The station signed on the air on January 23, 1961. It was originally owned by E. O. Smith and used the call sign KZON. It switched to a
Regional Mexican format, becoming KRDS in 1963. The station operated as "Cards Country" with a
country music format prior to adopting a
talk radio format in the early 1970s. It changed to a
Christian radio format in 1975, featuring religious talk and music. It was simulcast on KRDS-FM 105.3 Wickenburg in the 1990s. That station is now
KHOV-FM. In 1997, the station changed its call sign to KMYL. KMYL aired the "
Music of Your Life"
adult standards format, and later changed to "NBC 1190", as a variety talk station (later an infomercial and
brokered talk station) which ran
NBC Radio News at the top of the hour.
La Buena Onda The format was changed in August 2005 when the station was acquired by a startup group, New Radio Venture, which brought a Spanish-language news/talk format targeting the large Spanish-speaking immigrant population in the Phoenix area. At the same time, NRV bought a Denver station, which it christened
KNRV, and gave it an identical format. The newly renamed KNUV became known as "La Buena Onda" (The Good Wave). At the peak of the first Buena Onda era, KNUV had Lily Antonini Latina reporter with breaking news every half an hour and with live reports and interviews. The station also was the English-language radio home of the
Phoenix Mercury of the WNBA. On November 9, 2007, KNUV protested the police description of the "Chandler Rapist" as a "Hispanic," claiming it amounts to racial profiling. The man, believed to be responsible for six attacks on teenage girls starting in June 2006 was described as Hispanic, 28 to 40 years old, 5 feet 6 inches tall, muscular, with a mustache and black hair. Radio station 1190AM was the first hispánic news media to promote and follow up the story. KNUV and KNRV signed off on July 31, 2008. The station was shut down due to "a faltering economy, ongoing crackdowns on undocumented immigrants and a tough market for Spanish talk radio".
Progressive talk format After being silent for two months, KNUV began simulcasting crosstown station
KPHX on October 9, 2008. KPHX's progressive talk radio programming, consisting of programming from
Nova M Radio and
Air America Radio, was moved to KNUV in January 2009 as Nova M's licensing agreement with KPHX came to an end. KNUV assumed the flagship station designation for Nova M, which later became On Second Thought before ceasing operations entirely by the spring of 2009. KPHX adopted
The Lounge Sound music radio format at that time, which itself lasted only until July 2009, when KPHX returned to the progressive talk format, with significant involvement from Dr. Mike Newcomb, a key player in that format on each of the stations on which it has been broadcast in the Phoenix market dating back to 2004.
Spanish radio returns According to the
Phoenix New Times paper KNUV's doors were padlocked shut on March 2, 2009. On the morning of March 5, 2009, KNUV stopped broadcasting progressive talk and switched back to a Spanish-language format later that afternoon. In April 2009, the station went off the air due to station owner New Radio Venture's bankruptcy. On July 13, 2009, the station returned to the air again, airing paid programming in Spanish and news programming from Mexico at other times. KNUV currently airs a limited selection of local programming during the daytime and
Radio Fórmula programs from Mexico at night. ==References==