6:11
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khjk
Submitted in response to article http://concepts.bpweb.net/youtube/ hjkhjk....
published: 19 Apr 2010
author: Rachael Parker
khjk
khjk
Submitted in response to article http://concepts.bpweb.net/youtube/ hjkhjk.- published: 19 Apr 2010
- views: 10108
- author: Rachael Parker
0:29
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KHJK
KHJK
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
KHJK
City of license La Porte, Texas
Broadcast ...
published: 20 Dec 2013
KHJK
KHJK
KHJK From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia KHJK City of license La Porte, Texas Broadcast area Greater Houston/Golden Triangle Branding Air 1 Slogan "The Positive Alternative" Frequency 103.7 MHz First air date 2005 (on current tower) Format Christian Rock ERP 94,860 watts HAAT 590 meters Class C Facility ID 48676 Transmitter coordinates 29°56′9″N 94°30′39″W Callsign meaning K Houston JacK (former format) Former callsigns KTDD (1990-1991) KVST (1991-2005) KUST (3/2005-5/2005) KIOL (2005-2007) Affiliations Air 1 Owner Educational Media Foundation Webcast Listen Live Website air1.com KHJK (103.7 FM, "Air 1") is a Christian rock-formatted radio station serving the Houston and Beaumont, Texas, areas. It relays the satellite delivered Air 1 format by owner Educational Media Foundation. Contents [hide] 1 History 2 Callsign history 3 HD radio 4 References 5 External links History[edit] KHJK-FM previously operated as KVST, "K-Star Country 103.7", which was licensed to service the area north of Houston. Owned by Ben Amato of Conroe (who sold his chain of grocery stores around that area to finance the radio station), it originally signed on as KVST in Huntsville, TX on 103.5; however, interference from 103.5 in Buda, TX (Oldies 103.5 Austin, now BOB-FM) caused the station not to reach down to the intended audience of Conroe and a look at a move in frequency was done. It moved to 103.7 and later a simulcast on 99.7 (KUST, Willis) was added to help the coverage in Conroe and The Woodlands. The station, whose signal was poor in comparison to Houston's other country music stations, was purchased by Cumulus Media in mid-2004, which later acquired greater Houston's only Top 40 station, KRBE, in addition to also owning 97.5, the former KAYD-FM (now KFNC and a rimshot for Houston). In 2005, the station's transmitter was moved to its current location in Devers to service the Houston area. This resulted in another format change, with the station switching to KIOL and its heritage rock format that had been carried on the 97.5 frequency, which was a carry over from the original heritage rock frequency of 101.1 KLOL, which had flipped to a Spanish format. 97.5 continued as a simulcast on the latter until switching to a news (and later, ESPN) sports format. On August 30, 2007, the Houston Chronicle reported that KIOL would be switching to the Jack FM format at 10:37 a.m. the following day, and adopting new call letters, KHJK [1]. The final songs on "Rock 103.7" were "Mary Jane's Last Dance by Tom Petty, "Cold As Ice" by Foreigner, and "Fire" by Jimi Hendrix, while the first two songs on "Jack" were "Jumpin' Jack Flash" by The Rolling Stones" and "Let's Go Crazy" by Prince." On May 6, 2009, KHJK shifted from adult hits to adult alternative as "103-7FM." [1] As part of a prepackaged bankruptcy filing, the lenders took over the license of four Cumulus Media Partners stations; two in the Kansas City metro area (KCHZ and KMJK) and the two rimshot signals in the Houston metro, KHJK and KFNC in November 2011.[2] Station broker Larry Patrick became majority owner and set out to sell the stations to recover the value for the lenders. After the filing, Cumulus continued to program the stations under LMA. While Cumulus could have purchased the stations back, the highest bidder for KFNC was David Gow, owner of KGOW (1560 The Game) and the highest bidder for KHJK was Educational Media Foundation, who programs Christian AC and Christian Rock formats.[3] EMF switched the format of KHJK to Air 1 at 5:00 PM on July 17, 2012.