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Contents

   



(Top)
 


1 History  





2 Notable K104 Morning DJs  





3 See also  





4 References  





5 External links  














KKDA-FM







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Coordinates: 32°3519N 96°5805W / 32.58861°N 96.96806°W / 32.58861; -96.96806
 

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
 


This article needs additional citations for verification. Please help improve this articlebyadding citations to reliable sources. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed.
Find sources: "KKDA-FM" – news · newspapers · books · scholar · JSTOR
(June 2015) (Learn how and when to remove this message)

KKDA-FM

  • United States
  • Broadcast area

    Dallas–Fort Worth metroplex

    Frequency

    104.5 MHz

    Branding

    K104

    Programming

    Language(s)

    English

    Format

    Urban contemporary

    Affiliations

    Compass Media Networks

    Ownership

    Owner

    Service Broadcasting Corporation

    Sister stations

    KRNB

    History

    First air date

    1947 (77 years ago) (1947) as KIXL

    Former call signs

    KIXL (1947–1972)
    KEZT (1972–1975)

    Call sign meaning

    K K104 DAllas

    Technical information

    Facility ID

    59702

    Class

    C

    ERP

    99,000 watts

    HAAT

    508 meters (1,667 ft)

    Transmitter coordinates

    32°35′19N 96°58′05W / 32.58861°N 96.96806°W / 32.58861; -96.96806

    Links

    Webcast

    Listen Live

    Website

    myk104.com

    KKDA-FM (104.5 MHz), known on air as K104, is a radio station in the Dallas–Fort Worth metroplex broadcasting an urban contemporary formatted station. It is owned by Service Broadcasting Corporation alongside KRNB. Its studios are located in Arlington, Texas,[1] and the transmitter site is in Cedar Hill.

    History[edit]

    104.5 FM began operation on June 8, 1947, as KIXL. KIXL (pronounced "Kicksil") aired a successful beautiful music format, simulcast on both 104.5 FM and 1040 AM ("104 on both dials"). A pioneer in the "mood music" format, the station showed up in the top five in Dallas market ratings consistently through 1968, but by the beginning of the 1970s KIXL was facing tough competition from KOAX, which had come to dominate as the top-rated easy listening station. In 1973, the year Dallas and Fort Worth were combined into one radio market, KIXL dropped its heritage calls in favor of KEZT, continuing to play easy-listening musical fare. The change did not improve the station's fortunes, as KEZT never appeared in the top 10 of the Dallas/Fort Worth ratings, while KOAX's success continued and KTLC provided additional competition in the beautiful music format.

    On December 22, 1976, KEZT flipped to an Rhythmic CHR format, changed their call letters as KKDA-FM and adopted the moniker K104, under the leadership of new owner Hyman Childs. K104 was initially the FM counterpart to KKDA AM, which aired R&B and Soul during the day and Gospel at night. KKDA-FM primarily began as a disco station with the two slogans, "K104 Is Disco Soul!" and "K104 Is Disco!" Through the early to mid 1980s, KKDA-FM shifted to a Top 40/CHR/UC hybrid type format (also known as "Crossover" and "CHUrban", which is the predecessor to the current Rhythmic CHR format) while retaining the "K104" branding, first in 1983 with "K104, This Is It!", then later in 1985 with "K104, Jammin' With The Music!", and after that in 1987 with "K104, People Power!" In the late 1980's, the station was briefly known as "Hot 104, The All New KKDA-FM!", though the name would soon be dropped and returned to the "K104" branding under new slogan "K104, We've Got It Goin' On!" (During the station's disco era K104 had a mascot that billed itself as The K104 Disco Chicken).

    Through the mid-1990s, under the leadership of new GM Ken Dowe and new PD Michael Spears, KKDA-FM skewed its former urban contemporary format with slower R&B and soul songs at night and gospel on Sunday mornings, towards the Mainstream Urban genre consisting of a Hip-Hop and current R&B heavy playlist. That format helped project K104 to being one of the highest-rated radio stations in the Dallas–Fort Worth DMA, where it has remained to this day.

