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The station later changed its calls to KRMP in March 2003 and became known as "Superstar Country 103.5." The station moved to southwest of Oklahoma City from Anadarko in July 2004 and became KVSP "Power 103.5" with a Mainstream Urban format making it Oklahoma City's first Urban station on the FM dial since KAEZ (Now Sports KRXO-FM) departed in ...
99.3 FM: Oklahoma City: Oklahoma Catholic Family Conference, Inc. Catholic Spanish KHEB: 91.9 FM: Granite: South Central Oklahoma Christian Broadcasting Inc: Southern Gospel KHEV: 90.3 FM: Fairview: Great Plains Christian Radio, Inc. Contemporary Christian/Christian Talk and Teaching KHIM: 97.7 FM: Mangum: Fuchs Radio L.L.C. Classic hits KHKC ...
The format lasted for about 2 years when it was dropped and KPRW started simulcasting Rock with KATT-FM again. In 1993, Oklahoma City businessman Russell M. Perry, founder of the weekly newspaper The Black Chronicle purchased KPRW and changed the format back to Urban as KVSP "Power Jammin' 1140" filling the void as the Urban station in Oklahoma ...
This is a list of FM radio stations in the United States having call signs beginning with the letters KT through KV. Low-power FM radio stations, those with designations such as KTAH-LP , have not been included in this list.
KQXT-FM 101.9 - AC; KQXT-FM HD-3 105.7 - Regional Mexican. KRPT 92.5/93.3 - Classic country; KTKR 760 - Sports radio; KXXM 96.1 - Top 40 Mainstream; KZEP-FM 104.5 - Spanish CHR; WOAI 1200 AM - News Talk radio (first "Clear Channel" owned station, merged with KAJA FM under San Antonio Broadcasting umbrella)
WOAD – Gospel 1300 AM & 103.5 FM - Urban contemporary gospel; WJSU-FM – FM 88 – Jazz. WJSU-HD2 - JSU Tigers The Sipp - Urban Alternative; WMPR – WMPR 90.1 FM - Urban contemporary, Blues, Urban Gospel, Variety; WHLH – 95.5 Hallelujah FM – Urban contemporary gospel; WRBJ-FM – 97.7 FM – Urban contemporary; WJMI – 99 Jams ...
This restored the alternative rock format to Oklahoma City following the flip of KHBZ-FM (now KOKQ) to active rock in 2009, only to dump active rock on December 29 that same year. On December 3, 2010, the following message was sent out on The Spy's Facebook page: "To be specific: yes, we're no longer broadcasting on 105.3 FM.
In 1964, the owners of KJEM bought KTOK for $625,000, selling KJEM-AM-FM for $315,000 to Radio Oklahoma, headed by the Globe Life and Accident Insurance Corporation. [13] A 1966 blaze at the transmitter site briefly forced the station off the air; [ 14 ] months after returning, it made an early move to an all-talk format, branded "Audience ...