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KTFM (94.1 FM, "94.1 San Antonio's Sports Star") is a commercial radio station licensed to Floresville, Texas, and serving Greater San Antonio. It broadcasts a sports radio format and is owned by Alpha Media. On weekdays it has local personalities hosting sports shows, with ESPN Radio heard nights and weekends.
97.5 FM Houston: TX: ESPN Radio 97.5 KTTU: 950 AM Lubbock: TX: 100.7 The Score KTTU-FM: 97.3 FM Lubbock: TX: Double T 97.3 KITX-HD4: 95.5-4 FM Paris: TX: ESPN Paris 105.1 KGKL: 960 AM San Angelo: TX: ESPN Radio 960 KTFM: 94.1 FM San Antonio: TX: San Antonio's Sports Star KZDC: 1250 AM San Antonio: TX: ESPN 1250 KTFS: 740 AM Texarkana: TX: ESPN ...
Call sign Frequency City of License [1] [2] Licensee Format [3]; KAAM: 770 AM: Garland: DJRD Broadcasting, LLC: Christian talk/Brokered KABA: 90.3 FM: Louise: Aleluya Broadcasting Network
San Antonio, Texas is the 25th largest radio market in the US as ranked by Nielsen Audio ... San Antonio's Sports Star: ESPN 94.1 FM: Sports: Alpha Media: 95.1: KMYO:
KZDC (1250 AM, "ESPN 1250") is an all-sports-formatted radio station in San Antonio, ... KZDC switched translators from K233DB 94.5 FM to K277CX 103.3 FM San Antonio.
KLEY-FM (95.7 MHz, "Tejano 95.7 & 103.3") is a commercial radio station licensed to Jourdanton, Texas, and serving the San Antonio metropolitan area. The station is currently owned by Alpha Media and licensed to Alpha Media Licensee, LLC. [2] KLEY-FM broadcasts a Tejano music format. The studios are on Eisenhauer Road in Northeast San Antonio.
In 1987, KAJA got a rival FM station, when 100.3 KCYY began its own country music format. KAJA and KCYY, owned by Cox Media, have competed for San Antonio country listeners for more than three decades. On October 18, 2010, KAJA won the 2010 Country Music Association (CMA) Large Market Radio Station of the Year award. This was the station's ...
The call letters were changed back to KALL-FM on July 10. Management wanted to recapture some of the listeners who had grown up on KALL-FM when it was a contemporary hits station. On December 3, 1993, the call sign switched to the current KODJ. [5] The original KODJ call letters were originally found on a radio station in Los Angeles. [6]