| |
|---|---|
| Broadcast area | Little Rock (Central Arkansas) |
| Frequency | 94.1MHz |
| Branding | The Point 94.1 |
| Programming | |
| Language | English |
| Format | Classic rock |
| Ownership | |
| Owner |
|
| KABZ,KBZU | |
| History | |
First air date | October 26, 1960 (1960-10-26) |
Former call signs |
|
Call sign meaning | Point |
| Technical information[2] | |
Licensing authority | FCC |
| Facility ID | 60364 |
| Class | C |
| ERP | 100,000 watts |
| HAAT | 488 meters (1,601 ft) |
| Links | |
Public license information | |
| Webcast | Listen live |
| Website | kkpt.com |
KKPT (94.1FM) is an American commercialradio station located inLittle Rock,Arkansas. KKPT broadcasts aclassic rock music format branded as "The Point 94.1".[3] The station is owned by Signal Media and thebroadcast license held by Signal Media of Arkansas, Inc. The station's studios are located west of the downtown area along the south shore of theArkansas River (David D. Terry Lake), and the transmitter tower is located onShinall Mountain, near theChenal Valley neighborhood of Little Rock.
This station originally broadcast from the antenna on the side of the Tower Building in downtown Little Rock asKMMK, also known as "K-Rose", a classical/easy listening format. In 1973, Bernie Mann/Mann Media, purchased the station, changed the calls toKEZQ and moved the tower out west toShinall Mountain, and eventually increased the ERP/tower height to cover the entire metro. The station aired the Bonneville "Beautiful Music" format, and did well.
Mann Media sold the station toMultimedia in 1976 along with the other station he owned, KALO 1250 to Ron Curtis, who had purchased Dan Garner's KLAZ, 98.5 FM. Multimedia changed the 94.1 FM call letter and format shortly after closing toKLPQ (KQ-94) and launched a rock format. The market was in an uproar for quite some time, while the beautiful music format was aired in mid-days and evenings on Ted Snider's KARN 920 AM.
In 1978, Ed Muniz from New Orleans purchased 100.3 FM in Jacksonville and purchased the "intellectual property" from Gary Fries/GM of KLPQ-FM, and launched FM-100/KEZQ. KLPQ survived until late 1983 when Philip Jonsson from Dallas purchased the station, and launchedKHLT "K-Lite".
In 1994,adult contemporary KHLT made the change to "The Point", a 70s-basedclassic hits format,[4] which was an early hybrid of Classic Top-40 (Oldies) andclassic rock. The station was assigned thecall signKKPT by theFederal Communications Commission on June 17, 1994.[1] When Magic 105 FM left the harder edge classic rock format for "We Play Everything" Tom-FM in early 2008, The Point was left as the loneclassic rock station in Little Rock until 2019, whenKLRG signed on as a classic rock station.
34°47′56″N92°29′46″W / 34.799°N 92.496°W /34.799; -92.496