    Competitively, KKDA also has a current crosstown rivalry with another urban station KBFB ("97.9 The Beat"), who has taken advantage of KKDA's 'traditional' urban direction and used that to their advantage, resulting in the two fighting it out for R&B/hip hop dominance in the Metroplex. Their first competition until 1985 was the now defunct R&B radio station KNOK (which used the slogan "Disco and More"); their second competitor from 1988 until 1995 was station KJMZ (known as "100.3 Jamz"). In addition, they also once had a competitor in rhythmic contemporary rival KZZA ("Casa 106.7"), which had shifted from a Hispanic rhythmic direction, since KKDA also has a sizable share[clarification needed] of Hispanic listeners. However, KZZA is a rimshot signal.[clarification needed] KNOR was considered[by whom?] a competitor from 2004-2006 as it was the only station in the Metroplex having a similar format to KKDA-FM's urban contemporary format.

    As the FCC loosened radio station ownership rules with the passing of the Telecommunications Act of 1996, virtually all major market radio stations became part of large broadcast groups such as iHeartMedia, Cumulus, and others. Today, KKDA-FM is one of the few remaining major market commercial stations in the nation that is still owned by a local, non-corporate broadcaster.

    Its longtime morning drive show, Skip Murphy and the Home Team, was ranked number 1 during the morning drive time slot for nearly a decade, according to Arbitron ratings. Over the last few years, several popular personalities on the show, such as comedian Nannette Lee and Wig, have moved on. The most recent personality to leave was Thomas "Skip" Murphy. He announced in July 2008 that he was moving to sister radio station KRNB to work weekdays from 3 pm to 7 pm. Nationally syndicated personality Tom Joyner became recognized as the "Fly Jock" because he hosted the morning drive slot on K104 and traveled regularly to host an afternoon drive slot on WGCI-FM in Chicago. His show was heard later on KRNB, and most recently aired on KZMJ.

    Notable K104 Morning DJs[edit]

    See also[edit]

    References[edit]

    1. ^ "K104 Is Moving To A New Location -". January 11, 2018. Retrieved October 15, 2018.

    External links[edit]

    Radio stations in the Dallas–Fort Worth metroplex (Texas)

    ByAM frequency

  • 570
  • 620
  • 660
  • 700
  • 730
  • 770
  • 8201
  • 8502
  • 8702
  • 890
  • 910
  • 970
  • 990
  • 10402
  • 10801
  • 11102
  • 1140
  • 1160
  • 1190
  • 1220
  • 1270
  • 1310
  • 1340
  • 1360
  • 1390
  • 1420
  • 1440
  • 1460
  • 1480
  • 1540
  • 1570
  • 1600
  • 1630
  • 1700
  • ByFM frequency

  • 88.3
  • 88.5
  • 88.7
  • 89.1
  • 89.3
  • 89.5
  • 89.7
  • 90.1
  • 90.5
  • 90.9
  • 91.3
  • 91.7
  • 92.1
  • 92.5
  • 93.3
  • 93.7
  • 94.1
  • 94.5
  • 94.9
  • 95.3
  • 95.9
  • 96.3
  • 96.7
  • 97.1
  • 97.5
  • 97.9
  • 98.3
  • 98.7
  • 99.1
  • 99.5
  • 100.3
  • 100.7
  • 101.1
  • 101.7
  • 102.1
  • 102.9
  • 103.3
  • 103.7
  • 104.1
  • 104.5
  • 104.9
  • 105.3
  • 105.7
  • 106.1
  • 106.7
  • 106.9
  • 107.1
  • 107.5
  • 107.9
  • LPFM

  • KXDE-LP
  • 92.9
  • 95.5
  • 102.5
  • 104.1
  • 107.1
  • Translators

  • 93.1
  • 93.7
  • 95.5
  • 95.7
  • 95.9
  • 96.7
  • 97.5
  • 99.1
  • 99.9
  • 101.5
  • 102.5
  • 104.1
  • 104.9
  • 106.5
  • NOAA Weather Radio
    frequency

  • 162.525 (Corsicana)
  • 162.525 (Mineral Wells)
  • 162.55 (Fort Worth)
  • Digital radio
    by frequency & subchannel

  • 1270
  • 88.1-1
  • 88.1-2
  • 88.5-1
  • 89.7-1
  • 89.7-2
  • 90.9-1
  • 90.9-2
  • 91.7-1
  • 92.5-1
  • 93.3-1
  • 93.3-2
  • 93.3-3
  • 94.1-1
  • 94.1-4
  • 94.5-1
  • 94.9-1
  • 94.9-2
  • 94.9-3
  • 96.3-1
  • 96.3-2
  • 97.1-1
  • 97.1-2
  • 97.5-1
  • 97.9-1
  • 97.9-2
  • 97.9-3
  • 98.7-1
  • 98.7-2
  • 99.5-1
  • 99.5-2
  • 100.3-1
  • 100.3-2
  • 100.3-3
  • 101.1-1
  • 101.7-1
  • 101.7-2
  • 101.7-3
  • 102.1-1
  • 102.1-2
  • 102.9-1
  • 103.7-1
  • 103.7-2
  • 104.9-1
  • 104.9-2
  • 104.9-3
  • 104.9-4
  • 105.3-1
  • 105.3-2
  • 105.3-3
  • 106.1-1
  • 106.1-2
  • 107.1-1
  • 107.5-1
  • 107.5-2
  • 107.9-1
  • 107.9-2
  • 107.9-3
  • Bycall sign

