KMST (FM) explained

Above:Simulcast of KWMU St. Louis
KMST
City:Rolla, Missouri
Format:Public radio
Erp:100,000 watts
Haat:146 meters
Class:C1
Facility Id:69041
Licensing Authority:FCC
Callsign Meaning:K Missouri University of
Science and
Technology
Former Callsigns:KMSM (1964–1974)
KUMR (1974–2007)
Affiliations:National Public Radio
Owner:University of Missouri–St. Louis
Licensee:The Curators of the University of Missouri
Sister Stations:KWMU
Webcast:Listen Live
Website:www.kmst.org

KMST is a radio station licensed to Rolla, Missouri, and operated by the University of Missouri at St. Louis as an extension of St. Louis Public Radio. The station broadcasts at 88.5 MHz FM with an effective radiated power of 100,000 watts, making it the most powerful public radio station in south-central Missouri.

Historically, the station's programming has consisted of several genres of music such as classical and jazz as well as several popular National Public Radio programs such as All Things Considered, A Prairie Home Companion, Car Talk, and Michael Feldman's Whad'Ya Know? show. The station originated a weekly science talk show, titled We're Science, which was syndicated nationwide for several years in the mid-1990s.

The station originally broadcast under the call letters KUMR, from the abbreviation of the station's home, the University of Missouri–Rolla, through 2006. On January 1, 2008, the University of Missouri–Rolla changed its name to Missouri University of Science and Technology.[1] As a result, the station's original call sign, KUMR, was changed to KMST on July 16, 2007, as a reflection of the university's forthcoming name change.[2]

Until 2017, KMST broadcast from studios in the basement of the Curtis Laws Wilson library on the UMR/Missouri S&T campus. Effective July 1, 2017, the station (including its Lebanon translator) was transferred to the University of Missouri-St. Louis and became part of the St. Louis Public Radio network, airing the same broadcast as the St. Louis frequency.[3] The only local programming retained through the changeover was Wayne Bledsoe's Bluegrass for a Saturday Night, a local staple for many decades,[4] which continued until Bledsoe's August 2017 retirement.[5] Missouri S&T opted to end KMST's local operations after the University of Missouri system suffered a massive budget cut that led school officials to conclude KMST was no longer part of the school's "academic core."[6]

KMST was also heard in Lebanon, Missouri via translator K242AN on 96.3 MHz FM, until the translator went silent in August 2020; its license was cancelled by the Federal Communications Commission on March 28, 2022.

See also

External links

37.7989°N -91.7246°W

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Curators approve UMR name change. news.mst.edu . Missouri S&T Office of Public Relations . April 6, 2007 . 2009-01-14 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20090817044925/http://news.mst.edu/2007/04/curators_approve_umr_name_chan.html . August 17, 2009 .
  2. News: KUMR to become KMST . July 6, 2007 . 2018-02-08 . Missouri University of Science and Technology .
  3. Web site: KMST 88.5. stlpublicradio.org. 2017-08-01.
  4. News: Bluegrass for a Saturday Night. 2017-08-01. en. dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20170802005428/http://kmst.org/programs/bluegrass-saturday-night#stream/0. August 2, 2017. KMST.
  5. News: Bledsoe to host last broadcast of Bluegrass for a Saturday Night . August 22, 2017 . 2018-02-08 . Dawn . Fels . St. Louis Public Radio .
  6. News: University budget crisis prompts St. Louis Public Radio takeover of station . Tyler . Falk . June 16, 2017 . 2018-02-08 . Current . American University School of Communication .