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CKIS-FM

CKIS-FM (92.5 MHz) is a Canadian radio station in Toronto, Ontario. Owned by Rogers Radio, a division of Rogers Sports & Media, the station broadcasts a Top 40/CHR format branded as KiSS 92.5.

CKIS-FM
Broadcast areaGreater Toronto Area
Frequency92.5 MHz (HD Radio)
BrandingKiSS 92.5
Programming
Language(s)English
FormatTop 40/CHR
SubchannelsHD2: CFTR simulcast
HD3: CJCL simulcast
Ownership
Owner
CFTR, CHFI-FM, CJCL, CFMT-DT, CITY-DT, CJMT-DT
History
First air date
January 26, 1993
Former call signs
CISS-FM (1993–2003)
CJAQ-FM (2003–2009)
Call sign meaning
"Kiss" (branding)
Technical information
Licensing authority
CRTC
ClassB
ERP4,700 watts average
13,000 watts peak
HAAT287.8 meters (944 ft)
Links
WebcastListen Live
Websitekiss925.com

The station was founded on January 26, 1993 as CISS-FM under the ownership of Rawlco Communications in the "New Country" format. CISS was acquired by Rogers Communications on February 26, 1999, and was rebranded first as Power 92, then Kiss 92.5 as a top 40 station, but the station was renamed to 92.5 Jack FM on June 4, 2003 with the call letters CJAQ-FM under a jockless adult hits format before abandoning the concept in 2006 and played classic rock music. The current iteration of "Kiss" was relaunched on June 5, 2009.

CKIS studios are located at the Rogers Building at Bloor and Jarvis Streets in the northeastern corner of downtown Toronto, while its transmitter is located atop First Canadian Place.

History edit

The beginning and Country music (1989–1999) edit

On July 31, 1989, the Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission (CRTC) announced a call for applications to license a new FM station on the 92.5 frequency, which was believed to be the last available FM frequency in the Toronto market.[1][2] On August 8, 1990, Rawlco Communications was awarded a licence from the CRTC for a new FM radio station. The format chosen to air on the frequency was country music that would target an audience ranging from 25–54 years of age. Rawlco planned on changing frequencies for the station to 99.1 FM, which was formerly the home of CKO-FM-1, but cancelled the plan after the CRTC denied this.[3][4] On January 26, 1993, at 1 p.m., singer Anne Murray pressed the button to launch the station, with the CISS-FM call letters and CISS-FM 92.5 (pronounced "kiss") branding.[5][6]

The station's licensing by the Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission had been controversial, because the CRTC had passed over an application by Milestone Radio for an urban music station, which would have been a new format in the Toronto market, in favour of Rawlco's application. Milestone's second attempt at an urban station was also passed over in favour of CBLA-FM; the company finally won a licence on its third attempt, and launched CFXJ-FM in 2001.

First "Kiss" era (1999–2003) edit

Rogers Communications announced a deal to buy the station in February 1999. The deal would not be completed until August, but immediately after the deal was announced, Rogers took control of the station's programming by way of a local management agreement or LMA[7] (at the time, LMAs were not actively regulated by the CRTC). Without much warning, on February 5, 1999, at 7:30 p.m., the station flipped formats to Top 40/CHR and changed monikers to Power 92, becoming the first city-grade Top 40 station to serve Toronto since the demise of CHOG in October 1995.[8] The final song on "CISS" was "The Dance" by Garth Brooks, while the first song on "Power" was "Doo Wop (That Thing)" by Lauryn Hill.

The station's on-air staff was immediately let go.[7] Some reports at the time indicated the staff had been taken out to a meal at a restaurant nearby, then returned to the station to find they were no longer allowed in.[9] In a conversation recollecting the incident 23 years later, Mike Richards indicated that the staff had been invited to a fine dining restaurant and were expecting a meal but, after a lengthy delay, they were instead handed their layoff notices in one of the dining rooms.[10] When the station flipped to Power, the station attracted adverse attention from the operators of CKDX, then a dance music station branded as Power 88.5 in Newmarket, north of Toronto, and from Corus Entertainment, which owned several "Power" stations in western Canada at the time, and who had taken steps towards potentially turning their Toronto rock music station CILQ-FM in a new direction as Power 107. On February 26, 1999, the station rebranded as Kiss 92 FM.[11] The station would later rebrand as Kiss 92.5.

