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The 10:00pm hour of that shift is known as The Ten O'Clock Booty Call, with the remaining two hours devoted solely to slow jam love songs dubbed as The KMEL Lounge. Urban contemporary gospel airs on Sunday mornings. KMEL is one of two area stations to play gospel; KBLX is the other.
On March 13, 1987, at 6 p.m., the station's call sign was changed to WEGX, and rebranded as "Eagle 106". The first song played on "Eagle 106" was “Living in America” by James Brown. [8] The station kept the CHR/top 40 format, but gave it a more adult-friendly makeover, designing the station to appeal primarily to women aged 18–34.
Rick Chase (born George T. Fryer; June 12, 1957 in Salinas, California – December 12, 2002 in Stockton), was a disc jockey known primarily for his thirteen years as a DJ on San Francisco radio station KMEL 106.1 FM.
KBMS – Best Music Station AM 1480 – Urban adult contemporary; KXJM – Jam'n 107.5 – Rhythmic contemporary; KINK HD-2/K275CH - WE 102.9 - Rhythmic Top 40/Hip Hop; KOOR - 1010 Urbana - Spanish rhythmic
With the tryout a success, he was signed to host a morning show for album-oriented rock (AOR) station 106.1 KMEL, teaming up with newsman Joe Regelski. While at KMEL, Bennett's mother, Ruth, achieved fame as the world's oldest AOR disk jockey when she hosted a Sunday night countdown show on KMEL from 1982 to 1983. [15]
The following is a list of FCC-licensed radio stations in the U.S. state of Pennsylvania, which can be sorted by their call signs, frequencies, cities of license, licensees, and programming formats. List of radio stations
In November 2007, the station dropped the moniker "Mix 106" in favor of the new brand "106-1 MDX." From November 2007 until January 2012 the station used the slogan "San Angelo's Most New Hit Music." In January 2012 the station moved to the new slogan "All of Today's Hottest Hits & Fewest Commercials."
It played the top songs from the best selling rock albums. This lasted until May 1982. Stiff competition from rival rock stations KMEL and CBS-owned KRQR prompted KSFX to drop AOR. In 1982, the station returned to its KGO-FM call letters and switched to All-Talk, based on 810 KGO's success as San Francisco's top station.