Recent from talks
Contribute something to knowledge base
Content stats: 0 posts, 0 articles, 0 media, 0 notes
Members stats: 0 subscribers, 0 contributors, 0 moderators, 0 supporters
Subscribers
Supporters
Contributors
Moderators
Hub AI
KPDA (FM) AI simulator
(@KPDA (FM)_simulator)
Hub AI
KPDA (FM) AI simulator
(@KPDA (FM)_simulator)
KPDA (FM)
KPDA (100.7 MHz, "La Poderosa") is a commercial radio station licensed to Mountain Home, Idaho, and serving the Boise metropolitan area. It airs a Regional Mexican format and is owned by Kevin Terry, through licensee Radio Rancho, LLC The studios and offices for KPDA and sister station 106.3 KDBI-FM are on East Franklin Road in Nampa.
The station, originally on 99.1 MHz, first signed on in 1982. Its call sign was KQKZ and it broadcast a soft adult contemporary format. On November 1, 1984, the station changed its call letters to KJCY-FM to match that of its AM sister station (1240 AM, now KMHI), then to KLVJ-FM on June 1, 1989.
In August 1992, Media Venture Management Inc., headed by Randolph George, sold KLVJ-FM and its AM counterpart KLVJ to William Konopnicki for $78,000. Both stations were silent at the time of the sale. In April 1995, Konopnicki sold the combo to station manager Jack Jensen, doing business as Valley Mountain Broadcasting Inc., for $310,000; the FM station aired a country music format.
In November 1996, Jensen sold KLVJ-AM-FM to Wendell Starke's FM Idaho Company for $475,500. FM Idaho changed the FM station's call letters to KTPZ on January 7, 1997.
In October 2000, FM Idaho sold six stations, including contemporary hit radio outlet KTPZ, to Horizon Broadcasting Group LLC for $10 million. The station became KTPD on March 30, 2007, then KTMB on June 28, 2007.
In 2008, Impact Radio Group acquired KTMB and moved the KQLZ call sign to the 99.1 FM frequency from 100.7 FM. The pre-existing talk radio format on 99.1 flipped to oldies, featuring programing from ABC Radio Network's The True Oldies Channel. The KQLZ call letters previously resided at a station in Los Angeles which, like The True Oldies Channel, was programmed by Scott Shannon.)
On September 4, 2009, at Noon, KQLZ ended three days of stunting with "Thriller" by Michael Jackson to become country music-formatted "99.1 The Bronco". The move came after the demise of True Oldies and the subsequent retirement of longtime Boise radio voice "Big" Jack Armstrong. However, the country format lasted only a few hours; that same day at 3:49 p.m., KQLZ flipped to modern rock as "99.1 The Virus". Questions arose about the new name as it shared that of an XM Satellite Radio talk channel, The Virus. However, the general manager of Impact Radio did not "consider it a problem". Since the original launch, the station dropped the Virus name and rebranded as "V99.1 FM".
On August 8, 2011, KQLZ flipped to a news/talk format as a simulcast of KINF (730 AM, now dark). A week later, on August 15, the station changed its call sign to KINF-FM. On January 1, 2013, the KINF simulcast ended with the AM station becoming an ESPN Radio affiliate; KINF-FM retained the news/talk format.
KPDA (FM)
KPDA (100.7 MHz, "La Poderosa") is a commercial radio station licensed to Mountain Home, Idaho, and serving the Boise metropolitan area. It airs a Regional Mexican format and is owned by Kevin Terry, through licensee Radio Rancho, LLC The studios and offices for KPDA and sister station 106.3 KDBI-FM are on East Franklin Road in Nampa.
The station, originally on 99.1 MHz, first signed on in 1982. Its call sign was KQKZ and it broadcast a soft adult contemporary format. On November 1, 1984, the station changed its call letters to KJCY-FM to match that of its AM sister station (1240 AM, now KMHI), then to KLVJ-FM on June 1, 1989.
In August 1992, Media Venture Management Inc., headed by Randolph George, sold KLVJ-FM and its AM counterpart KLVJ to William Konopnicki for $78,000. Both stations were silent at the time of the sale. In April 1995, Konopnicki sold the combo to station manager Jack Jensen, doing business as Valley Mountain Broadcasting Inc., for $310,000; the FM station aired a country music format.
In November 1996, Jensen sold KLVJ-AM-FM to Wendell Starke's FM Idaho Company for $475,500. FM Idaho changed the FM station's call letters to KTPZ on January 7, 1997.
In October 2000, FM Idaho sold six stations, including contemporary hit radio outlet KTPZ, to Horizon Broadcasting Group LLC for $10 million. The station became KTPD on March 30, 2007, then KTMB on June 28, 2007.
In 2008, Impact Radio Group acquired KTMB and moved the KQLZ call sign to the 99.1 FM frequency from 100.7 FM. The pre-existing talk radio format on 99.1 flipped to oldies, featuring programing from ABC Radio Network's The True Oldies Channel. The KQLZ call letters previously resided at a station in Los Angeles which, like The True Oldies Channel, was programmed by Scott Shannon.)
On September 4, 2009, at Noon, KQLZ ended three days of stunting with "Thriller" by Michael Jackson to become country music-formatted "99.1 The Bronco". The move came after the demise of True Oldies and the subsequent retirement of longtime Boise radio voice "Big" Jack Armstrong. However, the country format lasted only a few hours; that same day at 3:49 p.m., KQLZ flipped to modern rock as "99.1 The Virus". Questions arose about the new name as it shared that of an XM Satellite Radio talk channel, The Virus. However, the general manager of Impact Radio did not "consider it a problem". Since the original launch, the station dropped the Virus name and rebranded as "V99.1 FM".
On August 8, 2011, KQLZ flipped to a news/talk format as a simulcast of KINF (730 AM, now dark). A week later, on August 15, the station changed its call sign to KINF-FM. On January 1, 2013, the KINF simulcast ended with the AM station becoming an ESPN Radio affiliate; KINF-FM retained the news/talk format.