[4] The last songs played on 103.7 FM were "Mary Jane's Last Dance" by Tom Petty, "In The End" by Linkin Park, "Closing Time" by Semisonic, and "It's The End Of The World As We Know It (And I Feel Fine)" by R.E.M.. Between In The End and Closing Time, the announcer gave this goodbye message : "Houston, thank you. It's been an amazing ride. Steve, Donna, and the entire 103.7 FM crew want to say thanks for being there for us. Attending our events, coming to our shows, and just for listening to Houston's adult alternative, 103.7 FM. It's been our pleasure serving you some of the best new music out there and playing the best music you can't hear anywhere else but 103.7 FM. You are some of the best listeners we could have ever asked for, and we'll miss you. Thanks again. And are you hiring?" The first song on Air 1 was "Me Without You" by TobyMac.[1] The purchase of KHJK by EMF was consummated on October 15, 2012 at a price of $5 million. Callsign history[edit] KTDD - 05/03/1990 KVST - 07/22/1991 (K-Star Country) KUST - 03/30/2005 KIOL - 05/23/2005 (Rock 103-7) KHJK - 09/01/2007 (103.7 Jack FM, 103-7 FM, Air-1) HD radio[edit] Cumulus Broadcasting began upgrading its stations to HD Radio broadcasting in 2005. One of the first ten stations to be upgraded was KIOL.[5] The station had been simulcast on KRBE HD-2, but this was replaced by a feed of the True Oldies Channel in June 2012.[6]- published: 20 Dec 2013
- views: 3
0:53
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KHJK
KHJK
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
KHJK
City of license La Porte, Texas
Broadcast ...
published: 14 Nov 2013
KHJK
KHJK
KHJK From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia KHJK City of license La Porte, Texas Broadcast area Greater Houston/Golden Triangle Branding Air 1 Slogan "The Positive Alternative" Frequency 103.7 MHz First air date 2005 (on current tower) Format Christian Rock ERP 94,860 watts HAAT 590 meters Class C Facility ID 48676 Transmitter coordinates 29°56′9″N 94°30′39″W Callsign meaning K Houston JacK (former format) Former callsigns KTDD (1990-1991) KVST (1991-2005) KUST (3/2005-5/2005) KIOL (2005-2007) Affiliations Air 1 Owner Educational Media Foundation Webcast Listen Live Website air1.com KHJK (103.7 FM, "Air 1") is a Christian rock-formatted radio station serving the Houston and Beaumont, Texas, areas. It relays the satellite delivered Air 1 format by owner Educational Media Foundation. Contents [hide] 1 History 2 Callsign history 3 HD radio 4 References 5 External links History[edit] KHJK-FM previously operated as KVST, "K-Star Country 103.7", which was licensed to service the area north of Houston. Owned by Ben Amato of Conroe (who sold his chain of grocery stores around that area to finance the radio station), it originally signed on as KVST in Huntsville, TX on 103.5; however, interference from 103.5 in Buda, TX (Oldies 103.5 Austin, now BOB-FM) caused the station not to reach down to the intended audience of Conroe and a look at a move in frequency was done. It moved to 103.7 and later a simulcast on 99.7 (KUST, Willis) was added to help the coverage in Conroe and The Woodlands. The station, whose signal was poor in comparison to Houston's other country music stations, was purchased by Cumulus Media in mid-2004, which later acquired greater Houston's only Top 40 station, KRBE, in addition to also owning 97.5, the former KAYD-FM (now KFNC and a rimshot for Houston). In 2005, the station's transmitter was moved to its current location in Devers to service the Houston area. This resulted in another format change, with the station switching to KIOL and its heritage rock format that had been carried on the 97.5 frequency, which was a carry over from the original heritage rock frequency of 101.1 KLOL, which had flipped to a Spanish format. 97.5 continued as a simulcast on the latter until switching to a news (and later, ESPN) sports format. On August 30, 2007, the Houston Chronicle reported that KIOL would be switching to the Jack FM format at 10:37 a.m. the following day, and adopting new call letters, KHJK [1]. The final songs on "Rock 103.7" were "Mary Jane's Last Dance by Tom Petty, "Cold As Ice" by Foreigner, and "Fire" by Jimi Hendrix, while the first two songs on "Jack" were "Jumpin' Jack Flash" by The Rolling Stones" and "Let's Go Crazy" by Prince." On May 6, 2009, KHJK shifted from adult hits to adult alternative as "103-7FM." [1] As part of a prepackaged bankruptcy filing, the lenders took over the license of four Cumulus Media Partners stations; two in the Kansas City metro area (KCHZ and KMJK) and the two rimshot signals in the Houston metro, KHJK and KFNC in November 2011.