Well, the Trib did have greater circulation in the South Sound and KGY reception was good in Tacoma. Usually, KING 1090 was on the grid. That is unusual to see KJR listed. In most years, KJR was not part of the grid and KING was.
I find it interesting that 250-watt KGY earned a spot in the radio grid while 50 kW KING did not. I guess the TNT had enough circulation in Olympia to make this worthwhile? Can’t imagine many people in Tacoma listening when they could get the same Mutual programs loud and clear over KVI.
I see that KTAC radio is listed here as having been an “LBS” affiliate. Apparently that stood for Liberty Broadcasting System. Here is some information I found on Wikipedia about that network, which at one time was the second-largest in the nation.
The founder of that network, Gordon McClendon… wow, what a fascinating person who pioneered many radio formats, including top-40 and all-news, and who was eventually married to actress and TV host Susan Stafford. Here is more information on him:
Second only to Mutual, that’s huge. Mutual seemed to have an affiliate in every market and covered the smaller markets out there in the weeds.
It was Tom Read who used both the Liberty and Mutual Networks for branding his Eastern Washington stations KTRW (Spokane/Spokane Valley), KSPO (Dishman/Spokane), KTAC (Moses Lake, Ephrata, Othello), etc. Read still owns 6 stations currently.
January 11, 2022 at QZVX
Jason Remington says:
Well, the Trib did have greater circulation in the South Sound and KGY reception was good in Tacoma. Usually, KING 1090 was on the grid. That is unusual to see KJR listed. In most years, KJR was not part of the grid and KING was.
January 11, 2022 at QZVX
T.K. says:
KJR was still the ABC affiliate and KING was independent, so I can see why they would have made that decision.
January 11, 2022 at QZVX
Jason Remington says:
Great answer, makes perfect sense.
January 10, 2022 at QZVX
T.K. says:
I find it interesting that 250-watt KGY earned a spot in the radio grid while 50 kW KING did not. I guess the TNT had enough circulation in Olympia to make this worthwhile? Can’t imagine many people in Tacoma listening when they could get the same Mutual programs loud and clear over KVI.
January 10, 2022 at QZVX
John Fortmeyer says:
I see that KTAC radio is listed here as having been an “LBS” affiliate. Apparently that stood for Liberty Broadcasting System. Here is some information I found on Wikipedia about that network, which at one time was the second-largest in the nation.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Liberty_Broadcasting_System
The founder of that network, Gordon McClendon… wow, what a fascinating person who pioneered many radio formats, including top-40 and all-news, and who was eventually married to actress and TV host Susan Stafford. Here is more information on him:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gordon_McLendon
January 10, 2022 at QZVX
Jason Remington says:
Second only to Mutual, that’s huge. Mutual seemed to have an affiliate in every market and covered the smaller markets out there in the weeds.
It was Tom Read who used both the Liberty and Mutual Networks for branding his Eastern Washington stations KTRW (Spokane/Spokane Valley), KSPO (Dishman/Spokane), KTAC (Moses Lake, Ephrata, Othello), etc. Read still owns 6 stations currently.
January 10, 2022 at QZVX
Jason Remington says:
And it looks like KTAC made use of Liberty for Sports Scoreboard which covered 2-3 hours of their daily schedule. Early sports-talk radio? There had to be some play-by-play games in that schedule. KTAC also fed broadcasts to the network — https://qzvx.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/01/KTAC-feeds-Liberty-Network-The-Daffodil-Parade-The_Tacoma_News_Tribune_Fri__Apr_4__1952_-scaled.jpg (April 4, 1952)