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Cook Inlet Region, Inc., a corporation created under the 1971 Alaska Native Claims Settlement Act, was instrumental in developing KBC. [4] KBC was founded in 1996 and is located in Anchorage, Alaska, with a satellite office in Albuquerque, N.M. [2] The word "koahnic" is of Athabascan origin and was chosen for the name of the corporation due to its meaning "live air."
CBC Radio One [10] Our Native Land: 2020–present Tchadas Leo CHEK Podcasts [11] This Land: 2019–present Rebecca Nagle: Crooked Media [11] In Your Ears for 50 Years: 2021-2021 KYUK, Public Media for Alaska's Yukon-Kuskokwim Delta [12] [13] National Native News: 1987 (on radio)-present Koahnic Broadcast Corporation and Native Voice One [13 ...
KTDB (89.7 FM), is a National Public Radio-affiliated station in Ramah, New Mexico. It is one of the first Native American owned and operated radio stations founded in 1972, one year after KYUK-AM in Bethel, AK. [2] [3] It primarily features National Public Radio programming and Native American programming.
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KCNP (89.5 FM) is a radio station [2] licensed to Ada, Oklahoma, United States. The station is currently owned by the Chickasaw Nation. [3] The Chickasaw Nation owns three additional transmitters that simulcast KCNP – KAZC 89.3 in Dickson, KTNG 97.3 in Connerville, and KWPV 104.5 in Wynnewood.
Founded in 1982 with the intention of bridging the culture gap between the Native American population in the area and their non-Native neighbors in a time of heightened racial tension, the station is now a fixture of the northwestern Wisconsin airwaves, presenting a variety of programming, much of it presenting the culture of the local Ojibwa ...
Native American Calling is a call-in talk show. AIROS carried its national premiere on June 5, 1995. Initially, it was jointly produced by AIROS and the Alaska Public Radio Network and originated from the studios of KUNM, Albuquerque, New Mexico. [3] In 2001, the New York Times described Native American Calling as very popular. [4] By 2006, it ...
KNDN (960 AM) is a radio station broadcasting in Navajo, one of three such stations in the world. [2] [3] Licensed to Farmington, New Mexico, United States, the station serves the Four Corners area. The station is currently owned by Basin Broadcasting Co. [4]