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Broadcast area | Las Vegas metropolitan area |
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Frequency | 107.5MHz (HD Radio) |
Branding | X107-5 |
Programming | |
Format | Alternative rock |
Subchannels | HD2:Country music "NuTune Country" |
Affiliations | Compass Media Networks |
Ownership | |
Owner |
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KCYE,KKLZ,KOAS,KVGS | |
History | |
First air date | April 1986; 38 years ago (1986-04) (as KLVV) |
Former call signs | KLVV (1986–88) KUDA (1988–93) KFBI (1993–96) |
Technical information[1] | |
Licensing authority | FCC |
Facility ID | 2100 |
Class | C |
ERP | 24,500 watts |
HAAT | 1,137 meters (3,730 ft) |
Transmitter coordinates | 35°57′58″N115°30′07″W / 35.966°N 115.502°W /35.966; -115.502 |
Links | |
Public license information | |
Webcast | Listen live Listen live (HD2) |
Website | www |
KXTE (107.5FM,X107-5) is acommercialradio station licensed toPahrump, Nevada, and serving theLas Vegas metropolitan area. It is owned by theBeasley Broadcast Group and broadcasts analternative rock format. KXTE is the flagship station of thenationally syndicated weekday programDave and Mahoney. KXTE'sstudios are on South Durango Drive in Las Vegas.
KXTE has aneffective radiated power (ERP) of 24,500watts. Itstransmitter is atopPotosi Mountain inBlue Diamond.[2] KXTE broadcasts usingHD Radio technology. Its HD-2digital subchannel playscountry music.
KLVV began broadcasting in Las Vegas on the 107.5frequency in April 1986. It was an adult contemporary station calling itself "K-Love." (It was not connected with the current dayChristian Contemporary network known asK-Love.)
In November 1988, the station, now owned byEZ Communications, became KUDA, "Oldies 108 FM."Norm N. Nite once had a show on the station, calledSolid Gold Scrapbook. In 1989, KUDA was purchased by Americom Broadcasting, which owned stations in Reno and Fresno.
Americom, headed by Tom Quinn, addedHoward Stern’s show to the station in 1992, changed the station's call letters to KFBI and transitioned from oldies to classic rock in 1993. This was the first time Stern agreed to appear on a station outside of a top-10 radio market, and KFBI immediately surged to the top of ratings in Las Vegas, making KFBI the city's dominant radio station.
Three years later, in April 1996, Americom sold KFBI toAmerican Radio Systems (ARS), where PD Mike Stern and GM Alan Gray changed the call letters to KXTE, flipped the station's format toalternative rock, and rebranded the station as “X 107.5”.[3] ARS later merged withInfinity Broadcasting (forerunner toCBS Radio).
Stern stayed on KXTE until the station pulled him in November 2005, a month before he left terrestrial radio forSirius Satellite Radio. He was replaced byAdam Carolla, which began airing on January 3, 2006, and ended on February 20, 2009. Dave Farra and Jason Mahoney, hosts ofThe Dave and Mahoney Morning Show, returned to the Las Vegas airwaves to take over mornings on April 20, 2009. On August 3, 2015, it was announced thatDave and Mahoney would re-locate from Las Vegas to CBS Radio sister stationKHMX in Houston.[4] On January 15, 2017, it was announced that the show would return to KXTE starting February 6.[5]
On February 2, 2017, CBS Radio announced it would merge withEntercom (now Audacy).[6] The merger was approved on November 9, 2017, and was consummated on November 17.[7][8]
On September 14, 2020, KXTE rebranded asAlt 107.5 as part of a nationwide expansion of networked programming and theAlt brand across Entercom's alternative stations. As part of this, KXTE program director and afternoon host Ross Mahoney was let go, while "Dave & Mahoney" remained in mornings and would be syndicated toSan Diego sister stationKBZT. In addition, KXTE would addKROQLos Angeles host Nicole Alvarez for middays,KRBZKansas City's "Church of Lazlo" for afternoons, andWNYLNew York's Kevan Kenney and Bryce Segall for nights and overnights, respectively.[9][10] By mid-2022, the station had dropped most of the out of market programming and was being programmed locally again.
On October 6, 2022, it was announced that Audacy andBeasley Broadcast Group would swap a pair of stations in Las Vegas, with Audacy swapping ownership of KXTE to Beasley in exchange forKDWN and translator K268CS. The company stated that the syndicatedDave & Mahoney show, based at KXTE, will remain on the station upon the closure of the deal.[11] Beasley would begin operating the station through alocal marketing agreement on November 14, at which time the station dismissed the entirety of the airstaff and began running jockless with limited imaging outside ofDave & Mahoney.[11]
On December 19, 2022, KXTE returned to its priorX107.5 branding with the new slogan "Xtreme Radio", and changed its weekday lineup to focus onhot talk programs;Dave & Mahoney remains the station's morning/flagship show, and would be joined by the syndicatedFree Beer and Hot Wings Show in middays, andDave & Chuck the Freak from sister stationWRIF in Detroit (which airs live in early mornings, and is replayed in afternoon drive). Alternative rock would continue to be featured during overnights and weekends.[12] The acquisition of the station by Beasley was consummated on December 22, 2022.
The hot talk format failed to impact the market, bottoming out with a 1.4 share of the Nielsen market ratings for June 2023. As such, on July 28, 2023, at 10 a.m. (dropping the hot talk format midway through the song "Somebody That I Used to Know" byGotye), coinciding with the station's addition of former KXTE andKOMP host Carlota Gonzalez, the station shifted back completely to alternative rock still under the "X" brand, with the move being deemed a "music takeover" led by Gonzalez to "bring the X you know back". The new iteration of the format primarily focuses on 1990s/2000s classic alternative, with a lean toward harder rock. With the move, the station dropped "Free Beer and Hot Wings" from middays, but retained Dave and Chuck the Freak in late afternoons, as well as Beasley's syndicated "Cooper and Anthony" in evenings for a time; both programs have since been dropped.[13]
Dave Farra's interview with cast members from the 2011 season ofMTV reality television series,The Real World: Las Vegas, who were promoting their fundraiser for "Let the Kids Rock" to raise money for school children, was depicted in that season's finale, which premiered on June 1, 2011.[14]