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Wikipedia

KTDD (FM)

KTDD (104.9 MHz) is an FM radio station licensed to Eatonville, Washington, and serving the southern Puget Sound region including Tacoma. KTDD is owned by 247 Media and carries a Contemporary Worship radio format. The station holds periodic fundraisers to support the on-air ministry.

KTDD
Broadcast areaSouth Puget Sound including Tacoma
Frequency104.9 MHz
BrandingWorship 24/7
Programming
FormatContemporary worship music
Ownership
Owner
  • 247 Media Broadcasting
  • (W247 Broadcasting LLC)
History
First air date
1995 (as KJUN-FM)
Former call signs
KAEK (1993)
KJUN-FM (1993-1996)
KKBY (1996)
KKBY-FM (1996-1999)
KFNK (1999-2010)
KSGX (2010-2011)
KKBW (2011-2016)
KUBE (2016-2017)
Technical information
Facility ID3915
ClassC3
ERP17,000 watts
HAAT124 meters (407 ft)
Transmitter coordinates
46°50′24″N 122°15′27″W / 46.84000°N 122.25750°W / 46.84000; -122.25750Coordinates: 46°50′24″N 122°15′27″W / 46.84000°N 122.25750°W / 46.84000; -122.25750
Links
WebsiteWorship247.com

KTDD has an effective radiated power (ERP) of 17,000 watts. The transmitter is off Alder Cutoff Road East in Eatonville.[1]

History

Adult contemporary (198?-199?)

The 104.9 frequency first signed on in the late 1980s as FM translator K285AE that rebroadcast the adult contemporary format of KLTX (now KJEB-FM). The translator went dark in the early 1990s, when KLTX increased its power.

Country (1995-1998)

The frequency came back to air in 1995, using call sign KJUN-FM, broadcasting a country music format. The call letters were changed to KKBY-FM sometime in 1996, and shifted to classic country.

Urban (1998-1999)

In 1998, KKBY flipped to urban contemporary as "Y 104.9". This format only lasted for a short time.

Rock (1999-2010)

On August 16, 1999, the station flipped again to what is known as the frequency's well known format: a grunge rock/metal rock-emphasizing active rock station known as "Funky Monkey 104.9" (or "The Monkey 104.9").[2] The call letters were changed to KFNK that October 21. The station gained a noticeable presence in the South Puget Sound area as an alternative to commercially owned stations KISW and KNDD, which are both owned by Entercom. Even after Ackerley Communications bought the station from Rock on Radio, Inc. in 2001 (and later, iHeartMedia (as Clear Channel Communications) in 2002[3]), the station still emphasized on listener participation and playing music that may not be heard elsewhere, as well as giving air time to local acts. The station also had a nationwide and worldwide presence, as the station streamed online throughout its history.

The station briefly aired syndicated programming in 2001, such as the "Lex and Terry" morning show, which is based out of Dallas. (The station dropped the show by 2002.) The station would begin airing syndicated programming again in 2010, when the station began carrying Nikki Sixx's "Sixxth Sense" show. The station was somewhat anomalous in that it rarely had disc jockeys hosting segments of airtime, and relied heavily on broadcast automation, which the station capitalized on (as some of their liners included "without the dumb-a** DJs and useless bullsh*t"). There was one full-time disc jockey, and 3 part-time air personalities did one show a week each. Most songs ended with a voice-over identifying the song title and artist, also called a "backsell."

'90s hits (2010-2011)

On November 10, 2010, at Noon, the station dropped its 11-year-old active rock format and flipped to a '90s-leaning adult hits format as "GenX 104-9".[4][5] The final three songs on The Monkey were "Brass Monkey" by the Beastie Boys, "It's the End of the World as We Know It (And I Feel Fine)" by R.E.M., and "Closing Time" by Semisonic, while GenX's first three songs were "Get Ready for This" by 2 Unlimited, "Smells Like Teen Spirit" by Nirvana, and "Baby Got Back" by Sir Mix-a-Lot. The call letters were changed to KSGX on November 28. Throughout its life as "GenX", ratings for the station were negative, usually peaking at a 0.3 share, as compared to The Monkey's, which usually hung around the 1 share.

On October 28, 2011, at 5 p.m., the station dropped the "GenX" format and began stunting with Halloween music as "Freddy 104-9". The last three songs on "GenX" were "My Favorite Mistake" by Sheryl Crow, "Anniversary" by Tony! Toni! Toné! and "Hella Good" by No Doubt, while the first song on "Freddy" was "Shout at the Devil" by Mötley Crüe.

