Before 97.9 went Wild, it spent almost the previous 10 years as a Jazz derivative. It actually started out as a straight-ahead jazz station with an occasional AC or urban AC track sprinkled in as “97.7 The New Trend” and evolved to smooth jazz before ending as a smooth jazz/soft AC hybrid, “97.9 The City.” From what I'd heard, when Citadel acquired KLGH 105.3, it looked at bringing back “The City” on 104.9 before ultimately deciding OKC needed yet another country station. I don’t see smooth jazz coming back to OKC anytime soon, though soft AC might make some sense on 104.9. It wouldn’t be a major cash cow with that format, but, as we’ve already discussed, nothing on that stick would be.
Until 2003, that stick had always been some form of religious or talk programming. I first remember it as KJIL “King Jesus Is Lord.” It was owned by Swaggert and flipped to talk around 1990 as KNTL. The foray into FM talk didn’t last long, and it went back to religious programming as CCM “The Light.” That kind of programming has never been my cup-of-tea, but it ran a music format with little-to-no teaching or preaching. Bott Radio took it over in the mid-90’s and started running its network on it until it launched KQCV-FM 95.1. I remember hearing some people were really upset that Bott took “The Light” off-the-air. Someone else ultimately bought the intellectual property of it and relaunched “The Light” on KLGH 105.3, which, ironically, got bought by Citadel and taken off-the-air to pick up 104.9’s sports programming in 2003. After Bott launched 95.1, 104.9 was sold and became “Sports Talk 104.9,” which got acquired by Citadel shortly afterward and got merged into WWLS. Seems like a few of the people with Sports Talk 104.9 decided not to join the Sports Animal and went to 1340 and/or 1400, but I'm not 100% sure of the connection there. The sports talk format stayed on 104.9 until 2003, when it went to 105.3, and KQBL was launched on 104.9. That lasted until about the end of the year when Citadel took over KMMZ 96.9 and moved “The Bull” there and WWLS-FM back to 104.9. The Sports Animal would remain at 104.9 until Citadel upgraded KKWD 97.9 to 98.1. That was made possible by a Dallas/Ft. Worth move-in that downgraded KJMZ in Lawton. Citadel had to move a Stillwater station and downgrade the KATT to a C1 to accommodate the Stillwater move.
Not exactly true, but definitely the case for the last 35 years or so. There were several urban FM's in OKC in the 70’s and early 80’s that covered the entire market really well, but almost nobody listened to FM back then. I’m thinking 100.5 was urban until the KATT was launched in the mid-70’s, and 98.9 and/or 101.9 tried versions of the format at various points after 100.5 went rock. The African American population in OKC is mostly on the east side of the city with the heaviest concentration of African American residents living near the State Capitol around Lincoln Blvd. You’re absolutely correct that KVSP 103.5 doesn’t cover that area of town well at all. Prior to launching urban on 103.5, that format was on 1140. Again, not the best signal and a daytimer to boot. 104.9 might be a little more solid in that area than 103.5, but it’s still not much better of a choice for targeting the African American audience than 103.5 is.