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WKSF (99.9 FM "Kiss Country") is a country music station licensed to Old Fort, North Carolina, serving the Asheville area. The station is owned by iHeartMedia, Inc. and broadcasts from a tower on Mount Pisgah, southwest of Asheville.
WKIS (99.9 MHz) is a commercial radio station licensed to Boca Raton, Florida, and serving South Florida.It is owned by Audacy, Inc. and airs a country music radio format.Its studios are located in Audacy's Miami office on Northeast Second Avenue. [2]
From 1994 to 2000, the WFKS call sign was used on 99.9 FM in Palatka, as CHR/Hot AC "99.9 Kiss FM". That station became country music WGNE-FM in 2000, and was moved into the Jacksonville market by Renda Broadcasting in May 2005. It is now "99.9 Gator Country", competing with WKSL's sister station, WQIK-FM.
WKXB launched as WPGF-FM, a sister station to 1470/WPGF. It adopted an adult contemporary format as WVBS-FM in the early 1980s. WVBS-FM would flip to a Top 40/CHR format in the mid-late 1980s named "All Hit B100". In 1993, WVBS-FM became Country-formatted "Kix Country 99.9" with new calls WKXB.
La 100 in Buenos Aires; Estación del Sur in Rosario, Santa Fe; León FM in Rosario, Santa Fe; X99 in Bahía Blanca, Buenos Aires; 99.9 in Mar del Plata, Buenos Aires; Ciudad in San Genaro, Santa Fe
KXSS-FM "96.9 Kiss-FM" in Amarillo, Texas (owned by Townsquare Media) KZII "102.5 Kiss-FM" in Lubbock, Texas (owned by Townsquare Media) WDMK, better known as "105.9 Kiss FM" in Detroit, Michigan (owned by Radio One) WKSE, "Kiss 98.5", in Buffalo, New York (owned by Audacy) WKSF, "99.9 Kiss Country" in Asheville, North Carolina (owned by iHeart)
WGNE-FM (99.9 MHz) is a commercial radio station licensed to Middleburg, Florida, and serving the Jacksonville metropolitan area. It is owned by Renda Media and airs a country music radio format as "99.9 Gator Country", and primarily competes against iHeartMedia-owned WQIK. WGNE's studios and offices are in the Arlington district of Jacksonville.
In the late 1970s, many US radio stations began calling themselves "Kiss". Among these was KIIS-FM in Los Angeles, which adopted that call sign in 1975 when it became a sister station to KIIS (AM) — whose call sign comes not from the word "Kiss" but rather its dial position at 1150, with the letters "I" and "S" being the letters most closely resembling 1 and 5, respectively. [1]