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The following is a list of FCC-licensed radio stations in the U.S. state of Kansas, ... 102.1 FM: Dodge City: Kansas Sacred Heart Radio Corporation: Spanish Catholic ...
Kansas City: The International Radio Project of Kansas City: Variety KOPN: 89.5 FM: Columbia: New Wave Corporation: Variety KOQL: 106.1 FM: Ashland: Cumulus Licensing LLC: Top 40 (CHR) KOSP: 92.9 FM: Ozark: MW Springmo, Inc. Rhythmic contemporary KOTC-LP: 98.7 FM: Jefferson City: Jefferson City Seventh-Day Adventist Church: Christian KOZO: 89.7 ...
KCKC (102.1 FM) is an adult hits radio station based in Kansas City, Missouri, that operates with an ERP of 100 kW. It is licensed to and operated by Steel City Media. The studios are at Westport Center in Midtown Kansas City and the transmitter is in Independence, Missouri.
KYYS was the longtime call-sign for a rock format station, first located at 102.1 MHz (now KCKC-FM) and, until January 2008, at 99.7 MHz (now KZPT). The calls were transferred to retain presence within the media market, yet has no ties to either of its predecessors.
The following is a list of full-power radio stations, HD Radio subchannels and low-power translators in the United States broadcasting K-Love programming, which can be sorted by their call signs, frequencies, city of license, state and broadcast area. Blue background indicates a low-power FM translator. Gray background indicates an HD Radio ...
The classification of urban-formatted radio stations range from the radio formats of rhythmic contemporary hit radio to Urban contemporary gospel. Though urban contemporary was the originator of the format, there have come to be many variations of the format in the last 30 years.
On November 2, 2015, at midnight, after playing "You Ain't Much Fun" by Toby Keith, 102.5/94.9-HD2 changed its format to alternative rock, branded as "102.5 The Underground", beginning with "Kansas City" by The New Basement Tapes. With the change, 102.5/94.9-HD2 became the first Nash/Nash Icon station to drop the format.
Golden East put the AM station on the market and found a buyer in 1984: Elbert Anderson, the black owner of a local Coca-Cola bottling company. New studios were built on 63rd Street to handle the majority of the programming, and the station became KCXL with an urban contemporary format, the third local radio station for Kansas City's African-American community. [13]