In its early days, the station also aired imaging material in which an announcer pronounced the name of the city "Toe-ron-toe", widely considered a mispronunciation of Toronto. New material was soon substituted.

Thanks to former CRTC content regulations on FM radio, CISS was the first, and remained the only Top 40 station on FM licensed to the City of Toronto in the late 1990s and early 2000s (the closest formatted station in the market, CIDC-FM, which airs a rhythmic contemporary format, is licensed to Orangeville, and is a rimshot from the northwestern portion of the market). The station rode a wave of popularity for pop music acts like Backstreet Boys and 'NSYNC, and often seemed to supertarget a primary market of young teenage or preteen girls. In addition, CISS was more rhythmic-leaning than most Top 40 stations due to the market not having an urban or rhythmic station until 2001, when CFXJ-FM signed on the air with an urban format.

Station personalities included Jay Michaels, first paired with Daryn Jones as "Mad Dog and Daryn" and then with Billie Holiday in mornings as Mad Dog and Billie (frequently accompanied by voice actress Stephanie Beard as "Suga BayBee"), Kris James (a re-hired veteran of the country format, and temporarily the CHR format's first morning host) middays, Tarzan Dan afternoons, Cory Kimm and Taylor Kaye evenings, and Slim hosting "Slim Jams", a slow jam/R&B program in overnights.[12]

By 2002, somewhat ironically, the station moved to take CFXJ's turf with a complete shift to a rhythmic contemporary format billed as "Toronto's Hip Hop and R&B." The station hired local urban flavoured talent DJX and Haddy, Axel, Kwame, DJ Baby Yu and RG.

Jack FM (2003–2009) edit

On June 4, 2003, at 4:07 p.m., the station flipped to the "Jack FM" branding and the adult hits format, which had proved quite successful on Rogers-owned stations in Calgary and Vancouver.[13] The station would adopt the CJAQ-FM call letters in February 2004 (with CISS being moved to a Rogers-owned station in Ottawa). The station experienced a ratings drop after the flip, most likely because of the popularity of the previous format. However, once the station established itself, the station gained a boost in the ratings.

When it first launched, "Jack" operated without disc jockeys in an effort to establish the "Playing What We Want" concept which was new to Toronto. Though DJs were introduced within weeks of the debut, the station would become Canada's first DJ-free station in late September 2005. At the time, station GM/program director Pat Cardinal cited the move was "a result of listener feedback. The audience has been telling us that they want no DJs on Jack. They want more music." In November 2005, Cardinal defended his decision in an interview with Michael Hainsworth of Report on Business Television and stated why he doesn't see commercial-free iPods and satellite radio as a threat to a non-DJ format.[14] Despite the move, the station's ratings would dive from a 4.1 share in 2005 to the 2.3 share range in 2006.

Pat Cardinal would be replaced as GM/PD in June 2006 by Steve Kennedy, who had experience with the "Jack" format in Calgary. The previous month, the "Jack" playlist would be adjusted to mainstream rock, with the station dropping most pop songs in an effort to compete against Corus-owned stations CILQ-FM and CFNY-FM. The move put a dent in the music variety that is a hallmark of the "Jack" format and its "playing what we want" slogan (which CJAQ still used at the time and would not replace until March 2008, when it adopted the slogan "Toronto's Best Rock Variety"). The move to rock would further hamper CJAQ's overall share in the Toronto radio market (down 17%), even in the male target demographic (down 14%).

