Frequency | 970 kHz |
---|---|
Branding | NewsRadio 970 KFBX |
Programming | |
Format | Talk radio |
Network | ABC News Radio |
Affiliations | Premiere Networks Compass Media Networks |
Ownership | |
Owner |
|
KAKQ-FM, KIAK-FM, KKED | |
History | |
First air date | September 18, 1972 |
Former call signs | KIAK (1972–2004) |
Call sign meaning | A common abbreviation for Fairbanks |
Technical information | |
Facility ID | 12518 |
Class | B |
Power | 10,000 watts |
Links | |
Webcast | Listen Live |
Website | 970kfbx.iheart.com |
KFBX (970 kHz) is a commercial AM radio station in Fairbanks, Alaska. It airs a talk radio format and is owned and operated by iHeartMedia, Inc. The studios and offices are on 9th Avenue.
KFBX is powered at 10,000 watts using a non-directional antenna. The transmitter is off Farmer's Loop Road in Fairbanks. [1]
Most programs on KFBX are nationally syndicated. Weekdays start with This Morning, America's First News with Gordon Deal . That's followed by The Clay Travis and Buck Sexton Show, Armstrong & Getty, The Jesse Kelly Show, The Joe Pags Show and Coast to Coast AM with George Noory . Some shows are time-shifted due to time zone differences.
Weekends feature The Kim Komando Show, The Weekend with Michael Brown, Bill Handel on the Law, At Home with Gary Sullivan, Science Fantastic with Michio Kaku and Somewhere in Time with Art Bell as well as replays of weekday shows. Most hours begin with an update from ABC News Radio. KFBX airs a half hour of local and national news each weekday at noon.
On July 24, 1970, Big Country Radio, Inc., owner of KYAK in Anchorage, applied for a construction permit to build a new radio station on 970 kHz in Fairbanks. It was approved on January 13, 1971. [2] The station began broadcasting as KIAK on September 18, 1972. It aired a country music format. [3]
In 1978, Big Country Radio decided to sell its three Alaska radio properties, KIAK, KYAK and KGOT, an FM station in Anchorage. The new owner was Prime Time of Alaska, a company owned by business people in Washington state. The price tag was more than $3 million. [4] Prime Time owned a country music station in Everett, Washington, KWYZ. [5]
1983 was an eventful year for KIAK. Prime Time sold the station to Bingham Broadcasting, controlled by a minority owner of a Seattle station. The sales price was $4.5 million. [6] The sale included KIAK's FM construction permit, KQRZ (102.5 FM), which launched that July and originally played Top 40 hits. [7]
At the end of that month, a 28-year-old man threatened to blow up the station if he did not get air time. He was startled to find that the station was actually an automated operation. The man ultimately surrendered. [8] In fact, KIAK had been automated since 1975, using a syndicated format from Drake-Chenault. The automation equipment was dubbed by the station as the "Big Country Machine". [9]
Bingham sold all four of its stations in Anchorage and Fairbanks to Olympia Broadcasting at the end of 1985. The price was about $12 million. [10] In January 1990, the country music format on KIAK moved to the former KQRZ, which became KIAK-FM. KIAK 970 AM began to focus more on classic country hits and added several new talk programs. [11]
Olympia filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection in June 1990. [12] That set off a lengthy process that included three different abortive sale attempts of the company's four Alaska properties. A deal with Harbor Broadcasting was doomed by a license challenge by the NAACP. While a settlement was reached, the FCC conditioned the sale on the license renewals, and Olympia was anxious to sell the stations to satisfy its creditors. [13]
The next sale attempt, to Alpha & Beta Broadcasting, was canceled by the company's receiver in early 1992 due to a conflict between creditor Barclays and lender Greyhound Financial. Greyhound felt that the stations had sold for too little money. [14] In January 1993, the receiver proposed to sell the stations to Community Pacific Broadcasting for $1.2 million. [15] But this was superseded by a $1.45 million offer from Craig McCaw's COMCO Broadcasting. [16] By this time, KIAK had largely become a sports talk outlet. [17]
In 1997, Comco sold its entire station portfolio, including KIAK-AM-FM and KAKQ-FM in Fairbanks, to Capstar Broadcasting Partners. Capstar was a forerunner to present owner iHeartMedia. [18] The call letters were changed from KIAK to KFBX in October 2004. [19] KFBX began to concentrate on airing syndicated talk shows from Premiere Networks, also owned by iHeartMedia.
KSUA is a student-run college radio station licensed to Fairbanks, Alaska, United States. Broadcasting from the University of Alaska Fairbanks (UAF) campus with 3,000 watts effective radiated power (ERP,) it serves the Alaska Interior area. When first on the air in 1984, it was one of a few commercially licensed college stations. Reorganized in 1993, KSUA now operates under the FCC non-commercial educational license public radio rules. KSUA has won statewide and national broadcasting awards.
KVET is an Austin, Texas AM radio station. It is owned by iHeartMedia, and carries a sports radio format with both local sports shows and programming from Fox Sports Radio.
