Maybe plans have changed again, but I can't see why they'd want to hold onto 101.1 now especially.
I am a 1995 graduate of John Brown University in Northwestern Arkansas. I knew they had an online Christian hip hop and pop station and this is what I expected for them to do. I listened to KLRC 101.1 when I went there and had wished back then that they would have had a Christian CHR station. I would have listened to it. When I was there most kids listened to KMCK 105.7. KMCK was always playing in the weight room where I went every other day. I wonder if they would now play Real FM but I have my doubts.Looks like 100.3 won't be a simulcast after all. Real FM To Launch In Northwestern Arkansas
I am a 1995 graduate of John Brown University in Northwestern Arkansas. I knew they had an online Christian hip hop and pop station and this is what I expected for them to do. I listened to KLRC 101.1 when I went there and had wished back then that they would have had a Christian CHR station. I would have listened to it. When I was there most kids listened to KMCK 105.7. KMCK was always playing in the weight room where I went every other day. I wonder if they would now play Real FM but I have my doubts.
Fun fact: at one point, JBU owned KMCK.
I am a 1995 graduate of John Brown University in Northwestern Arkansas.
Yep. And it continued operating its former sister station, KUOA 1290, long after selling 105.7. Didn’t your family buy 1010 in Waco from JBU also?
Yes, that is correct. I ended up doing a deeper dive on JBU's broadcasting history a few years ago to better understand the history of 1010 and the how and why it came to be. It was very interesting.
In addition to the JBU connection, one of my siblings graduated from U of A so I am very familiar with the NWA market and
one thing I haven't been able to figure out is why KLRC has stayed on both KLRC and KLAB (the old KLRC on 101.1).
That is cool. So around 1994 was your first semester. I was at John Brown from January 1992 to December 1994. I was an older student in my mid-20's. I went to the University of Arkansas 2 times for a violin or cello recital for an arts class and another time to take a test to qualify for graduate school. I made a few other trips to Fayetteville and Springdale for something to do as well as Tulsa and Oklahoma City a couple of times and Wichita once. Most were before the 4 lane 412 highway connecting Springdale with Siloam Springs was built. I loved that area and the winters are much better than central Illinois where I am from. That would be interesting if we knew some of the same people. As an introvert I was shy though and did not have very many friends. I found making friends with a couple of international students easier. They were my only friends. One was from Belize. I found international students to be more humble.You and I were in the same area at the same time. My first semester at the University of Arkansas was when it won the national championship in basketball. I knew several people from Siloam Springs, and I wouldn’t be surprised if you knew a few of them, too.
I've been told JBU owned and operated a handful of commercial stations in the 70's and 80's, many of which operated secular programming. I've only been able to confirm KUOA, KMCK, and 1010 in Waco were owned by JBU, though. I don't remember when it sold KUOA 1290, but I seem to remember it operating it well into the 90's. I don't know who operates it now, but I understand it airs a regional Mexican format today. A friend of mine was interested in the station about 10 years ago, but the tower situation was a mess he said.
If your sibling was there in the mid-90's, I might have known them. I was surprised to find, a month or two ago, that a student worker whose office is across the hall from mine was the daughter of an old friend of mine from Arkansas 30 years ago. You know what they say. In Texas, you grow up hating Arkansas, but 2/3 of your friends end up going to school there. I was one of the 2/3. My ACT was one point too low to qualify for admission to University of Texas as a freshman. I met the class rank and the GPA requirements, but you needed either a 26 or 27 on the ACT, and I never could quite make that.
I can't figure that one out either. I was originally told JBU was going to sell 101.1, but I was later informed those plans had changed. Not sure if it decided to hold onto 101.1 because it wasn't going to fetch the desired price, or if there was another reason. It also seemed like selling 101.1 was part of how JBU was going to pay for getting 90.9 built and on-air. So, it may have gotten enough donations that it didn't need to sell a station to help fund the cost of signing on. Still, I would've either put Real FM there a long time ago or sold it since it could be used as a commercial allocation.
Very interesting. I did not know JBU owned any other stations outside of Northwest Arkansas. I wonder what the format was as the wikipedia article does not specifically say and why JBU bought it94.5 Panama City, from 1983 to 1986 was owned by Brown Broadcasting along with AM 1080.
WFLF-FM - Wikipedia
en.wikipedia.org
I would be interested in the stations JBU used to own as well and their history. When I went to JBU KLRC 101.1 used to air instrumental music for a couple of hour around dinner time. I would listen to it sometimes. At my age now I would have liked that a lot more now. KLRC would sign-off at midnight every night and I often was listening when they signed off. Their studios were on campus. I got a tour of it one time.
Ok, the name "Reflections" is kind of familiar. Why KOAI?That program was called "Reflections" and was about the only time I listened to KLRC. It reminded me a bit of KOAI.
I vaguely remember KLRC signing off at midnight. I can remember hearing KCFX a few times after KLRC signed off, but, other times, I got splatter from KTXR 101.3.
Ok, the name "Reflections" is kind of familiar. Why KOAI?
When KLRC 101.1 signed off I would sometimes listen to KGLC 100.9 Miami, OK which played worship music.
I had a Denon AV receiver with Bose speakers and could play music loud at times. I loved that setup but the selectivity was bad on it. I also had a Sony walkman. I would listen to music all the time while doing homework. I also had a little 13 inch Craig TV. I did not watch TV very much but did watch NBA Basketball during the Jordon era, Star Trek and Coach.
Hestand, there's a name I hadn't seen in ages. I vaguely remember then-KGND 107.5 being based in Vinita, before he bought it.
Don't recall the full time format but recall hearing rock on there really late nights on weekends at one point.
Then Hestand got it, and moved the studio to Grove and programmed what was a rarely updated AC format until he sold it to OSU.