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Prairie Public was established on February 1, 1999 as the North Dakota Public Radio network. It consisted of three partners — Prairie Public Broadcasting, the North Dakota State University, and the University of North Dakota [8] — with the goal of providing a full public radio service to all of North Dakota.
KDSU (91.9 FM) is a radio station licensed to Fargo, North Dakota.The station is owned by North Dakota State University, but is operated by Prairie Public Radio.It airs NPR news and talk programming for most of the day, but simulcasts KFJM's Roots, Rock and Jazz programming from 9 am to 3 pm and from 8 pm to 4 am on weekdays.
Main Street Broadcasting, Inc. Sports ... Blooming Prairie Farm Radio Inc. Classic hits KOJB: ... St. Louis Park: Park Public Radio, Inc. Dance/EDM KPRM:
KCND (90.5 FM) is a public radio station licensed to Bismarck. It signed on the air in 1981 as Prairie Public Radio, which later became part of the statewide North Dakota Public Radio network, the entirety of which was later renamed Prairie Public Radio. It currently broadcasts with an effective radiated power of 50 kW on 90.5 MHz.
Call sign Frequency City of License [1] [2] Licensee Format [3]; KABU: 90.7 FM: Fort Totten: Dakota Circle Tipi, Inc. Educational KACL: 98.7 FM: Bismarck: Townsquare License, LLC
Prairie Public Broadcasting is a community-owned public broadcaster based in North Dakota, with television coverage extending into South Dakota, Montana, northwestern Minnesota, and Manitoba, and radio service to North Dakota and online to the world. It operates a radio network and a television network.
A Prairie Home Companion is a weekly radio variety show created and hosted by Garrison Keillor that aired live from 1974 to 2016. In 2016, musician Chris Thile took over as host, and the successor show was eventually renamed Live from Here and ran until 2020.
Prairie Public has been carried on cable in Manitoba since 1975, when KGFE was picked up by cable systems in Winnipeg [2] and Brandon, Manitoba. In 1986, Prairie Public was nearly dropped from cable in Winnipeg. [3] [4] After the crisis, Prairie Public set up a fixed microwave link to carry stronger signals into Winnipeg. In 1998, a signal link ...