On December 11, 2006, CJAQ abandoned its DJ-free format when they launched a new morning show featuring Ben McVie and Kerry Gray, the former morning team at CJDV-FM in Kitchener. DJs would surface on other dayparts on December 12, 2006, including Jeff Chalmers and Samantha Stevens. Ben and Kerry were eventually fired on August 16, 2007 and replaced by Jeff Chalmers and Larissa Primeau. Chalmers and Primeau were dismissed in September 2008 and replaced by Carly Klassen and Jeff Brown. (Brown, the former PD of CHEZ-FM in Ottawa, replaced Steve Kennedy as PD on July 4, 2007, when Rogers market manager Sandy Sanderson became GM.) Brown and Klassen would be holding down both the morning and afternoon drive slots by May 2009, one month after "Jack FM" registered a dismal 2.0 share in the BBM ratings results for the Toronto market.

Second "Kiss" era (2009–present) edit

At 3 p.m. on June 5, 2009 (one day after the 6th anniversary of Jack's launch), after playing "Boy Inside the Man" by Tom Cochrane & Red Rider, the station reverted to Top 40/CHR as KiSS 92.5.[15][16] KiSS started with a stretch of 10,000 songs without commercial or DJ interruption, beginning with "Boom Boom Pow" by The Black Eyed Peas.[17] KiSS (which would eventually swap the CJAQ-FM call sign for Calgary's CKIS-FM) features a music playlist consisting mainly of pop, hip-hop and R&B music; the station often avoids rock music, though it does include some Canadian rock artists to meet Canadian content regulations. KiSS competes head-on with Toronto area stations CKFM-FM, CIDC-FM (which airs a rhythmic contemporary format, and is based in the suburbs), as well as, to a lesser extent, Toronto Hot AC station CHUM-FM, and Top 40 station WKSE in Buffalo.

It was announced on July 8, 2009 that ET Canada's Roz Weston will be hosting the new morning show, along with Mocha, formerly of CKBT-FM in Kitchener. Both were formerly co-hosts and producers of Mad Dog & Billie during the station's first Top 40 incarnation. Maurie Sherman (Damnit Maurie) joined the show as Senior Producer/Reporter in March 2011.

Beginning in January 2010, CKIS would offer "Commercial Free Mondays", a campaign patterned after many Top 40 stations across the United States, and offer hourly prize giveaways. (CKIS followed Edmonton's CHBN-FM as the 2nd station in Canada to offer a whole day commercial-free; KiSS competitor CIDC-FM would follow suit one month later with a promotion they label as "The Zone", also on Mondays. The promotion label was dropped on May 13, 2011, to avoid confusion with the block aired on YTV.)

In 2013, the station's DJ Clymaxxx and Mocha won their 2nd consecutive Stylus Award for "Radio Mixshow DJs of the Year" for Set It Off.

HD Radio edit

In April 2016, the CRTC granted approval for CKIS to utilize HD Radio operations.[18] On June 27, CKIS added simulcasts of CFTR and CJCL on their HD2 and HD3 sub-channels, respectively.[19][20]

