Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

910 KJJQ/Depot Radio bought by NE Company

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • 910 KJJQ/Depot Radio bought by NE Company

    Depot Radio (all three stations) were bought by Three Eagle Comm. of Nebraska. According to what Three Eagle said in the article it could mean more sports coverage, which could be good news for the Jacks.

    http://www.brookingsregister.com/mai...505b596467597f

    Brookings radio stations to have one owner
    BY JOHN KUBAL
    * Depot Radio bought by Three Eagles Communications

    A multi-million-dollar deal by a Nebraska media group will bring all of Brookings’ commercial radio stations under one owner. And one of two buildings housing the city’s stations will be vacated.
    In a $9.45 million deal with Omaha-based Waitt Radio, Three Eagles Communications, based in Lincoln, Neb., bought Depot Radio, which includes KJJQ-AM, KKQQ-FM and KDBX-FM in Brookings, four stations in Watertown and two in Fort Dodge, Iowa.
    The company already owns Brookings-based KBRK-AM and KBRK-FM; and all the stations will broadcast out of a soon-to-be-expanded KBRK building. . . .

    Three Eagles will add 45 employees, bringing its total in Brookings and Watertown to 80. And Rolland Johnson, Three Eagles CEO, said he doesn’t anticipate any format or staff changes.
    ‘‘We usually end up adding employees,’’ Johnson said. ‘‘We usually have more sports, more news and more public affairs.’’ . . .

    He said that when the merger was complete, the old passenger railroad station that houses Depot Radio would be vacated and put up for sale.
    Three Eagles, which began in 1996 with the purchase of 10 stations, now owns 50 in Illinois, Iowa, Minnesota, Nebraska and South Dakota.
    Johnson said his company tends to purchase mom-and-pop outfits and stations that focus on locals rather than relying on syndicated programming.
    ‘‘We have very little satellite and we do very little syndicated programming,’’ he said. ‘‘We tend to focus on local people providing information for their markets.’’ . . .



  • #2
    Re: 910 KJJQ/Depot Radio bought by NE Company

    The interesting thing is that Three Eagle says it dosen't have much Satellite programing (syndicated programming), but beyond being the home for Jackrabbit Women's Basketball 910 is also an ESPN affiliate.

    http://www.depotradio.com/sports.php

    Comment


    • #3
      Re: 910 KJJQ/Depot Radio bought by NE Company

      Nothing like competing against yourself.  I hope this will be good for Brookings and SDSU. Both have low range frequencies so satillite broadcasting will be a way for the future.

      Radio being FCC regulated is quiet interesting. Three Eagles owns KJSK in Columbus, Ne and they have some religous programing, but there 24 hr on the air broad cast includes sports programming, like Papa Joe and others. KJSK is also part of the UNO network since they have a number of Columbus athletes on the football team and one on the basketball team.

      Comment


      • #4
        Re: 910 KJJQ/Depot Radio bought by NE Company

        Parts of the Collegin story:

        http://www.sdsucollegian.com/news/20...r-674210.shtml

        Buyout puts most local radio stations under one owner

        By Michelle Herrick

        Published: Tuesday, April 27, 2004


        SDSU's campus radio station is the only independent station remaining in Brookings after a buyout of all the commercial stations in Brookings April 15.

        Three Eagles Communications, based in Lincoln, Neb., bought Depot Radio, which included talk station 910 AM, KCountry 102.3 and top 40 music station X107.1.

        "It will affect the radio landscape here in Brookings," said Ashley Allen, KSDJ station manager. "I think that there won't be as much competition between all the stations. The stations will probably try to find their own niche rather than competing for the same listeners."

        Included in the $9.4 million deal with Omaha-based Waitt Radio were four stations in Watertown and two in Fort Doge, Iowa. . . .

        Three Eagles CEO Rolland Johnson said he doesn't foresee any major formatting or staffing changes.

        "We usually end up adding employees," Johnson said. "We usually have more sports, more news and more public affairs."

        Johnson was a professor at SDSU from 1967 to 1969. He was one of the first professors in the Radio, Television and Film department. As a student, he helped launch KSDJ. . . .



        Comment

        Working...
        X