Early years The station began as KOB, first licensed by the federal government on April 5, 1922. However, the person most responsible for its founding, Ralph Willis Goddard, by this time already had extensive experience with radio. Goddard was the dean of the Engineering School at New Mexico College Of Agriculture And Mechanic Arts (now
New Mexico State University). It was located in State College, New Mexico, near
Las Cruces. Goddard headed the school's Radio Club, and in the spring of 1920, arranged for the university to be issued a license for an experimental radio station, which was issued the call sign 5XD. In addition to experimental work, this station was used for such things as reporting sport scores. Eventually the station expanded from its initial
Morse code transmissions to audio programs, including entertainment broadcasts. Initially, there were no formal standards for radio stations making broadcasts intended for the general public. However, effective December 1, 1921, the
United States Department of Commerce, which supervised radio at this time, issued a regulation requiring that stations making broadcasts intended for the general public now had to operate under a "Limited Commercial" license. On April 5, 1922, the university was issued a broadcasting station license with the randomly assigned call letters KOB. The 1928 passage of the
Davis Amendment required an equitable assignment of radio facilities within 5 regions of the United States. Effective November 11, 1928, as part of a major reassignment of stations under the
Federal Radio Commission's
General Order 40, KOB was assigned to 1180 kHz, one of Region 5's high-powered "clear channel" frequencies. Although this allowed unlimited operation during daylight hours, nighttime hours were shared with
KEX in Portland, Oregon, with KOB receiving 1/3rd of the after-sunset hours, and KEX assigned the rest. On December 31, 1929, while preparing the transmitter for a New Year's Eve broadcast, Goddard was instantly killed when he came into contact with high voltage equipment. In 1932, the station reduced its power from 20 to 10 kilowatts due to transmitter issues.
Albuquerque Journal ownership In 1932, the university arranged for KOB to be leased by the
Albuquerque Journal, which later purchased the station. KOB's last State College broadcast was on April 24, and it resumed broadcasting that fall in Albuquerque. KOB was an
NBC Red Network affiliate, carrying its schedule of dramas, comedies, news, sports, soap operas, game shows, and
big band broadcasts during the "
Golden Age of Radio". In 1940, KOB's timesharing partner, KEX, moved to 1160 kHz, which allowed KOB to expand its nighttime operating hours to unlimited. In March 1941, a nationwide frequency reassignment took place with the implementation of the
North American Regional Broadcasting Agreement (NARBA). Initially, KOB was assigned to 1030 kHz.
WBZ in Boston, Massachusetts, was the primary station assigned to 1030 kHz; moreover, it employed a directional antenna that strengthened its signal toward the west. The resulting excessive nighttime interference between WBZ and KOB caused the FCC to reassign KOB to 770 kHz. However, WJZ (now
WABC) in New York City was also assigned to 770 kHz, and this led to a series of legal battles between the two stations over nighttime coverage that would last for decades. In 1948, Tom Pepperday, owner and publisher of the
Journal, signed on
KOB-TV, the first television station between the
Mississippi River and the
West Coast. The stations were acquired by
Time Life in 1952. In 1957, they were sold to
Hubbard Broadcasting, Inc. On August 1, 1967, KOB-FM (now
KOBQ) first
signed on. At first, it
simulcast KOB, but soon began its own format of
beautiful music, and in the 1980s, switched to
adult contemporary music.
Separation of KOB radio and KOB-TV Hubbard Broadcasting sold KOB AM and FM to Southwest Radio in 1986. At the time, FCC regulations stated that stations could not share call signs if they were not co-owned, so with Hubbard keeping the TV station as KOB-TV, Southwest had to find new call letters for the radio stations. To continue trading on the well-known KOB calls and their 64-year legacy in the state, a leading "K" was appended, becoming KKOB and KKOB-FM on October 28. Despite their separate ownership, KKOB still has a news partnership with KOB-TV. In 1994, KKOB AM and FM were sold to
Citadel Broadcasting for $7.8 million. In 2011, Citadel was acquired by the station's current owner, Cumulus Media. Under Cumulus ownership, some shows syndicated by
Premiere Networks were dropped, such as
Coast-to-Coast AM and
Sean Hannity, because Premiere is owned by Cumulus rival
iHeartMedia. KKOB switched to mostly airing programs syndicated by Cumulus Media's
Westwood One subsidiary, only retaining one Premiere Networks weekday show,
Rush Limbaugh until his death in 2021.
Dan Bongino took over the midday time slot previously held by Limbaugh on all Cumulus stations on May 24, 2021. On September 1, 2016, KKOB began simulcasting its programming over translator station K233CG (94.5 FM) in
Sandia, which Cumulus purchased for $425,000.
Legal dispute with WABC Beginning in 1941, KOB was involved in a 38-year-long dispute over the use of the 770 kHz frequency with New York City station
WABC (originally WJZ), a
Class I-A clear-channel station. In 1978, the FCC noted that "No other station assignment among the thousands so far established has approached this one in the length, complexity, and thoroughness of the consideration that has been accorded in adjudicatory and rulemaking proceedings before the Commission, and in repeated judicial reviews." In March 1941, with the implementation of the
North American Regional Broadcasting Agreement (NARBA), most of the original "clear channel" stations were reassigned to comparable authorizations. The FCC attempted to give KOB an assignment that would allow it to use high power to serve a large area of the underserved southwestern United States. KOB's initial 1941 NARBA assignment was for operation on 1030 kHz. However, another high-powered station,
WBZ in
Boston, Massachusetts, was also assigned to this frequency; moreover, WBZ employed a directional antenna that strengthened its signal westward. The resulting nighttime interference between WBZ and KOB caused the FCC, beginning later in 1941, to reassign KOB to 770 kHz with the first of a series of temporary Special Service Authorizations. The joint assignment of KOB and WABC to 770 kHz still resulted in interference over large areas of the middle of the country. The FCC later concluded that KOB and WABC should have equal status on 770 kHz as "Class I-B" stations, with both required to protect the nighttime coverage of the other station, and ordered that KOB and WJZ both install directional antennas. KOB constructed the required nighttime directional antenna, but WABC refused to comply, appealing the order in the courts. WABC's challenge was successful, primarily on the grounds that downgrading its coverage left its ABC network at a disadvantage compared to the other two national networks' New York City stations, CBS's
WCBS and NBC's
WNBC, which were non-directional operations. The FCC then reclassified KOB as a "Class II-A" station, and its directional antenna was modified to further reduce its signal toward WABC.
Hot air balloon accidents On October 10, 2004, a
Smokey Bear special shape hot air balloon participating in the
Albuquerque International Balloon Fiesta collided with and became entangled in one of KKOB's transmitter towers. The three passengers were able to climb out of the basket onto the tower. However, the tower was energized and could have led to electrocution once the passengers set foot on ground, so KKOB shut down its transmitter following the accident to enable them to climb down to safety. This accident was recorded by several local television stations, and the footage has become a standard story on a number of televised reality programs which deal with "caught on camera" incidents. On October 11, 2024, a hot air balloon participating in the Albuquerque International Balloon Fiesta hit the north tower and caused it to collapse. The balloon was able to land safely and no injuries were reported. ==Awards==