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Wikipedia

KBFF

KBFF (95.5 FM, "Live 95.5") is a commercial radio station licensed to Portland, Oregon, and serving the Portland metropolitan area, including parts of Oregon and Washington. The station airs a Top 40 (CHR) radio format and is owned by Alpha Media.[2] It carries the syndicated morning drive time show "Brooke & Jeffrey" from KQMV in Seattle.

KBFF
Broadcast areaPortland metropolitan area
Frequency95.5 MHz
BrandingLive 95.5
Programming
FormatTop 40 (CHR)
Ownership
Owner
KINK, KUFO, KUPL, KXL-FM, KXTG
History
First air date
September 25, 1960
Former call signs
KGMG (1960-1965)
KXL-FM (1965-1999)
KXJM (1999-2008)
KXTG (2008-2011)
Call sign meaning
BFF = Acronym for Best Friends Forever
Technical information[1]
Licensing authority
FCC
Facility ID949
ClassC
ERP100,000 watts
HAAT386 meters (1,266 ft)
Transmitter coordinates
45°29′19″N 122°41′44″W / 45.48861°N 122.69556°W / 45.48861; -122.69556
Links
Public license information
  • Public file
  • LMS
WebcastListen Live
Websitelive955.com

KBFF's studios and offices are located in Downtown Portland, on SW Fifth Avenue.[3] The transmitter is in Portland's West Hills, off SW Fairmount Court.[4] KBFF has an effective radiated power (ERP) of 100,000 watts.

History edit

Early history edit

The 95.5 MHz spot on the FM dial in Portland was first occupied by the original KWJJ-FM. That station signed on in 1946.[5] It only transmitted with an effective radiated power of 3,400 watts and it mostly simulcast AM 1080 KWJJ (now KFXX). But in the 1940s and 50s, few radios could receive FM signals and management saw little opportunity to make it profitable. In the mid-1950s, KWJJ silenced the FM station, giving up the license.

On September 23, 1959, the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) granted International Good Music, Inc. (IGM) a construction permit to build a new FM station on 95.5 MHz. In early October 1959, call sign KGMG was granted, standing for "Good Music," the format term for classical music. By September 9, 1960, 95.5 KGMG was testing intermittently.

On September 25, 1960, at 7 a.m., KGMG began regular operations by airing programming from the IGM automation system.[6] KGMG broadcast from 7 a.m. to 1 a.m. daily, and only selected commercials were played and no singing jingles were allowed.[7] By March 1962, KGMG was broadcasting the recorded "Heritage Concert" series. On March 17, 1962, KGMG became the second Portland station to broadcast in multiplex stereo. In July 1962, KGMG began leasing antenna space to Pacific Motor Trucking Co. for a 25-watt VHF transmitter.

On April 20, 1964, KGMG switched to an automated MOR format from IGM. By mid-1964, KGMG was broadcasting 9 a.m. to 11 p.m. daily.

KXL-FM Stereo 95 edit

On May 13, 1965, the FCC approved the $125,000 sale of KGMG to Seattle, Portland & Spokane Radio, a joint venture of Dena Pictures, Inc. and the Alexander Broadcasting Company.[8] Seattle, Portland & Spokane Radio also owned AM 750 KXL (now KXTG). Two months later, on July 5, 1965, KGMG became KXL-FM and began duplicating KXL's "Good Music" format as KXL & KXL-FM Stereo.[9]

In September 1966, KXL-FM staff began taping the evening "Good Music" programming for syndicator IGM, now known as Broadcast Programming International (BPI). The company provided the software to many FM stations nationwide. In 1969, KXL-FM raised its power to 100,000 watts and increased antenna height to 990 feet.

At the time, KXL (AM) was a daytimer, required to sign off at sunset to avoid interfering with clear channel station WSB in Atlanta, so it simulcasted its programming on KXL-FM, which could continue the programming at night. In 1970, KXL-AM-FM switched to a "Popular Music" middle of the road (MOR) format as KXL-FM Stereo 95. Most FM stations by the 1970s could not fully simulcast their AM stations, but this rule didn't apply to AM stations that were daytimers. KXL-FM continued to simulcast KXL (AM) through 1974.

In March 1984, KXL-FM switched to TM's Beautiful Music service and was playing five to six vocals an hour until 1989, when the station began running Unistar's "Special Blend" soft adult contemporary satellite format with local morning host George Walker.

K95.5/Star 95.5/95.5 KXL edit

In April 1990, KXL-FM changed format to "Lite Favorites," a combination of soft AC and soft rock. It was branded as K95.5. This format also utilized a satellite music service except for drive times.

