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KDHT (FM)

KDHT (95.7 MHz) is a commercial FM radio station in Denver, Colorado. KDHT broadcasts a top 40 format branded as "Hits 95.7", and is owned by iHeartMedia. The station has studios and offices on South Monaco Street in the Denver Tech Center, while the transmitter site is atop Lookout Mountain in Golden.

KDHT
Broadcast areaDenver–Boulder
Frequency95.7 MHz (HD Radio)
BrandingHits 95-7
Programming
FormatTop 40 (CHR)
SubchannelsHD2: KBPI simulcast (active rock)
AffiliationsPremiere Networks
Ownership
Owner
KBCO, KBPI, KDFD, KHOW, KOA, KRFX, KTCL, KWBL
History
First air date
December 15, 1966 (1966-12-15) (as KMYR at 95.5)
Former call signs
  • KMYR (1966-1975)
  • KHOW-FM (1975-1976)
  • KXKX (1976-1980)
  • KHOW-FM (1980-1983)
  • KPKE (1983-1987)
  • KSYY (1987–1991)
  • KHOW-FM (1991–1993)
  • KHIH (1993–2000)
  • KFMD (2000–2005)
  • KMGG (2005–2006)
  • KPTT (2006–2022)
Former frequencies
95.5 MHz (1966-1970)
Call sign meaning
"Denver's Hits"
Technical information
Facility ID48967
ClassC0
ERP100,000 watts
HAAT346 meters (1,135 ft)
Transmitter coordinates
39°43′59″N 105°14′10″W / 39.73306°N 105.23611°W / 39.73306; -105.23611
Translator(s)
  • 101.7 K269CL (Evergreen)
  • HD2: 107.9 K300CP (Denver)
Links
Webcast
  • Listen Live
  • HD2: KBPI Listen Live
  • HD3: Evolution Listen Live
Website
  • hits957.iheart.com
  • HD2: kbpi.iheart.com

KDHT has an effective radiated power (ERP) of 100,000 watts. KDHT broadcasts in the HD Radio format, with its HD2 subchannel simulcasting KBPI's active rock format.

History edit

KMYR (1966-1968) edit

On December 15, 1966, the station signed on as KMYR.[1] The station originally broadcast at 95.5 MHz at 51,000 watts, about half the power it has today. It was owned by Karlo Broadcasting, Ltd. KMYR aired middle of the road music and carried news from ABC Radio.

KMYR moved to its current frequency, 95.7 MHz, in 1970, and also increased its power to current level, 100,000 watts.[2] In 1975, it was acquired by Doubleday, a publishing and broadcasting company, which had bought one of Denver's top AM stations, KHOW, in 1968.

KHOW-FM (1968-1977) edit

After the closing of the sale, KMYR's call sign was switched to KHOW-FM. The two stations simulcasted some of their news and music, but Federal Communications Commission rules at the time required AM and FM stations to broadcast separate programming for most of the day.

KXKX (1977-1989) edit

From 1977 to 1980, it aired a Top 40 format as KXKX.

KHOW-FM (1980-1983) edit

In 1980, the station returned to the KHOW-FM call letters, and flipped to a progressive rock format.

KPKE (1983-1987) edit

On July 19, 1983, the station returned to Top 40 music as "All Hit 96 KPKE".[3] For a time, KPKE had some of the highest ratings in the market.[4] In April 1986, Legacy Broadcasting, owned by Robert F.X. Sillerman, bought KPKE and KHOW.

KSYY (1987-1991) edit

In June 1987, KPKE changed to soft adult contemporary, this time as KSYY, "Sunny 95.7."[5][6] Over the next several years, KHOW and KSYY changed hands several times. In April 1988, the stations were bought by Metropolitan Broadcasting, formerly Metromedia. Two months later, Command Communications bought the stations. In November 1989, Viacom bought KHOW and KSYY.

KHOW-FM (1991-1993) edit

On February 4, 1991, KSYY changed call letters back to KHOW-FM and began an AM-FM simulcast with KHOW.

