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KYLA

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This is an old revision of this page, as edited by MrSchimpf (talk | contribs) at 00:52, 19 August 2018 (Undid revision 855070359 by 208.242.193.2 (talk) (it really isn't needed, it tells us nothing except it drafted off the 'playlist' trend OUAT. If you want infringement of old radio station logos to your heart's content, Logopedia exists. It stays out.)). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

KYLA/KYRA/KYZA
Broadcast areaKYLA: Orange County, California
KYRA: Ventura County, California
KYZA: Victor Valley, California
Frequency92.7 MHz
BrandingAir1
Programming
FormatChristian CHR
Ownership
OwnerEducational Media Foundation
KKLQ (FM)
History
First air date
KYLA: 1993 (as KRCI)
KYRA: 1963 (as KNJO)
KYZA: 1959 (as KACE-FM)
Former call signs
KYLA:
KOUG (1991-1997)
KLIT (1997-2007)
KJLL (2007-2012)
KLST-FM (2012-2013)
KYRA:
KNJO (1963-1997)
KMLT (1997-2007)
KHJL (2007-2012)
KLSI (2012-2013)
KYZA:
KACE-FM (1959-1974)
KCNW (1974-1976)
KHNY (1976-1983)
KWDJ (1983-1990)
KQLH (1990-1997)
KXEZ (1/1997-6/1997)
KELT (1997-2007)
KAJL (2007-2012)
KLSN (2012-2013)
Technical information
Facility IDKYLA: 9304
KYRA: 21689
KYZA: 1244
ClassKYLA: A
KYRA: A
KYZA: A
ERPKYLA: 690 watts
KYRA: 3,100 watts
KYZA: 280 watts
HAATKYLA: 293 meters (961 ft)
KYRA:141 meters (463 ft)
KYZA: 449 meters (1,473 ft)
Transmitter coordinates
KYLA:33°36′20″N 117°48′35″W / 33.60556°N 117.80972°W / 33.60556; -117.80972
KYRA:34°12′21″N 118°49′4″W / 34.20583°N 118.81778°W / 34.20583; -118.81778
KYZA:34°36′44″N 117°17′27″W / 34.61222°N 117.29083°W / 34.61222; -117.29083
Translator(s)K205EP (88.9 MHz, Santa Clarita, translator for KYRA)
Repeater(s)92.7 KYRA-FM1 (Malibu Vista, CA)
Links
Webcastwww.air1.com/listen/%20Listen%20Live
Websiteair1.com

KYLA is one of three trimulcast Christian Rock FM radio stations in Southern California and is licensed to Fountain Valley, serving Orange County on 92.7 MHz.

KYRA is one of three trimulcast Christian Rock radio stations in Southern California and operates in Thousand Oaks, California, broadcasting to eastern Ventura County and far northwestern Los Angeles County on 92.7 MHz. KYRA also is heard on a translator, K220FR, in Simi Valley, CA on 91.9 FM.

KYZA is one of three trimulcast Christian Rock radio stations in Southern California and operates in Adelanto, California, broadcasting to the Victor Valley area on 92.7 MHz.

The three stations are considered rimshots of the nationally syndicated Christian contemporary hit radio (Christian CHR) network Air1 for the Greater Los Angeles area.

KYRA is also heard on FM booster KYRA-FM1 (92.7 FM) in Malibu Vista, California.

History

KYRA

KYRA signed on in 1963 with the call letters KNJO, broadcasting from a studio in the Park Oaks shopping center in Thousand Oaks.[1]: B-23  KNJO stood for "Conejo", the valley in which the station was located. The station's claim to fame at the time was that it was the first FM radio station on the West Coast to broadcast in stereo. KNJO was a community-oriented radio station featuring local news, sports, and remote broadcasts from a variety of local events.[2] The station was built by radio personality Sy Blonder and co-owned by Dodger baseball star Sandy Koufax.[1]: B-23 

Over the next several decades, KNJO changed hands several times. First, it was purchased by Alan Fischler, Ed Feldman and Art Hogan; later, by Ira Barmack, operator of comedy station KMDY in Thousand Oaks; then by political strategist/attorney Darry Srago; and, finally, by Amaturo Group. The station's studio moved to the North Ranch Mall in Westlake Village before settling in its final location on Long Court in Thousand Oaks. Joseph Amaturo and the Amaturo family purchased the station in 1995 for $2 million[3] and also purchased stations on the same 92.7 FM frequency on Catalina Island and in Temecula. Eventually, they began a trimulcast, and Amaturo changed the call letters of KNJO to KMLT when the station became "Lite 92.7". The goal of the Amaturos was to cover the entire Los Angeles/Orange County area with three stations on one frequency, 92.7 FM. Following the trimulcast's subsequent relaunches, the station became KHJL (Jill FM) in 2007 and KLSI (Playlist 92.7) in 2012.