On September 27, 1993, KXL-FM switched to a Hot AC format as Star 95.5 but only lasted a year.[10]

On October 18, 1994, KXL-FM switched to all '70s Hits as Seventies 95.5.[11] This format only lasted a year and a half.

Music Radio 95 KXL/Mix 95.5/95.5FM edit

On April 15, 1996, KXL-FM modified its 1970s format to include 1980s music and adopted the branding Music Radio 95 KXL.[12]

In the Fall of 1996, KXL-FM returned to Hot AC. On April 1, 1997, KXL-FM switched to a new slogan as Mix 95.5.[13] In December 1997, Carl Widing was hired as Program Director and in February 1998, KXL-FM switched to a Triple A format as 95.5FM.

On November 30, 1998, KXL-FM was sold to the Rose City Radio Corp. for $55 Million.[14]

Jammin' 95.5 edit

On March 26, 1999, at 5:30 p.m., KXL-FM switched to a rhythmic contemporary format as Jammin' 95.5, becoming the first FM station in Portland to air the format full time. The first song was "Changes" by 2Pac.[15]

On April 30, 1999, KXL-FM changed the call letters to KXJM.

95-5 The Game edit

On May 1, 2008, due to declining ratings, Rose City Radio announced that KXJM would change formats to all sports on May 12, as "95.5 The Game." The switch almost left Portland without a hip-hop station, and as a result, would leave Portland listeners with only two choices for rhythmic music: Mainstream Top 40 KKRZ, whose playlist included some hip-hop songs, and KVMX, the market's Rhythmic Adult Contemporary station.[16]

On May 9, 2008, at 6 p.m., KVMX officially ditched its Rhythmic AC format and became Portland's new home for Rhythmic Contemporary as "Jammin' 107.5." Both KXJM and KVMX simulcasted the format that weekend until KXJM's flip to sports at 9 a.m. the following Monday, May 12. KVMX also acquired the KXJM call letters, the website and all intellectual properties from Rose City.

On May 27, 2008, the original KXJM officially chose KXTG as its new call letters to better reflect the sports format and "The Game" moniker. KXTG and AM sister station KXL changed ownership would be bought by Alpha Broadcasting in May 2009. Despite the station's emphasis on local hosts, ratings success did not follow, usually peaking at about a 2.0 share in the Arbitron ratings.[citation needed]

Live 95-5 edit

On May 21, 2011, Alpha announced that on May 25, at 5:00 p.m., KXTG's sports format would be moving to AM 750 KXL, which was running a news/talk format that at the time was simulcasting on 101.1 FM, previously a rock station.[17] 95.5 FM would then launch a new format at the same time, although the announcement didn't say what that new format would be.[18]

The question of what the format would be began to take on a life of its own when industry website RadioInsight reported that Alpha registered several domain names for the station, in order to keep people guessing.[19] On May 24, 2011, a logo and website for "Live 95.5" appeared in a Google cache, with the hint referenced in its moniker as "Today's Modern Mix," indicating a contemporary music format.[20]

On May 25, at 5 p.m., KXTG flipped to a Hot AC/Adult Top 40 format as Live 95-5, Today's Modern Mix For The Modern Woman. The first song was "Raise Your Glass" by P!nk, beginning a 10,000 songs-in-a-row promotion to attract listeners interest.[21][22] The station also changed its call letters to KBFF.

KBFF saw its ratings improve, going from a 1.9 in its last book as a Sports outlet in May 2011 to a 3.6 share in the June 2011 book, along with a spike in its audience cumes, topping 105.1 The Buzz for the Adult Top 40 crown.[23]

In September 2012, KBFF shifted to Top 40/CHR. To capitalize on this, the station shortened its slogan to "Today's Modern Mix," and then eventually "Portland's #1 Hit Music Station."[citation needed]

In August 2014, KBFF dropped its entire on-air lineup and relaunched as Live 95.5, The Station That Sounds Like Portland.[24]

In April 2015, the station restructured its on-air lineup, adding the syndicated Brooke & Jubal morning drive time show, based at KQMV in Seattle.[25]

On October 22, 2018, at 10 a.m., as a Halloween stunt, KBFF began branding itself as “eviL 95-5” (“eviL” is Live spelled backwards) and started airing spooky sounds in between songs. This continued until November 1 at Midnight.[26]