References edit

  1. ^ (CRTC), Government of Canada, Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission (31 July 1989). "ARCHIVED - Public Notice CRTC 1989-93". www.crtc.gc.ca. Retrieved 16 April 2018.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  2. ^ Who will fill Metro radio's missing link?[permanent dead link], Greg Quill, Toronto Star, March 10, 1990
  3. ^ (CRTC), Government of Canada, Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission (8 August 1990). "ARCHIVED - Decision CRTC 90-693". www.crtc.gc.ca. Retrieved 16 April 2018.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  4. ^ (CRTC), Government of Canada, Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission (6 August 1992). "ARCHIVED - Decision CRTC 92-543". www.crtc.gc.ca. Retrieved 16 April 2018.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  5. ^ Country Music radio makes surprise debut 2016-11-15 at the Wayback Machine, Greg Quill, Toronto Star, January 27, 1993
  6. ^ Cliff Dumas (18 December 2016). "Cliff Shania CISS commercial (1998)". Archived from the original on 2021-12-13. Retrieved 16 April 2018 – via YouTube.
  7. ^ a b (PDF). February 25, 1999. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2006-03-08. Retrieved December 18, 2015.
  8. ^ Country station changes its tune: Focus shifts to Top 40 as Rogers takes over CISS-FM 2016-12-20 at the Wayback Machine, Toronto Star, February 6, 1999
  9. ^ "CISS kisses off country for Rogers' Power92" (PDF). RPM. Vol. 68, no. 17. February 15, 1999. p. 4.
  10. ^ Richards, Mike (January 25, 2022). Jeff Lumby and Mike talk about the mass staff firing at CISS 92.5! Its a Canadian Radio UrbanLegend!. YouTube. Retrieved February 4, 2022.
  11. ^ Rogers CISSes Power 92 goodbye 2016-11-15 at the Wayback Machine, Peter Goddard, Toronto Star, February 24, 1999
  12. ^ Some Old Videos (26 March 2016). "Mad Dog and Billie on Kiss 92.5 (2003)". Archived from the original on 2021-12-13. Retrieved 16 April 2018 – via YouTube.
  13. ^ Rogers woos adults with death of KISS-FM 2016-11-15 at the Wayback Machine, Christopher Hutsul, Toronto Star, June 6, 2003
  14. ^ . hainsworth.com. Archived from the original on 28 September 2007. Retrieved 16 April 2018.
  15. ^ Jack gets the KISS-off; Station's format never really worked in T.O.[permanent dead link], Greg Quill, Toronto Star, June 9, 2009
  16. ^ Friday afternoon brought a high-profile format change in Canada's biggest market, Scott Fybush/North East Radio Watch, June 5, 2009
  17. ^ KISS 92.5 is back 2009-06-08 at the Wayback Machine The Southern Ontario/WNY Radio-TV board, June 5, 2009.
  18. ^ "Canadian Radio News". www.facebook.com. Archived from the original on 2022-02-26. Retrieved 16 April 2018.
  19. ^ "Canadian Radio News". www.facebook.com. Archived from the original on 2022-02-26. Retrieved 16 April 2018.
  20. ^ http://hdradio.com/canada/find-hd-radio-canadian-station HD Radio Stations in Canada

