KMYR and KDEN The station was launched by Frederick W. Meyer, a wholesale grocer, in 1940 as
KMYR. (The
call sign represented Meyer's name.) It originally
signed on with 250
watts of power. The station's sale in 1956 brought a call letter change to
KDEN. For a time in the 1970s and 80s, KDEN aired an
all-news radio format. At first it used
NBC Radio's "News and Information Service" (NIS). When that was discontinued, KDEN remained an NBC News
network affiliate but it had its own schedule of local anchors delivering the news.
Radio AAHS In December 1993, after an eight-month period off the air, 1340 AM became
KKYD "
Radio AAHS", the Denver outlet of the first nationwide network of
radio programs for children. The downfall of Radio AAHS came when the
Walt Disney Company established a competitor,
Radio Disney. After the sign-off of Radio AAHS in January 1998, Children's Broadcasting Corporation needed programming for its owned & operated former AAHS stations until it could find buyers for them. KKYD, along with the other nine CBC stations, became an outlet for "
Beat Radio", which broadcast electronic dance music 12 hours a night.
Colorado Public Radio This lasted until late October 1998. KKYD then switched to a
Catholic radio format, which it aired until sale from the Catholic Radio Network to
Colorado Public Radio. The announcement of CPR's purchase February 9, 2001, also mentioned plans to convert the station from commercial to non-commercial status. In September 2000, CPR acquired the intellectual properties of then-classical station KVOD
AM 1280, as that station was switching to another format. In March 2001, Colorado Public Radio put the
classical music programming of KVOD on 90.1 FM, with
KCFR's News/Talk/
NPR programming moved to 1340 AM. On July 9, 2008, KCFR moved back to 90.1 FM, with KVOD moving to the newly acquired
88.1 FM frequency. The changes were made as CPR wanted to go FM-only by the end of the year. Until a buyer could be found for 1340, CPR continued to operate it as a
simulcast of 90.1 KCFR. On October 31, 2011, CPR launched "OpenAir" on 1340 AM, billing it "New Music from Colorado Public Radio." It has a broad-based format that focuses on current independent artists with a great deal of current Colorado talent. OpenAir also streams online at www.openaircpr.org. With the change, new
KVOQ call letters were adopted.
Sports radio On July 24, 2015, Colorado Public Radio announced that it would swap KVOQ to Victor Michael's Cedar Cove Broadcasting, Inc. in exchange for
KRKY-FM. Michael also forgave $100,000 in debt as part of the swap. On July 27, 2015, KVOQ changed its format to
all-sports, branded as "Mile High Sports". The previous OpenAir format is now heard on
KVOQ 102.3. On August 28, 2015, the station changed its call sign to the current
KDCO. Effective January 20, 2016, Cedar Cove Broadcasting traded KDCO to Kona Coast Radio, LLC, in exchange for
translator stations K214DW and K206EO. Kona Coast Radio is also owned by Victor Michael. On April 28, 2016, KDCO began simulcasting on FM translator K284CI 104.7 FM Denver. Effective August 22, 2017, Victor Michael sold KDCO and translators K225BS and K284CI to 4-K's LLLP for $464,000. Effective November 25, 2020, 4-K's LLLP sold the K284CI translator to Rocky Mountain Public Media for $680,000, at which point it began rebroadcasting
KUVO. The AM station was simultaneously sold separately for $420,000 to El Sembrador Ministries, owner of the
ESNE Radio network of Spanish-language Catholic radio stations with ESNE programming beginning on December 8. ==References==