In 2005, KMLT added a 38 watt booster, KMLT-FM1, on Castro Peak near Malibu, California; its city of license is Malibu Vista.[4]

KYLA

KYLA signed on in 1993 with the call letters KRCI and originally broadcast from Catalina Island at 3,000 watts.[5] Later the station began a simulcast with KMLT, changing call signs to KLIT. Initially, the simulcast aired a beautiful music format that evolved to a soft adult contemporary music format branded as "Lite 92.7". KLIT was later purchased by Amaturo Group, which created a trimulcast with KELT.

KLIT was moved to Fountain Valley, California with a change of transmitter location, broadcasting from a mountain southeast of Newport Beach, California at 690 watts. This provided a better signal coverage of the interior portions of Orange County, California. The call letters were changed to KJLL-FM (Jill FM) in early 2007 and to KLST-FM (Playlist 92.7) in 2012.

KYZA

KYZA signed on in 1959 with the call letters KACE-FM, originally broadcasting from Riverside, California at 1,000 watts.[1]: B-20  The station changed its call letters KCNW in 1974,[6] then to KHNY-FM two years later.[7]

The station adopted numerous music formats until 1997, when the call sign was changed to KELT and a trimulcast with KMLT/KLIT was created airing the beautiful music format. The station later switched to Soft AC and adopted the branding "Lite 92.7". The station later became KAJL (Jill FM) in 2007 and KLSN in 2012.

92.7 Jill FM and Playlist 92.7

The trimulcast's coverage area was shifted after the moves of all three transmitters, and with the arrival of Jack FM on KCBS-FM (93.1 FM) in 2005, Amaturo Group moved to compete. The company dismissed the airstaff of the "Lite 92.7" stations and adopted an automated adult hits music format branded as "Jill FM". The new format was geared to be a more female-friendly sound, known as Jill, as opposed to the more male-oriented format on Jack FM.[8] In 2009, Jill FM adjusted its format to soft adult contemporary music with the same focus as rival KOST (103.5).

On February 14, 2011, the stations dropped the "Jill FM" name and rebranded as "Playlist 92.7", a classic hits outlet with the slogan "We play everything". The first song played on Playlist was "Somebody" by Bryan Adams.[9] The new format featured hit songs spanning the period from 1964 to 2010, consisting of a mix of top 40, R&B, adult contemporary and alternative rock.

Air1

On December 1, 2012 at midnight, KLST/KLSN/KLSI (the call signs changed shortly after) officially flipped from AC to the nationally syndicated Christian contemporary hit radio (Christian CHR) network Air1 under new owner Educational Media Foundation.[10] This transaction brought the Christian CHR format to suburban areas of Los Angeles with the station's multiple rimshot Class A signals.[2] Air1 plays music from artists in the Christian rock genre such as Tauren Wells, TobyMac, Group 1 Crew, Seventh Day Slumber, and Skillet. The feed is also heard on KTLW's network of Class A FM translators in portions of the northern Los Angeles area as well as on a 92.7 FM repeater in southwestern parts of the metro.[11]

References

  1. ^ a b c "Directory of AM and FM Radio Stations in the U.S." (PDF). Broadcasting Yearbook. Broadcasting Publications Inc. 1964. Retrieved 2018-07-07.
  2. ^ a b Mcgrath, Rachel (2012-12-19). "Christian radio network buys 92.7 FM in Thousand Oaks". Ventura County Star. Retrieved 2017-11-15.
  3. ^ "Evergreen Grows In Boston, Buys WKLB For $34 Million" (PDF). Radio and Records. 1995-10-20. p. 6. Retrieved 2018-05-13.
  4. ^ "Call Sign History: KYRA-FM1". Federal Communications Commission. Retrieved 2018-05-12.
  5. ^ "Directory of Radio Stations in the U.S." (PDF). Broadcasting and Cable Yearbook. New Providence, New Jersey: R.R. Bowker. 1996. p. B-34. ISBN 0-8352-3725-7. Retrieved 2018-07-07.
  6. ^ "For the Record" (PDF). Broadcasting. Broadcasting Publications Inc. 1974-04-01. p. 48. Retrieved 2018-07-07.
  7. ^ "For the Record" (PDF). Broadcasting. Broadcasting Publications Inc. 1976-03-08. p. 68. Retrieved 2018-07-07.
  8. ^ "SoCal Trimulcast Counters 'Jack' With 'Jill'" (PDF). Radio and Records. 2005-05-27. p. 11. Retrieved 2018-07-07.
  9. ^ Venta, Lance (2011-02-14). "Jill-FM Unleashes A New Playlist". RadioInsight. RadioBB Networks. Retrieved 2018-05-14.
  10. ^ "Playlist 92.7 Sold To Air1". RadioInsight. RadioBB Networks. 2012-12-03. Retrieved 2017-11-15.
  11. ^ "EMF Adds Translator To Help Spread The Word In L.A." Insideradio.com. Retrieved 2017-11-01.

External links