[2] Station broker Larry Patrick became majority owner and set out to sell the stations to recover the value for the lenders. After the filing, Cumulus continued to program the stations under LMA. While Cumulus could have purchased the stations back, the highest bidder for KFNC was David Gow, owner of KGOW (1560 The Game) and the highest bidder for KHJK was Educational Media Foundation, who programs Christian AC and Christian Rock formats.[3] EMF switched the format of KHJK to Air 1 at 5:00 PM on July 17, 2012.[4] The last songs played on 103.7 FM were "Mary Jane's Last Dance" by Tom Petty, "In The End" by Linkin Park, "Closing Time" by Semisonic, and "It's The End Of The World As We Know It (And I Feel Fine)" by R.E.M.. Between In The End and Closing Time, the announcer gave this goodbye message : "Houston, thank you. It's been an amazing ride. Steve, Donna, and the entire 103.7 FM crew want to say thanks for being there for us. Attending our events, coming to our shows, and just for listening to Houston's adult alternative, 103.7 FM. It's been our pleasure serving you some of the best new music out there and playing the best music you can't hear anywhere else but 103.7 FM. You are some of the best listeners we could have ever asked for, and we'll miss you. Thanks again. And are you hiring?" The first song on Air 1 was "Me Without You" by TobyMac.[1] The purchase of KHJK by EMF was consummated on October 15, 2012 at a price of $5 million. Callsign history[edit] KTDD - 05/03/1990 KVST - 07/22/1991 (K-Star Country) KUST - 03/30/2005 KIOL - 05/23/2005 (Rock 103-7) KHJK - 09/01/2007 (103.7 Jack FM, 103-7 FM, Air-1) HD radio[edit] Cumulus Broadcasting began upgrading its stations to HD Radio broadcasting in 2005. One of the first ten stations to be upgraded was KIOL.[5] The station had been simulcast on KRBE HD-2, but this was replaced by a feed of the True Oldies Channel in June 2012.[6]- published: 14 Nov 2013
- views: 2
0:15
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About Air 1 Radio 103.7 KHJK
KHJK (103.7 FM, "Air 1") is a Christian rock-formatted radio station serving the Houston a...
published: 18 Sep 2013
About Air 1 Radio 103.7 KHJK
About Air 1 Radio 103.7 KHJK
KHJK (103.7 FM, "Air 1") is a Christian rock-formatted radio station serving the Houston and Beaumont, Texas, areas. It relays the satellite delivered Air 1 format by owner Educational Media Foundation. Contents [hide] 1 History 2 Callsign history 3 HD radio 4 References 5 External links History[edit source] KHJK-FM previously operated as KVST, "K-Star Country 103.7", which was licensed to service the area north of Houston. Owned by Ben Amato of Conroe (who sold his chain of grocery stores around that area to finance the radio station), it originally signed on as KVST in Huntsville, TX on 103.5; however, interference from 103.5 in Buda, TX (Oldies 103.5 Austin, now BOB-FM) caused the station not to reach down to the intended audience of Conroe and a look at a move in frequency was done. It moved to 103.7 and later a simulcast on 99.7 (KUST, Willis) was added to help the coverage in Conroe and The Woodlands. The station, whose signal was poor in comparison to Houston's other country music stations, was purchased by Cumulus Media in mid-2004, which later acquired greater Houston's only Top 40 station, KRBE, in addition to also owning 97.5, the former KAYD-FM (now KFNC and a rimshot for Houston). In 2005, the station's transmitter was moved to its current location in Devers to service the Houston area. This resulted in another format change, with the station switching to KIOL and its heritage rock format that had been carried on the 97.5 frequency, which was a carry over from the original heritage rock frequency of 101.1 KLOL, which had flipped to a Spanish format. 