External links edit

43°38′56″N 79°22′54″W / 43.64889°N 79.38167°W / 43.64889; -79.38167

ckis, kiss, redirects, here, radio, station, toledo, ohio, branded, kiss, wvks, radio, station, singapore, branded, kiss, 92fm, kiss, 92fm, canadian, radio, station, toronto, ontario, owned, rogers, radio, division, rogers, sports, media, station, broadcasts, . KISS 92 5 redirects here For the radio station in Toledo Ohio branded as 92 5 KISS FM see WVKS For the radio station in Singapore branded as Kiss 92FM see Kiss 92FM CKIS FM 92 5 MHz is a Canadian radio station in Toronto Ontario Owned by Rogers Radio a division of Rogers Sports amp Media the station broadcasts a Top 40 CHR format branded as KiSS 92 5 CKIS FMToronto OntarioBroadcast areaGreater Toronto AreaFrequency92 5 MHz HD Radio BrandingKiSS 92 5ProgrammingLanguage s EnglishFormatTop 40 CHRSubchannelsHD2 CFTR simulcastHD3 CJCL simulcastOwnershipOwnerRogers Radio Rogers Media Inc Sister stationsCFTR CHFI FM CJCL CFMT DT CITY DT CJMT DTHistoryFirst air dateJanuary 26 1993Former call signsCISS FM 1993 2003 CJAQ FM 2003 2009 Call sign meaning Kiss branding Technical informationLicensing authorityCRTCClassBERP4 700 watts average13 000 watts peakHAAT287 8 meters 944 ft LinksWebcastListen LiveWebsitekiss925 com The station was founded on January 26 1993 as CISS FM under the ownership of Rawlco Communications in the New Country format CISS was acquired by Rogers Communications on February 26 1999 and was rebranded first as Power 92 then Kiss 92 5 as a top 40 station but the station was renamed to 92 5 Jack FM on June 4 2003 with the call letters CJAQ FM under a jockless adult hits format before abandoning the concept in 2006 and played classic rock music The current iteration of Kiss was relaunched on June 5 2009 CKIS studios are located at the Rogers Building at Bloor and Jarvis Streets in the northeastern corner of downtown Toronto while its transmitter is located atop First Canadian Place Contents 1 History 1 1 The beginning and Country music 1989 1999 1 2 First Kiss era 1999 2003 1 3 Jack FM 2003 2009 1 4 Second Kiss era 2009 present 2 HD Radio 3 References 4 External linksHistory editThe beginning and Country music 1989 1999 edit On July 31 1989 the Canadian Radio television and Telecommunications Commission CRTC announced a call for applications to license a new FM station on the 92 5 frequency which was believed to be the last available FM frequency in the Toronto market 1 2 On August 8 1990 Rawlco Communications was awarded a licence from the CRTC for a new FM radio station The format chosen to air on the frequency was country music that would target an audience ranging from 25 54 years of age Rawlco planned on changing frequencies for the station to 99 1 FM which was formerly the home of CKO FM 1 but cancelled the plan after the CRTC denied this 3 4 On January 26 1993 at 1 p m singer Anne Murray pressed the button to launch the station with the CISS FM call letters and CISS FM 92 5 pronounced kiss branding 5 6 The station s licensing by the Canadian Radio television and Telecommunications Commission had been controversial because the CRTC had passed over an application by Milestone Radio for an urban music station which would have been a new format in the Toronto market in favour of Rawlco s application Milestone s second attempt at an urban station was also passed over in favour of CBLA FM the company finally won a licence on its third attempt and launched CFXJ FM in 2001 First Kiss era 1999 2003 edit Rogers Communications announced a deal to buy the station in February 1999 The deal would not be completed until August but immediately after the deal was announced Rogers took control of the station s programming by way of a local management agreement or LMA 7 at the time LMAs were not actively regulated by the CRTC Without much warning on February 5 1999 at 7 30 p m the station flipped formats to Top 40 CHR and changed monikers to Power 92 becoming the first city grade Top 40 station to serve Toronto since the demise of CHOG in October 1995 8 The final song on CISS was The Dance by Garth Brooks while the first song on Power was Doo Wop That Thing by Lauryn Hill The station s on air staff was immediately let go 7 Some reports at the time indicated the staff had been taken out to a meal at a restaurant nearby then returned to the station to find they were no longer allowed in 9 In a conversation recollecting the incident 23 years later Mike Richards indicated that the staff had been invited to a fine dining restaurant and were expecting a meal but after a lengthy delay they were instead handed their layoff notices in one of the dining rooms 10 When the station flipped to Power the station attracted adverse attention from the operators of CKDX then a dance music station branded as Power 88 5 in Newmarket north of Toronto and from Corus Entertainment which owned several Power stations in western Canada at the time