References edit

  1. ^ "Facility Technical Data for KBFF". Licensing and Management System. Federal Communications Commission.
  2. ^ "KXTG Facility Record". United States Federal Communications Commission, audio division.
  3. ^ Live955.com/contact
  4. ^ Radio-Locator.com/KBFF
  5. ^ Broadcasting Yearbook 1950 page 250
  6. ^ Broadcasting Yearbook 1961-1962 page B-138
  7. ^ https://feedback.pdxradio.com/forums/topic/this-day-in-portland-radio-history-september/page/3/
  8. ^ Broadcasting Yearbook 1966 page B-122
  9. ^ https://feedback.pdxradio.com/forums/topic/this-day-in-portland-radio-history-july/
  10. ^ https://feedback.pdxradio.com/forums/topic/this-day-in-portland-radio-history-september-archive-edition/page/2/
  11. ^ http://www.americanradiohistory.com/Archive-RandR/1990s/1994/RR-1994-10-28.pdf[bare URL PDF]
  12. ^ https://feedback.pdxradio.com/forums/topic/this-day-in-portland-radio-history-april/page/2/
  13. ^ https://feedback.pdxradio.com/forums/topic/this-day-in-portland-radio-history-april-5/
  14. ^ Broadcasting & Cable Yearbook 2010 page D-454
  15. ^ http://www.americanradiohistory.com/Archive-RandR/1990s/1999/RR-1999-04-02.pdf[bare URL PDF]
  16. ^ . Radio Ink. 2008-05-01. Archived from the original on 2008-05-11. Retrieved 2008-05-07.
  17. ^ Salem-News.com/KUFO Shutdown by Bonnie King (March 15, 2011) retrieved 4/5/19
  18. ^ "95.5 KXTG Becomes Live 95.5". 25 May 2011.
  19. ^ The Game Portland Moving to 750; Modern AC Live 95.5 To Debut from Radioinsight (May 24, 2011)
  20. ^ Preview from Google[permanent dead link]
  21. ^ "The Game Portland Moving to 750; Modern AC Live 95.5 Debuts". 26 May 2011.
  22. ^ "95.5 KXTG Becomes Live 95.5". 25 May 2011.
  23. ^ Portland ratings 2011-09-02 at the Wayback Machine from Radio-Info
  24. ^ "On-Air Changes at Live 95.5/Portland, OR".
  25. ^ Brooke & Jubal Get Syndicated to Portland
  26. ^ "Live 95.5 Portland To Get Evil With Halloween Music - RadioInsight". RadioInsight. 2018-10-19. Retrieved 2018-10-23.

