Supriya Ghosh (Editor)

KDOK

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
City
  
Kilgore, Texas

Branding
  
All Hit Radio 1240

First air date
  
1936 (as KOCA)

Broadcast area
  
Longview-Marshall area

Frequency
  
1240 kHz

Translator(s)
  
101.9 K270AW (Longview) 105.3 K287AJ (Kilgore) 107.9 K300CX (Henderson)

KDOK (1240 AM, "All Hit Radio") is a radio station licensed to Kilgore, Texas, United States, the station serves the Longview-Marshall area. 1240 in Kilgore, Texas is the third oldest station in East Texas behind KYZS 1490 Tyler, Texas (1930), and KFRO 1370 Longview, Texas (1935).

Contents

History

Licensed in 1936 as KOCA (which stood for Kilgore Oil Capital of America) had a long and rich history of serving the Kilgore community.

1240 became KTXC on February 9, 1987.

On September 15, 1988, the station changed its call sign to KKTX (to reflect its FM sister station 96.1 KKTX-FM and to begin a simulcast with them). The simulcast would stop during local football games as KKTX and KKTX-FM ran separate games.

Then again on October 19, 1999 the station changed call letters to KBGE.

On May 7, 2009, the KKTX-FM 96.1 FM simulcast ended when the station started syndicating Scott Shannon's "The True Oldies Channel and picking up the KDOK call sign dropped by 92.1 KTBB-FM in Tyler, Texas.

As of February 24, 2011, KDOK has dropped Scott Shannon's True Oldies Channel and it began stunting with Michael Jackson's "Beat It" on repeat. On February 28, 2011 KDOK changed their format to classic hip hop, branded as "The Beat".

On January 31, 2013, the station was purchased by Chalk Hill Communications, LLC, who owns KZQX-FM (QX-FM). For a brief stunting period, it became "Beatles 1240" while technical changes were implemented. At noon on February 4, the new "All Hit Radio - KDOK" was launched. It is locally produced and programmed, sharing studios with KZQX-FM.

KDOK Call Sign History

The original KDOK was on 1330 in Tyler, Texas and was licensed and founded by Mrs. Buford, of Buford Broadcasting, who also founded KLTV. In the 1970s 1330 dropped the KDOK call letters after years of being a top 40 format in favor of country, and changed call letters to KZAK. KZAK had legendary DJs Hoss Huggins and Sans Hawkins.

After 1330 dropped the KDOK call letters they went to 1490 in Tyler (which was the original KGKB licensed in 1930).

From 1490 the KDOK call letters went to 92.1 in Tyler (the former KROZ), where they lived for 15 years as an oldies station. In 2009 92.1 dropped the KDOK call letters to simulcast sister station KTBB 600 and became KTBB-FM.

2009 is when 1240 became KDOK.

References

KDOK Wikipedia


Similar Topics