97.5 continued as a simulcast on the latter until switching to a news (and later, ESPN) sports format. On August 30, 2007, the Houston Chronicle reported that KIOL would be switching to the Jack FM format at 10:37 a.m. the following day, and adopting new call letters, KHJK [1]. The final songs on "Rock 103.7" were "Mary Jane's Last Dance by Tom Petty, "Cold As Ice" by Foreigner, and "Fire" by Jimi Hendrix, while the first two songs on "Jack" were "Jumpin' Jack Flash" by The Rolling Stones" and "Let's Go Crazy" by Prince." On May 6, 2009, KHJK shifted from adult hits to adult alternative as "103-7FM." [1] As part of a prepackaged bankruptcy filing, the lenders took over the license of four Cumulus Media Partners stations; two in the Kansas City metro area (KCHZ and KMJK) and the two rimshot signals in the Houston metro, KHJK and KFNC in November 2011.[2] Station broker Larry Patrick became majority owner and set out to sell the stations to recover the value for the lenders. After the filing, Cumulus continued to program the stations under LMA. While Cumulus could have purchased the stations back, the highest bidder for KFNC was David Gow, owner of KGOW (1560 The Game) and the highest bidder for KHJK was Educational Media Foundation, who programs Christian AC and Christian Rock formats.[3] EMF switched the format of KHJK to Air 1 at 5:00 PM on July 17, 2012.[4] The last songs played on FM-103.7 were "Mary Jane's Last Dance" by Tom Petty, "In The End" by Linkin Park, "Closing Time" by Semisonic, and "It's The End Of The World As We Know It (And I Feel Fine)" by R.E.M.. Between In The End and Closing Time, the announcer gave this goodbye message : "Houston, thank you. It's been an amazing ride. Steve, Donna, and the entire 103.7 FM crew wanna thank you for being there for us. Attending our events, coming to our shows, and just for listening to Houston's adult alternative, 103.7 FM. It's been our pleasure serving you some of the best new music out there and playing the best music you can't hear anywhere else but 103.7 FM. You are some of the best listeners we could have ever asked for, and we'll miss you. Thanks again. And are you hiring?" The first song on Air 1 was "Me Without You" by TobyMac.[1] The purchase of KHJK by EMF was consummated on October 15, 2012 at a price of $5 million. Callsign history[edit source] KTDD - 05/03/1990 KVST - 07/22/1991 (K-Star Country) KUST - 03/30/2005 KIOL - 05/23/2005 (Rock 103-7) HD radio[edit source] Cumulus Broadcasting began upgrading its stations to HD Radio broadcasting in 2005. One of the first ten stations to be upgraded was KIOL.[5] The station had been simulcast on KRBE HD-2, but this was replaced by a feed of the True Oldies Channel in June 2012.- published: 18 Sep 2013
- views: 4
0:10
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About KHJK Air1 Houston
KHJK
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
KHJK
City of license La Porte, Texas
Broadcast ...
published: 31 Dec 2013
About KHJK Air1 Houston
About KHJK Air1 Houston
KHJK From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia KHJK City of license La Porte, Texas Broadcast area Greater Houston/Golden Triangle Branding Air 1 Slogan "Positive Hits" Frequency 103.7 MHz First air date 2005 (on current tower) Format Christian Rock ERP 94,860 watts HAAT 590 meters Class C Facility ID 48676 Transmitter coordinates 29°56′9″N 94°30′39″W Callsign meaning K Houston JacK (former format) Former callsigns KTDD (1990-1991) KVST (1991-2005) KUST (3/2005-5/2005) KIOL (2005-2007) Affiliations Air 1 Owner Educational Media Foundation Webcast Listen Live Website air1.com KHJK (103.7 FM, "Air 1") is a Christian rock-formatted radio station serving the Houston and Beaumont, Texas, areas. It relays the satellite delivered Air 1 format by owner Educational Media Foundation. Contents [hide] 1 History 2 Callsign history 3 HD radio 4 References 5 External links History[edit] KHJK-FM previously operated as KVST, "K-Star Country 103.7", which was licensed to service the area north of Houston. Owned by Ben Amato of Conroe (who sold his chain of grocery stores around that area to finance the radio station), it originally signed on as KVST in Huntsville, TX on 103.5; however, interference from 103.5 in Buda, TX (Oldies 103.5 Austin, now BOB-FM) caused the station not to reach down to the intended audience of Conroe and a look at a move in frequency was done. It moved to 103.7 and later a simulcast on 99.7 (KUST, Willis) was added to help the coverage in Conroe and The Woodlands. The station, whose signal was poor in comparison to Houston's other country music stations, was purchased by Cumulus Media in mid-2004, which later acquired greater Houston's only Top 40 station, KRBE, in addition to also owning 97.5, the former KAYD-FM (now KFNC and a rimshot for Houston). In 2005, the station's transmitter was moved to its current location in Devers to service the Houston area. This resulted in another format change, with the station switching to KIOL and its heritage rock format that had been carried on the 97.5 frequency, which was a carry over from the original heritage rock frequency of 101.1 KLOL, which had flipped to a Spanish format. 