For the San Antonio, Texas radio station that held the call sign KHTY from 2004 to 2005, seeKRPT. For the Santa Barbara, California radio station that held the call sign KHTY from 1985 to 1998, seeKLSB.
Radio station in Bakersfield, California, United States
This station first signed on the air in 1958 as KBIS. It was adaytimer, operating at a power of 1,000watts and required to go off the air at sunset.[4]
In June 1976, Westco Media sold KBIS to Thunderbird Broadcasting, owned by popularcountry music singerBuck Owens, for $382,500. Owens lived in Bakersfield. As Thunderbird already ownedKUZZ (then at 800 AM) in Bakersfield, andFederal Communications Commission (FCC) regulations at the time prohibited ownership of multiple AM stations within the same market, that company sold KUZZ to theInternational Church of the Foursquare Gospel for $100,000.[5] The FCC approved both license transfers on November 16, and KBIS adopted the KUZZ call letters the following January.[6][7]
In August 1984, Buck Owens Broadcasting orchestrated a frequency swap with Sunset Broadcasting Corp., owner ofKAFY. Owens traded KUZZ, a daytimer on 970 AM, to Sunset for KAFY — located on the stronger, full-time 550 AM frequency — plus $650,000 in cash.[8] The 970 AM frequency took on the KAFY call letters in January 1986.[9] In April 1987, Sunset Broadcasting, headed by Daren McGavren, sold KAFY to McGavren-Barro Broadcasting Corp. — owned by his son Steve McGavren and Mary Helen Barro — for $700,000. At the time of the sale, KAFY was broadcasting in theSpanish language.[10]
In April 2000, Hispanic Media Group, headed by Amancio Suarez Sr., sold KAFY and aconstruction permit for a second AM station in Bakersfield to Golden Pegasus Financial Services for $825,000. At the time, KAFY broadcast aregional Mexican music format.[11] The station would change hands once again by the end of the year asClear Channel Communications purchased the newly rechristened KZPM for $1.4 million.[12][13]
Throughout the 2000s under Clear Channel ownership, the 970 AM frequency took on various call signs and formats. In May 2001, Clear Channel began using the KZTK call sign on the then-news/talk outlet. In September 2002, the call letters changed to KGET to match those of television stationKGET-TV, at the time also owned by Clear Channel. The radio station KGET was branded "News Talk 970 KGET".
In January 2006, the KGET call letters were changed to KHTY. The station at the time was aclassic hits radio station branded as "Mighty 970".[14] In 2007, KHTY switched back to news/talk with the branding "Business 970 KHTY".[15] Later that year, KHTY began airing a news/talk format in Spanish.[16]
Former KHTY/Fox Sports 970 logo
On March 2, 2009, KHTY flipped tosports radio with the branding "Fox Sports 970".[17] On June 13, 2022, KHTY began simulcasting onKBFP 800 AM Bakersfield, replacing that station's comedy format.[18]