, 1953 as KGKO
frequency = 1480 kHz
format = Spanish language Sports
power = 5,000 watts (day)
1,900 watts (night)
class = B
callsign_meaning =
former_callsigns = KGKO (1953-1958)
KBOX (1958-1982)
KMEZ (1982-1989)
KDBN (1989-1991)
KCMZ (1991-1993)
KMRT (1993-1998)
KDXX (1998-2002)
KHCK (2002-2005)
owner = James Crystal Radio
(operated by The Walt Disney Company)
licensee = JCE Licenses, LLC
webcast = [http://espn-mp3-od.andomedia.com/espnpod2/espndeportes/asx/espndeportes.asx ESPN Deportes Live Feed]
website =
affiliations = ESPN Deportes Radio
sister_stations = KESN, KMKI

KNIT (1480 AM) is a Spanish language sports/talk radio station that serves the Dallas-Fort Worth Metroplex as an ESPN Deportes affiliate. It operates on AM frequency 1480 kHz and is operated and managed by ESPN, but owned by JCE Licenses, Inc (James Crystal Radio in Florida) under a Local marketing agreement.

History

Wonderful K-Box

The station now known as KNIT signed on as KGKO in 1953, playing pop music and jazz. In 1958, KGKO changed calls to KBOX and adopted a Top 40 format to compete with Gordon McLendon's top-rated 1190 KLIF. Future WABC staple Dan Ingram was an early voice on KBOX. Within a year, the station, known variously as "Wonderful K-Box in Dallas," "Big Top Radio," and "Tiger Radio," had rocketed from the bottom of the ratings to a near-tie with KLIF, and remained highly rated through the coming decade. K-Box was also notable for being the only radio station covering President John F. Kennedy's motorcade live when he was assassinated on November 22, 1963 (although KLIF was widely acclaimed for its later coverage of the President's death and the ensuing events, it was not broadcasting live from the motorcade route).

Group One Broadcasting of Texas acquired KBOX from Balaban Broadcasting in 1967 for $2 million dollars.

KBOX Goes Country

KBOX had never been able to defeat KLIF in the Top 40 arena, and so on January 24, 1967, KBOX changed direction and went to a country format. The first song played on the new country KBOX was "I've Got a Tiger By the Tail" by Buck Owens (a nod to the station's former "Tiger Radio" moniker).

KPCN-730 AM was the first country station in the area, having started in 1962, but broadcasted during the daytime only. KBOX quickly became the ratings leader for country music in Dallas. In its first ratings book, they moved from a 10.0 share Q3 1966 to a 12.1 share in Q1 1967.

KBOX-AM had six years of solid ratings, posting a high of 14.4 in the Q3 1967 book. In 1972, WBAP-AM began giving them stiff competition as a country-formatted 50 kilowatt powerhouse. WBAP gained listeners from KBOX.

In the year 1973, the Arbitron markets for Dallas and Fort Worth were combined into one book, to reflect the merging of the two cities into one metropolitan area. KBOX like other smaller stations were hurt by this redefinition. Some like KBOX did not even appear in the new ratings book. WBAP-AM became the clear country winner at that point, as KBOX barely reached the Ft. Worth half of the newly defined market.

In 1976, Group One applied for a nighttime power increase from 500 watts to 1 kilowatt. The Federal Communications Commission approved it. This gave them a less marginal signal, which is probably what allowed them to struggle into the 1980s providing a decidedly more local service to the Dallas area. But by 1980, FM radio was growing in dominance and their ability to compete with a music format was waning.

On November 14, 1982, the KBOX call letters were dropped by Group One. KBOX became KMEZ and switched from its country format to a simulcast of the easy listening format of sister station KMEZ-FM (the former KBOX-FM and KTLC).

Into the 1990s and 2000s: More Changes

In 1989, KMEZ-AM broke away from the FM station to adopt a Business News/Talk format as KDBN. This was followed in 1991 by satellite-fed Adult Standards from the Unistar radio network (later Westwood One) as KCMZ.