KASE-FM is a commercial radio station licensed to Austin, Texas. It is owned by iHeartMedia and airs a country music radio format. It shares studios and offices with four sister stations in the Penn Field complex in the South Congress district of south central Austin within walking distance of St. Edward's University. The transmitter site is off Waymaker Way in Austin, amid towers for other FM and TV stations.
KTMS is a commercial radio station in Santa Barbara, California. It is owned by Rincon Broadcasting and airs a talk radio format. KTMS is simulcast on FM translator station K250BS at 97.9 MHz, licensed to Solimar Beach and broadcasting from KTMS' AM transmitter site, overlooking Santa Barbara from near Rattlesnake Canyon Park, along Gibraltar Road, and above Gibraltar Peak, home of most Santa Barbara FM stations. The site is unusual, since AM stations are usually sited in low-lying areas, ideally with the highest possible high ground conductivity. This site is sufficiently close to the population center for even the low night power to serve the whole city.
KOAN is a commercial radio station in Anchorage, Alaska. It is owned by Tetyana Sevvina Robbins through licensee Falcon Broadcasting LLC. KOAN is managed by Alaska Integrated Media, a company of six radio stations; three owned by AIM and three managed by the company. Its studios are located on Business Park Boulevard in Anchorage, and its transmitter is located in South Anchorage.
KKED is an alternative rock radio station in Fairbanks, Alaska. The station is owned by iHeartMedia.
KIAK-FM is a commercial country radio station in Fairbanks, Alaska.
KSKO-FM is a non-commercial radio station in McGrath, Alaska, broadcasting on 89.5 FM. KSKO is rebroadcast on Class D FM repeaters full time in Grayling, Shageluk, Holy Cross, Nikolai, and Anvik. For part of the day, KSKO is also rebroadcast on KZPA 900 in Fort Yukon and KRFF 89.1 in Fairbanks; KSKO also rebroadcasts a midday show from KRFF. Two new "repeaters" were built in the summer and fall of 2021, KSKC Crooked Creek and KSKP Sleetmute which added 200 people to KSKO's "population served" count for a total of about 1,200 on owned and operated repeaters/signals across a stretch of 200 miles or so along the west central interior.
KTKN is an American commercial radio station airing talk and hot adult contemporary music programming in Ketchikan, Alaska.
KUAC is a non-commercial FM radio station in Fairbanks, Alaska, broadcasting at 89.9 MHz. The station is operated by the University of Alaska Fairbanks. It debuted on October 2, 1962, originally at 104.9 MHz, as Alaska's first non-commercial radio station and second FM station.
KJNP and KJHA are non-commercial radio stations which simulcast their programming. KJNP is licensed to North Pole, Alaska and serves the Fairbanks area. KJHA is licensed to Houston, Alaska, just north of Anchorage. The stations air a Christian radio format.
KROF is a radio station broadcasting a talk format. Licensed to Abbeville, Louisiana, United States, the station serves the Lafayette area. The station is currently owned by Townsquare Media. Its studios are located on Bertrand Road in Lafayette, and its transmitter is located north of Abbeville.
KNUE is a Townsquare Media radio station, licensed to Tyler, Texas, United States, serving the Tyler-Longview-Jacksonville area with a contemporary country music format. KNUE operates with an ERP of 98 kW from a transmitter site near Overton in western Rusk County. Studios are located on Brookside Drive in south Tyler in a building shared with Townsquare's other Tyler stations.
WXVA – branded as 102.9 Valley FM – is a classic hits formatted broadcast radio station licensed to Winchester, Virginia, serving the Northern Shenandoah Valley. WXVA is owned and operated by Winchester Radio Broadcasters, LLC.
WPMH is a Christian talk radio station licensed to Newport News, Virginia, serving Hampton Roads. The station is owned and operated by Chesapeake-Portsmouth Broadcasting Corporation.
WBTG is a radio station licensed to serve Sheffield, Alabama. The station is owned by Slatton & Associates Broadcasters, Inc. It airs an adult standards format positioned as "Memory Music".
KDJF is a radio station licensed to serve Ester, Alaska; however, the station's offices are in Fairbanks, Alaska. Like many other radio stations in the area, its tower is located on Ester Dome. The station is owned by Tor Ingstad Licenses, LLC. It airs a country music format. Programming on KDJF includes the syndicated Rick and Bubba Show on mornings.
KDHS-LP is a high school radio station licensed to serve Delta Junction, Alaska. The station is owned by the Delta/Greely School District and operated by the staff and students of Delta High School. It airs a Variety format.
KENI is a radio station broadcasting a news/talk format. Licensed to Anchorage, Alaska, United States, the station serves the south-central Alaska area. The station is currently owned by iHeartMedia, Inc.. Its studios are located at Dimond Center in Anchorage, and its transmitter is located off Dowling Road in Southeast Anchorage.
KUWL was a Christian radio station in Fairbanks, Alaska, United States. It broadcast from 1985 to 1993, closing due to insufficient financial support from its listeners. After being silent, the KUWL license was then sold to Borealis Broadcasting, which in turn traded it to the University of Alaska Fairbanks to relocate KSUA in exchange for the rights to the 103.9 frequency, which used the KUWL call letters from 1996 to 2006.
Coordinates: 64°52′48″N147°40′29″W / 64.88000°N 147.67472°W