P
purpledevil
Guest
If so, I'll rush out and pick up a Powerball ticket the same day, lol.
I don't foresee a K*BJ call associated with 91-7, because that signal will have never been associated with the primary format. Lake Jackson and Bay City's signals were originally a part of the main CCM format and never changed when both moved to N-GEN. KWUP remains on 92-5 in Navasota to this day, and the only reason 96-9 was changed to KSBJ was because of the similar sound of the call to the original, seeing as how the ministry originally dropped the frequency mention after the El Campo signal was purchased. That's crept back in over the last year or better, so you hear "89-3 KSBJ" on both signals now, even though the billboards out west indicate the imaging of "96-9 KSBJ" for the former KNTE, nee KIOX-FM.
I would imagine University of Houston has it stipulated in the contract that 91-7 must forego the KUHA call, otherwise, the call might have simply stayed in place, as is. No one except us pays attention to them these days, anyway. Look at just how many are still left on some stations from old formats long deceased. KTJM, KJOJ-FM, KTHT, KFNC, KAMA-FM, KOVE-FM, KHPT, and KHJK, just to name a few. Oh yeah, and the granddaddy of 'em all, KEYH, who's "key" has been lost since 1979!
I don't foresee a K*BJ call associated with 91-7, because that signal will have never been associated with the primary format. Lake Jackson and Bay City's signals were originally a part of the main CCM format and never changed when both moved to N-GEN. KWUP remains on 92-5 in Navasota to this day, and the only reason 96-9 was changed to KSBJ was because of the similar sound of the call to the original, seeing as how the ministry originally dropped the frequency mention after the El Campo signal was purchased. That's crept back in over the last year or better, so you hear "89-3 KSBJ" on both signals now, even though the billboards out west indicate the imaging of "96-9 KSBJ" for the former KNTE, nee KIOX-FM.
I would imagine University of Houston has it stipulated in the contract that 91-7 must forego the KUHA call, otherwise, the call might have simply stayed in place, as is. No one except us pays attention to them these days, anyway. Look at just how many are still left on some stations from old formats long deceased. KTJM, KJOJ-FM, KTHT, KFNC, KAMA-FM, KOVE-FM, KHPT, and KHJK, just to name a few. Oh yeah, and the granddaddy of 'em all, KEYH, who's "key" has been lost since 1979!