City | Port Hueneme, California |
---|---|
Broadcast area |
Ventura County, California Santa Barbara County, California Los Angeles County, California |
Frequency | 1520 kHz 96.3 MHz K242CW (Oxnard, CA) |
First air date | 1958 (as KACY) |
Format | Variety |
Power | 10,000 watts 24/7 |
Class | B |
Facility ID | 25091 |
Transmitter coordinates | 34°10′2.00″N 119°8′2.00″W / 34.1672222°N 119.1338889°W |
Former callsigns | KYNE (1957-1958, not used on air) KACY (1958-1984) KTRO (1984-1999) KVTA (1999-2013) KUNX (2013-2015) |
Owner | Gold Coast Broadcasting LLC |
Sister stations | KCAQ, KFYV, KOCP, KUNX, KVTA |
Website | www.goldcoastbroadcasting.com |
KKZZ (1520 AM kHz) is an AM is a Variety radio station licensed to Port Hueneme, in Ventura County, California. The station is owned by Gold Coast Broadcasting LLC. The Station runs Automated with No Jocks or Ads expect for its Legal ID Heard at the top of the hour Beside Oldies and Classic Hits KKZZ 1520AM Plays Classical, Old School, Classic Rock, etc
During the 1960s and '70s, the station was known by the call letters KACY. It was a top-40 format station that used the slogan "Boss of the Beach." It was the dominant Top-40 station in the region, often co-sponsoring concerts (most in Santa Barbara) with local promoter Jim Salzer. Several KACY disc jockeys went on to greater prominence in their subsequent careers, including TV host Bob Eubanks and radio programmer Bill Tanner. Shotgun Tom Kelly was also heard on KACY in the early '70s, before moving to major markets like San Diego (appearing on KGB, KCBQ) and Los Angeles (where he is currently heard on KRTH).
During its KACY era, the station increased daytime power to 50,000 watts. More recently, the daytime power was rolled back to the previous 10,000 watts. The nighttime power remains unchanged at 1,000 watts.
The station has been operating at reduced power since 2011 under Special Temporary Authority (STA) from the FCC due to engineering problems; on April 15 of that year the station discovered one of the monitoring points for their antenna system had gone over the limit prescribed in their license, and they reduced nighttime power to 648 watts while they investigated the cause. However, before they could discover and correct the problem, a farmer plowing on land adjacent to the KVTA transmitter site mistakenly crossed a boundary and tore up at least half of the ground wiring for one of the three towers used for KVTA's daytime antenna pattern. This required them to reduce daytime power to 4,600 watts and nighttime power further, to 136 watts. As of January 8, 2013, they had not completed repairs and requested an extension of the STA.
From 1984 until 1999, the station had a Spanish-language format as "Radio Tiro" under the call letters KTRO. During that period, instead of jingles, the sound effect of a pistol firing was used out of commercial breaks into music ("tiro" being the Spanish word for "bullet").