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WPKF

Coordinates:41°44′16″N73°54′18″W / 41.7379°N 73.9051°W /41.7379; -73.9051
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Radio station in Poughkeepsie, New York, United States
WPKF
Broadcast areaPoughkeepsie-Newburgh-Kingston, New York
Frequency96.1MHz
Branding96.1 KISS-FM
Programming
FormatTop 40 (CHR)
AffiliationsPremiere Networks
Ownership
Owner
History
First air date
October 11, 1996 (1996-10-11)[1]
Former call signs
  • WALQ (1996,CP)
  • WNSX (1996–97)
  • WTND (1997–99)
  • WCTJ (1999–2001)
Call sign meaning
Poughkeepsie Kiss FM
Technical information[2]
Licensing authority
FCC
Facility ID72380
ClassA
ERP3,500 watts
HAAT81 meters (266 ft)
Transmitter coordinates
41°44′16″N73°54′18″W / 41.7379°N 73.9051°W /41.7379; -73.9051
Links
Public license information
WebcastListen live (viaiHeartRadio)
Websitekissfmhv.iheart.com

WPKF (96.1FM, "Kiss FM") is atop 40 (CHR) radio station licensed toPoughkeepsie, New York and serving the Mid-Hudson Valley of New York state. The station is owned byiHeartMedia, Inc. Its studios are located on Tucker Drive in Poughkeepsie, and its transmitter is located on Ryon Drive in the same city.

History

[edit]

The 96.1 frequency was granted as aconstruction permit in 1995 toWRNQ/WKIP owner Richard Novik. In early 1996, the frequency planned to use the WALQ calls, however that August those calls were replaced by WNSX (Ninety Six) as the station prepared to sign on the air. Two months later, the 96.1 frequency came to life as "Modern Rock, The X 96.1", withThe Greaseman in mornings and ABC's "MR-35" format the rest of the day.

Two months after WNSX signed on, Richard Novik sold his station cluster to Straus Media and the future of themodern rock format began to unravel.The X did not fit in with thecountry-oriented Straus strategy and the station flipped to country as "Thunder Country" WTND. WNSX did quite well for a new signal in its only book on the air, but it was too late to turn back.

Being mostly satellite-fed (Westwood One "Hot Country") and in a quasi-network withWTHK in Hudson andWTHN in Ellenville, WTND seemed to make economic sense for Straus at the outset. In reality, the format failed badly against the heritage, better programmed and better-promotedWRWD-FM and sunk to the bottom of the ratings. After nearly being de-listed from the PoughkeepsieArbitron ratings, WTND was flipped tohot adult contemporary "The Cat" WCTJ on August 9, 1999, after a weekend of stunting with clips from theBob & Sheri morning show.

Initially, WCTJ was to be a simulcast of sister stationWCTW in Catskill, however by September it was ironed out into a mutual simulcast. Instead of simulcasting WCTW to points south (as had been done a year prior via translator in Poughkeepsie), the two stations existed on their own albeit with the same music and DJs on a slight delay with different promotions and a nighttime split where WCTW airedDelilah (heard in Poughkeepsie on WRNQ). Balancing the two different markets and keeping everything running was problematic and WCTJ's ratings and revenue remained weak in relation to the work needed for the simulcast.

Straus Media sold its stations toClear Channel Communications in 2000 and, after buying rival Roberts Radio, WCTJ was put under the same roof as rivalWBWZ. After WCTW split off on its own after Clear Channel took control of the stations at the start of November, WCTJ was left on its own amid format-flip rumors. On December 22, rumors became fact when WCTJ and WTHN entered joint stunting as "Variety 96 & 99" and eventually launched asRhythmic Top 40 that afternoon using Clear Channel'sKissFM brand.

In March 2005, WFKP in Ellenville dropped the Kiss-FM format amid dismal ratings and flipped to a virtual simulcast of WRNQ's "LiteFM" format. The change had no effect on WPKF's Dutchess County ratings.

Instability and many changes were still to come. In September 2005, Kiss added Matt Bosso as afternoon host, but he moved on shortly afterwards to join the then-syndicated Wake Up with Whoopi in August 2006. More changes to Kiss came in 2007 as programmer Jimi Jamm left radio to embark on a career in music promotion. Aaron McCord became Kiss-FM's third program director, but left music programming responsibilities to CJ McIntyre. Then in 2008, yet more changes came to the station, with morning/APD CJ McIntyre becoming program director while continuing to host "CJ's Playhouse. Still more changes in late 2009 saw CJ's Playhouse come to end and the syndicatedElvis Duran and the Morning Show replaced local programming, as didOn Air with Ryan Seacrest middays; local programming on the station continued with Chris Marino afternoons (who also served as program director and music director) and Fuzzy & Choco at night. CJ was moved to WRWD's morning show.

Then in January 2011, Chris Marino left WPKF to do the morning show on WBWZ, and Fuzzy moved to afternoons for a short time and Choco became the night DJ, with a 5 p.m. to 7 p.m. overlap with both Fuzzy & Choco.

In September 2011, WPKF fired local air talent except Chris Marino and began largely carrying Clear Channel'sPremium Choice programming format with pre-recorded DJs from other markets, and eliminated locally programmed music in favor of programming from corporate headquarters in San Antonio, Texas.

References

[edit]
  1. ^Landriscina, Mina (October 11, 1996)."'X 96.1' joins radio airwaves: Modern rock station after thirtysomethings".Poughkeepsie Journal. Poughkeepsie, New York. p. 1D. RetrievedNovember 29, 2025 – via Newspapers.com.
  2. ^"Facility Technical Data for WPKF".Licensing and Management System.Federal Communications Commission.

External links

[edit]
Radio stations inPoughkeepsie andKingston,New York (mid-Hudson Valley area)
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Hot
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Urban
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