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It takes pride in being an alternative to mainstream media and offers the public a forum for expressing points of view that otherwise may not be heard. As a community station, Radio Punjab strives to provide points of view that are rarely expressed in mainstream media. Radio Punjab provides the best music entertainment, live news from India, sports, religious programs along with open line talk shows (Interactive Broadcasting) which gives the audience a chance to voice their opinions on issues effecting the South Asian community. We are also available worldwide live 24 hours on Internet at Punjab studios are situated in Seattle WA, Fresno, Sacramento, Bakersfield, California, and Surrey B.C., Canada We are the only radio network covering the South Asian population since 1994 throughout USA and Canada. Radio Punjab is a 24-hour multilingual radio station. Retrieved June 29, 2015.Fresno AM 620, Sacramento AM 1210, Bakersfield AM 660, Seattle AM 1250, Tacoma Kent AM 1560, Dallas AM 890, San Francisco AM 1310,
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United States Federal Communications Commission, audio division. The sale was completed on September 25, 2015, at a purchase price of $800,000.
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It was approved by the FCC on August 26, 2015. On June 29, 2015, Radio Disney Sacramento filed an application to sell KIID to Punjabi American Media. However, will remain on the air and continue carrying Radio Disney programming until it is sold. Disney originally planned to temporarily shut down the station on September 26, 2014. On August 13, 2014, Disney put KIID and twenty-two other Radio Disney stations up for sale, in order to focus more on digital distribution of the Radio Disney network. This replacement allowed the licensee to petition for eliminating the requirement for painting and lighting the towers. All three towers were replaced by towers of shorter height. Towers 1 (center) and 2 (eastern) were destroyed. On July 15, 2009, two of the three radio towers KIID broadcasts from were destroyed due to a fire at the transmitter site. On April 15, 1997, the callsign was changed to KQPT on Jto KOME on Januto KRAK and finally on Februto the current KIID, along with the sale to The Walt Disney Company and switch to the Radio Disney format (after a period of simulcasting then-sister KNCI that began on October 16, 2000). The station changed to business news in 1988 and then returned to oldies in 1990 as "Cruisin 1470".Ĭhanges and sale to Radio Disney
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By 1980, KXOA had moved to oldies as "14K", and in 1982, it began broadcasting the Music of Your Life syndicated format. 1470 AM was sold back to KXOA-FM, Inc., in 1978, and regained its KXOA call letters as a result. In May 1970, KXOA changed its format to a blend of Adult Contemporary and Oldies, with the slogan of "Let the Sound Shine In." KXOA-AM-FM were sold to separate owners at the end of 1970, and while the FM station kept the call letters, the AM station, sold to Mediacast, Inc., had to change and became KNDE, changing its format to progressive rock. A young Don Imus was hired away from Stockton station KJOY in 1970 to do morning drive he quickly left for Cleveland's WGAR. In the late 1950s, KXOA switched to a Top 40 format, fiercely competing with KROY (1240 AM) once that station flipped to the format in 1960. Cal-Val Radio acquired KXOA in 1958 and increased the station's power to 5,000 watts during the day in 1960. Dellar sold the station in 1946 to Sacramento Broadcasters the new owners were approved to relocate the station to 1470 kHz with 1,000 watts in 1948. KXOA, Sacramento's fourth radio station, broadcast with 250 watts and was an affiliate of the Don Lee Network and Mutual Broadcasting System. Lincoln Dellar put KXOA on the air in 1945 at 1490 kHz, alongside an FM outlet at 107.9 MHz.