Rock (2011-2016)

At 12:01 a.m. on November 1, 2011, after playing "More Human than Human" by White Zombie, the station reverted to active rock as "The Brew 104-9".[6] The first song on "The Brew" was "Epic" by Faith No More.[7] On December 6, 2011, KSGX changed call letters to KKBW to match "The Brew" moniker.

The station's second go-around with the format does not have the grunge/metal-lean like their predecessor. The station's playlist consisted of current and well-known hard rock tracks, and some classic hard rock from artists like AC/DC, and Guns N' Roses, which The Monkey rarely played. Some of the station's airstaff was voice-tracked from other Clear Channel stations across the country (similar to iHeartRadio's Rock Nation format that formerly aired on 104.9 HD2), unlike The Monkey.

Rhythmic (2016-2017)

As part of a major format shuffle involving four of iHeart's Seattle stations, on January 19, 2016 at noon, after playing "Lump" by Seattle band The Presidents of the United States of America, KKBW's format moved to sister KYNW and was modified to alternative as "Alt 102.9." At the same time, KUBE's long-time Rhythmic CHR format and branding moved to KKBW as "KUBE 104.9", with the format targeting the Tacoma and South Sound areas, as their former 93.3 FM frequency adopted KBKS's Mainstream Top 40 format and relaunched as KPWK, "Power 93.3". (KBKS, in turn, adopted KYNW's Adult Top 40 format.) KUBE's first song on 104.9 was "Can I Get A..." by Jay-Z.[8][9][10] With the change, afternoon host/program director Eric Powers (who had been with KUBE since 1992, becoming program director in 1998) was let go, with Tiffany Warner moving from middays to afternoons. The KUBE call letters were moved to 104.9 on January 26.

Religious (2017-present)

On November 1, 2017, iHeart announced that it would acquire KFNQ, KJAQ, and KZOK from Entercom as part of Entercom's merger with CBS Radio. The company planned to divest KUBE and KFOO to Ocean Station Trust in preparation for their sale to a third-party (which was completed on December 19).[11] As part of the impending divestment, the station swapped call signs with KTDD in San Bernardino, California on November 14, 2017. On December 11, 2017, at noon, after playing "Rap God" by Eminem, KTDD switched to an unbranded Contemporary Christian music format fed from sister station KZFS in Spokane. It used the "Positive Hit Music" slogan as an interim format, while KUBE's programming and format was moved back to KPWK on an HD Radio subchannel (which, albeit partially, reversed the 2016 swap).[12] The KUBE callsign and format was restored to the 93.3 frequency in full in May 2018.

On August 31, 2020, it was announced that 247 Media Ministries would be acquiring the station from the Trust. Upon closure of the sale, the station joined the "Worship 24/7" contemporary worship music network, becoming the second station in that network, joining with KURT in Bend, Oregon (owned by the same founders, albeit under the name H&H Broadcasting).[13] The purchase was consummated on November 3, 2020, at a price of $320,000.

References

  1. ^ Radio-Locator.com/KTDD
  2. ^ http://www.americanradiohistory.com/Archive-RandR/1990s/1999/RR-1999-08-20.pdf[bare URL PDF]
  3. ^ Virgin, Bill; Reporter, Seattle Post-Intelligencer (June 27, 2002). "Radio Beat: KFNK is on the market, but is Paul Allen buying?". seattlepi.com.
  4. ^ "104.9 The Monkey Seattle Returns To Its GenX Roots". November 10, 2010.
  5. ^ "Funky Monkey 104.9 Becomes Gen X Radio". November 10, 2010.
  6. ^ "Freddy Haunts Seattle, Is a Brew To Follow?". November 1, 2011.
  7. ^ "Gex X 104.9 Becomes The Brew". November 1, 2011.
  8. ^ "iHeart Shuffles Four Seattle/Tacoma Stations". January 19, 2016.
  9. ^ "iHeart Rearranges Seattle FM Dial". Insideradio.com.
  10. ^ "KUBE Moves To 104.9". March 30, 2016.
  11. ^ "Entercom Trades Boston & Seattle Spin-Offs To iHeartMedia For Richmond & Chattanooga". November 1, 2017.
  12. ^ "Alt 102.9 & KUBE 104.9 Tacoma Move To Placeholder Formats". RadioInsight. 2017-12-11. Retrieved 2017-12-11.
  13. ^ 247 Media Ministries Acquires 104.9 KTDD From iHeart Divestiture Trust

