The Early years Albert John Williams obtained the construction permit for a new daytime-only radio station on 1460 kHz in Inglewood on August 1, 1957. The station signed on February 14, 1958, airing a format of popular and semi-classical music; the same day,
KTYM-FM 103.9 debuted as a simulcast. It had a policy of no back-to-back commercials.
KTYM-FM 103.9 was known for its programming for the
Black community in southern California at night. The station increased its power to 5,000 watts directional in 1962, having been approved for the upgrade the year before. In 1963, the AM station added several foreign-language programs. At the end of 1963, Williams transferred the KTYM stations to the Trans America Broadcasting Corporation, wholly owned by Williams. By 1964, while other Los Angeles stations were being accused of racial bias in hiring, KTYM-AM-FM was cited as just one of five racially integrated radio stations in the region.
Anti-Semitism inquiry In June 1966, the
Federal Communications Commission renewed the license of KTYM by a 5–1 vote. The decision was contentious because, although KTYM had a good record on racial integration, the
Anti-Defamation League (ADL) objected to two airings of the program "Richard Cotten's Conservative Viewpoint" in October 1964 and May 1965. The ADL claimed that these shows linked
Jews to
communism and included personal attacks on the ADL itself. However, the commissioners said that, despite their "strongest personal feelings" against the content of the programs, they could not intervene in the matter without becoming "the censor of broadcasting" and they cited that KTYM had offered the ADL airtime under the
Fairness Doctrine. The decision was decried by local labor groups and Jewish organizations. The ADL appealed the case to the
Supreme Court of the United States, which declined to take it up in 1969. That same year, Williams bought Fresno television station
KAIL-TV for $236,500.
Sale to Avant Garde Broadcasting In 1971 Williams reached a deal to sell KTYM-FM to the Black-owned Avant Garde Broadcasting, headed by
Clarence Avant. He spent much of the decade starting up
KDWN, a 50,000-watt AM station in
Las Vegas. The station was approved for 500 watts at night in 1979. Personalities who hosted programs on KTYM included
Stewart Alexander and
Earl Ofari Hutchinson. Williams died in 2005.
Sale to Immaculate Heart Radio By the 2010s, KTYM primarily aired a mix of religious talk shows and paid programming. On March 17, 2014, Trans America reached a deal to sell KTYM to IHR Educational Broadcasting, operator of the
Immaculate Heart Radio network, potentially expanding the latter's reach into Los Angeles. However, the KTYM purchase was put on hold, and on July 22,
2014, Immaculate Heart Radio announced the purchase of Spanish-language
KHJ, which switched formats to Catholic religious programming.
Sale to ESNE In March 2015, the sale of KTYM to Immaculate Heart Radio was finally approved by the FCC, but six months later, KTYM was instead sold to
ESNE Radio, a Spanish-language
Catholic radio network based in the United States, owned by El Sembrador Ministries, with headquarters in
Chatsworth, California. ESNE broadcasts on 14 stations in the United States, Mexico, and Spain. KTYM broadcasts primarily to the Black community in the English language. Since 2016 it has been available as KTYM Media, a 24/7 internet streaming radio and video service, playing
Christian preaching,
Gospel music,
R&B,
Jazz, inspirational
talk shows, and educational, historical, and cultural programs in addition to its faith-based programming. ==References==