KRYP explained

KRYP
City:Gladstone, Oregon
Area:Portland metropolitan area
Branding:El Rey (The King)
Frequency:93.1 MHz
Airdate:May 10, 1981 (as KAST-FM at 92.9 in Astoria)
January 2006 (as KTRO-FM at 93.1)
Format:Regional Mexican
Erp:1,600 watts
Class:C3
Licensing Authority:FCC
Facility Id:82062
Coordinates:45.4889°N -122.6944°W
Callsign Meaning:El ReY Portland
Former Callsigns:Astoria:
KAST-FM (1981–1983)
KBKN (1983–1984)
KAST-FM (1984–2006)
Gladstone:
KTRO-FM (2006–2007)
Former Frequencies:92.9 MHz (1981–2006, in Astoria, Oregon)
Owner:Salem Media Group
Licensee:Salem Media of Oregon, Inc.
Webcast:Listen Live
Website:931elrey.com

KRYP (93.1 MHz) is a commercial FM radio station licensed to Gladstone, Oregon, and serving the Portland metropolitan area. It is owned by the Salem Media Group and airs a Spanish language Regional Mexican format, a mix of genres including Banda, Ranchera, Mariachi, and Norteño music.[1] The studios are on SE Lake Road, off the Milwaukie Expressway (Oregon Route 224) in Portland.

KRYP is a Class C3 FM station, with an effective radiated power (ERP) of 1,600 watts. Its transmitter is atop Portland's West Hills.

History

KAST-FM

KRYP is a "move-in" station. It signed on the air on .[2] Its original call sign was KAST-FM and it broadcast on 92.9 MHz in Astoria, Oregon, about 90 miles (145 km) northwest of Portland. It was the FM sister station of KAST 1370 AM, one of Oregon's oldest radio stations. KAST-FM ran 25,000 watts, with too little power and too far away to be heard by the larger Portland audience.

In the early 2000s, the decision was made to ask the FCC to allow the station to move. If it could relocate to the Portland metropolitan area, that would be a lucrative change.

KTRO

KTRO came into existence through a complicated deal that involved five owners of radio stations in Oregon and featured both signal downgrades and frequency migrations.[3] It started in 2005 when Salem Communications bought the FM signal from New Northwest Broadcasters, which had operated it as KAST-FM on 92.9 in Astoria. To make room on the Portland dial, KPDQ-FM, also owned by Salem, moved from 93.7 to 93.9 and downgraded its broadcast station class from C to C1.[3] McKenzie River Broadcasting's KKNU, licensed to Springfield, moved from 93.1 to 93.3. Bay Cities Building's KDCQ, licensed to Coos Bay, moved from 93.5 to 92.9. Meanwhile, Oregon Eagle's KTIL-FM, licensed to Tillamook, moved from 94.1 to 94.3. New Northwest's own 94.3 licensed to Long Beach, Washington, picked up the KAST-FM call sign and format, moving from the original 92.9 to 99.7 FM.[3]

The relocated station began broadcasting in the Portland radio market in early 2006. From that point until April 11, 2007, the station was known as KTRO and it featured a talk radio format.[4] Most of the programming was provided by the Salem Radio Network, a conservative talk service featuring hosts such as Dennis Prager, Hugh Hewitt and Mike Gallagher.

KRYP

Salem management saw that the Hispanic community was growing in the Portland area. It decided KTRO's talk format could go on an AM station, leaving 93.1 FM to serve Spanish-speaking listeners with a music format targeted at them. (The Salem Radio Network's conservative talk programming is now heard on co-owned KPAM 860 AM.)

KTRO took on new call letters, KRYP, and a new radio format during the two-week period starting on March 28, 2007. It uses the moniker "El Rey" or The King. Salem Media normally "target[s] audiences interested in Christian and family-themed content and conservative values."[5] But KRYP was an exception. Salem management brought in José Santos of Santos Latin Media to help. He is a former program director of KLVE, one of the top Spanish-language stations in Los Angeles.[6] Santos would lead the station's change to a Regional Mexican format.

The Spring 2008 Arbitron ratings saw KRYP become the Portland radio market leader. It was the first time a Spanish-language radio station achieved that milestone.[7] [8]

Notes and References

  1. http://www.univision.net/corp/en/urg.jsp Our History/Our Content
  2. https://www.worldradiohistory.com/Archive-BC-YB/1988/B-Radio-1988-YB.pdf Broadcasting & Cable Yearbook 1988 page B-228. Retrieved Nov. 27, 2024.
  3. http://www.allbusiness.com/services/motion-pictures/4476412.html Five Portland Owners Shuffle Signals to Add KTRO
  4. Web site: Salem Communications Corp, Form 10-K, Annual Report, Filing Date Mar 31, 2006 . secdatabase.com . May 14, 2018.
  5. http://www.salem.cc/aboutOverview.htm Overview
  6. http://www.nab.org/AM/Template.cfm?Section=Industry_Areas&CONTENTID=12797&TEMPLATE=/CM/ContentDisplay.cfm NAB Radio Show Session Features Top Program Directors
  7. http://www.oregonmediainsiders.com/node/1653 Latest Arbs: El Rey Is King
  8. http://www.radioandrecords.com/RRWebSite/NewsStoryPage.aspx?ContentID=Lxz8nCNlf3Y%3d& El Rey/Portland Makes History