External links

  • KTDD in the FCC FM station database
  • KTDD on Radio-Locator
  • KTDD in Nielsen Audio's FM station database

ktdd, ktdd, radio, station, licensed, eatonville, washington, serving, southern, puget, sound, region, including, tacoma, ktdd, owned, media, carries, contemporary, worship, radio, format, station, holds, periodic, fundraisers, support, ministry, ktddeatonvill. KTDD 104 9 MHz is an FM radio station licensed to Eatonville Washington and serving the southern Puget Sound region including Tacoma KTDD is owned by 247 Media and carries a Contemporary Worship radio format The station holds periodic fundraisers to support the on air ministry KTDDEatonville WashingtonBroadcast areaSouth Puget Sound including TacomaFrequency104 9 MHzBrandingWorship 24 7ProgrammingFormatContemporary worship musicOwnershipOwner247 Media Broadcasting W247 Broadcasting LLC HistoryFirst air date1995 as KJUN FM Former call signsKAEK 1993 KJUN FM 1993 1996 KKBY 1996 KKBY FM 1996 1999 KFNK 1999 2010 KSGX 2010 2011 KKBW 2011 2016 KUBE 2016 2017 Technical informationFacility ID3915ClassC3ERP17 000 wattsHAAT124 meters 407 ft Transmitter coordinates46 50 24 N 122 15 27 W 46 84000 N 122 25750 W 46 84000 122 25750 Coordinates 46 50 24 N 122 15 27 W 46 84000 N 122 25750 W 46 84000 122 25750LinksWebsiteWorship247 comKTDD has an effective radiated power ERP of 17 000 watts The transmitter is off Alder Cutoff Road East in Eatonville 1 Contents 1 History 1 1 Adult contemporary 198 199 1 2 Country 1995 1998 1 3 Urban 1998 1999 1 4 Rock 1999 2010 1 5 90s hits 2010 2011 1 6 Rock 2011 2016 1 7 Rhythmic 2016 2017 1 8 Religious 2017 present 2 References 3 External linksHistory EditAdult contemporary 198 199 Edit The 104 9 frequency first signed on in the late 1980s as FM translator K285AE that rebroadcast the adult contemporary format of KLTX now KJEB FM The translator went dark in the early 1990s when KLTX increased its power Country 1995 1998 Edit The frequency came back to air in 1995 using call sign KJUN FM broadcasting a country music format The call letters were changed to KKBY FM sometime in 1996 and shifted to classic country Urban 1998 1999 Edit In 1998 KKBY flipped to urban contemporary as Y 104 9 This format only lasted for a short time Rock 1999 2010 Edit On August 16 1999 the station flipped again to what is known as the frequency s well known format a grunge rock metal rock emphasizing active rock station known as Funky Monkey 104 9 or The Monkey 104 9 2 The call letters were changed to KFNK that October 21 The station gained a noticeable presence in the South Puget Sound area as an alternative to commercially owned stations KISW and KNDD which are both owned by Entercom Even after Ackerley Communications bought the station from Rock on Radio Inc in 2001 and later iHeartMedia as Clear Channel Communications in 2002 3 the station still emphasized on listener participation and playing music that may not be heard elsewhere as well as giving air time to local acts The station also had a nationwide and worldwide presence as the station streamed online throughout its history The station briefly aired syndicated programming in 2001 such as the Lex and Terry morning show which is based out of Dallas The station dropped the show by 2002 The station would begin airing syndicated programming again in 2010 when the station began carrying Nikki Sixx s Sixxth Sense show The station was somewhat anomalous in that it rarely had disc jockeys hosting segments of airtime and relied heavily on broadcast automation which the station capitalized on as some of their liners included without the dumb a DJs and useless bullsh t There was one full time disc jockey and 3 part time air personalities did one show a week each Most songs ended with a voice over identifying the song title and artist also called a backsell 90s hits 2010 2011 Edit On November 10 2010 at Noon the station dropped its 11 year old active rock format and flipped to a 90s leaning adult hits format as GenX 104 9 4 5 The final three songs on The Monkey were Brass Monkey by the Beastie Boys It s the End of the World as We Know It And I Feel Fine by R E M and Closing Time by Semisonic while GenX s first three songs were Get Ready for This by 2 Unlimited Smells Like Teen Spirit by Nirvana and Baby Got Back by Sir Mix a Lot The call letters were changed to KSGX on November 28 Throughout its life as GenX ratings for the station were negative usually peaking at a 0 3 share as compared to The Monkey s which usually hung around the 