  • K226BM
  • K229DR
  • K256DE
  • K238CC
  • K239CC
  • K240DS
  • K244FC
  • K248BC
  • K260BP
  • K260CX
  • K268CL
  • K273BJ
  • K273CS
  • K281CS
  • K285HJ
  • K293CM
  • KAAM
  • KAMM
  • KAND
  • KATH
  • KAWA
  • KBDT
  • KBEC
  • KBFB
  • KBOC
  • KCBI
  • KCLE
  • KDFT
  • KDGE
  • KDKR
  • KDMX
  • KDXX
  • KEC55
  • KEC56
  • KEFW-LP
  • KEGL
  • KEJC-LP
  • KEOM
  • KERA
  • KESS-FM
  • KEXB
  • KFCD
  • KFJZ2
  • KFLC
  • KFWR
  • KFXR
  • KFZO
  • KGGR2
  • KHFX
  • KHKS
  • KHSE
  • KHVN
  • KHYI
  • KJKK
  • KJON2
  • KJRN
  • KKDA
  • KKDA-FM
  • KKGM
  • KKLF
  • KKXT
  • KLAK
  • KLEJ-LP
  • KLIF
  • KLNO
  • KLTY
  • KMNY
  • KMQX
  • KMVK
  • KNGO
  • KNON
  • KNOR
  • KNTU
  • KPIR
  • KPLX
  • KPVC-LP
  • KPYK
  • KRLD1
  • KRLD-FM
  • KRNB
  • KRQP-LP
  • KRVA
  • KRVF
  • KSCS
  • KSGV-LP
  • KSKY
  • KSPF
  • KSQX
  • KTCG
  • KTCK
  • KTCK-FM
  • KTCU-FM
  • KTFW-FM
  • KTNO
  • KTXG
  • KTXV
  • KUZU-LP
  • KVDT
  • KVIL
  • KVTT2
  • KVWR-LP
  • KWRD-FM
  • KXDE-LP
  • KXEZ
  • KXI87
  • KYDA
  • KYEB-LP
  • KYFA-FM
  • KYQX
  • KZEE
  • KZMJ
  • KZMP-FM
  • KZPS
  • KZZA
  • WBAP1
  • WBAP-FM
  • WNG651
  • WRR
  • Defunct

  • KTDK-FM 104.1
  • Satellite radio local traffic/weather
    XM Channel 135
    Sirius Channel 135

    Nearby regions
    Abilene
    Brownwood
    Killeen–Temple
    Lawton
    Oklahoma City
    Paris
    Sherman–Denison
    Tyler
    Waco
    Wichita Falls
    See also
    List of radio stations in Texas

    Notes
    1. Clear-channel stations with extended nighttime coverage.
    2. Daytime-only AM radio station.

    Urban Contemporary Radio Stations in the state of Texas

    Stations

  • KBFB - Dallas
  • KCOH - Houston
  • KIIZ-FM - Killeen
  • KISX - Whitehouse (UAC)
  • KKDA-FM - Dallas
  • KMAZ-LP - Houston (UAC)
  • KMDX - San Angelo
  • KMJQ - Houston (UAC)
  • KNDA - Corpus Christi
  • KQBT - Houston
  • KRNB - Decatur (UAC)
  • KSSM - Copperas Cove (UAC)
  • KTCX - Beaumont
  • KWBT - Waco (UAC)
  • KZMJ - Gainesville (UAC)
  • KZRB - New Boston
  • See also
    adult contemporary
    classic hits
    college
    country
    news/talk
    NPR
    oldies
    religious
    rock
    sports
    top 40
    urban
    other radio stations in Texas

    Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=KKDA-FM&oldid=1233104968"

    Categories: 
    Urban contemporary radio stations in the United States
    Radio stations in the DallasFort Worth metroplex
    Radio stations established in 1947
    1947 establishments in Texas
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