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Broadcast area | Hilo, Hawaii |
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Frequency | 97.9MHz |
Branding | KBIG 97.9 & 106.1 |
Programming | |
Format | Hot adult contemporary |
Ownership | |
Owner | Pacific Radio Group, Inc. |
KAPA,KPVS,KHLO,KLEO,KAGB,KLUA | |
History | |
First air date | June 5, 1980 (1980-6-5) |
Former call signs | KKEA (1971–1980) |
Technical information[1] | |
Licensing authority | FCC |
Facility ID | 52468 |
Class | C1 |
ERP | 51,000watts |
HAAT | -19.7 meters |
Transmitter coordinates | 19°50′19″N155°6′43″W / 19.83861°N 155.11194°W /19.83861; -155.11194 |
Repeater(s) | 106.1KLEO |
Links | |
Public license information | |
Webcast | Listen Live |
Website | kbigfm.com |
KKBG (97.9FM) is aradio station broadcasting ahot adult contemporary format. Licensed toHilo, Hawaii, United States, the station serves the Hilo area. The station is currently owned by Pacific Radio Group, Inc.[2]
The Mauna Kea Broadcasting Company, owned bySaul Levine, received a construction permit for a new radio station to be built in Hilo on May 14, 1969.[3] The station would have to wait more than a decade before finally signing on. Continual extensions of the construction permit were granted until 1980, when the call sign was changed to KKBG. The Big Island finally got FM radio on June 5, 1980, when the station debuted on a test basis with aneasy listening format.[4] Official program service debuted two months later.[5] Mauna Kea Broadcasting also ownedKJYE (96.3 FM) on Oahu.[6]
Levine sold KKBG to Philip L. Brewer in 1982; Brewer's only other broadcasting holding was a station inWindsor, Colorado.[7] The station changed formats after the sale to rock. Brewer sold his Colorado properties in 1988 and expanded on the Big Island by acquiring Hilo AM outletKHLO the next year.[8]
In 1998, Brewer sold its four Big Island radio properties to Emerald City Radio Partners for $3.8 million; by this time, the station was already adult contemporary.[9] Emerald City became Maverick Media, and its stations were sold to Pacific Radio Group; its simultaneous purchases of two clusters caused major radio station ownership realignment on the Big Island.[10]
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