and who had taken steps towards potentially turning their Toronto rock music station CILQ FM in a new direction as Power 107 On February 26 1999 the station rebranded as Kiss 92 FM 11 The station would later rebrand as Kiss 92 5 In its early days the station also aired imaging material in which an announcer pronounced the name of the city Toe ron toe widely considered a mispronunciation of Toronto New material was soon substituted Thanks to former CRTC content regulations on FM radio CISS was the first and remained the only Top 40 station on FM licensed to the City of Toronto in the late 1990s and early 2000s the closest formatted station in the market CIDC FM which airs a rhythmic contemporary format is licensed to Orangeville and is a rimshot from the northwestern portion of the market The station rode a wave of popularity for pop music acts like Backstreet Boys and NSYNC and often seemed to supertarget a primary market of young teenage or preteen girls In addition CISS was more rhythmic leaning than most Top 40 stations due to the market not having an urban or rhythmic station until 2001 when CFXJ FM signed on the air with an urban format Station personalities included Jay Michaels first paired with Daryn Jones as Mad Dog and Daryn and then with Billie Holiday in mornings as Mad Dog and Billie frequently accompanied by voice actress Stephanie Beard as Suga BayBee Kris James a re hired veteran of the country format and temporarily the CHR format s first morning host middays Tarzan Dan afternoons Cory Kimm and Taylor Kaye evenings and Slim hosting Slim Jams a slow jam R amp B program in overnights 12 By 2002 somewhat ironically the station moved to take CFXJ s turf with a complete shift to a rhythmic contemporary format billed as Toronto s Hip Hop and R amp B The station hired local urban flavoured talent DJX and Haddy Axel Kwame DJ Baby Yu and RG Jack FM 2003 2009 edit On June 4 2003 at 4 07 p m the station flipped to the Jack FM branding and the adult hits format which had proved quite successful on Rogers owned stations in Calgary and Vancouver 13 The station would adopt the CJAQ FM call letters in February 2004 with CISS being moved to a Rogers owned station in Ottawa The station experienced a ratings drop after the flip most likely because of the popularity of the previous format However once the station established itself the station gained a boost in the ratings When it first launched Jack operated without disc jockeys in an effort to establish the Playing What We Want concept which was new to Toronto Though DJs were introduced within weeks of the debut the station would become Canada s first DJ free station in late September 2005 At the time station GM program director Pat Cardinal cited the move was a result of listener feedback The audience has been telling us that they want no DJs on Jack They want more music In November 2005 Cardinal defended his decision in an interview with Michael Hainsworth of Report on Business Television and stated why he doesn t see commercial free iPods and satellite radio as a threat to a non DJ format 14 Despite the move the station s ratings would dive from a 4 1 share in 2005 to the 2 3 share range in 2006 Pat Cardinal would be replaced as GM PD in June 2006 by Steve Kennedy who had experience with the Jack format in Calgary The previous month the Jack playlist would be adjusted to mainstream rock with the station dropping most pop songs in an effort to compete against Corus owned stations CILQ FM and CFNY FM The move put a dent in the music variety that is a hallmark of the Jack format and its playing what we want slogan which CJAQ still used at the time and would not replace until March 2008 when it adopted the slogan Toronto s Best Rock Variety The move to rock would further hamper CJAQ s overall share in the Toronto radio market down 17 even in the male target demographic down 14 On December 11 2006 CJAQ abandoned its DJ free format when they launched a new morning show featuring Ben McVie and Kerry Gray the former morning team at CJDV FM in Kitchener DJs would surface on other dayparts on December 12 2006 including Jeff Chalmers and Samantha Stevens Ben and Kerry were eventually fired on August 16 2007 and replaced by Jeff Chalmers and Larissa Primeau Chalmers and Primeau were dismissed in September 2008 and replaced by Carly Klassen and Jeff Brown Brown the former PD of CHEZ FM in Ottawa replaced Steve Kennedy as PD on July 4 2007 when Rogers market manager Sandy Sanderson became GM Brown and Klassen would be holding down both the morning and afternoon drive slots by May 2009 one month after Jack FM registered a dismal 2 0 share in the BBM ratings results for the Toronto market Second Kiss era 2009 present edit At 3 p m on June 5 2009 one day after the 6th anniversary of Jack s launch after playing Boy Inside the Man by Tom Cochrane amp Red Rider the station reverted to Top 40 CHR as KiSS 92 5 15 16 KiSS started