Jump to content

KDRB

Coordinates: 41°49′48″N 93°36′54″W / 41.830°N 93.615°W / 41.830; -93.615
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by Yobot (talk | contribs) at 05:24, 3 July 2016 (WP:CHECKWIKI error fixes using AWB (12052)). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

KDRB
Broadcast areaDes Moines, Iowa
Frequency100.3 MHz (HD Radio)
100.3-2 FM KDRB-HD2 Country "96.5 Country" (HD Radio)
Branding100.3 The Bus
Programming
FormatAdult Hits
Ownership
Owner
History
First air date
1948 (as WHO-FM)
Former call signs
WHO-FM (1948-1973)
KLYF (1973-1998)
KMXD (1998-2006)
Call sign meaning
K Des Moines Radio Bus
Technical information
Facility ID51332
ClassC
ERP100,000 watts
HAAT547 meters
Translator(s)96.5 K243CA (Millman, relays HD2)
Links
WebcastListen Live
Listen Live (HD2)
Websitethebusfm.com
965country.com

KDRB, "100.3 The Bus," is an adult hits radio station similar to Jack FM serving the Des Moines, Iowa, area in the USA. It broadcasts at 100.3 FM. The station's studios are located at 2141 Grand Avenue in Des Moines along with iHeartMedia, Inc.'s other Des Moines stations (KDXA, KKDM, KXNO and WHO). Its strong 100,000 watt signal stretches north to Mason City, Iowa (which is about 100 miles from Des Moines) and south to the Missouri and Iowa border.

History

The Palmer years

In 1948, WHO-FM began transmissions at 100.3 FM as the third FM station to serve the Des Moines market, after KRNT-FM and KSO-FM. In its early years, it primarily simulcast its sister station, WHO. Studios were located at 1100 Walnut Street in downtown Des Moines and the station's tower and transmitter were located on top of the Equitable Building at 6th and Locust in Des Moines. In 1950, the transmitter was moved to a new tower at WHO's transmitter site in Mitchellville, Iowa. The old transmitter and tower on top of the Equitable Building was sold to KCBC for their new FM station KCBC-FM. In the mid-1960s, WHO-FM ceased simulcasting its AM sister and started programming easy listening and classical music.

In 1973, the station underwent some dramatic changes. The call letters were changed to KLYF and the station was reprogrammed with a beautiful music format in FM stereo. This was the first time that the station broadcast in multiplex stereo and became known by its nickname "K-Life". In 1981, the format evolved into an adult contemporary format and by the mid 1990s it was an adult top 40 station competing directly with KSTZ. The station's transmitter was eventually moved to the WOI Tower near Alleman, Iowa.

Buyout by Jacor and Clear Channel

In October 1997, Palmer Broadcasting sold its Des Moines radio stations to Jacor Broadcasting of Cincinnati, Ohio. Jacor immediately re-branded the station as "Mix 100.3", but left the format unchanged for the most part. On June 17, 1998, the call letters changed to KMXD. Over time the station continued to lose listeners at an alarming rate. Many things were done to try to counteract this, such as rebranding the station as "Mix 100" and trying an "80s and more" format. When this failed also, the format was changed again to a traditional adult contemporary format and the station was renamed "My 100". Under this namer, 100.3 saw its worst ratings ever, sinking into the basement of the Arbitron ratings.

New life as "The Bus"

On May 25, 2006, KMXD was rebranded to "The Bus", simulcasting KDRB. This was a short lived, transitional arrangement to get listeners of 106.3 used to "100.3 The Bus". The Bus had performed much better than anyone had expected and the decision was made to close the failing "Mix/My" formats and move "The Bus" to the much stronger signal at 100.3. On June 12, 2006, KMXD became KDRB and "The Bus" is now only heard on 100.3. The 106.3 frequency is now KDXA "Alt 106.3".

Programming

100.3 The Bus primarily has no DJs, except Jack Emerson in afternoon drive. However, most of the time, the "Bus Driver" is heard between every song and commercial break, mainly to identify the station.

KDRB has also been the flagship station for Iowa State University sports since the 2006-2007 season, taking over from sister station KXNO. Its longtime AM sister, WHO, airs the games of the rival University of Iowa.

Signal

KDRB has a 100,000 watt signal which allows it to be heard over most of Iowa, Possibly a small sliver of South Dakota (The Sioux City area), Up to Austin Minnesota, A small section of Wisconsin, Almost all of Eastern Iowa and Western Illinois, A fairly large portion of Missouri, A decent sized portion of Kansas and Parts of Eastern Nebraska (Lincoln and Omaha included) which makes this stations listening area 8 states (Similar to WHO AM also located in Des Moines)[1]

File:KDRB.png
My prediction for KDRB 100.3 the bus's coverage area. I strongly advise you take this with a grain of salt as you may or may not receive this station in the areas circled.

References

  • DesMoinesBroadcasting.com. "Des Moines Station Timeline". Retrieved 2006-06-22.
  • Munson, Kyle (2006-05-26). "Successful "Bus" Takes Over 100.3 Frequency". Des Moines Register.
  • Iowa State University Media Relations (2006-06-01). "Cyclones Jump on "The Bus"".

41°49′48″N 93°36′54″W / 41.830°N 93.615°W / 41.830; -93.615