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On November 10, 2010, at Noon, the station dropped its 11-year-old active rock format and flipped to a '90s-leaning adult hits format as "GenX 104-9". [5] [6] The final three songs on The Monkey were "Brass Monkey" by the Beastie Boys, "It's the End of the World as We Know It (And I Feel Fine)" by R.E.M., and "Closing Time" by Semisonic, while GenX's first three songs were "Get Ready for This ...
After establishing itself within the Seattle music community, [8] the station was approved for an LPFM broadcast license by the FCC in 2014, [1] [3] and after a successful fundraising campaign began broadcasting at 104.9 FM on September 20, 2017, [1] [3] transmitting from the station's studios at 2018a East Union Street in Seattle's Cherry Hill ...
Call sign Frequency City of License [1] [2] Owner Format [3]; KACS: 90.5 FM: Chehalis: Chehalis Valley Educational Foundation: Contemporary Inspirational: KACW: 91.3 FM
KZOK-FM (102.5 MHz) is a commercial radio station located in Seattle, Washington. It airs a classic rock radio format and is owned by iHeartMedia, Inc. KZOK's transmitter is located near Issaquah, Washington, on Tiger Mountain, and operates from studios in Seattle in the Belltown neighborhood northwest of Downtown. KZOK-FM broadcasts in HD. [2]
On June 26, 2019, KUBE-HD2 changed to iHeart's "Pride Radio" network, which airs Top 40/dance music targeting the LGBTQ community. This marked the second such format in Seattle, the other being Entercom's "Channel Q" format airing on KNDD-HD2/K277AE. [37] [38] It has since been moved to the HD2 sub-channel of KBKS. On February 19, 2022, KUBE's ...
KHTE-FM - 96.5 The Box - Urban contemporary; KOKY – 102.1 KOKY – Urban adult contemporary; KPZK – Praise 102.5 – Urban contemporary gospel; KZTS - Rejoice 1380/105.5/103.3 - Urban Gospel; KWCP-LP - KWCP-LP 98.9 The Mix - Urban Adult Contemporary/Classic Hip Hop; KTUV - The Cat 99.9 FM & 1440 AM - Urban Oldies
105.7 HFS ceased broadcasting mainstream music on February 1, 2007, immediately before KMS on HFS premiered, yet retained the WHFS call letters traditionally associated with the music the station used to broadcast. During this period the WHFS format was moved to HD radio as WHFS 105.7-HD2 and was known as "HFS2".
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