External links edit

kbff, airport, nebraska, with, icao, code, western, nebraska, regional, airport, this, article, uses, bare, urls, which, uninformative, vulnerable, link, please, consider, converting, them, full, citations, ensure, article, remains, verifiable, maintains, cons. For the airport in Nebraska with ICAO code KBFF see Western Nebraska Regional Airport This article uses bare URLs which are uninformative and vulnerable to link rot Please consider converting them to full citations to ensure the article remains verifiable and maintains a consistent citation style Several templates and tools are available to assist in formatting such as reFill documentation and Citation bot documentation June 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message KBFF 95 5 FM Live 95 5 is a commercial radio station licensed to Portland Oregon and serving the Portland metropolitan area including parts of Oregon and Washington The station airs a Top 40 CHR radio format and is owned by Alpha Media 2 It carries the syndicated morning drive time show Brooke amp Jeffrey from KQMV in Seattle KBFFPortland OregonBroadcast areaPortland metropolitan areaFrequency95 5 MHzBrandingLive 95 5ProgrammingFormatTop 40 CHR OwnershipOwnerAlpha Media Alpha Media Licensee LLC Sister stationsKINK KUFO KUPL KXL FM KXTGHistoryFirst air dateSeptember 25 1960Former call signsKGMG 1960 1965 KXL FM 1965 1999 KXJM 1999 2008 KXTG 2008 2011 Call sign meaningBFF Acronym for Best Friends ForeverTechnical information 1 Licensing authorityFCCFacility ID949ClassCERP100 000 wattsHAAT386 meters 1 266 ft Transmitter coordinates45 29 19 N 122 41 44 W 45 48861 N 122 69556 W 45 48861 122 69556LinksPublic license informationPublic fileLMSWebcastListen LiveWebsitelive955 comKBFF s studios and offices are located in Downtown Portland on SW Fifth Avenue 3 The transmitter is in Portland s West Hills off SW Fairmount Court 4 KBFF has an effective radiated power ERP of 100 000 watts Contents 1 History 1 1 Early history 1 2 KXL FM Stereo 95 1 3 K95 5 Star 95 5 95 5 KXL 1 4 Music Radio 95 KXL Mix 95 5 95 5FM 1 5 Jammin 95 5 1 6 95 5 The Game 1 7 Live 95 5 2 References 3 External linksHistory editEarly history edit The 95 5 MHz spot on the FM dial in Portland was first occupied by the original KWJJ FM That station signed on in 1946 5 It only transmitted with an effective radiated power of 3 400 watts and it mostly simulcast AM 1080 KWJJ now KFXX But in the 1940s and 50s few radios could receive FM signals and management saw little opportunity to make it profitable In the mid 1950s KWJJ silenced the FM station giving up the license On September 23 1959 the Federal Communications Commission FCC granted International Good Music Inc IGM a construction permit to build a new FM station on 95 5 MHz In early October 1959 call sign KGMG was granted standing for Good Music the format term for classical music By September 9 1960 95 5 KGMG was testing intermittently On September 25 1960 at 7 a m KGMG began regular operations by airing programming from the IGM automation system 6 KGMG broadcast from 7 a m to 1 a m daily and only selected commercials were played and no singing jingles were allowed 7 By March 1962 KGMG was broadcasting the recorded Heritage Concert series On March 17 1962 KGMG became the second Portland station to broadcast in multiplex stereo In July 1962 KGMG began leasing antenna space to Pacific Motor Trucking Co for a 25 watt VHF transmitter On April 20 1964 KGMG switched to an automated MOR format from IGM By mid 1964 KGMG was broadcasting 9 a m to 11 p m daily KXL FM Stereo 95 edit On May 13 1965 the FCC approved the 125 000 sale of KGMG to Seattle Portland amp Spokane Radio a joint venture of Dena Pictures Inc and the Alexander Broadcasting Company 8 Seattle Portland amp Spokane Radio also owned AM 750 KXL now KXTG Two months later on July 5 1965 KGMG became KXL FM and began duplicating KXL s Good Music format as KXL amp KXL FM Stereo 9 In September 1966 KXL FM staff began taping the evening Good Music programming for syndicator IGM now known as Broadcast Programming International BPI The company provided the software to many FM stations nationwide In 1969 KXL FM raised its power to 100 000 watts and increased antenna height to 990 feet At the time KXL AM was a daytimer required to sign off at sunset to avoid interfering with clear channel station WSB in Atlanta so it simulcasted its programming on KXL FM which could continue the programming at night In 1970 KXL AM FM switched to a Popular Music middle of the road MOR format as KXL FM Stereo 95 Most FM stations by the 1970s could not fully simulcast their AM stations but this rule didn t apply to AM stations that were daytimers KXL FM continued to simulcast KXL AM through 1974 In March 1984 KXL FM switched to TM s Beautiful Music service and was playing five to six vocals an hour until 1989 when the station began running Unistar s Special Blend soft adult contemporary satellite format with local morning host George Walker K95 5 Star 95 5 95 5 KXL edit In April 1990 KXL FM changed format to Lite Favorites a combination of soft AC and soft rock It was branded as K95 5 This format also utilized a satellite music service except for drive times On September 27 1993 KXL FM switched to a Hot AC format as Star 95 5 but only lasted a year 10 On October 18 1994 KXL FM switched to all 70s Hits as Seventies 95 5 11 This format only lasted a year and a half Music Radio 95 KXL Mix 95 5 95 5FM edit On April 15 1996 KXL FM modified its 1970s format to include 1980s music and adopted the branding Music Radio 95 KXL 12 In the Fall of 1996 KXL FM returned to Hot AC On April 1 1997 KXL FM switched to a new slogan as Mix 95 5 13 In December 