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Green Bay Packers

in Here is your first Forum Tue Jun 24, 2014 1:42 pm
by haiyouwo22 • 5 Posts

What radio personalities are presently featured on KMOX Radio


St. Louis, Missouri For many of my generation, KMOX radio was the "Voice of St. Louis." It was one of the first 100,000 watt AM powerhouses in the area. For many years it was where most of us got our news in the car


on the way to work and then again on the way home. They didn't play a whole lot of music on KMOX, but when they did, it was usually in some historical context.


It was the home of the Cardinal's broad casts for many years. A lot of us were shocked when the Cardinals moved to a weak little radio station in Webster Groves, 55 AM. Now all the people in outstate Missouri who used to be able to sit by their radio on a clear evening and listen NFL Jerseys 2014 to the baseball game would be unable to do so anymore. It made a lot of people upset and even though it has been several years now, there still are calls for the games to be put back on KMOX.


During all those years of baseball broadcasts the station groomed such notables as Mike Shannon, Jack Buck, Harry Carey, and Bob Costas. They all got their start there and in the case of Harry Carey, Jack Buck, and Bob Costas, they went on to bigger and better things. As for Mike Shannon, he still broadcasts the cardinals games, but of course, not with KMOX anymore.


Things at the radio station took a different turn with the death of owner Bob Hyland. He was definitely old school. While all of the other radio stations in St. Louis were changing formats like most people change underwear, he stayed with the talk format and in terms of listeners and ratings, KMOX stayed number one. No one messed with KMOX radio in St. Louis.


But then Bob died and after that long time morning personality Jack Carny soon followed. Jack's son had a stint in his place, and so did Jack Buck's son Joe Buck, but it just didn't seem the same after Jack Buck died as well. I can't tell you how many nights that I sat by the radio waiting for that famous phrase of Harry Carey's "Way Back! It could be, it might be, it is! A home run."


KMOX (1120 AM, "NewsRadio 1120") is a radio station broadcasting from St. Louis, Missouri. KMOX operates as "NewsRadio 1120" and refers to itself as "The Voice of St. Louis."


KMOX is affiliated with the CBS Radio Network and licensed to a CBS Corporation subsidiary, CBS Radio. KMOX's transmitter is located in Pontoon Beach, cheap jerseys Illinois. The KMOX AM Studio is located directly across the street from the Gateway Arch.


For many years, KMOX broadcast using C QUAM AM stereo, but stereo transmissions ended in the spring of 2000. The station now broadcasts an HD Radio signal.


KMOX, along with WSDZ are responsible for the activation of the Greater St. Louis Inc. According to the station's official website, the "KMOX" call letters were assigned by the Federal Radio Commission. The station's owners had hoped to be assigned "K V S L", for "Voice of St. Louis" They were assigned KMOX, but in a last ditch effort they applied for "K M O", but the letters Cheap Nike NFL Jerseys were in use at the time by a small station on Wholesale Nike NFL Jerseys the west coast. KMOX signed on December 24, 1925. (The "X" was because the date was Christmas Eve, or "X"mas eve. Although a local legend states the call letters mean Kirkwood, Missouri On Xmas, the K was the assigned first call letter of all new radio stations west of the Mississippi River.


In 1927, the station gave prominent coverage to the Charles Lindbergh flight across the Atlantic, in the Spirit of St. Louis. That same year, it became cheap nfl jerseys one of the first 16 stations in the CBS network[1]; two years later CBS bought KMOX, and began the process of getting approval to build a 50,000 watt transmitter tower; when completed, it gave the now clear channel station a signal that could be heard as far away as New Zealand and the Arctic Circle, making it one of the first international radio stations.


In 1933, KMOX covered the first post Prohibition case of Budweiser beer leaving Anheuser Busch for the White House, a story carried nationally by CBS.


During the 1930s and 1940s, KMOX was one of several St. Louis stations broadcasting Cardinals and Browns baseball games. KMOX lost broadcasting rights in 1948 when a new Cardinals radio network was formed by the team, but by the 1950s, it became the flagship station of that network (in part due to its clear channel status).


During the 1950s, the station's slogan was "k mocks", pronouncing the way the station's call letters are spelled.


In 1955 Robert Hyland Jr became KMOX's general manager, a role he held for nearly forty years. It was Hyland who emphasized and leveraged KMOX's relationship with the Cardinals; he also made the decision in 1960 to eliminate the station's afternoon music programming in favor of talk radio, a critical change which led to the station's subsequent dominance of the St. Louis radio market. On February 29 of that year, Jack Buck hosted the first "At Your Service" program, which included an interview with Eleanor Roosevelt. That program, like the sports talk programs that soon followed, pioneered a format for radio heavily dependent on interviews, guest appearances, and calls from listeners.

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