1 share On October 28 2011 at 5 p m the station dropped the GenX format and began stunting with Halloween music as Freddy 104 9 The last three songs on GenX were My Favorite Mistake by Sheryl Crow Anniversary by Tony Toni Tone and Hella Good by No Doubt while the first song on Freddy was Shout at the Devil by Motley Crue Rock 2011 2016 Edit At 12 01 a m on November 1 2011 after playing More Human than Human by White Zombie the station reverted to active rock as The Brew 104 9 6 The first song on The Brew was Epic by Faith No More 7 On December 6 2011 KSGX changed call letters to KKBW to match The Brew moniker The station s second go around with the format does not have the grunge metal lean like their predecessor The station s playlist consisted of current and well known hard rock tracks and some classic hard rock from artists like AC DC and Guns N Roses which The Monkey rarely played Some of the station s airstaff was voice tracked from other Clear Channel stations across the country similar to iHeartRadio s Rock Nation format that formerly aired on 104 9 HD2 unlike The Monkey Rhythmic 2016 2017 Edit As part of a major format shuffle involving four of iHeart s Seattle stations on January 19 2016 at noon after playing Lump by Seattle band The Presidents of the United States of America KKBW s format moved to sister KYNW and was modified to alternative as Alt 102 9 At the same time KUBE s long time Rhythmic CHR format and branding moved to KKBW as KUBE 104 9 with the format targeting the Tacoma and South Sound areas as their former 93 3 FM frequency adopted KBKS s Mainstream Top 40 format and relaunched as KPWK Power 93 3 KBKS in turn adopted KYNW s Adult Top 40 format KUBE s first song on 104 9 was Can I Get A by Jay Z 8 9 10 With the change afternoon host program director Eric Powers who had been with KUBE since 1992 becoming program director in 1998 was let go with Tiffany Warner moving from middays to afternoons The KUBE call letters were moved to 104 9 on January 26 Religious 2017 present Edit On November 1 2017 iHeart announced that it would acquire KFNQ KJAQ and KZOK from Entercom as part of Entercom s merger with CBS Radio The company planned to divest KUBE and KFOO to Ocean Station Trust in preparation for their sale to a third party which was completed on December 19 11 As part of the impending divestment the station swapped call signs with KTDD in San Bernardino California on November 14 2017 On December 11 2017 at noon after playing Rap God by Eminem KTDD switched to an unbranded Contemporary Christian music format fed from sister station KZFS in Spokane It used the Positive Hit Music slogan as an interim format while KUBE s programming and format was moved back to KPWK on an HD Radio subchannel which albeit partially reversed the 2016 swap 12 The KUBE callsign and format was restored to the 93 3 frequency in full in May 2018 On August 31 2020 it was announced that 247 Media Ministries would be acquiring the station from the Trust Upon closure of the sale the station joined the Worship 24 7 contemporary worship music network becoming the second station in that network joining with KURT in Bend Oregon owned by the same founders albeit under the name H amp H Broadcasting 13 The purchase was consummated on November 3 2020 at a price of 320 000 References Edit Radio Locator com KTDD http www americanradiohistory com Archive RandR 1990s 1999 RR 1999 08 20 pdf bare URL PDF Virgin Bill Reporter Seattle Post Intelligencer June 27 2002 Radio Beat KFNK is on the market but is Paul Allen buying seattlepi com 104 9 The Monkey Seattle Returns To Its GenX Roots November 10 2010 Funky Monkey 104 9 Becomes Gen X Radio November 10 2010 Freddy Haunts Seattle Is a Brew To Follow November 1 2011 Gex X 104 9 Becomes The Brew November 1 2011 iHeart Shuffles Four Seattle Tacoma Stations January 19 2016 iHeart Rearranges Seattle FM Dial Insideradio com KUBE Moves To 104 9 March 30 2016 Entercom Trades Boston amp Seattle Spin Offs To iHeartMedia For Richmond amp Chattanooga November 1 2017 Alt 102 9 amp KUBE 104 9 Tacoma Move To Placeholder Formats RadioInsight 2017 12 11 Retrieved 2017 12 11 247 Media Ministries Acquires 104 9 KTDD From iHeart Divestiture TrustExternal links EditKTDD in the FCC FM station database KTDD on Radio Locator KTDD in Nielsen Audio s FM station database Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title KTDD FM amp oldid 1123222417, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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