KHIH (1993-2000) edit

In October 1993, shortly after Noble Broadcast Group acquired the station, KHOW-FM adopted a smooth jazz format and the call letters KHIH.[7][8] (KHIH was originally on 94.7 FM until Salem purchased the station that same month and dropped it for a Christian Talk/Teaching format.) KHOW meanwhile flipped to a News/Talk format which has been the format to the present day, in spite of staff and personality changes over the years.

In 1996, Noble merged with Jacor, taking advantage of the Telecommunications Act of 1996, allowing one company to own several radio stations in the same market, no longer limited to one AM and one FM. In 1999, Jacor merged with Clear Channel Communications, now known as iHeartMedia.

KFMD (2000-2005) edit

On September 1, 2000, 95.7 returned to contemporary hits as KFMD, "95.7 KISS FM", giving the market its first Mainstream Top 40 outlet since KHHT's demise in 1997. (The smooth jazz format was picked up by KCKK 104.3 later that day.)[9][10][11] However, with competition from Rhythmic Top 40 KQKS and Adult Top 40 KALC, ratings for KFMD were not impressive.

KMGG (2005-2006) edit

On April 27, 2005, KFMD changed call letters to KMGG, and flipped to a Hispanic Urban format as "Mega 95.7."[12][13]

KMGG was one of four FM stations targeting the Mile High City's Hispanic population, the other three being KJMN, KKCS and KXPK; unlike the latter three, KMGG was more focused on the bilingual-speaking second and third generation Hispanics. In addition, KMGG took advantage of KQKS's decision to hold off on certain Reggaeton and Hispanic hip hop tracks. However, the format did not help the station's popularity, as KMGG was continually ranked low in the Arbitron ratings.

KPTT (2006-2021) edit

 
Second logo as The Party

On September 18, 2006, at Midnight, after ending its "Sunday Night Sabor" show and playing "My Way" by Frank Sinatra, KMGG flipped to a Rhythmic Adult Contemporary format targeting females ages 25–49, branded as "95.7 The Party." The first song was P!nk's "Get The Party Started."[14][15][16] The KPTT call letters were adopted on October 18, 2006.

As a Rhythmic AC, the station's playlist consisted of current and recurrent upbeat rhythmic and pop tracks, and old school hip hop and R&B, as well as some classic dance and disco tracks. KPTT primarily targeted the older audience of KQKS (as well as the market's other adult contemporary-oriented stations), and was the first adult-oriented rhythmic outlet in Denver since KDJM flipped in December 2005.

KPTT aired a Sunday-Thursday night slow jams program called "Between The Sheets", as well as the syndicated LGBTQ-oriented "Radio with a Twist" on weekends. The station also served as the Denver outlet for Whoopi Goldberg's national morning show, "Wake Up with Whoopi", which was syndicated by Premiere Networks, co-owned with KPTT by Clear Channel Communications.[17] The show was cancelled in 2008.

During the summer of 2009, KPTT transitioned from rhythmic AC to rhythmic hot AC, and then to a rhythmic-leaning Top 40/CHR format.[18] Morning show host Issa, who took over the morning drive slot after the cancellation of Whoopi's show, was moved to middays and was replaced by Johnjay & Rich, who are syndicated from KZZP in Phoenix.

By March 2010, KPTT shifted to Rhythmic Top 40 altogether, thus putting it in direct competition with KQKS. On November 1, 2010, Johnjay & Rich were dropped from morning drive and were replaced with a music-intensive morning show hosted by former night host Chino. At the same time, the station introduced a new logo, which was loosely based on sister KYLD in San Francisco. This shift to Rhythmic Top 40 proved to be successful for a few years, giving KQKS a serious competitor.

