Post by Jeremiah Kubiak on Jan 13, 2007 4:32:36 GMT -5
KTLK (100.3 FM) is a news/talk radio station located in the Twin Cities area. They are licensed to Minneapolis, Minnesota. KTLK's transmitter is located in the suburb of Shoreview on KMSP-TV's tower. Its effective radiated power is 98,000 watts (including beam tilt). KTLK-FM should not be confused with KTLK-AM in Los Angeles, though both stations are owned by Clear Channel Communications.
History
The station started broadcasting in 1965 as WCTS, with a non-commercial very conservative fundamentalist Christian format, consisting of mostly Bible teachings, by the Fourth Baptist Church in Minneapolis. WCTS is owned by the Central Theological Seminary, hence the call letters. WCTS continues broadcasting to this day on 1030 AM.
A startup company called Colfax Communications purchased the station in early 1993, took it off the air for a few months signed on again as WBOB, picking up a country music format under the "Bob 100" moniker. The slogan was "Turn your knob to Bob". WBOB faced stiff competition from the long established K102 and upstart KJJO-FM, which had switched to country only a few months prior. Despite this, WBOB was consistently the second highest-rated country station in the market behind K102 during its run with the format. Colfax had purchased KQQL to partner with WBOB prior to Bob 100's debut.
Various 100.3 logos through the yearsThe station was later sold to Chancellor Broadcasting, which owned other stations in the market, including Bob's rival, K102, purchased WBOB and KQQL in 1996. A format change for WBOB was expected, and finally, in 1997, WBOB became WRQC, broadcasting a hard rock format with Howard Stern in the morning and the slogan "Classic Rock That Really Rocks". WRQC was known on-air first as Real Rock 100, then Rock 100.3. The station gained controversy for its billboards touting Stern, with a scantily clad female model and the words "Turn On Howard".
Stern's show was a mild success in the market, but consistently finished second or third in the ratings. Plus, like many other Stern affiliates, ratings for the station the rest of the day were poor, as KQRS' owners flipped its sister station, KEGE to a similar hard rock format. Rock 100.3 and Stern left the Twin Cities airwaves on August 3, 1999, as the famed WLOL call sign was eventually resurrected for a new classic hits format. Ratings weren't much better, even when radio broadcasts of Minnesota Vikings games were added. In July 2003, the KJZI call letters and a smooth jazz format were introduced on 100.3 FM.
When the local public broadcaster KBEM, another jazz station, found itself in financial straits in early 2005, Clear Channel donated $25,000 to help keep it operating. KJZI and another CCC-owned station, Cities 97 (KTCZ), carried announcements requesting support for KBEM. This was regarded as a very unusual move by many observers, as Clear Channel is often regarded as an "evil" conglomerate.
The ratings for KJZI were average, and rumors regarding yet another format change constantly surfaced. Clear Channel seemed content with the smooth jazz format, but were even more interested in taking advantage of their Premiere Radio Networks syndication arm. The company had experienced success with news/talk programming on one of their Pittsburgh FM stations, WPGB. Desperately wanting a traditional talk radio station in the Twin Cities market, but having no AM stations to do it with (of their two AM stations in the market, KFAN was not an option, given their massively successful sports format, and KFXN, a weak daytime-only station, served a complimentary role to KFAN), Clear Channel decided to put talk on an FM signal. On January 1, 2006, KJZI switched to a talk format, becoming the second commercial FM talk station in the area after WFMP. The new call letters were KTLK, and the new station obtained the local syndication rights to Rush Limbaugh's and Sean Hannity's radio programs from KSTP-AM. A mix of local and syndicated hosts fill out the rest of the schedule.
KTLK HD2
By February 2005, the station was one of a handful of stations in Minnesota to use iBiquity's HD Radio system for digital radio broadcasts. On April 25, 2006, Clear Channel announced that KTLK's HD2 subchannel will carry a format focusing on Classic Country hits.
History
The station started broadcasting in 1965 as WCTS, with a non-commercial very conservative fundamentalist Christian format, consisting of mostly Bible teachings, by the Fourth Baptist Church in Minneapolis. WCTS is owned by the Central Theological Seminary, hence the call letters. WCTS continues broadcasting to this day on 1030 AM.
A startup company called Colfax Communications purchased the station in early 1993, took it off the air for a few months signed on again as WBOB, picking up a country music format under the "Bob 100" moniker. The slogan was "Turn your knob to Bob". WBOB faced stiff competition from the long established K102 and upstart KJJO-FM, which had switched to country only a few months prior. Despite this, WBOB was consistently the second highest-rated country station in the market behind K102 during its run with the format. Colfax had purchased KQQL to partner with WBOB prior to Bob 100's debut.
Various 100.3 logos through the yearsThe station was later sold to Chancellor Broadcasting, which owned other stations in the market, including Bob's rival, K102, purchased WBOB and KQQL in 1996. A format change for WBOB was expected, and finally, in 1997, WBOB became WRQC, broadcasting a hard rock format with Howard Stern in the morning and the slogan "Classic Rock That Really Rocks". WRQC was known on-air first as Real Rock 100, then Rock 100.3. The station gained controversy for its billboards touting Stern, with a scantily clad female model and the words "Turn On Howard".
Stern's show was a mild success in the market, but consistently finished second or third in the ratings. Plus, like many other Stern affiliates, ratings for the station the rest of the day were poor, as KQRS' owners flipped its sister station, KEGE to a similar hard rock format. Rock 100.3 and Stern left the Twin Cities airwaves on August 3, 1999, as the famed WLOL call sign was eventually resurrected for a new classic hits format. Ratings weren't much better, even when radio broadcasts of Minnesota Vikings games were added. In July 2003, the KJZI call letters and a smooth jazz format were introduced on 100.3 FM.
When the local public broadcaster KBEM, another jazz station, found itself in financial straits in early 2005, Clear Channel donated $25,000 to help keep it operating. KJZI and another CCC-owned station, Cities 97 (KTCZ), carried announcements requesting support for KBEM. This was regarded as a very unusual move by many observers, as Clear Channel is often regarded as an "evil" conglomerate.
The ratings for KJZI were average, and rumors regarding yet another format change constantly surfaced. Clear Channel seemed content with the smooth jazz format, but were even more interested in taking advantage of their Premiere Radio Networks syndication arm. The company had experienced success with news/talk programming on one of their Pittsburgh FM stations, WPGB. Desperately wanting a traditional talk radio station in the Twin Cities market, but having no AM stations to do it with (of their two AM stations in the market, KFAN was not an option, given their massively successful sports format, and KFXN, a weak daytime-only station, served a complimentary role to KFAN), Clear Channel decided to put talk on an FM signal. On January 1, 2006, KJZI switched to a talk format, becoming the second commercial FM talk station in the area after WFMP. The new call letters were KTLK, and the new station obtained the local syndication rights to Rush Limbaugh's and Sean Hannity's radio programs from KSTP-AM. A mix of local and syndicated hosts fill out the rest of the schedule.
KTLK HD2
By February 2005, the station was one of a handful of stations in Minnesota to use iBiquity's HD Radio system for digital radio broadcasts. On April 25, 2006, Clear Channel announced that KTLK's HD2 subchannel will carry a format focusing on Classic Country hits.