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KSJB

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This is the current revision of this page, as edited by Rodw (talk | contribs) at 18:00, 14 November 2024 (Disambiguating links to KFYR (link changed to KFYR (AM)) using DisamAssist.). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this version.

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KSJB
Frequency600 kHz
BrandingKSJB 600
Programming
FormatCommercial; Classic country
AffiliationsCBS News Radio
Ownership
OwnerChesterman Communications
KSJZ
History
First air date
1937
Technical information[1]
Licensing authority
FCC
Facility ID10778
ClassB
Power5,000 watts unlimited
Transmitter coordinates
46°49′3″N 98°42′34″W / 46.81750°N 98.70944°W / 46.81750; -98.70944
Translator(s)100.1 K261FC (Jamestown)
Links
Public license information
WebcastListen Live
Websiteksjbam.com

KSJB (600 AM) is a radio station based in Jamestown in the U.S. state of North Dakota.

Broadcasting with 5,000 watts of power and a directional pattern that drives the signal from northeast to southwest, the station boasts that it can be heard clearly in six states and two Canadian provinces. KSJB can be heard with a clear "city-grade" signal in cities such as Valley City, Bismarck, Fargo, Grand Forks, & Minot, North Dakota; Pierre, South Dakota; Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada; and Bemidji, Minnesota.

Both KSJB and KSJZ broadcast from studios at the Buffalo Mall. They share a transmitter site south of Jamestown, on Highway 281.

Programming

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When they signed on in 1937, they featured local programs and news, with standard middle of the road music formatting. Beginning in 1963, KSJB programmed a "Top 40” format, competing directly with Bismarck's KFYR/550 located 100 miles to the west, which also featured a popular music format. In the 1960s the station became heavily involved with various promotions, including publishing and distributing a weekly Top 40 handout and sponsoring numerous concerts. Several of those concerts featured Count Basie's Orchestra, who station owner at that time Ed Crilly often played with on various cruise ships in the early 1970s. After extensive research, in 1973 the decision was made to change the format to country-western, and the change was made over the Easter weekend, without fanfare, or prior notice to the listeners or the announcing staff. Given the station's extensive reach, it continued to focus on music and programming for truck drivers and farmers, with a schedule heavy with farm market reports and agribusiness information. Currently KSJB broadcasts classic country music, local news, hundreds of local and regional Class A and Class B football and basketball games, and specialty programming on weekends.

History

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KSJB first signed on the air March 14, 1937. It operated under the callsign KRMC with a power of 250 watts daytime and 100 watts at night on 1310 kHz. The call letters KRMC came from the company name at the time: Roberts, MacNab Co. (Arthur L. Roberts, R.B. MacNab and A.J. Breitbach, general manager.) The studios were at the Gladstone Hotel downtown, and the transmitter and tower was on the south edge of Jamestown. A few years later, the station moved to their current frequency of 600 kHz, but the power was still 250 watts daytime and 100 watts at night. Later the station was purchased by John W. Boler, who changed the callsign to KSJB in 1943. Finally in 1947, KSJB began its operation as a 5,000-watt directional station, with the transmitter and triple towers located along highway 281 about 6 miles south of Jamestown. Both are still located there, and in the fall of 2014, all three towers and original infrastructure was replaced at a cost of $900,000. The company's FM station, KSJZ "MIX 93.3" (originally KSJM), an adult contemporary radio station, went on the air in 1967.

In 1948, KSJB "established auxiliary studios and control facilities in Fargo."[2] Studios and offices were added in Aberdeen, South Dakota in the 1960s as well, but none of those exist today.

Former logo

References

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  1. ^ "Facility Technical Data for KSJB". Licensing and Management System. Federal Communications Commission.
  2. ^ "KSJB Expands" (PDF). Broadcasting. November 1, 1948. Retrieved 30 January 2015.
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