97.5 continued as a simulcast on the latter until switching to a news (and later, ESPN) sports format. On August 30, 2007, the Houston Chronicle reported that KIOL would be switching to the Jack FM format at 10:37 a.m. the following day, and adopting new call letters, KHJK [1]. The final songs on "Rock 103.7" were "Mary Jane's Last Dance by Tom Petty, "Cold As Ice" by Foreigner, and "Fire" by Jimi Hendrix, while the first two songs on "Jack" were "Jumpin' Jack Flash" by The Rolling Stones" and "Let's Go Crazy" by Prince." On May 6, 2009, KHJK shifted from adult hits to adult alternative as "103-7FM." [1] As part of a prepackaged bankruptcy filing, the lenders took over the license of four Cumulus Media Partners stations; two in the Kansas City metro area (KCHZ and KMJK) and the two rimshot signals in the Houston metro, KHJK and KFNC in November 2011.[2] Station broker Larry Patrick became majority owner and set out to sell the stations to recover the value for the lenders. After the filing, Cumulus continued to program the stations under LMA. While Cumulus could have purchased the stations back, the highest bidder for KFNC was David Gow, owner of KGOW (1560 The Game) and the highest bidder for KHJK was Educational Media Foundation, who programs Christian AC and Christian Rock formats.[3] EMF switched the format of KHJK to Air 1 at 5:00 PM on July 17, 2012.[4] The last songs played on 103.7 FM were "Mary Jane's Last Dance" by Tom Petty, "In The End" by Linkin Park, "Closing Time" by Semisonic, and "It's The End Of The World As We Know It (And I Feel Fine)" by R.E.M.. Between In The End and Closing Time, the announcer gave this goodbye message : "Houston, thank you. It's been an amazing ride. Steve, Donna, and the entire 103.7 FM crew want to say thanks for being there for us. Attending our events, coming to our shows, and just for listening to Houston's adult alternative, 103.7 FM. It's been our pleasure serving you some of the best new music out there and playing the best music you can't hear anywhere else but 103.7 FM. You are some of the best listeners we could have ever asked for, and we'll miss you. Thanks again. And are you hiring?" The first song on Air 1 was "Me Without You" by TobyMac.[1] The purchase of KHJK by EMF was consummated on October 15, 2012 at a price of $5 million. Callsign history[edit] KTDD - 05/03/1990 KVST - 07/22/1991 (K-Star Country) KUST - 03/30/2005 KIOL - 05/23/2005 (Rock 103-7) KHJK - 09/01/2007 (103.7 Jack FM, 103-7 FM, Air-1) HD radio[edit] Cumulus Broadcasting began upgrading its stations to HD Radio broadcasting in 2005. One of the first ten stations to be upgraded was KIOL.[5] The station had been simulcast on KRBE HD-2, but this was replaced by a feed of the True Oldies Channel in June 2012.[- published: 31 Dec 2013
- views: 0
2:35
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How You Can Get An HD2 Broadcast Station For KHJK 103.7 FM Houston, Texas
Air 1 Radio Is Listener Supported & Owned By The K-LoveAir1Foundation To Keep Air 1 Radio ...
published: 20 Aug 2012
author: Aaron Michael McCluske
How You Can Get An HD2 Broadcast Station For KHJK 103.7 FM Houston, Texas
How You Can Get An HD2 Broadcast Station For KHJK 103.7 FM Houston, Texas
Air 1 Radio Is Listener Supported & Owned By The K-LoveAir1Foundation To Keep Air 1 Radio On Air In The Houston, Texas Area It Takes People Pledging To Air 1...- published: 20 Aug 2012
- views: 67
- author: Aaron Michael McCluske
1:38
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103.7 KHJK Now Owned By The Satellite Delivered Air 1 Radio
KHJK (103.7 FM, "Air 1") is a Christian rock-formatted radio station serving the Houston a...