In the fall of 2014, KPTT evolved back to a more mainstream Top 40 direction with the inclusion of pop tracks in its playlist, while maintaining a Rhythmic presentation. The adjustment helped the station overtake KQKS in terms of ratings and audience cumes. The transition became official in April 2015, when Billboard moved KPTT from the Rhythmic panel to the Top 40/CHR panel; Mediabase followed suit in May 2015. The following month, KPTT adopted the slogan "Denver's #1 Hit Music Station."

 
Third logo as "The Party"

In November 2015, the station brought in a new morning show, hosted by JJ Kincaid (from sister station WHTZ in New York), Deanna Regalado and producer Robert 'Dubz' Trigilio.[19] Regalado would move to middays in May 2018, and was replaced with Nina Blanco.[20] Kincaid would be released from the station in April 2019, and replaced with David 'Deuce' Jacobson.[21]

KDHT (2021-present) edit

On July 2, 2021, morning hosts David ‘Deuce’ Jacobson, Nina Blanco, and Robert ‘Dubz’ Trigilio were released from the station. This, combined with the recent registration of new web domains by iHeart as early as mid-May, suggested KPTT would undergo a significant overhaul of its format, as the station dropped to 19th place with a 2.0 share in the May 2021 Nielsen Audio ratings for the market. Shortly before Midnight on July 14, after playing "Only Human" by The Jonas Brothers, KPTT began stunting, playing only music by Britney Spears as "Free Britney Radio", as the stunt took place during her ongoing conservatorship court dispute, the next hearing which would take place that afternoon. KPTT also promoted a change to take place the following day at noon. At the promised time, KPTT relaunched their Top 40/CHR format as "Hits 95.7". The new format jabbed KQKS and KALC upon launch, as "Hits 95.7" would be a flanker between the two stations.[22] The first song on "Hits" was "good 4 u" by Olivia Rodrigo.[23][24]

In August 2021, KPTT became the Denver affiliate of the nationally syndicated "The Jubal Show", hosted by Jubal Fresh and co-hosts Alex Fresh and 'English' Evan Omelia, based at Seattle sister station KBKS.[25]

On March 14, 2022, KPTT changed its callsign to KDHT; aside from adjusting to match the new branding, it also returned a heritage callsign to the area, as it had previously been used on 92.5 FM from 1989 to 1993, and on 107.1 FM from 2009 to 2014.[26]

HD Radio edit

In July 2006, KPTT's HD2 subcarrier signed on with a format focusing on Regional Mexican Oldies. In September 2006, the format was replaced with KPTT's previous Hispanic rhythmic format. This was later replaced with "Pride Radio", which targeted the LGBT community. In mid-2012, this was replaced with the dance radio format "Club Phusion"; which was in turn relaunched in 2003 as "Evolution".[27]

On December 11, 2017, KBPI/Fort Collins began simulcasting the station's active rock format on KPTT-HD2's subchannel and on translator K300CP (107.9 FM) in Denver, which is a relay of KPTT-HD2. At the same time, KPTT moved the "Evolution" format from KPTT-HD2 to a new HD3 sub-channel.

