The next thing The FM KMJ needs to do is to tell Dave Ramsey to turn the damn volume down on his bumper music! Its so loud that you can't even hear what he's saying, remember this is FM.
DanielBoone said:IBy the way, which station is the FIRST powerful radio station in CA? My guess is 104.1 The Hawk. OR 95.5 KLOS Los Angeles. I'm curious to know.
Madmansam said:I Am Wondering What The Legal Call Letters Will Be For 105.9? They Can't Legally Use KMJ-FM. Will It Be KKMJ or KMJF? Unless Those Calls Are Being Used? Or Will It Just Stay KFJK?
Michael Rivers Kramer said:Madmansam said:I Am Wondering What The Legal Call Letters Will Be For 105.9? They Can't Legally Use KMJ-FM. Will It Be KKMJ or KMJF? Unless Those Calls Are Being Used? Or Will It Just Stay KFJK?
They probably could use KMJ-FM since they have KMJ already on AM. In 1981, the KSFX call letters were dropped in San Francisco in favor of KGO-FM.
Michael Rivers Kramer said:Michael Rivers Kramer said:Madmansam said:I Am Wondering What The Legal Call Letters Will Be For 105.9? They Can't Legally Use KMJ-FM. Will It Be KKMJ or KMJF? Unless Those Calls Are Being Used? Or Will It Just Stay KFJK?
They probably could use KMJ-FM since they have KMJ already on AM. In 1981, the KSFX call letters were dropped in San Francisco in favor of KGO-FM.
Just checked the FCC database. The call letters for 105.9 in Fresno are now KMJ-FM.
DanielBoone said:By the way, which station is the FIRST powerful radio station in CA? My guess is 104.1 The Hawk. OR 95.5 KLOS Los Angeles. I'm curious to know.
ki6bkj said:Kmj Fm has a new luineup that is true however, FM talk radio in this market won't work It has been tried beforekenrayc said:Jack-fm KFJK will flip to KMJ-fm Thursday with a simulcast of the local news and have a different talk line up including Glen Beck, Mike Savage, and Chris Daniel will have a show from 3-5 PM.
ExKynoJox said:So, what does everyone think of the weekend format?
But wasn't there a KGO-FM on 103.7 before they became KSFX? When KWG-1230 bought 100.9 in 1981, They couldn't use KWG-FM for the reason that the FCC wasn't issuing three letter calls anymore, that is why they became KWGF, not KWG-FM. Some FM's were Grandfathered in, but only on the frequency that the original three letter originated at, not a new FM Frequency. The original KMJ-FM was indeed on 97.9. This is what I have read. That is why if CBS wanted to resurrect "KNX-FM", they can only do it on 93.1, where the original KNX-FM was, not another frequency.Michael Rivers Kramer said:Madmansam said:I Am Wondering What The Legal Call Letters Will Be For 105.9? They Can't Legally Use KMJ-FM. Will It Be KKMJ or KMJF? Unless Those Calls Are Being Used? Or Will It Just Stay KFJK?
They probably could use KMJ-FM since they have KMJ already on AM. In 1981, the KSFX call letters were dropped in San Francisco in favor of KGO-FM.
Madmansam said:But wasn't there a KGO-FM on 103.7 before they became KSFX? When KWG-1230 bought 100.9 in 1981, They couldn't use KWG-FM for the reason that the FCC wasn't issuing three letter calls anymore, that is why they became KWGF, not KWG-FM. Some FM's were Grandfathered in, but only on the frequency that the original three letter originated at, not a new FM Frequency. The original KMJ-FM was indeed on 97.9. This is what I have read. That is why if CBS wanted to resurrect "KNX-FM", they can only do it on 93.1, where the original KNX-FM was, not another frequency.
I Stand Corrected! Thanks Scott!Scott Fybush said:Madmansam said:But wasn't there a KGO-FM on 103.7 before they became KSFX? When KWG-1230 bought 100.9 in 1981, They couldn't use KWG-FM for the reason that the FCC wasn't issuing three letter calls anymore, that is why they became KWGF, not KWG-FM. Some FM's were Grandfathered in, but only on the frequency that the original three letter originated at, not a new FM Frequency. The original KMJ-FM was indeed on 97.9. This is what I have read. That is why if CBS wanted to resurrect "KNX-FM", they can only do it on 93.1, where the original KNX-FM was, not another frequency.
Incorrect.
The rules have changed since 1981. Today, an owner who controls a three-letter base call ("KNX," "KGO," "KWG") can use it on other bands on any co-owned station in the same market. CBS could put "KNX-FM" on any of its Los Angeles FM stations for nothing more than the cost of the FCC filing fee.
Some actual recent examples: in Salt Lake City, Bonneville put "KSL-FM" on the former KQMB 102.7 Midvale UT a few years back, and it didn't matter that the heritage KSL-FM was 100.3 (now KSFI). In New Orleans, the heritage WWL-FM was 101.9 (now WLMG), but that didn't stop Entercom from flipping 105.3 Kenner to WWL-FM a few years back.
If 105.9 isn't KMJ-FM yet, it's only because the paperwork (or electronic equivalent thereof) has yet to go through.
As well as Different Owners. There is a KKXX-930 in Paradise (near Chico) as well as KKXX-93.1 in Shafter (near Bakersfield) and they are separate owners. I know there have been different KKXX's over different frequencies in Bakersfield over the years but to my knowlege, the KKXX calls have been on AM 930 for quite a while. I don't know the story there.Scott Fybush said:And as early as 1984, the FCC began allowing radio and TV stations in separate markets to share calls - that was when KNXT in LA became KCBS-TV.