published: 27 Aug 2013
103.7 KHJK Now Owned By The Satellite Delivered Air 1 Radio
103.7 KHJK Now Owned By The Satellite Delivered Air 1 Radio
KHJK (103.7 FM, "Air 1") is a Christian rock-formatted radio station serving the Houston and Beaumont, Texas, areas. It relays the satellite delivered Air 1 format by owner Educational Media Foundation. KRBE today[edit source | editbeta] On October 31, 2005, Susquehanna announced it had reached an agreement to sell its radio assets, including KRBE, to a partnership including Cumulus Media (which also owns Houston radio stations KIOL-FM (103.7) and KFNC-FM (97.5)) as well as Bain Capital, Blackstone Group and Thomas H. Lee Partners. The deal was expected to be completed in the first half of 2006. After the purchase, KRBE quietly changed its logo from "104 KRBE" to "104.1 KRBE", a technically more accurate description of the station. KRBE has evolved to an adult-oriented Top 40 (similar to co-owned station WWWQ in Atlanta) under Cumulus ownership.[citation needed] In late January 2006, KRBE launched its digital HD signal. Its HD2 signal, from late 2007 until June 2012, simulcasted KHJK. After KHJK's sale to EMF Broadcasting in June 2012, KRBE's HD2 signal changed to Oldies music from the True Oldies Channel.[3] The HD3 signal is still undetermined, but it's speculated to be either a Contemporary Christian station or an Urban Contemporary station. News Is That KRBE Had A Pending Sale With Clear Channel- published: 27 Aug 2013
- views: 5
0:09
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About 103.7 KHJK Air1 Houston
KHJK
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
KHJK
City of license La Porte, Texas
Broadcast ...
published: 27 Jan 2014
About 103.7 KHJK Air1 Houston
About 103.7 KHJK Air1 Houston
KHJK From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia KHJK City of license La Porte, Texas Broadcast area Greater Houston/Golden Triangle Branding Air 1 Slogan "Positive Hits" Frequency 103.7 MHz First air date 2005 (on current tower) Format Christian Rock ERP 94,860 watts HAAT 590 meters Class C Facility ID 48676 Transmitter coordinates 29°56′9″N 94°30′39″W Callsign meaning K Houston JacK (former format) Former callsigns KTDD (1990-1991) KVST (1991-2005) KUST (3/2005-5/2005) KIOL (2005-2007) Affiliations Air 1 Owner Educational Media Foundation Webcast Listen Live Website air1.com KHJK (103.7 FM, "Air 1") is a Christian rock-formatted radio station serving the Houston and Beaumont, Texas, areas. It relays the satellite delivered Air 1 format by owner Educational Media Foundation. Contents [hide] 1 History 2 Callsign history 3 HD radio 4 References 5 External links History[edit] KHJK-FM previously operated as KVST, "K-Star Country 103.7", which was licensed to service the area north of Houston. Owned by Ben Amato of Conroe (who sold his chain of grocery stores around that area to finance the radio station), it originally signed on as KVST in Huntsville, TX on 103.5; however, interference from 103.5 in Buda, TX (Oldies 103.5 Austin, now BOB-FM) caused the station not to reach down to the intended audience of Conroe and a look at a move in frequency was done. It moved to 103.7 and later a simulcast on 99.7 (KUST, Willis) was added to help the coverage in Conroe and The Woodlands. The station, whose signal was poor in comparison to Houston's other country music stations, was purchased by Cumulus Media in mid-2004, which later acquired greater Houston's only Top 40 station, KRBE, in addition to also owning 97.5, the former KAYD-FM (now KFNC and a rimshot for Houston). In 2005, the station's transmitter was moved to its current location in Devers to service the Houston area. This resulted in another format change, with the station switching to KIOL and its heritage rock format that had been carried on the 97.5 frequency, which was a carry over from the original heritage rock frequency of 101.1 KLOL, which had flipped to a Spanish format. 