1997 Carl Widing was hired as Program Director and in February 1998 KXL FM switched to a Triple A format as 95 5FM On November 30 1998 KXL FM was sold to the Rose City Radio Corp for 55 Million 14 Jammin 95 5 edit On March 26 1999 at 5 30 p m KXL FM switched to a rhythmic contemporary format as Jammin 95 5 becoming the first FM station in Portland to air the format full time The first song was Changes by 2Pac 15 On April 30 1999 KXL FM changed the call letters to KXJM 95 5 The Game edit On May 1 2008 due to declining ratings Rose City Radio announced that KXJM would change formats to all sports on May 12 as 95 5 The Game The switch almost left Portland without a hip hop station and as a result would leave Portland listeners with only two choices for rhythmic music Mainstream Top 40 KKRZ whose playlist included some hip hop songs and KVMX the market s Rhythmic Adult Contemporary station 16 On May 9 2008 at 6 p m KVMX officially ditched its Rhythmic AC format and became Portland s new home for Rhythmic Contemporary as Jammin 107 5 Both KXJM and KVMX simulcasted the format that weekend until KXJM s flip to sports at 9 a m the following Monday May 12 KVMX also acquired the KXJM call letters the website and all intellectual properties from Rose City On May 27 2008 the original KXJM officially chose KXTG as its new call letters to better reflect the sports format and The Game moniker KXTG and AM sister station KXL changed ownership would be bought by Alpha Broadcasting in May 2009 Despite the station s emphasis on local hosts ratings success did not follow usually peaking at about a 2 0 share in the Arbitron ratings citation needed Live 95 5 edit On May 21 2011 Alpha announced that on May 25 at 5 00 p m KXTG s sports format would be moving to AM 750 KXL which was running a news talk format that at the time was simulcasting on 101 1 FM previously a rock station 17 95 5 FM would then launch a new format at the same time although the announcement didn t say what that new format would be 18 The question of what the format would be began to take on a life of its own when industry website RadioInsight reported that Alpha registered several domain names for the station in order to keep people guessing 19 On May 24 2011 a logo and website for Live 95 5 appeared in a Google cache with the hint referenced in its moniker as Today s Modern Mix indicating a contemporary music format 20 On May 25 at 5 p m KXTG flipped to a Hot AC Adult Top 40 format as Live 95 5 Today s Modern Mix For The Modern Woman The first song was Raise Your Glass by P nk beginning a 10 000 songs in a row promotion to attract listeners interest 21 22 The station also changed its call letters to KBFF KBFF saw its ratings improve going from a 1 9 in its last book as a Sports outlet in May 2011 to a 3 6 share in the June 2011 book along with a spike in its audience cumes topping 105 1 The Buzz for the Adult Top 40 crown 23 In September 2012 KBFF shifted to Top 40 CHR To capitalize on this the station shortened its slogan to Today s Modern Mix and then eventually Portland s 1 Hit Music Station citation needed In August 2014 KBFF dropped its entire on air lineup and relaunched as Live 95 5 The Station That Sounds Like Portland 24 In April 2015 the station restructured its on air lineup adding the syndicated Brooke amp Jubal morning drive time show based at KQMV in Seattle 25 On October 22 2018 at 10 a m as a Halloween stunt KBFF began branding itself as eviL 95 5 eviL is Live spelled backwards and started airing spooky sounds in between songs This continued until November 1 at Midnight 26 References edit Facility Technical Data for KBFF Licensing and Management System Federal Communications Commission KXTG Facility Record United States Federal Communications Commission audio division Live955 com contact Radio Locator com KBFF Broadcasting Yearbook 1950 page 250 Broadcasting Yearbook 1961 1962 page B 138 https feedback pdxradio com forums topic this day in portland radio history september page 3 Broadcasting Yearbook 1966 page B 122 https feedback pdxradio com forums topic this day in portland radio history july https feedback pdxradio com forums topic this day in portland radio history september archive edition page 2 http www americanradiohistory com Archive RandR 1990s 1994 RR 1994 10 28 pdf bare URL PDF https feedback pdxradio com forums topic this day in portland radio history april page 2 https feedback pdxradio com forums topic this day in portland radio history april 5 Broadcasting amp Cable Yearbook 2010 page D 454 http www americanradiohistory com Archive RandR 1990s 1999 RR 1999 04 02 pdf bare URL PDF Portland Gets An FM Sports Station Radio Ink 2008 05 01 Archived from the original on 2008 05 11 Retrieved 2008 05 07 Salem News com KUFO Shutdown by Bonnie King March 15 2011 retrieved 4 5 19 95 5 KXTG Becomes Live 95 5 25 May 2011 The Game Portland Moving to 750 Modern AC Live 95 5 To Debut from Radioinsight May 24 2011 Preview from Google permanent dead link The Game Portland Moving to 750 Modern AC Live 95 5 Debuts 26 May 2011 95 5 KXTG Becomes Live 95 5 25 May 2011 Portland ratings Archived 2011 09 02 at the Wayback Machine from Radio Info On Air Changes at Live 95 5 Portland OR Brooke amp Jubal Get Syndicated to Portland Live 95 5 Portland To Get Evil With Halloween Music RadioInsight RadioInsight 2018 10 19 Retrieved 2018 10 23 External links editLive 95 5 on Facebook Live 95 5 on Twitter nbsp KBFF in the FCC FM station database KBFF in Nielsen Audio s FM station database Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title KBFF amp oldid 1153738951, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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