Marcos Rodriguez purchased the station and changed the format to Banda with call sign KMRT (1993-1998). Marcos Rodriguez picked the calls to connote the retailer K-Mart and imply good value for advertisers. KMRT was first in America to air Banda with an automated Audio Server delivery.

Eventually the calls changed to KDXX (1998-2002), and KHCK-AM (1998-2005), a simulcast of Tejano KHCK-FM "Kick FM" until the FM changed format to cumbia music and the AM continued as a standalone Tejano station for a few months). The current KNIT calls and a Southern Gospel format were adopted in March 2005 when it was briefly owned by Salem Communications.

KNIT Today

In June 2007, the station joined the Spanish language sports network ESPN Deportes, and the station is managed and operated by ESPN. [http://www.hispanicbusiness.com/news/newsbyid.asp?id=69117]

Former Logos

External links

* [http://stations.espn.go.com/stations/espn1033/story?id=deportes ESPN Deportes 1480 - Information from 103.3 ESPN]
*AMQ|KNIT
*AML|KNIT
*AMARB|KNIT
*Geolinks-US-buildingscale|32.66167|-96.65556
* [http://www.knus99.com/kbox1480.html Mike Shannon's Tribute to KBOX and KGKO Radio]
* [http://www.dfwradioarchives.com DFW Radio Archives]



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  • knit — [nıt] v present participle knitting [I and T] [: Old English; Origin: cnyttan] 1.) past tense and past participle knitted to make clothing out of wool, using two ↑knitting needles →↑crochet ▪ My grandmother taught me how to knit. ▪ She s knitting …   Dictionary of contemporary English

  • knit — [ nıt ] (past tense and past participle knit or knit|ted) verb ** 1. ) intransitive or transitive to make something such as a piece of clothing using wool and sticks called knitting needles: She reads and knits to pass the time. knit someone… …   Usage of the words and phrases in modern English

  • Knit — (n[i^]t), v. t. [imp. & p. p. {Knit} or {Knitted}; p. pr. & vb. n. {Knitting}.] [OE. knitten, knutten, As. cnyttan, fr. cnotta knot; akin to Icel. kn[=y]ta, Sw. knyta, Dan. knytte. See {Knot}.] 1. To form into a knot, or into knots; to tie… …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • Knit — (n[i^]t), v. t. [imp. & p. p. {Knit} or {Knitted}; p. pr. & vb. n. {Knitting}.] [OE. knitten, knutten, As. cnyttan, fr. cnotta knot; akin to Icel. kn[=y]ta, Sw. knyta, Dan. knytte. See {Knot}.] 1. To form into a knot, or into knots; to tie… …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • Knit — Knit, people, knit! Saltar a navegación, búsqueda Knit, people, knit! Episodio de Gilmore Girls Episodio nº Temporada 7 Episodio 9 Escrito por David Grae Dirigido por Lee Shallat Chemel …   Wikipedia Español

  • knit — nit vb, knit or knit·ted; knit·ting vt to cause to grow together <time and rest will knit a fractured bone> vi to grow together <fractures in old bones knit slowly> …   Medical dictionary

  • Knit — Knit, v. i. 1. To form a fabric by interlacing yarn or thread; to weave by making knots or loops. [1913 Webster] 2. To be united closely; to grow together; as, broken bones will in time knit and become sound. [1913 Webster] {To knit up}, to wind… …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • knit — The past tense and past participle form of the verb in its main meaning is knitted (a knitted scarf). In figurative meanings, knitted and knit are both used (She knit/knitted her brows / a close knit group) …   Modern English usage

  • knit — [nit] vt. knitted or knit, knitting [ME knitten < OE cnyttan (akin to Ger knütten, to tie (fishing) nets) < base of cnotta, KNOT1] 1. to make (cloth or a garment) by interconnecting loops of yarn or thread in rows of stitches by means of a… …   English World dictionary

  • Knit — Knit, n. Union knitting; texture. Shak. [1913 Webster] …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • knit — ► VERB (knitting; past and past part. knitted or (especially in sense 3) knit) 1) make by interlocking loops of yarn with knitting needles or on a machine. 2) make (a plain stitch) in knitting. 3) unite or join together. 4) tighten (one s… …   English terms dictionary

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