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Competitively, KKDA also has a current crosstown rivalry with another urban station KBFB ("97.9 The Beat"), who has taken advantage of KKDA's 'traditional' urban direction and used that to their advantage, resulting in the two fighting it out for R&B/hip hop dominance in the Metroplex. Their first competition until 1985 was the now defunct R&B ...
KZMJ is the flagship station for the nationally syndicated quiet storm evening slow-jams program Love and R&B, hosted by singer/actor Al B. Sure!. Among other specialty programs is DJ Mo Dave's weekly mix show on Friday nights consisting of classic hip-hop tracks previously heard on the station when it was known as "Boom 94.5".
WMGC-FM - 105.1 The Bounce - Classic Hip-Hop & R&B; WCHB – 1340 WCHB - Urban contemporary gospel; WMKM - Rejoice AM 1440 - Urban Gospel; WDFN - Detroit's BIN 1130 - Black-oriented news; WSHJ - 88.3 FM - Urban contemporary
KRNB was first launched at 6 a.m. on September 16, 1996, with an Urban Adult Contemporary format playing R&B music, hence the call sign. (Coincidentally, it is the western reflection of an R&B station in Philadelphia called WRNB.) [3] [4] At the time, its only other competitor for the rest of the decade was KRBV, which went off the air as an R&B station in 1998 due to a transmitter problem ...
AM 730 in Dallas began operations on August 1, 1957, as Top 40 music station KBCS.After a few years of competing with 1190 KLIF and 1480 KBOX for the Top 40 audience with limited success, the station changed calls to KKSN ("Kissin'") in 1959, evolving into an R&B format over the coming months and taking the new calls KRZY ("Crazy") in 1960.
The following is a list of FCC-licensed AM and FM radio stations in the U.S. state of ... Urban/Hip-Hop KCUS-LP: 94.9 FM ... Dallas: Warning Radio: Urban gospel/R&B ...
The Tom Joyner Morning Show aired on KSOC until 2014, when KSOC flipped to classic hip hop, and in 2017, when KSOC returned to urban adult contemporary, the show returned to the station. The program remained in Dallas until the mid-2010s, when Joyner began hosting remotely from South Florida after relocating to that area.
As with Rhythmic CHR, Rhythmic AC may vary depending on the market as to how much hip-hop and R&B product are included in the playlist; for example, the current WKTU (one of the late 1990s pioneers of the recent crop of Rhythmic AC stations) leans toward pop and dance, while WBQT in Boston is very hip-hop heavy.