the name of the game is Translators.
Corsicana loses, Navarro County loses, and the legendary chili can is officially expired.
Is there a translator available for the station? The only translator I saw in Corsicana was K300DS on 107.9, which translates KATG. They have an application to move to 107.3.the name of the game is Translators.
KAND-FM was sold off to what is now Univision. It was downgraded and moved into the Waco market in 2002...now the present day KWPW 107.9 Robinson TX. It was downgraded in order to let co-owned 107.9 Gainesville to upgrade as a C1 and relicensed to Lewisville to better cover D/FW (the present day KDXX).I recall a Corsicana station on 107.9 as KAND-FM that was country. It flipped to Tejano as a simulcast of KHCK 99.1 “Kick FM.” It made it into Tyler pretty well. That was the only full time Spanish language station receivable in East Texas for years.
Has a revitalization translator attached to it. 104.9 K285HC.Is there a translator available for the station? The only translator I saw in Corsicana was K300DS on 107.9, which translates KATG. They have an application to move to 107.3.
Now KWPW at Robinson, serving Waco.I recall a Corsicana station on 107.9 as KAND-FM that was country.
Eh. KNES from Fairfield has been the primary occupant of 99.1, with KFZO from Denton a constant visitor. I don't recall ever hearing Tejano on 99.1, and I've been back home for the last 16 years. When I was younger, 99.1 was Z-Rock from the home base of Dallas. I actively searched it out, as we obviously had nothing close to it. 96X was hardcore for ETX, but couldn't hold a candle to the shredding going on at Z-Rock.It flipped to Tejano as a simulcast of KHCK 99.1 “Kick FM.” It made it into Tyler pretty well.
Depending on how far back you go, KLJT started off with Spanish language programming at sign-on. La Invasora/Super Invasora has been in ETX since 2002 or 3. Before that, the Hispanic population here was so miniscule that there was figuratively no one here to serve.That was the only full time Spanish language station receivable in East Texas for years.
Would've been a possibility, had the HFCN not gotten a hold of K300DS. I'd bet a hundred redneck bucks that it, too, is "fed" by 1340 when all is said and done.Wouldn’t it be fitting if a KAND translator wound up on 107.9? That probably won’t happen. Hopefully, Corsicana can still have a hometown station for the community.
It does. Surely isn't targeting Kerens.By the way, doesn’t KRVF Kerens kind of serve the community?
It's not in simulcast with KFWR anymore than KCKL is simulcast with KYYK. More Wikipedia fallacies.Last I checked it was a type of simulcast of KFWR but identified separately as “106.9 The Ranch.” I don’t know to what extent they may program locally to Navarro County, if at all.
I recall a Corsicana station on 107.9 as KAND-FM that was country. It flipped to Tejano as a simulcast of KHCK 99.1 “Kick FM.” It made it into Tyler pretty well. That was the only full time Spanish language station receivable in East Texas for years.
Eh. KNES from Fairfield has been the primary occupant of 99.1, with KFZO from Denton a constant visitor. I don't recall ever hearing Tejano on 99.1, and I've been back home for the last 16 years. When I was younger, 99.1 was Z-Rock from the home base of Dallas. I actively searched it out, as we obviously had nothing close to it. 96X was hardcore for ETX, but couldn't hold a candle to the shredding going on at Z-Rock.
@txchipk may have better records than I, but here's what was Kick when as my records go:KAND-FM 107.9 actually became the first leg of Tejano "Kick FM" around 1994. As Rodriguez was assembling "Kick FM," the joke was that his motto should have been "We gotcha surrounded." Kick FM surrounded DFW on several signals but didn't reach either downtown when it signed on.
99.1 was Tejano from 1995 to about 2003. It was part of the Kick FM simulcast after being KDZR for a few years. At one point, Kick FM was on 1440, 99.1, 106.7, and 107.9. Almost seems like I'm missing a signal or two in that list. In '96, 106.7 broke off and began simulcasting KMRT's Amor format for Ft. Worth. Those signals have had several revisions over the years with 106.7 moving to 107.1 so the former KXGM 106.5 could move into DFW at 106.7, and, as you mentioned, 107.9 Corsicana moved into Waco so the Gainesville 107.9 could move closer to DFW. I believe it's a slightly better signal than most of the other northern rimshots because it's two clicks away from 107.5, which is a C1 instead of a C0 or a C, and has nothing to worry about above it.
@txchipk may have better records than I, but here's what was Kick when as my records go:
107.9/Corsicana Nov 1993-1998
1440/Denton Dec 1993-Mar 1996
99.1/Denton Feb 1995-Apr 2004
106.7/Granbury Mar 1995-Apr 2000
I'd bet a hundred redneck bucks that it, too, is "fed" by 1340 when all is said and done.

That is a new one on me, and somehow both Chip and Mike Shannon missed that one as well.106.7 was definitely Amor simulcasting KMRT 1480 in ‘96. Not that it couldn’t have gone back to Kick at some point that year, but it was Amor February through August. I remember it well. I lived on the west side of Ft. Worth, and I heard it several times.
I used to listen to KCOR 107.9 in 1973 and 1974, maybe late 1972 in Mesquite. KCOR became KAND FM not much later.
In the mid-1970s the 107.9 in Corsicana could also be heard in Fort Worth on a decent receiver.I used to listen to KCOR 107.9 in 1973 and 1974, maybe late 1972 in Mesquite.
That is a new one on me, and somehow both Chip and Mike Shannon missed that one as well.
Neither of these records indicate the Amor simulcast on 106.7 and 107.9 was launched until April 2000.