with a stretch of 10 000 songs without commercial or DJ interruption beginning with Boom Boom Pow by The Black Eyed Peas 17 KiSS which would eventually swap the CJAQ FM call sign for Calgary s CKIS FM features a music playlist consisting mainly of pop hip hop and R amp B music the station often avoids rock music though it does include some Canadian rock artists to meet Canadian content regulations KiSS competes head on with Toronto area stations CKFM FM CIDC FM which airs a rhythmic contemporary format and is based in the suburbs as well as to a lesser extent Toronto Hot AC station CHUM FM and Top 40 station WKSE in Buffalo It was announced on July 8 2009 that ET Canada s Roz Weston will be hosting the new morning show along with Mocha formerly of CKBT FM in Kitchener Both were formerly co hosts and producers of Mad Dog amp Billie during the station s first Top 40 incarnation Maurie Sherman Damnit Maurie joined the show as Senior Producer Reporter in March 2011 Beginning in January 2010 CKIS would offer Commercial Free Mondays a campaign patterned after many Top 40 stations across the United States and offer hourly prize giveaways CKIS followed Edmonton s CHBN FM as the 2nd station in Canada to offer a whole day commercial free KiSS competitor CIDC FM would follow suit one month later with a promotion they label as The Zone also on Mondays The promotion label was dropped on May 13 2011 to avoid confusion with the block aired on YTV In 2013 the station s DJ Clymaxxx and Mocha won their 2nd consecutive Stylus Award for Radio Mixshow DJs of the Year for Set It Off HD Radio editIn April 2016 the CRTC granted approval for CKIS to utilize HD Radio operations 18 On June 27 CKIS added simulcasts of CFTR and CJCL on their HD2 and HD3 sub channels respectively 19 20 References edit CRTC Government of Canada Canadian Radio television and Telecommunications Commission 31 July 1989 ARCHIVED Public Notice CRTC 1989 93 www crtc gc ca Retrieved 16 April 2018 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Who will fill Metro radio s missing link permanent dead link Greg Quill Toronto Star March 10 1990 CRTC Government of Canada Canadian Radio television and Telecommunications Commission 8 August 1990 ARCHIVED Decision CRTC 90 693 www crtc gc ca Retrieved 16 April 2018 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link CRTC Government of Canada Canadian Radio television and Telecommunications Commission 6 August 1992 ARCHIVED Decision CRTC 92 543 www crtc gc ca Retrieved 16 April 2018 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Country Music radio makes surprise debut Archived 2016 11 15 at the Wayback Machine Greg Quill Toronto Star January 27 1993 Cliff Dumas 18 December 2016 Cliff Shania CISS commercial 1998 Archived from the original on 2021 12 13 Retrieved 16 April 2018 via YouTube a b Broadcast Dialogue PDF February 25 1999 Archived from the original PDF on 2006 03 08 Retrieved December 18 2015 Country station changes its tune Focus shifts to Top 40 as Rogers takes over CISS FM Archived 2016 12 20 at the Wayback Machine Toronto Star February 6 1999 CISS kisses off country for Rogers Power92 PDF RPM Vol 68 no 17 February 15 1999 p 4 Richards Mike January 25 2022 Jeff Lumby and Mike talk about the mass staff firing at CISS 92 5 Its a Canadian Radio UrbanLegend YouTube Retrieved February 4 2022 Rogers CISSes Power 92 goodbye Archived 2016 11 15 at the Wayback Machine Peter Goddard Toronto Star February 24 1999 Some Old Videos 26 March 2016 Mad Dog and Billie on Kiss 92 5 2003 Archived from the original on 2021 12 13 Retrieved 16 April 2018 via YouTube Rogers woos adults with death of KISS FM Archived 2016 11 15 at the Wayback Machine Christopher Hutsul Toronto Star June 6 2003 Source Hainsworth com hainsworth com Archived from the original on 28 September 2007 Retrieved 16 April 2018 Jack gets the KISS off Station s format never really worked in T O permanent dead link Greg Quill Toronto Star June 9 2009 Friday afternoon brought a high profile format change in Canada s biggest market Scott Fybush North East Radio Watch June 5 2009 KISS 92 5 is back Archived 2009 06 08 at the Wayback Machine The Southern Ontario WNY Radio TV board June 5 2009 Canadian Radio News www facebook com Archived from the original on 2022 02 26 Retrieved 16 April 2018 Canadian Radio News www facebook com Archived from the original on 2022 02 26 Retrieved 16 April 2018 http hdradio com canada find hd radio canadian station HD Radio Stations in CanadaExternal links editKiSS 92 5 Live webstream CKIS FM at The History of Canadian Broadcasting by the Canadian Communications Foundation CKIS FM in the REC Canadian station database 43 38 56 N 79 22 54 W 43 64889 N 79 38167 W 43 64889 79 38167 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title CKIS FM amp oldid 1221290326, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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