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KYDA

Coordinates: 33°26′13″N 97°29′06″W / 33.437°N 97.485°W / 33.437; -97.485
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This is an old revision of this page, as edited by 2600:1700:df1:7d0:3d0b:e1f2:57c0:113d (talk) at 23:06, 1 April 2022 (Early beginnings). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

KYDA
Broadcast areaDallas-Fort Worth Metroplex/Gainesville/

Bowie/Decatur/Sherman/

Jacksboro/Ardmore
Frequency101.7 MHz
BrandingAir 1
Programming
Language(s)English
FormatChristian Worship
AffiliationsAir 1
Ownership
OwnerEducational Media Foundation
History
First air date
1967 (as KDSX)
Former call signs
KDSX (1967-1977)
KDSQ (1977-1995)
KDVE (1995-1997)
KIKM (1997-1999)
KZMP (1999-2003)
KTCY (2003-2013)
Call sign meaning
Your DAllas Station
Technical information
Facility ID28122
ClassC
ERP92,000 watts
HAAT620 meters
Translator(s)K263AK (100.5 MHz, Wichita Falls)
Links
WebcastListen Live
Websiteair1.com

KYDA (101.7 FM) is a radio station based in the Fort Worth, Texas, and is the local outlet of EMF's Air 1 radio, airing a Christian Worship format. The station is licensed to Azle, Texas, with a transmitter site located north of Decatur, Texas. It is currently owned by Educational Media Foundation after purchase from Liberman Broadcasting in early November 2012. Air1 is a Christian Worship music radio network in the United States.

History

Early beginnings

KDSX-FM was licensed for Denison-Sherman in 1967. In late 1976, B.V. Hammond, Jr. and Lofton L. Hendrick sold the station to Grayson County Broadcasters, Inc., which sold the station the next year to Radiozark Broadcasters. As Radiozark did not buy KDSX AM radio (now KKLF in Richardson), it changed the callsign to KDSQ. The station ran a longtime Top 40/CHR format.

In the 1990s, KDSQ made a series of technical improvements, changing from class A to C3 in October 1991 and becoming a full class C station with 92 kW ERP from a transmitter northeast of Decatur in 1999. These improvements allowed the station to enter the Dallas-Fort Worth radio market. The station changed calls and formats three times in five years, becoming KDVE in 1995 as a soft adult contemporary station, KIKM in 1997 as a country station competing against KMKT, and KZMP in 1999 as Spanish. Entravision Communications bought Z Spanish Media in 1999, resulting in its acquisition of KZMP. The callsign changed again in 2003, to KTCY.

Liberman Broadcasting (now Estrella Media as of February 2020) bought some of Entravision's radio assets on August 4, 2006[1] and relaunched KTCY "Concierto 101.7" as XO 101.7, retaining the same Spanish-language pop music but with different DJs and programming. The station moved toward a more romantic sound beginning in 2009.

In early 2012, KTCY briefly returned to Latin Pop as "Baila 101.7" [Baila is Spanish for "Dance"]. It competed for head-on with CBS Radio-owned KMVK Mega 107.5 and Univision Radio-owned KDXX Máxima 99.1. "Baila 101.7" previously broadcast music Sunday through Friday for a full 24 hours. However, on Saturday, 7-10 AM was reserved for Infomercials. The station ran jockless throughout its short tenure.

File:KTCYBaila.png
Previous Baila logo used until February 8, 2013.

Acquisition by EMF

It was announced on November 5, 2012, that Educational Media Foundation, owner of Christian Contemporary K-LOVE and then Christian Rock Air1, would expand to the Dallas/Fort Worth area by purchasing KTCY from Liberman for $6 million. As Entercom-owned classic hits station KLUV 98.7 owns the "K-Love" branding in the Dallas/Fort Worth market, it was assumed that the station would take Air1 to avoid confusion.[2] On February 8, the station went off the air to make way for EMF's takeover. EMF reserved the KYDA call letters for the current format that launched at 4 PM on February 12, 2013.[3]

Signal

Unlike most of the area's FM stations like competitor KLTY, which transmit their signals from Cedar Hill, KYDA transmits its signal from an unincorporated area within the county borders of Cooke, Montague, and Wise. Therefore, KYDA's signal is much stronger in the Northwestern parts of the Dallas/Fort Worth metroplex as well as the cities of Decatur, Bowie, Gainesville, and Sherman, to as far north as Ardmore, Oklahoma, but is considerably weaker in Dallas and areas Southeast of the city itself.

References

  1. ^ "Calif. media company to buy Dallas radio stations". Dallas Business Journal. 2006-07-31.
  2. ^ EMF Expands To Dallas/Fort Worth - Radio Insight (released November 5, 2012)
  3. ^ "Air-1 Expands To Dallas/Fort Worth – RadioInsight".

33°26′13″N 97°29′06″W / 33.437°N 97.485°W / 33.437; -97.485