KCUL is a terrestrial American radio station, which is currently broadcasting an unknown format. Licensed to Marshall, Texas, United States, the station serves the Longview-Marshall area. The station is currently owned by RCA Broadcasting, LLC.. RCA Broadcasting moved the KCUL call sign to 1410 on October 22, 2019, and reactivated the KCUL AM/FM radio combo temporarily. On March 6, 2020, RCA applied to change 92.3's longtime KCUL-FM calls to KPRO; the station returned to using KCUL in May 2020. RCA Broadcasting also owns 1370 KFRO in Longview. On May 31, 2020, KCUL returned to regular broadcasting activities.
History
The station went on the air as KEEP on June 6, 1988. KEEP was originally the FM counterpart to KCUL AM 1410. The station's construction permit & subsequent license was applied for in 1985. KEEP was initially owned by East Texas Stereo Inc.. In November 1992, the station changed its call sign to KCUL-FM to match the AM sister station. KCUL-FM was a full service oldies station that served the city ofMarshall, Texas. KCUL-FM had completely live on-air talent 24/7. One of the featured programs was the morning swap shop. In 2000, the long time owner of KCUL AM/FM, East Texas Stereo Inc. sold the combo to Access.1 of New York. The sale coincided with the sale of Cary Kamp's Shreveport, Louisiana cluster to Access.1. In 2005 KCUL-FM changed from '50s to '70s oldies format to a Regional Mexican format, and became a simulcast of 96.7 KOYE in Frankston, Texas. In 2013, the FCC forced Access.1 to sell two of its FM stations, so it was decided that KCUL-FM and 92.1 KSYR in Shreveport would be those stations, releasing both of them to Cosecha Communications LLC, as Trustee, and were intended to be sold at a later date. Due to the eventual sale of the bulk of the Access.1 stations in both East Texas and northwestern Louisiana, Access.1 ended up keeping KCUL-FM and KSYR, and entered into a shared services lease with Alpha Media which ended in 2019. Alpha had an option to purchase the stations, but couldn't exercise the option due to ownership limits set by the FCC. On September 2, 2015, Access.1 once again regained ownership of KCUL-FM and KSYR, after the sale of their larger stations to Alpha Media. At its zenith "La Invasora" was simulcast on 96.7 KOYE in Frankston, 92.1 KSYR in Benton, Louisiana, and 92.3 KCUL-FM Marshall. With the combined coverage area of these three signals, the Regional Mexican format spanned from Malakoff, Texas to Minden, Louisiana, and remained one of the few, if not only, Spanish language format serving several towns in East Texas and northwestern Louisiana. On November 30, 2015, Access.1 ceased to exist. Access.1's remaining three stations KCUL-FM, KFRO, and KSYR, were folded into A.1 Investco LLC, controlled by Kevin Gunderson the CEO of Gugenheim Capital. In January 2019, Access.1 decided to divest their remaining three radio stations KCUL-FM Marshall, KSYR Shreveport, and WGYM Hammonton. KSYR was sold first, then KCUL-FM, and WGYM on October 28, 2019. Ending Access.1 as a corporation on October 28, 2019. On June 19, 2019, A.1 Investco filed to sell KCUL-FM to AM 1410 KZEY owner, RCA Broadcasting, LLC., reuniting the former Marshall based AM/FM combo. After 14 years together, KCUL-FM broke simulcast with 92.1 KSYR "La Invasora". The following day, KCUL-FM went silent. After a 9-month negotiation and lengthy closing, RCA closed on the sale of KCUL-FM October 1st 2019. 92.3 and 1410 KZEY were reunited under one owner. On October 22, 2019, AM 1410 reacquired the KCUL call sign, and the KCUL AM/FM Marshall radio combo was reunited. This would prove to be temporary, as on March 6, 2020, RCA filed to change KCUL-FM's call sign to KPRO, while still silent, after holding the KCUL-FM set for 28 years. The two stations then swapped call signs on May 27, 2020, putting KCUL on 92.3 and KPRO on 1410. When KCUL 92.3 signed back on, 92.3 joined sister station 1370 KFRO, becoming an affiliate of the Galaxy Nostalgia Network. KCUL aires the Galaxy Moonbeam Nitesite, a program of over 300 shows, which targets baby-boomer. Galaxy is hosted by Gilbert Smith and Mike Bragg, and is an educational show that covers music, radio, television, movies, and historical events of the 20th century.