References edit

  1. ^ Broadcasting Yearbook 1967 page B-26
  2. ^ Broadcasting Yearbook 1970 page B-33
  3. ^ http://www.americanradiohistory.com/Archive-RandR/1980s/1983/RR-1983-07-22.pdf[bare URL PDF]
  4. ^ KPKE 95.7 Denver - 4 June 1985 aircheck
  5. ^ https://www.americanradiohistory.com/Archive-RandR/1980s/1987/RR-1987-05-29.pdf[bare URL PDF]
  6. ^ https://www.americanradiohistory.com/Archive-RandR/1980s/1987/RR-1987-06-26.pdf[bare URL PDF]
  7. ^ http://www.americanradiohistory.com/Archive-RandR/1990s/1993/RR-1993-10-29.pdf[bare URL PDF]
  8. ^ "Airwaves sizzle as corporations battle for dominance", The Denver Post, October 31, 1993.
  9. ^ http://www.americanradiohistory.com/Archive-RandR/2000s/2000/RR-2000-09-08.pdf[bare URL PDF]
  10. ^ "New wave sinks Stern", The Denver Post, September 6, 2000.
  11. ^ "Dialing for dollars" - Westword, September 14, 2000
  12. ^ http://www.americanradiohistory.com/Archive-RandR/2000s/2005/RR-2005-05-06.pdf[bare URL PDF]
  13. ^ "Homer and the gang yuk it up for Fox to open sweeps", The Denver Post, April 29, 2005.
  14. ^ "Whoopi Does Mornings as KMGG/Denver Flips to "95.7 the Party"".
  15. ^ http://www.radiodiscussions.com/showthread.php?481851-Denver-Welcome-to-The-Party-The-New-95-7-The-Party[bare URL]
  16. ^ "Denver among the few newscasts still stressing sports", The Denver Post, September 19, 2006.
  17. ^ http://www.whoopi.com/splash 2008-05-12 at the Wayback Machine, Retrieved on 2007/04/21.
  18. ^ Roberts, Michael (May 1, 2009). "George McFly of the Party on being laid off by Clear Channel Denver". Westword. Retrieved May 3, 2009.
  19. ^ JJ Kincaid Headed to Mornings in Denver
  20. ^ Nina Blanco Joins 95.7 The Party Morning Show
  21. ^ JJ Kincaid Exits Mornings at 95.7 The Party
  22. ^ "95.7 the Party Becomes Hits 95.7". 15 July 2021.
  23. ^ "95.7 The Party Morning Show Departs". RadioInsight. 2 July 2021. Retrieved 2021-07-26.
  24. ^ "Hits 95.7 Debuts In Denver". RadioInsight. 15 July 2021. Retrieved 2021-07-26.
  25. ^ "Jubal Show Debuts In Denver". RadioInsight. Retrieved 2021-08-26.
  26. ^ "KDHT Call Letters Return To Denver". RadioInsight. 15 March 2022. Retrieved 2022-03-15.
  27. ^ . Archived from the original on 2014-11-29. Retrieved 2014-11-14.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)

External links edit

  • Official KDHT Website
  • KPKE audio clip from 1985
  • KDHT in the FCC FM station database
  • KDHT in Nielsen Audio's FM station database
  • K269CL in the FCC FM station database
  • K269CL at FCCdata.org
  • K300CP in the FCC FM station database
  • K300CP at FCCdata.org
  • FCC history cards for KDHT

