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KFBT

Coordinates:36°33′12″N119°45′10″W / 36.55333°N 119.75278°W /36.55333; -119.75278
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
This article is about the radio station. For the television station in Las Vegas, Nevada originally known as KFBT-TV, seeKVCW. For the television station in Koriyama, Fukushima Prefecture, Japan, seeFukushima Broadcasting.

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(June 2019) (Learn how and when to remove this message)
Radio station in Hanford, California
KFBT
Broadcast areaFresnoVisalia, California
Frequency103.7MHz (HD Radio)
Branding103.7 The Beat
Programming
FormatRhythmic adult contemporary
Ownership
Owner
KALZ,KBOS-FM,KCBL,KFSO-FM,KHGE,KRDU,KRZR,KSOF
History
First air date
1976
Former call signs
KIOY (1976–1982)
KMGX (1982–1989)
KRZR (1989–2010)
Call sign meaning
Kickin' to theFresno'sBeaT!
Technical information[1]
Licensing authority
FCC
Facility ID48776
ClassB
ERP50,000watts
HAAT152 meters (499 ft)
Transmitter coordinates
36°33′12″N119°45′10″W / 36.55333°N 119.75278°W /36.55333; -119.75278
Links
Public license information
WebcastListen Live
Websitethebeat1037.iheart.com

KFBT (103.7FM) is a commercialradio station that is licensed toHanford, California and serves theVisaliaTulare—Hanford andFresno areas. The station is owned byiHeartMedia, Inc.[2] and broadcasts arhythmic adult contemporary format. The KFBT studios are located on Shaw Avenue in North Fresno, and the transmitter tower is south of Fresno nearCaruthers.

KFBT broadcasts inHD radio.[3]

History

[edit]

The station at 103.7 FM first signed on in 1976 as KIOY. In the late 1970s, the station broadcast acontemporary hit radio (CHR, also called top 40) format known as "K104 FM" from its studios in a vineyard betweenFresno andHanford.

KMGX (1982–1989)

[edit]

In the early 1980s, the station changed itscall sign to KMGX and its branding to "The New Magic 104 FM" while retaining the CHR format. Throughout the 1980s, KMGX remained competitive with rivalKBOS, known at the time by the on-air moniker of "Rockradio K-Boss 95 FM". Playlists from 1985 show Magic 104 give heavy airplay to dance-oriented artists such asSheena Easton,Prince, andTeena Marie, while K-Boss emphasized rock music from the likes ofBilly Squier,Bruce Springsteen, andDavid Lee Roth.

In the late 1980s, KMGX adopted the moniker "The All New X104". X104 was one of the first radio stations in the U.S. to blend the CHR andurban format into a fully fledged "churban" format (later known asrhythmic contemporary). The station's appeal grew to dominant audienceshares within Fresno'sLatino community throughout the 1980s. At its peak in popularity, the station hosted the largest single Latino audience share of any general market radio station in the U.S. at 70 percent. KMGX's success is attributed to its high appeal among second- and third-generationMexican Americans who gravitated towards morning drive host Richard Cano, as well as the popularity of evening host Kid Landon among younger listeners. TheFresno State alumnus served previously as aKYNO disc jockey and program director at KBOS, returning to Fresno in 1984 and claiming some of the highest morning ratings in the history of the market. Sales manager Chuck Lontine, who joined the station from the San Francisco radio market, created a "Spanglish" (bilingual English/Spanish) sales and marketing strategy that sustained the station throughout the 1980s. By the end of the decade, however, KMGX began to lose audience share to a growing number of Spanish-language stations in the market, leading to the discontinuation of the churban format in mid-1989.

KRZR (1989–2010)

[edit]
Logo for KRZR as a rock station, used until October 2010.

In June 1989, KGMX flipped to a current-based rock format, changing its call sign toKRZR in August.[4] This new iteration of 103.7 FM was launched by Southern California broadcasting veteran Jim Votaw, X104 exec Chuck Lontine, and programmer Brian Burns. At the time, the station was owned by Olympia Broadcasting ofSeattle. KRZR introduced the "Rock 40" format — a youth-targeted hybrid of CHR andalbum-oriented rock that combines the formatics of the former with the music mix of the latter[5] — to the Fresno radio market. (This concept later evolved to what is now known asactive rock, and KRZR was one of the first stations to air that format.[6]) The station was initially patterned after Olympia's successful Rock 40 stationKXXR inKansas City, Missouri andWestwood One-ownedKQLZ (Pirate Radio) inLos Angeles. KRZR's first slogan was "Today's Rock 'N' Roll", and the station playedglam metal artists and those representing related subgenres ofhard rock who otherwise would have difficulty getting radio airplay. One prominent promotion was a weekly giveaway of $10,000 to randomly spotted owners of cars sporting the station's bumper/window stickers, who called into the studio within an allotted time.[citation needed]

