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Radio station in San Martin, California From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
KZSJ (1120 AM) is a commercial radio station licensed to San Martin, California. It has a radio format of music and talk in Vietnamese and Korean, serving San Jose and the Santa Clara Valley. The station is currently owned by Bustos Media.[2] Programming is produced by Quê Hương Media, which airs on a digital subchannel of KSCZ-LD (previously on KAXT-CD).
Broadcast area | Santa Clara Valley |
---|---|
Frequency | 1120 kHz |
Branding | Quê Hương (Homeland) |
Programming | |
Language(s) | Vietnamese, Korean |
Ownership | |
Owner | Bustos Media |
History | |
First air date | November 1995 |
Call sign meaning | Previous "Z" branding, San Jose |
Technical information[1] | |
Licensing authority | FCC |
Facility ID | 30906 |
Class | D |
Power | 5,000 watts day 150 watts night |
Transmitter coordinates | 36°57′49″N 121°29′22″W |
Translator(s) | 101.7 K269GX (San Jose) |
Links | |
Public license information | |
Website | youtube.com/user/quehuongradio |
By day, KZSJ is powered at 5,000 watts non-directional. But 1120 AM is a clear channel frequency reserved for Class A KMOX St. Louis. So to avoid interference, KZSJ greatly reduces power at night to 150 watts. Programming is heard around the clock on 60 watt FM translator 101.7 K269GX in San Jose.[3]
Founded by Jeffrey Eustis, KZSJ had its first construction permit on January 18, 1991, with the call sign KSJI.[4] The call letters changed to KZSJ on November 1, 1995.[4] Later that month, KZSJ began broadcasting with a Regional Mexican music format that played genres including banda and ranchera as part of the Z-Spanish Radio Network operated by Redwood City entrepreneur Amador Bustos.[5][6][7]
Eustis finalized a sale of KZSJ for $450,000 in late January 1996 to Bustos.[8] KZSJ was granted its first broadcasting license on February 21, 1996.[4]
In March 1999, KZSJ entered a local marketing agreement (LMA) with Quê Hương Inc. and changed to a Vietnamese language format.[9] Founded in 1994 on KSJX, Quê Hương was the first 24-hour Vietnamese-language radio station outside of Vietnam.[10][11] Programming on the Quê Hương radio network has included music, community events, and legal advice geared towards Vietnamese-American communities.[10] By 2003, Bustos moved KZSJ to his Bustos Media company.[12]
As of 2003, Quê Hương Radio reached about 200,000 listeners in the San Francisco Bay Area.[13] In July 2003, KZSJ broadcast public service announcements from the San Jose Police Department in Vietnamese expressing condolences to the family of police shooting victim Bich Cau Thi Tran.[14] In September 2003, three relatives of dissident Thadeus Nguyễn Văn Lý were charged by Vietnamese officials for corresponding with Quê Hương Radio and the San Jose–based Commission for Religious Liberty in Vietnam.[15][16]
Beginning around 2014, KZSJ began broadcasting Korean-language programming on weekday mornings from Santa Clara-based Hanmi Radio.[17]
On February 1, 2018, Bustos Media obtained a construction permit for an FM translator for KZSJ. K269GX broadcasts on 101.7 MHz. The FM translator was formally licensed on April 8, 2020.[18]
Quê Hương Radio broadcasts throughout the day. Among the local Vietnamese-language media outlets, Quê Hương is known for its stridently anti-communist viewpoint. During the late 1990s, it was a sharp critic of Việt Nam Thời Báo, a local daily newspaper, for the latter's less critical coverage of the Vietnamese government.[19]
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