KTAR-FM

Coordinates: 33°19′58″N 112°3′48″W / 33.33278°N 112.06333°W / 33.33278; -112.06333
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KTAR-FM
Broadcast areaPhoenix, Arizona
Frequency92.3 MHz (HD Radio) 92.3HD2 Mormon Channel
BrandingKTAR News
Programming
FormatNews/Talk
Ownership
OwnerBonneville International Corporation
History
First air date
December 19, 1970 (as KXTC)
Former call signs
KXTC (1970-1982)
KEZC (1982-1984)
KJJJ-FM (1984-1985)
KKFR (1985-2006)
Call sign meaning
Keep Taking the Arizona Republic (reference to co-ownership of sister AM station with The Arizona Republic at one point)
Technical information
Facility ID65479
ClassC
ERP100,000 watts
HAAT545 meters (1,788 ft)
Transmitter coordinates
33°19′58″N 112°3′48″W / 33.33278°N 112.06333°W / 33.33278; -112.06333
Links
WebcastListen Live
Websitektar.com

KTAR-FM (92.3 FM) is a radio station broadcasting a News/Talk format.[1] Licensed to Glendale, Arizona, United States, the station serves the Phoenix area and is currently owned by Bonneville International Corporation.[2] It is co-owned with KTAR on 620 kHz in the AM band, which split off from KTAR-FM on January 1, 2007, as to provide more news on 92.3 FM and more sports on 620 AM, which absorbed the assets of co-owned KMVP at 860 kHz in Phoenix. Its studios are located in Phoenix near Piestewa Peak and its transmitter is in South Mountain Park.

History

KXTC

On December 19, 1970, the station first signed on as KXTC, and aired a mix of mainstream and contemporary jazz music. It initially broadcast from a transmitter atop the Westward Ho.[3] That lasted until 1978, when they switched to a disco format which they would have for about two years, using the name "Disco 92". Show hosts included Scott Tuchman and Rick Nuhn. The station dropped disco for country in 1980, going by "KC-92". In January 1981, the station moved to Shaw Butte, and three months later, KXTC became KJJJ-FM for the first time.

KEZC, KJJJ, and KKFR

In 1982, the call letters KEZC were issued on 92.3 FM, the station played a softer version of country formats common in the Phoenix market, and the station slogan was 'Easy Country'. In 1984, the station began to simulcast with KJJJ (now KGME) as KJJJ-FM, a country music station. In 1985, KJJJ-FM flipped from country, and KKFR premiered as a gold-based Top 40 outlet as "The Fire Station, Arizona's 92 Fire FM", and later as "92.3 KKFR, Your Fire Station!". In 1988, they began using (albeit briefly) "Hot Hits 92.3", but was forced to drop that by Mike Jacobs, the owner of the "Hot Hits" slogan nationally. Over the next few years, they began shifting towards a Rhythmic/Dance Music mix. They also adopted the name "Power 92", which patterned their direction on then and now former sister station KPWR in Los Angeles. They would later modify it to "Power 92.3" in 2000.

On December 16, 1993, despite high ratings with their rhythmic direction, KKFR evolved to a mainstream Top 40 and leaned slightly toward Modern Rock (to less of an extent than other Top 40 stations in other markets); however, the station lost much of its audience and ratings slipped, and from January to March 1995, the station re-added rhythmic and dance music to the playlist, which helped the station regain much of its lost audience. By 1997, they began dropping the dance cuts, leading to the transformation into a R&B/Hip-Hop approach. By the end of the year, the station was no longer Top 40 at all.

Chancellor Media (which later became AMFM, Inc.) purchased the station in late 1998 from its longtime owners The Broadcast Group, but when the company merged with Clear Channel Communications, they had to divest the station to meet FCC ownership regulations. Emmis Communications bought the station in 2000.

News Talk 92.3 KTAR-FM

In 2006, Emmis sold the station to Bonneville International. In turn, Bonneville announced it would gradually move the news/talk format aired on KTAR 620 to KKFR beginning September 18, 2006 (which was the day KKFR became KTAR-FM), and the AM property would merge with KMVP, the local ESPN Radio station, which would then be complete by January 1, 2007. KTAR-FM would become the news station, KTAR would become "Arizona Sports 620" (which became ESPN Phoenix 620 AM on September 15, 2014 when Arizona Sports gradually moved to 98.7 FM on January 6, 2014.) and 860 AM would be divested to the Cesar Chavez Foundation on March 9, 2017.[4][5][6]

Meanwhile, the former occupant of 92.3, KKFR, went through changes; its intellectual property was acquired by Riviera Broadcast Group (which already owned KEDJ and two stations in Las Vegas), and shortly thereafter, moved to 98.3 FM licensed to Mayer, which was KKLD in Prescott Valley. Sunburst Media let Riviera operate and later own the station; KKFR took over KKLD and created the new KKFR on September 1. In 2007, less than a month after the split of the KTAR radio stations, the station tweaked its identity to News 92.3 KTAR-FM; previously, the "-FM" was not used, as the station was simulcasting with KTAR. Coincidentally, sister station KMVP-FM was the original home of the KTAR-FM call letters.

KTAR-FM is a 24-hour news station, but will serve as an overflow for live sporting events whenever KMVP-FM and KTAR are unavailable.

HD radio

KTAR's HD Radio signal is multiplexed. The main signal is a simulcast of KTAR's news and talk programming. The second channel carries the radio station of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. The channel originates from Temple Square in Salt Lake City, Utah, and broadcasts 24 hours a day, seven days a week.

References

  1. ^ "Station Information Profile". Arbitron. Spring 2010. Archived from the original on 2010-03-01. Retrieved 2011-09-12. {{cite web}}: Unknown parameter |deadurl= ignored (|url-status= suggested) (help)
  2. ^ "KTAR-FM Facility Record". United States Federal Communications Commission, audio division. Retrieved 2011-09-12.
  3. ^ "FCC History Card" (PDF). Retrieved 10 April 2017.
  4. ^ https://radioinsight.com/headlines/87311/phoenixs-peak-flips-to-sports/. {{cite web}}: Missing or empty |title= (help)
  5. ^ https://radioinsight.com/headlines/89403/bonneville-to-launch-espn-phoenix-in-september/. {{cite web}}: Missing or empty |title= (help)
  6. ^ "Bonneville Sells Phoenix AM To Cesar Chavez Foundation - RadioInsight". RadioInsight. 9 March 2017.

External links