
“To build a facility that is multiformat is always a bit of a challenge,” says Kerns, who has been designing and building radio stations for decades, “but the importance of this was making sure we developed something that reflected the Navajo culture.”
The result is a state-of-the-art studio that melds current technology with ancient Native American values and beauty. It’s home to a station that reports on tribal issues, plays country music, broadcasts a number of shows in native Navajo language, provides school updates, has a horse show minute and rodeo report, and airs NBC news at the top of every hour. Its programming is as diverse as life on the reservation, and now its studio properly reflects that beauty.
“We tried to think about it from a Navajo native’s perspective and make sure it was something they would have derived at, and not as if it came from half way across the country,” states Kerns, who is based out of St. Louis, MO.
When he was initially approached by Little, Kerns was enthusiastic, albeit a bit skeptical. This was the third time the Native Broadcast Enterprise was trying to build a station, and the company had been struggling to meet its mission of educating, informing and entertaining the Navajo people because they were using 40-year-old equipment housed in dilapidated buildings. KTNN 660 AM broadcasts throughout the reservation, which spans four states and is equivalent to the size of Rhode Island at 26,000 acres. When Kerns landed in Albuquerque and drove over three hours to Window Rock, he was awed by the vastness and shocked by the gaps in cell service.
“We saw the pictures, and then to feel it and touch it, it’s completely like ‘wow’,” explains Little. “Things are exactly the way they looked on paper. It’s really something when you come into the facility.”
When they officially opened the doors in March, so many people attended that the festivities ran well into the night. With visitors ranging from passersby to students on organized school trips, the station still averages two tours a day. “Our listeners are just so happy and excited for us that we have a new home,” concludes Little.
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