Its Transmitter is on Vashon Island
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KVI (570 AM) is a commercial radio station in Seattle, Washington, known as "News Talk 570 KVI." Owned by Lotus Communications, it airs a conservative talk radio format. The studios and offices are located with former sister station KOMO-TV at KOMO Plaza (formerly Fisher Plaza) in Seattle. KVI is powered at 5,000 watts, using a non-directional antenna, giving it a signal that extends from the U.S.-Canada border to Olympia. Its transmitter is on Vashon Island, located roughly halfway between Seattle and Tacoma. On weekdays, KVI airs both local and nationally syndicated shows. Local hosts include John Carlson (Commute with Carlson) and Ari Hoffman. National programs include Markley, VanCamp and Robbins (whose show is syndicated from the WMBD studios in Peoria), The Dana Loesch Show and Red Eye Radio. Two versions of "The Lars Larson Show" are heard, one for the Northwest at noon and a national show at 2 a.m. Weekends feature shows on money, health and cars, some of which are paid brokered programming.
Syndicated weekend shows include Sunday Night Live with Bill Cunningham and Somewhere in Time with Art Bell. Most hours begin with an update from iHeartMedia's 24/7 News. KVI's history can be traced back to November 24, 1926; 98 years ago (November 24, 1926). It signed on the air on 1280 kilocycles and was licensed to Tacoma. By the spring of 1928 its frequency shifted to 1060 AM, followed by another shift to 760 AM in the fall. By September 1932, it had moved to its permanent home at 570 AM. It was powered at 1,000 watts and was owned by the Puget Sound Broadcasting Company. During the "Golden Age of Radio," KVI was a network affiliate of CBS, carrying its schedule of dramas, comedies, news, sports, game shows, soap operas and big band broadcasts. It also carried programs from the Don Lee Network. In 1949, KVI relocated its city of license to Seattle and got a boost to 5,000 watts.
KVI broadcast from a single tower on Vashon Island and it moved its studios into the Camlin Hotel in Downtown Seattle. With its arrival in Seattle, it shifted its network to the Mutual Broadcasting System, since KIRO was already the CBS affiliate in Seattle. In 1959, Gene Autry's Golden West Broadcasters added KVI to its portfolio. KVI switched to an adult contemporary format in 1964. By 1973, KVI had evolved into a full service, middle of the road (MOR) direction. It was during this period that it became established as a dominant player in the market. In 1976, KVI acquired an FM radio station, KETO at 101.5 MHz. Under Golden West, the new KVI-FM became a successful Adult Top 40 station, now known as KPLZ-FM. With the beginning of the 1980s, music listening on AM radio was shifting to FM and KVI added several talk shows. On July 23, 1984, KVI switched to oldies.
That direction would last less than a decade, and by 1992, KVI had a fulltime talk radio format. At first, the station used the slogan "the balanced alternative" with a line up alternating liberal and conservative talk hosts, but by 1993, KVI dropped all its liberal hosts except Mike Siegel. Siegel, formerly a liberal, swung right in his views during this period and remained on the station. The other slots were filled by a line up of both local and nationally syndicated conservatives. By May 1994, the year KVI and KPLZ were sold to Fisher Communications, KVI had an almost entirely conservative-talk format. KVI returned to a full service format at 4 p.m. November 7, 2010, with a mix of oldies and recent hits, news and traffic updates. Due to the failure of the format, which only garnered an average of a 0.5 share of the market, KVI began stunting with Christmas music on Thanksgiving Day, Supraketo Keto Pills Keto 2011. On January 3, 2012, the station flipped back to talk, this time as "Smart Talk," with an emphasis on entertainment reports, lifestyle and health info, and local news.
Programs included "Sunrise Seattle", a Good Morning America-type program hosted by Mark Christopher and Elisa Jaffe, Don Imus, Clark Howard, Phil Hendrie, "The Buzz" with Scott Carty, the "Daily Wrap from the Wall Street Journal" with Michael Castner, ConsumerMan with Herb Weisbaum, as well as paid brokered programming on weekends. After only nine months, the "Smart Talk" format was dropped on September 4, 2012 in favor of a return to conservative talk. On April 11, 2013, Fisher announced that it would sell its properties, including KVI and KOMO-TV, Supraketo Official to the Sinclair Broadcast Group. The price for all the stations was $373.3 million. Although nearly all of Sinclair's broadcast properties are television stations, the company initially retained KVI, KPLZ-FM, KOMO and KOMO-FM. On June 3, 2021, Sinclair announced they would sell KVI, KPLZ and KOMO-AM-FM to Lotus Communications for Supraketo Official $18 million. Licensing and Management System. Sports Page" Commercial". YouTube. KVI to switch to oldies format next week Archived 2010-11-03 at the Wayback Machine. Payne, Patti (August 28, 2012). "KVI makes a right turn - back to conservative talk". Puget Sound Business Journal. Malone, Michael (April 11, 2013). "Sinclair to Acquire Fisher Stations Supraketo for Ketosis $373 Million". Sharrow, Ryan (April 11, 2013). "Sinclair Broadcast to acquire Fisher Communications for $373.3M". Allison, Melissa (April 11, 2013). "KOMO owner Fisher Communications agrees to sale". Venta, Lance (September 28, 2021). "Lotus Closes On Purchase Of Sinclair's Seattle Radio Properties".
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