City | Norman, Oklahoma |
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Broadcast area | Oklahoma City Metroplex |
Branding | KGOU |
Slogan | "Your NPR Source" |
Frequency | 106.3 MHz |
First air date | 1970 as KGOU |
Format | NPR News/Talk/Jazz music/Blues music |
ERP | 6,000 watts |
HAAT | 88 meters (289 ft) |
Class | A |
Facility ID | 69369 |
Callsign meaning | OU is the abbreviation for the University of Oklahoma |
Owner | University of Oklahoma |
Webcast | http://kgou.org/listen-live |
Website | http://www.kgou.org |
KGOU is a National Public Radio member News/Talk/Jazz music/Blues music radio station serving the Oklahoma City area and is owned by the University of Oklahoma. It is operated by OU's College of Continuing Education (OU Outreach), with studios in Copeland Hall on the OU campus.
The station operates three full-power satellites: KROU (105.7 FM) in Spencer, KWOU (88.1 FM) in Woodward and KOUA (91.9 FM) in Ada, Oklahoma. It also operates translators K276ET (103.1 FM) in Seminole, K250AU (97.9 FM) in Ada, K295BL (106.9 FM) in Chickasha and K286BZ (105.1 FM) in Shawnee.
KGOU was originally licensed as a commercial rock music station to the University of Oklahoma in 1970, broadcasting at 106.3 FM. OU applied for a non-commercial Class A license and switched the station's format to NPR news and talk on New Year's Day, 1983. The studios were originally located in Kaufman Hall on the OU campus.
The station's repeater network began more or less out of necessity. KGOU's signal was spotty at best in most of Oklahoma City because it had to protect what is now KTUZ-FM at nearby 106.7. To solve this problem, OU won a construction permit for a repeater station that would better cover the northern suburbs. This repeater station, KROU, officially signed on June 28, 1993. It was the first in a network of repeater stations that cover much of central and northwestern Oklahoma.
KGOU's format is primarily news/talk on weekdays, with jazz, blues, and world music programs on weekends, broadcasting programs from NPR, PRI and other public radio networks alongside locally produced news and music programming.
KGOU renovated space in Copeland Hall on the OU campus in 2006 and moved its broadcasting studios that fall.