kdht, airport, pratt, kansas, assigned, icao, code, kptt, pratt, industrial, airport, organic, farming, school, kptt, agricultural, training, center, this, article, uses, bare, urls, which, uninformative, vulnerable, link, please, consider, converting, them, f. For the airport in Pratt Kansas assigned the ICAO code KPTT see Pratt Industrial Airport For the organic farming school see KPTT Agricultural Training Center 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 KDHT 95 7 MHz is a commercial FM radio station in Denver Colorado KDHT broadcasts a top 40 format branded as Hits 95 7 and is owned by iHeartMedia The station has studios and offices on South Monaco Street in the Denver Tech Center while the transmitter site is atop Lookout Mountain in Golden KDHTDenver ColoradoBroadcast areaDenver BoulderFrequency95 7 MHz HD Radio BrandingHits 95 7ProgrammingFormatTop 40 CHR SubchannelsHD2 KBPI simulcast active rock AffiliationsPremiere NetworksOwnershipOwneriHeartMedia iHM Licenses LLC Sister stationsKBCO KBPI KDFD KHOW KOA KRFX KTCL KWBLHistoryFirst air dateDecember 15 1966 1966 12 15 as KMYR at 95 5 Former call signsKMYR 1966 1975 KHOW FM 1975 1976 KXKX 1976 1980 KHOW FM 1980 1983 KPKE 1983 1987 KSYY 1987 1991 KHOW FM 1991 1993 KHIH 1993 2000 KFMD 2000 2005 KMGG 2005 2006 KPTT 2006 2022 Former frequencies95 5 MHz 1966 1970 Call sign meaning Denver s Hits Technical informationFacility ID48967ClassC0ERP100 000 wattsHAAT346 meters 1 135 ft Transmitter coordinates39 43 59 N 105 14 10 W 39 73306 N 105 23611 W 39 73306 105 23611Translator s 101 7 K269CL Evergreen HD2 107 9 K300CP Denver LinksWebcastListen LiveHD2 KBPI Listen LiveHD3 Evolution Listen LiveWebsitehits957 iheart comHD2 kbpi iheart comKDHT has an effective radiated power ERP of 100 000 watts KDHT broadcasts in the HD Radio format with its HD2 subchannel simulcasting KBPI s active rock format Contents 1 History 1 1 KMYR 1966 1968 1 2 KHOW FM 1968 1977 1 3 KXKX 1977 1989 1 4 KHOW FM 1980 1983 1 5 KPKE 1983 1987 1 6 KSYY 1987 1991 1 7 KHOW FM 1991 1993 1 8 KHIH 1993 2000 1 9 KFMD 2000 2005 1 10 KMGG 2005 2006 1 11 KPTT 2006 2021 1 12 KDHT 2021 present 2 HD Radio 3 References 4 External linksHistory editKMYR 1966 1968 edit On December 15 1966 the station signed on as KMYR 1 The station originally broadcast at 95 5 MHz at 51 000 watts about half the power it has today It was owned by Karlo Broadcasting Ltd KMYR aired middle of the road music and carried news from ABC Radio KMYR moved to its current frequency 95 7 MHz in 1970 and also increased its power to current level 100 000 watts 2 In 1975 it was acquired by Doubleday a publishing and broadcasting company which had bought one of Denver s top AM stations KHOW in 1968 KHOW FM 1968 1977 edit After the closing of the sale KMYR s call sign was switched to KHOW FM The two stations simulcasted some of their news and music but Federal Communications Commission rules at the time required AM and FM stations to broadcast separate programming for most of the day KXKX 1977 1989 edit From 1977 to 1980 it aired a Top 40 format as KXKX KHOW FM 1980 1983 edit In 1980 the station returned to the KHOW FM call letters and flipped to a progressive rock format KPKE 1983 1987 edit On July 19 1983 the station returned to Top 40 music as All Hit 96 KPKE 3 For a time KPKE had some of the highest ratings in the market 4 In April 1986 Legacy Broadcasting owned by Robert F X Sillerman bought KPKE and KHOW KSYY 1987 1991 edit In June 1987 KPKE changed to soft adult contemporary this time as KSYY Sunny 95 7 5 6 Over the next several years KHOW and KSYY changed hands several times In April 1988 the stations were bought by Metropolitan Broadcasting formerly Metromedia Two months later Command Communications bought the stations In November 1989 Viacom bought KHOW and KSYY KHOW FM 1991 1993 edit On February 4 1991 KSYY changed call letters back to KHOW FM and began an AM FM simulcast with KHOW KHIH 1993 2000 edit In October 1993 shortly after Noble Broadcast Group acquired the station KHOW FM adopted a smooth jazz format and the call letters KHIH 7 8 KHIH was originally on 94 7 FM until Salem purchased the station that same month and dropped it for a Christian Talk Teaching format KHOW meanwhile flipped to a News Talk format which has been the format to the present day in spite of staff and personality changes