Text and photos by SCOTT FYBUSH
THANK YOU TO ALL OUR CUSTOMERS!
The 2024 Tower Site Calendar is very, very nearly sold out.
We are so happy that we have so many supporters after nearly a quarter century of doing this. We especially appreciate the nice comments we receive from our longtime buyers.
We will not be reprinting this year’s calendar, so if you want one, order it now. We still have some previous years available if you need to fill in any gaps.
In the meantime, we still have some great broadcasting books. Check out the store!
If you’ve gone to Phoenix and haven’t gone up South Mountain, have you really gone to Phoenix at all?
This is simultaneously one of the most remarkable and most accessible TV/FM mountaintop tower farms out there: it’s just a 20-minute or so drive up a nice paved road through a public park (largest county park in America!) to the gate that leads into this majestic farm that’s home to pretty much all of the market’s TV and FM action.
It’s not hard to understand why this is such a superior site: from the brow of the mountain, the view to the north encompasses nearly the entire sprawl that is the Phoenix metro, with very little shadowing except the bit that comes from Piestewa Peak and its sister peaks up north of downtown.
On earlier trips up South Mountain, we’d been inside only one other building, Bonneville’s 92.3/98.7 pair – but this time, our tour guide had access to a few more FMs, starting with the pair of guyed towers that sit to themselves far at the west end of the tower farm.
These sticks are Hubbard classic rocker KSLX (100.7 Scottsdale) and CBS Radio’s KZON (101.5 Phoenix), and their separate small buildings at the base of each tower are near mirror-images, each with a new Nautel transmitter (GV40 for KSLX, NV40 for KZON, augmented by a smaller Nautel aux) and each featuring filtering to keep its neighbor station from creating intermod.
Up in the core of the mountain, we get to see something that won’t be there much longer: CBS Radio’s other two FMs, KOOL (94.5) and KMLE (107.9) are wedged tightly into a room that’s part of the building that houses Fox O&O KSAZ-TV (Channel 10). KOOL has been here for many decades, going back to when channel 10 was KOOL-TV; KMLE moved in later on, and now both stations are moving to a new space that was cleared out when KSAZ shut down its interim digital operation and went back to channel 10 for digital. (Which means we need to come back again sometime to see the post-move facility!)
A busy day in Phoenix still has one more late-afternoon stop: the city’s public TV station, KAET (Channel 8), moved a few years ago from the main Arizona State University campus in Tempe to the Cronkite School’s new building right in downtown Phoenix, and we get a quick peek at it before the end of business hours (and before we’re off to see the Diamondbacks beat the Dodgers.)
KAET’s master control is glassed in just off the lobby, which is down the hall from the big TV studios that are shared by Channel 8 and the Cronkite School. (The J-school produces its own nightly newscast, “Cronkite News,” that airs on KAET.)
On the day we’re visiting, they’re getting ready for production on a local version of Antiques Roadshow; I think that was some lighting testing going on when we peeked into the big studio.
One floor down, there’s a nifty facility that serves multiple purposes: Central Sound @ Eight handles audio post-production on KAET’s broadcasts and also serves KBAQ (89.5), the classical station jointly operated by ASU and the local community college. That sweet sweetening suite shown above is a surround-sound post room where Alex Kosiorek and his Central Sound team mix down everything from symphony broadcasts to student productions.
Thanks to CBS Radio’s Eric Schechter and KAET’s Eric Xu for the tours!
And don’t miss a big batch of cross-country IDs next Wednesday, over at our sister site, TopHour.com!
Next week: Las Vegas