97.5 continued as a simulcast on the latter until switching to a news (and later, ESPN) sports format. On August 30, 2007, the Houston Chronicle reported that KIOL would be switching to the Jack FM format at 10:37 a.m. the following day, and adopting new call letters, KHJK [1]. The final songs on "Rock 103.7" were "Mary Jane's Last Dance by Tom Petty, "Cold As Ice" by Foreigner, and "Fire" by Jimi Hendrix, while the first two songs on "Jack" were "Jumpin' Jack Flash" by The Rolling Stones" and "Let's Go Crazy" by Prince." On May 6, 2009, KHJK shifted from adult hits to adult alternative as "103-7FM." [1] As part of a prepackaged bankruptcy filing, the lenders took over the license of four Cumulus Media Partners stations; two in the Kansas City metro area (KCHZ and KMJK) and the two rimshot signals in the Houston metro, KHJK and KFNC in November 2011.[2] Station broker Larry Patrick became majority owner and set out to sell the stations to recover the value for the lenders. After the filing, Cumulus continued to program the stations under LMA. While Cumulus could have purchased the stations back, the highest bidder for KFNC was David Gow, owner of KGOW (1560 The Game) and the highest bidder for KHJK was Educational Media Foundation, who programs Christian AC and Christian Rock formats.[3] EMF switched the format of KHJK to Air 1 at 5:00 PM on July 17, 2012.[4] The last songs played on 103.7 FM were "Mary Jane's Last Dance" by Tom Petty, "In The End" by Linkin Park, "Closing Time" by Semisonic, and "It's The End Of The World As We Know It (And I Feel Fine)" by R.E.M.. Between In The End and Closing Time, the announcer gave this goodbye message : "Houston, thank you. It's been an amazing ride. Steve, Donna, and the entire 103.7 FM crew want to say thanks for being there for us. Attending our events, coming to our shows, and just for listening to Houston's adult alternative, 103.7 FM. It's been our pleasure serving you some of the best new music out there and playing the best music you can't hear anywhere else but 103.7 FM. You are some of the best listeners we could have ever asked for, and we'll miss you. Thanks again. And are you hiring?" The first song on Air 1 was "Me Without You" by TobyMac.[1] The purchase of KHJK by EMF was consummated on October 15, 2012 at a price of $5 million. Callsign history[edit] KTDD - 05/03/1990 KVST - 07/22/1991 (K-Star Country) KUST - 03/30/2005 KIOL - 05/23/2005 (Rock 103-7) KHJK - 09/01/2007 (103.7 Jack FM, 103-7 FM, Air-1) HD radio[edit] Cumulus Broadcasting began upgrading its stations to HD Radio broadcasting in 2005. One of the first ten stations to be upgraded was KIOL.[5] The station had been simulcast on KRBE HD-2, but this was replaced by a feed of the True Oldies Channel in June 2012.- published: 27 Jan 2014
- views: 0
6:02
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103.7FM KHJK Houston - Composite (2010)
103-7FM, KHJK-FM Houston's Adult Alternative Composite from July 2010....
published: 28 Jun 2012
author: coolcat713
103.7FM KHJK Houston - Composite (2010)
103.7FM KHJK Houston - Composite (2010)
103-7FM, KHJK-FM Houston's Adult Alternative Composite from July 2010.- published: 28 Jun 2012
- views: 604
- author: coolcat713
Youtube results:
4:03
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103.7 KHJK Houston's Adult Alternative - Last Moments and Flip to Air1
The last half-hour of programming (scoped) on 103.7FM before the flip to Air1. There is a ...
published: 22 Jul 2012
author: Jason Riley
103.7 KHJK Houston's Adult Alternative - Last Moments and Flip to Air1
103.7 KHJK Houston's Adult Alternative - Last Moments and Flip to Air1
The last half-hour of programming (scoped) on 103.7FM before the flip to Air1. There is a theme in the songs from Barenaked Ladies onward, and there is a fin...- published: 22 Jul 2012
- views: 794
- author: Jason Riley
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103.7FM KHJK Houston - TOH (2012)
Recorded 06/15/2012 .Top of hour ID for Houston's Adult Alternative, KHJK-FM 103.7, LaPort...
published: 15 Jun 2012
author: coolcat713
103.7FM KHJK Houston - TOH (2012)
103.7FM KHJK Houston - TOH (2012)
Recorded 06/15/2012 .Top of hour ID for Houston's Adult Alternative, KHJK-FM 103.7, LaPorte/Houston, Texas.- published: 15 Jun 2012
- views: 136
- author: coolcat713