over the years In 1996 Noble merged with Jacor taking advantage of the Telecommunications Act of 1996 allowing one company to own several radio stations in the same market no longer limited to one AM and one FM In 1999 Jacor merged with Clear Channel Communications now known as iHeartMedia KFMD 2000 2005 edit On September 1 2000 95 7 returned to contemporary hits as KFMD 95 7 KISS FM giving the market its first Mainstream Top 40 outlet since KHHT s demise in 1997 The smooth jazz format was picked up by KCKK 104 3 later that day 9 10 11 However with competition from Rhythmic Top 40 KQKS and Adult Top 40 KALC ratings for KFMD were not impressive KMGG 2005 2006 edit On April 27 2005 KFMD changed call letters to KMGG and flipped to a Hispanic Urban format as Mega 95 7 12 13 KMGG was one of four FM stations targeting the Mile High City s Hispanic population the other three being KJMN KKCS and KXPK unlike the latter three KMGG was more focused on the bilingual speaking second and third generation Hispanics In addition KMGG took advantage of KQKS s decision to hold off on certain Reggaeton and Hispanic hip hop tracks However the format did not help the station s popularity as KMGG was continually ranked low in the Arbitron ratings KPTT 2006 2021 edit nbsp Second logo as The PartyOn September 18 2006 at Midnight after ending its Sunday Night Sabor show and playing My Way by Frank Sinatra KMGG flipped to a Rhythmic Adult Contemporary format targeting females ages 25 49 branded as 95 7 The Party The first song was P nk s Get The Party Started 14 15 16 The KPTT call letters were adopted on October 18 2006 As a Rhythmic AC the station s playlist consisted of current and recurrent upbeat rhythmic and pop tracks and old school hip hop and R amp B as well as some classic dance and disco tracks KPTT primarily targeted the older audience of KQKS as well as the market s other adult contemporary oriented stations and was the first adult oriented rhythmic outlet in Denver since KDJM flipped in December 2005 KPTT aired a Sunday Thursday night slow jams program called Between The Sheets as well as the syndicated LGBTQ oriented Radio with a Twist on weekends The station also served as the Denver outlet for Whoopi Goldberg s national morning show Wake Up with Whoopi which was syndicated by Premiere Networks co owned with KPTT by Clear Channel Communications 17 The show was cancelled in 2008 During the summer of 2009 KPTT transitioned from rhythmic AC to rhythmic hot AC and then to a rhythmic leaning Top 40 CHR format 18 Morning show host Issa who took over the morning drive slot after the cancellation of Whoopi s show was moved to middays and was replaced by Johnjay amp Rich who are syndicated from KZZP in Phoenix By March 2010 KPTT shifted to Rhythmic Top 40 altogether thus putting it in direct competition with KQKS On November 1 2010 Johnjay amp Rich were dropped from morning drive and were replaced with a music intensive morning show hosted by former night host Chino At the same time the station introduced a new logo which was loosely based on sister KYLD in San Francisco This shift to Rhythmic Top 40 proved to be successful for a few years giving KQKS a serious competitor In the fall of 2014 KPTT evolved back to a more mainstream Top 40 direction with the inclusion of pop tracks in its playlist while maintaining a Rhythmic presentation The adjustment helped the station overtake KQKS in terms of ratings and audience cumes The transition became official in April 2015 when Billboard moved KPTT from the Rhythmic panel to the Top 40 CHR panel Mediabase followed suit in May 2015 The following month KPTT adopted the slogan Denver s 1 Hit Music Station nbsp Third logo as The Party In November 2015 the station brought in a new morning show hosted by JJ Kincaid from sister station WHTZ in New York Deanna Regalado and producer Robert Dubz Trigilio 19 Regalado would move to middays in May 2018 and was replaced with Nina Blanco 20 Kincaid would be released from the station in April 2019 and replaced with David Deuce Jacobson 21 KDHT 2021 present edit On July 2 2021 morning hosts David Deuce Jacobson Nina Blanco and Robert Dubz Trigilio were released from the station This combined with the recent registration of new web domains by iHeart as early as mid May suggested KPTT would undergo a significant overhaul of its format