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KMBZ-FM

Coordinates: 39°01′19″N 94°30′50″W / 39.022°N 94.514°W / 39.022; -94.514
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KMBZ-FM
KMBZ FM/AM Logo
Broadcast areaKansas City metropolitan area
Frequency98.1 MHz (HD Radio)
BrandingNewsradio 98.1 FM KMBZ
Programming
FormatNews/Talk
HD2: KMBZ simulcast
Ownership
Owner
KRBZ, KCSP, KQRC, KZPT, WDAF-FM, KMBZ, KWOD
History
First air date
1965 (as KUDL)
Former call signs
KUDL (1965–2011)
Call sign meaning
Taken from AM sister KMBZ
Technical information
Facility ID2449
ClassC0
ERP98,500 watts
HAAT335 meters
Links
WebcastListen Live
Websitekmbz.com

KMBZ-FM (98.1 MHz; "Newsradio 98.1 FM") is a commercial FM radio station licensed to Kansas City, Kansas, United States. KMBZ-FM airs a news/talk radio format. Owned by Entercom, its transmitter is located near 56th Street in Kansas City, Missouri and its studios and offices are located in Mission, Kansas. KMBZ-FM broadcasts at 98,500 watts, covering the Kansas City metropolitan area including parts of Missouri and Kansas. KMBZ-FM's schedule is mostly local talk shows, while its sister station 980 KMBZ (AM) carries mostly nationally syndicated hosts.

History

The 98.1 frequency was originally KUDL, which debuted on the AM band in 1953, broadcasting from Fairway, Kansas at 1380 kHz (now KCNW). KUDL played Top 40 music since at least 1956. With FM radio growing in popularity, KUDL began simulcasting its AM signal on 98.1 FM in 1965. From 1968 to 1973, the stations had split formats, with progressive rock (dubbed "The Rock of Kansas City") on the FM and Top-40/oldies on AM. In the early '70s, KUDL-FM had a Rhythm and blues music format and switched back to a progressive rock format until 1975 when KUDL AM began an All-news format. The FM station played began playing top 40 music in 1975 and called itself 'Disco 98' in 1976 with a disco format. After attempting Top-40 again during the rise and fall of disco, KUDL's soft rock format debuted in 1977.

File:KUDL Logo.png
Final logo as KUDL

In 1993, Apollo Broadcasting bought KUDL and one-time rival WHB from Shamrock Broadcasting, then sold WHB to a local broadcaster on the same day. In 2003, current owner Entercom dropped the smooth jazz format of KCIY at 106.5. However, KUDL continued airing Smooth Jazz on Sunday Mornings. The show aired from 7 AM to 11 AM and was hosted by Taylor Scott. In 2010, the station changed its positioner from "98.1 KUDL" to "Soft Rock 98.1."

On November 1, 2006, KUDL switched over to the all-Christmas format, continuing through Christmas Day, and switched early again in 2009. After switching to Christmas music, the station made its regular "soft rock" format available online and on its HD-2 channel.

On March 23, 2011, sister station KGEX flipped to a more modern-leaning Adult Contemporary format as "99-7 The Point" that contained some overlap with KUDL. One hour after The Point launched, KUDL shocked longtime listeners as they announced that they would terminate their adult contemporary format by the end of the month after 34 years and begin simulcasting sister station KMBZ, likely due to mediocre ratings, holding a relatively low 3.4 share in the latest Kansas City Arbitron ratings report (February 2011), as well as a likely negative connection to the call letters KUDL, which likely turned away younger demographics, a common trend among adult contemporary stations today. After the announcement was made, KUDL then began running liners redirecting listeners to 99.7. KUDL morning host Tanna Guthrie moved to afternoons on 99.7, and afternoon host Roger Carson moved to mornings on sister station WDAF-FM, where he replaced Blake Powers. The station held a two-hour farewell show on March 28, at 6 AM, before KUDL closed out its heritage format at 8AM with "Hold On to the Nights" by Richard Marx. Following the show, KUDL began simulcasting 99.7 for 3 days, as another way to redirect listeners to the frequency. On March 30, at 2 PM, KUDL broke from the simulcast and became KMBZ-FM.[1] In addition, KMBZ-FM replaced its HD2 simulcast of KXTR (a classical music station that then warehoused the KUDL call letters) with one for KCSP; the KXTR/KUDL simulcast moved to KRBZ's HD2 service, replacing all-comedy (it is now a simulcast of KCSP). Currently, KMBZ-HD2 carries a simulcast of KMBZ (AM).

The simulcast was split on January 5, 2015, with the AM adopting a mostly syndicated talk format as "Talk 980", while the FM revamped its schedule by airing a more local talk line up weekdays.[2]

References

  1. ^ "In Kansas City, Entercom to flip Soft AC KUDL to a simulcast with AM talk KMBZ". Radio-Info.com. March 24, 2011.
  2. ^ https://radioinsight.com/blog/headlines/91321/kmbz-to-break-simulcast-split-talk-formats/

39°01′19″N 94°30′50″W / 39.022°N 94.514°W / 39.022; -94.514