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KKSE-FM AI simulator
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KKSE-FM AI simulator
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KKSE-FM
KKSE-FM (92.5 MHz) is a commercial radio station licensed to Broomfield, Colorado, and serving the Denver metropolitan area and Northern Colorado. KKSE-FM airs a sports talk format branded as "Altitude Sports 92.5 FM." KKSE-FM has studios on South Colorado Boulevard in Glendale, with its transmitter located off Wheatland Road near Fort Lupton in Weld County. It is owned by Stan Kroenke's KSE Radio Ventures, which also owns sister stations KIMN, KKSE and KXKL-FM.
On June 19, 1967, the station first signed on as KGRE in Greeley. It originally broadcast on 92.3 MHz, and was the FM counterpart of KYOU (1450 AM, now KGRE). In 1982, it moved to 92.5 FM.
In 1984, the station switched its call sign to KYOU. It took over the country music format of KYOU AM when that station switched to oldies as KATR.
In 1989, KYOU got a boost in power to 57,000 watts from a taller tower, so it could better cover the Denver radio market, and was relicensed to Broomfield.
The call sign changed to KDHT on February 17, 1989, and under the programming leadership of Ira Gordon, KDHT became one of the earliest folk/Americana/adult album alternative (AAA) hybrids.
In February 1993, APB Broadcasting sold KDHT to Premiere Radio Networks for $3.55 million. Premiere changed the format to new country as KZDG, "Big Dog 92.5". Shamrock Broadcasting acquired the station in March 1995, with the station then rebranding as "Z 92.5" shortly thereafter. Chancellor Media purchased the station in early 1996.
From 1969 to the mid 1990s, Denver had a commercial classical music station at 99.5, KVOD. When Tribune Broadcasting acquired the station in 1995, it did not want to continue the classical format; to appease KVOD's audience, Tribune reached a deal with Chancellor to move KVOD's classical format over to Chancellor's newly acquired 92.5 frequency, and agreed to simulcast for nearly a month until 99.5 debuted a new classic rock format on March 4 as KKHK (now KQMT).
On February 18, 1996, at Midnight, KZDG became the new home of classical music in the Denver market. It took the KVOD call letters on March 22. (Today, KVOD is a non-commercial classical station at 88.1 MHz.)
KKSE-FM
KKSE-FM (92.5 MHz) is a commercial radio station licensed to Broomfield, Colorado, and serving the Denver metropolitan area and Northern Colorado. KKSE-FM airs a sports talk format branded as "Altitude Sports 92.5 FM." KKSE-FM has studios on South Colorado Boulevard in Glendale, with its transmitter located off Wheatland Road near Fort Lupton in Weld County. It is owned by Stan Kroenke's KSE Radio Ventures, which also owns sister stations KIMN, KKSE and KXKL-FM.
On June 19, 1967, the station first signed on as KGRE in Greeley. It originally broadcast on 92.3 MHz, and was the FM counterpart of KYOU (1450 AM, now KGRE). In 1982, it moved to 92.5 FM.
In 1984, the station switched its call sign to KYOU. It took over the country music format of KYOU AM when that station switched to oldies as KATR.
In 1989, KYOU got a boost in power to 57,000 watts from a taller tower, so it could better cover the Denver radio market, and was relicensed to Broomfield.
The call sign changed to KDHT on February 17, 1989, and under the programming leadership of Ira Gordon, KDHT became one of the earliest folk/Americana/adult album alternative (AAA) hybrids.
In February 1993, APB Broadcasting sold KDHT to Premiere Radio Networks for $3.55 million. Premiere changed the format to new country as KZDG, "Big Dog 92.5". Shamrock Broadcasting acquired the station in March 1995, with the station then rebranding as "Z 92.5" shortly thereafter. Chancellor Media purchased the station in early 1996.
From 1969 to the mid 1990s, Denver had a commercial classical music station at 99.5, KVOD. When Tribune Broadcasting acquired the station in 1995, it did not want to continue the classical format; to appease KVOD's audience, Tribune reached a deal with Chancellor to move KVOD's classical format over to Chancellor's newly acquired 92.5 frequency, and agreed to simulcast for nearly a month until 99.5 debuted a new classic rock format on March 4 as KKHK (now KQMT).
On February 18, 1996, at Midnight, KZDG became the new home of classical music in the Denver market. It took the KVOD call letters on March 22. (Today, KVOD is a non-commercial classical station at 88.1 MHz.)