as the station dropped to 19th place with a 2 0 share in the May 2021 Nielsen Audio ratings for the market Shortly before Midnight on July 14 after playing Only Human by The Jonas Brothers KPTT began stunting playing only music by Britney Spears as Free Britney Radio as the stunt took place during her ongoing conservatorship court dispute the next hearing which would take place that afternoon KPTT also promoted a change to take place the following day at noon At the promised time KPTT relaunched their Top 40 CHR format as Hits 95 7 The new format jabbed KQKS and KALC upon launch as Hits 95 7 would be a flanker between the two stations 22 The first song on Hits was good 4 u by Olivia Rodrigo 23 24 In August 2021 KPTT became the Denver affiliate of the nationally syndicated The Jubal Show hosted by Jubal Fresh and co hosts Alex Fresh and English Evan Omelia based at Seattle sister station KBKS 25 On March 14 2022 KPTT changed its callsign to KDHT aside from adjusting to match the new branding it also returned a heritage callsign to the area as it had previously been used on 92 5 FM from 1989 to 1993 and on 107 1 FM from 2009 to 2014 26 HD Radio editIn July 2006 KPTT s HD2 subcarrier signed on with a format focusing on Regional Mexican Oldies In September 2006 the format was replaced with KPTT s previous Hispanic rhythmic format This was later replaced with Pride Radio which targeted the LGBT community In mid 2012 this was replaced with the dance radio format Club Phusion which was in turn relaunched in 2003 as Evolution 27 On December 11 2017 KBPI Fort Collins began simulcasting the station s active rock format on KPTT HD2 s subchannel and on translator K300CP 107 9 FM in Denver which is a relay of KPTT HD2 At the same time KPTT moved the Evolution format from KPTT HD2 to a new HD3 sub channel References edit Broadcasting Yearbook 1967 page B 26 Broadcasting Yearbook 1970 page B 33 http www americanradiohistory com Archive RandR 1980s 1983 RR 1983 07 22 pdf bare URL PDF KPKE 95 7 Denver 4 June 1985 aircheck https www americanradiohistory com Archive RandR 1980s 1987 RR 1987 05 29 pdf bare URL PDF https www americanradiohistory com Archive RandR 1980s 1987 RR 1987 06 26 pdf bare URL PDF http www americanradiohistory com Archive RandR 1990s 1993 RR 1993 10 29 pdf bare URL PDF Airwaves sizzle as corporations battle for dominance The Denver Post October 31 1993 http www americanradiohistory com Archive RandR 2000s 2000 RR 2000 09 08 pdf bare URL PDF New wave sinks Stern The Denver Post September 6 2000 Dialing for dollars Westword September 14 2000 http www americanradiohistory com Archive RandR 2000s 2005 RR 2005 05 06 pdf bare URL PDF Homer and the gang yuk it up for Fox to open sweeps The Denver Post April 29 2005 Whoopi Does Mornings as KMGG Denver Flips to 95 7 the Party http www radiodiscussions com showthread php 481851 Denver Welcome to The Party The New 95 7 The Party bare URL Denver among the few newscasts still stressing sports The Denver Post September 19 2006 http www whoopi com splash Archived 2008 05 12 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved on 2007 04 21 Roberts Michael May 1 2009 George McFly of the Party on being laid off by Clear Channel Denver Westword Retrieved May 3 2009 JJ Kincaid Headed to Mornings in Denver Nina Blanco Joins 95 7 The Party Morning Show JJ Kincaid Exits Mornings at 95 7 The Party 95 7 the Party Becomes Hits 95 7 15 July 2021 95 7 The Party Morning Show Departs RadioInsight 2 July 2021 Retrieved 2021 07 26 Hits 95 7 Debuts In Denver RadioInsight 15 July 2021 Retrieved 2021 07 26 Jubal Show Debuts In Denver RadioInsight Retrieved 2021 08 26 KDHT Call Letters Return To Denver RadioInsight 15 March 2022 Retrieved 2022 03 15 Archived copy Archived from the original on 2014 11 29 Retrieved 2014 11 14 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link External links editOfficial KDHT Website KPKE audio clip from 1985 KDHT in the FCC FM station database KDHT in Nielsen Audio s FM station database K269CL in the FCC FM station database K269CL at FCCdata org K300CP in the FCC FM station database K300CP at FCCdata org FCC history cards for KDHT Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title KDHT FM amp oldid 1187490749, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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