KGRE (AM)
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KGRE (1450
kHz The hertz (symbol: Hz) is the unit of frequency in the International System of Units (SI), often described as being equivalent to one event (or cycle) per second. The hertz is an SI derived unit whose formal expression in terms of SI base uni ...
) is an AM
radio station Radio broadcasting is the broadcasting of audio (sound), sometimes with related metadata, by radio waves to radio receivers belonging to a public audience. In terrestrial radio broadcasting the radio waves are broadcast by a land-based rad ...
broadcasting a
Regional Mexican Regional Mexican music refers collectively to the regional subgenres of the country music of Mexico and its derivatives from the Southwestern United States. Each subgenre is representative of a certain region and its popularity also varies by ...
format. Licensed to
Greeley, Colorado Greeley is the home rule municipality city that is the county seat and the most populous municipality of Weld County, Colorado, United States. The city population was 108,795 at the 2020 United States census, an increase of 17.12% since the ...
, United States, it serves the Ft. Collins-Greeley area. The station is currently owned by Greeley Broadcasting Corporation.


History


KYOU

1450 went on the air as KYOU on August 24, 1948. Owned for 30 years by the Meroco Broadcasting Company, the station broadcast with 250 watts of power from a transmitter at 2424 6th Avenue. In 1961, KYOU relocated its transmitter outside of town and boosted its daytime power to 1,000 watts. ( Guide to reading History Cards) KYOU was primarily a full-service station with ABC and Intermountain Network news, while its sister station KGRE (92.3, later 92.5 FM), established in 1967, aired middle-of-the-road music. KYOU-KGRE was acquired by O'Kieffe Broadcasting, owned by Donald O'Malley and George Keiffer, in 1978 for $770,000.


The 1980s and 1990s: ownership carousel

The 1980s brought a series of changes to 1450 AM, beginning with a 1983 sale of 84 percent of the stations to Kenneth R. Greenwood for $310,000 in October 1983 that provided immediate cash relief to O'Kieffe. Four months later, Greenwood sold the pair to Oklahoma-based Swab-Fox Services. In May 1984, KGRE and KYOU switched call letters, with KYOU moving to the FM to project a more regional image while KGRE at 1450 AM remained focused on Greeley; the FM station is now
KKSE-FM KKSE-FM (92.5 MHz) is a commercial radio station licensed to Broomfield, Colorado, and serving the Denver metropolitan area and Northern Colorado. KKSE-FM airs a sports talk format branded as "Altitude Sports 92.5 FM." KKSE-FM has studios on ...
, since moved from Greeley to
Broomfield, Colorado Broomfield is a List of municipalities in Colorado#Consolidated city and county, consolidated city and county located in the United States, U.S. Colorado, state of Colorado. It has a consolidated government which operates under Article XX, Sect ...
. Later that year, however, the stations would change ownership again when Swab-Fox merged with the publisher of the ''
Tulsa Tribune The ''Tulsa Tribune'' was an afternoon daily newspaper published in Tulsa, Oklahoma from 1919 to 1992. Owned and run by three generations of the Jones family, the ''Tribune'' closed in 1992 after the termination of its joint operating agreement ...
'' newspaper. KGRE (and KYOU) had now flipped to separately programmed country formats. Ownership in KGRE changed yet again when Denver-based Surrey Broadcasting Company, trading as Surco of Northern Colorado, acquired KGRE and KYOU for $1.7 million in 1986. The new owners changed the call letters to KATR on August 10 of that year, though the station continued to play country music. Surrey sold the station in 1988—the fifth and final sale in the 1980s—to Robert and Marjorie Zellmer, this time without the former FM sister, for $230,000. KATR reclaimed the KGRE call letters on January 1, 1989. The Zellmers held onto KGRE until 1991, when it was sold to Keith M. Ashton for $275,000. The next year, Ashton thought he had found a buyer: Ross Fleischmann, a postal executive from Oklahoma City, who agreed to buy KGRE for $350,000, including the assumption of a loan Ashton had taken on to buy the station, in November 1992. With the sale awaiting closure, Fleischmann brought in general manager Paul Lowrey. However, the station began to lose money, and several months later, the deal collapsed, leading to the station and Ashton each declaring bankruptcy; in 1995, Ashton sued Fleischmann in Colorado court.
Hispanic Broadcasting Corporation Uforia Audio Network () is the radio broadcasting and music events division of TelevisaUnivision (United States), TelevisaUnivision USA. Formerly known as Hispanic Broadcasting Corporation and Univision Radio, it is the eighth-largest radio br ...
acquired the station for $170,000 in 1994, though Ashton remained on as the general manager of KGRE and the station's format remained in English, with oldies replacing country. However, by this point, KGRE was only operating 10 hours a day; it lost $5,000 to $10,000 a month, and its equipment included battered tape recorders, wobbly turntables and scratched records.


El Tigre

KGRE's ownership carousel, however, was about to come to an end. Ricardo Salazar, a radio consultant and DJ from Los Angeles who had previously been the Spanish-language radio voice of the
Los Angeles Raiders The Los Angeles Raiders were a professional American football team of the National Football League (NFL). The Raiders played in Los Angeles from 1982 to 1994 before relocating back to Oakland, California, where the team played from its inaugural ...
, was looking to start a broadcasting business of his own. He acquired KGRE for $150,000 in 1997, risking all of his savings and maxing out seven credit cards. Salazar described the station as a "minus five" on a one-to-ten scale when he acquired it. The station was reborn as
Regional Mexican Regional Mexican music refers collectively to the regional subgenres of the country music of Mexico and its derivatives from the Southwestern United States. Each subgenre is representative of a certain region and its popularity also varies by ...
outlet ''El Tigre'', and Salazar turned around its finances. It was profitable by the end of 1997; by 2006, station revenue surpassed $600,000 a year, thanks to an annual growth rate of 20 to 30 percent. Salazar expanded and bought additional stations in Colorado, including a second Tigre station for southern Colorado (
KFCS KFCS (1580 AM broadcasting, AM) is a radio station licensed to Colorado Springs, Colorado, United States. History KPIK went on the air in June 1957. It was owned by the Western Broadcasting Company, controlled by David Pinkston and Leroy Elmo ...
- KRYE) and an FM signal ( KGRE-FM 102.1, plus a translator on 102.1 that fixes KGRE's signal issues in Greeley proper, acquired in 2018). Ricardo Salazar died in 2018 at the age of 67; his daughter Lindsay continues to run KGRE.


References


External links


KGRE Tigre Radio
* {{Spanish Radio Stations in Colorado Mexican-American culture in Colorado Regional Mexican radio stations in the United States GRE Greeley, Colorado Mass media in Fort Collins, Colorado Radio stations established in 1948 GRE (AM)