The original KRZR airstaff included program director E. Curtis Johnson[7] (previously withKCAQ inOxnard), music director and afternoon drive host Brian Degus (known on-air as "McFly"), morning show host Pete Hansen, and newswoman Kelly Boom. Midday shifts were filled by Kevin Musso ("Nick NRG") and Larry "Sparky" Long ("Larry The Pocket Producer") — the latter an 18-year-old high school intern from Clovis. Rounding out the staff were Chris Daniel in evenings and Scott Stevens in overnights, and part-time/weekender, Dave Rodgers, who also worked for two years at KMGX X104. Dave was the last DJ on KMGX when it flipped. In July 1989, formerKCLQ DJ Clay Steiner (using the on-air name "Matt 'The Healer' Clayton") hired on for weekends and overnights. Long was hired that same month for fill-in shifts.

KRZR had a mascot known as "The Wild Hare", created by Johnson in 1993. According to him, the hare represented the irreverent attitude of the station and its rock mix.[6] KRZR used the Wild Hare on a variety of promotional materials, including a series of T-shirts with puns referring to rock bands, or people or events in popular culture (examples included "Haretallica", "Bat-Hare Forever", andTig-Hare Woods").[8] The station was so popular that management had trouble meeting the heavy demand for promotional materials, often selling out of T-shirts.[6]

Shortly after the debut of KRZR, both Burns and Lontine left the company. Brian Burns became a renowned program consultant and radio programmer, while Chuck Lontine joinedWLS in Chicago. Kevin Musso became a television weatherman in Fresno. Pete Hansen eventually moved on toThe DSC Show atKGB-FM in San Diego; he also hosts a podcast,The Pete Hansen Show. Larry "Sparky" Long now lives and works in Northern California. E. Curtis Johnson remained in the Fresno market after leaving KRZR in 2007, assuming the program director position at One Putt Broadcasting from 2008 to 2014, followed by the same role atLotus Communications' active rock outletKKBZ in April 2019.[7][9] Dave Rodgers (Ken Richards) remained on KRZR until October 2003, continued at KJUG FM in Visalia from 2004 to 2011, and since 2014 has worked weekends atKUZZ inBakersfield.

KFBT (2010–present)

[edit]
Old logo used until the summer of 2020

On October 6, 2010, at noon, after playingRage Against the Machine's "Freedom", KRZR changed its format from active rock torhythmic adult contemporary. The station changed its call letters to KFBT and its branding to "103.7 The Beat". The KRZR personalities were dismissed and the rock format moved to the station's HD2 digital subchannel. The first song on The Beat was "Get Ready for This" by2 Unlimited.[10]

HD Radio

[edit]

KFBT broadcasts inHD Radio on two digital subchannels:

  • KFBT-HD1 airs a digital simulcast of the analog signal.
  • KFBT-HD2 broadcasts a Hispanic rhythmic format known as "Fiesta Latina", a bilingual presentation featuring urban, pop, andregional Mexican music. The station's slogan is "Mix Latin Urban, Pop & Regional Mexican".

References

[edit]
  1. ^"Facility Technical Data for KFBT".Licensing and Management System.Federal Communications Commission.
  2. ^"KFBT Facility Record".FCC CDBS Public Access Database.Federal Communications Commission.
  3. ^"HD Radio Station Guide".HD Radio. iBiquity.
  4. ^"For the Record"(PDF).Broadcasting. Broadcasting Publications Inc. August 21, 1989. p. 56. RetrievedJune 13, 2019.
  5. ^Kojan, Harvey (July 20, 1989)."Whatever Happened To Rock 40?"(PDF).Radio & Records. p. 60. RetrievedJune 17, 2019.
  6. ^abc"10 Questions with ... E. Curtis Johnson".All Access. All Access Music Group. April 30, 2019. RetrievedJune 13, 2019.
  7. ^ab"KKBZ/Fresno Nabs E Curtis Johnson As New PD".All Access. All Access Music Group. April 3, 2019. RetrievedJune 13, 2019.
  8. ^Anthony, Ken (February 18, 2005)."KRZR/Fresno's Wild Hare"(PDF).Radio & Records. p. 56. RetrievedJune 17, 2019.
  9. ^"E. Curtis Comes Blazing Back".RAMP.Valencia, California: RAMP Media Inc. April 4, 2019. RetrievedJune 13, 2019.
  10. ^Venta, Lance (September 15, 2010)."KRZR Getting Beat In Fresno".RadioInsight. RadioBB Networks. RetrievedJune 13, 2019.

External links

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