It doesn’t make any sense on paper that KNON, Dallas’ forever eclectic and totally community-supported radio station, is celebrating its 40th anniversary. “There’s the board that survived the tornado, ...
After the October tornado, most everything was hurriedly boxed or bagged from KNON-FM's damaged studios, including a Gregg Smith cassette tape, which was found along with cables and equipment.
This story is published as part of a partnership between The Nation and the Texas Observer. It’s a gloomy, overcast Sunday evening in August, and Albert Old Crow pulls a collapsible crate on wheels ...
There’s been some short-notice news at Dallas’ beloved volunteer-run community radio station, KNON 89.3 FM, which calls itself “The Voice of the People.” The station has to move out of its 5353 Maple ...
Those tornadoes Sunday night in Dallas sent KNON(FM) dark after a direct hit on the building housing the radio station’s studios. Dave Chaos, station manager for KNON, was at home enjoying the Dallas ...
KNON DJs Ruben "Solo" Contreras (right) and Xavier Person, a.k.a. "Romeo X," host their radio show from a small storage building below the KNON radio antenna on Thursday, October 24, 2019 in Cedar ...
3:23 pm: The front door is wide open. Literally anyone could enter, climb the stairs, and walk directly into the KNON studio off Maple Avenue. This observation proves prescient later, when ...
On Nov. 8, 1963, an episode of The Twilight Zone, “The Old Man in the Cave,” premiered on CBS. Written by the show’s creator Rod Serling and based on a short story by American playwright Henry Slesar, ...
KNON FM, the community radio station and host of the Lambda Weekly radio show, has found a new home. Station manager Dave Chaos posted the news on Facebook. “We are moving to 11311 North Central ...
The studio and offices of 89.3 KNON-FM — home of Lambda Weekly, the longest-running LGBTQ radio program in the country — were destroyed in the tornado that hit north Dallas on Sunday night, Oct. 20.
“There are currently 60 Native-owned radio stations across the United States, according to Loris Taylor, CEO of Native Public Media. ‘The stations that we have are unique because when they’re tribally ...