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WKSF
WKSF (99.9 FM "Kiss Country") is a country music station licensed to Old Fort, North Carolina, serving the Asheville area. The station is owned by iHeartMedia, Inc. and broadcasts from a tower on Mount Pisgah, southwest of Asheville.
WLOS-FM launched alongside WLOS (1380 AM) on August 11, 1947. It originally broadcast for six hours a day on 104.3 MHz with a program schedule separate from the AM station. WLOS-FM began simulcasting the AM station on February 1, 1948. A television station, WLOS-TV (channel 13), began broadcasting in 1954.
A squabble over options to purchase stock in Skyway Broadcasting Company erupted in April 1957, when Harold H. Thoms—owner of WISE radio and television—and Walter Tison of Tampa, Florida, announced they had an option to buy shares in the firm and were going to exercise it. Skyway denied that any such option existed, claiming that it was based on an option extended to a minority stockholder—J. E. Edmonds—and later withdrawn. The matter was taken to court, where Edmonds attacked the validity of a 1953 option awarded to the Asheville Citizen-Times newspaper during WLOS's fight for channel 13, which remained outstanding. Then, that option catapulted into the spotlight when Miami businessman Mitchell Wolfson—a summer resident of Asheville—announced that he had acquired the Citizen-Times option through his other broadcast property, WTVJ in Miami, and that he was offering a buyout of all other shareholders in Skyway. The so-called "Britt option" that Thoms and Tison claimed to hold became the subject of multiple court cases as Thoms and Tison sued Britt and others for breach of contract.
On March 1, 1958, Wolfson's company, Wometco Enterprises, announced it had reached a deal to buy Britt's stock in Skyway Broadcasting and thus assume majority ownership of the WLOS stations. The FCC approved the transaction in August, and upon closure, several WTVJ employees moved to Asheville to help manage WLOS radio and television.
WLOS-FM moved to 99.9 MHz in 1962 and split programming in the mid-1960s with beautiful music. Wometco sold off WLOS AM to the Greater Asheville Broadcasting Corporation in 1969, retaining the FM and TV stations; the AM station changed its call sign to WKKE when the sale took effect.
In 1984, Wometco was taken private in a leveraged buyout by Kohlberg Kravis Roberts (KKR). As part of this transaction, to comply with Federal Communications Commission (FCC) cross-ownership restrictions, WLOS-FM—the only radio station Wometco owned—was sold to Asheville radio station WISE. The sale was completed in April.
The call sign was immediately changed to WRLX as part of the separation from the TV station. While WISE intended to stick with the easy listening format, it noticed a high amount of listenership to contemporary hit radio stations. As a result, on September 17, 1984, the station switched to a contemporary format as WKSF "Kiss FM". Prior to the sale, WISE had been a contemporary station, and rumors had circulated as early as February that the new ownership would transplant that format to the FM band, boosting ratings. The audience share for the FM frequency soared immediately, from 9.1 percent in 1984 to 27.8 percent in 1985, though within Asheville the station continued to lag the dominant WWNC (570 AM). WISE and WKSF were sold to Heritage Broadcast Group in 1986; the Asheville stations were at the time the largest owned by the Atlanta-based company. Between 1986 and 1993, the station's ratings declined in most years.
Osborn Communications agreed to buy WKSF from Heritage Broadcast Group in December 1993 and began managing the station in March 1994. Osborn flipped WKSF from Top 40 to country. There was no country station on FM, and FM country stations from beyond Asheville, such as WIVK in Knoxville, Tennessee, and WESC-FM in Greenville, South Carolina, had some listenership in the area. After the switch to country, the station's ratings stopped their decline, and in 1996, WKSF became the top-billing and highest-rated station in the market, dethroning WWNC, which Osborn had come to own.
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WKSF
WKSF (99.9 FM "Kiss Country") is a country music station licensed to Old Fort, North Carolina, serving the Asheville area. The station is owned by iHeartMedia, Inc. and broadcasts from a tower on Mount Pisgah, southwest of Asheville.
WLOS-FM launched alongside WLOS (1380 AM) on August 11, 1947. It originally broadcast for six hours a day on 104.3 MHz with a program schedule separate from the AM station. WLOS-FM began simulcasting the AM station on February 1, 1948. A television station, WLOS-TV (channel 13), began broadcasting in 1954.
A squabble over options to purchase stock in Skyway Broadcasting Company erupted in April 1957, when Harold H. Thoms—owner of WISE radio and television—and Walter Tison of Tampa, Florida, announced they had an option to buy shares in the firm and were going to exercise it. Skyway denied that any such option existed, claiming that it was based on an option extended to a minority stockholder—J. E. Edmonds—and later withdrawn. The matter was taken to court, where Edmonds attacked the validity of a 1953 option awarded to the Asheville Citizen-Times newspaper during WLOS's fight for channel 13, which remained outstanding. Then, that option catapulted into the spotlight when Miami businessman Mitchell Wolfson—a summer resident of Asheville—announced that he had acquired the Citizen-Times option through his other broadcast property, WTVJ in Miami, and that he was offering a buyout of all other shareholders in Skyway. The so-called "Britt option" that Thoms and Tison claimed to hold became the subject of multiple court cases as Thoms and Tison sued Britt and others for breach of contract.
On March 1, 1958, Wolfson's company, Wometco Enterprises, announced it had reached a deal to buy Britt's stock in Skyway Broadcasting and thus assume majority ownership of the WLOS stations. The FCC approved the transaction in August, and upon closure, several WTVJ employees moved to Asheville to help manage WLOS radio and television.
WLOS-FM moved to 99.9 MHz in 1962 and split programming in the mid-1960s with beautiful music. Wometco sold off WLOS AM to the Greater Asheville Broadcasting Corporation in 1969, retaining the FM and TV stations; the AM station changed its call sign to WKKE when the sale took effect.
In 1984, Wometco was taken private in a leveraged buyout by Kohlberg Kravis Roberts (KKR). As part of this transaction, to comply with Federal Communications Commission (FCC) cross-ownership restrictions, WLOS-FM—the only radio station Wometco owned—was sold to Asheville radio station WISE. The sale was completed in April.
The call sign was immediately changed to WRLX as part of the separation from the TV station. While WISE intended to stick with the easy listening format, it noticed a high amount of listenership to contemporary hit radio stations. As a result, on September 17, 1984, the station switched to a contemporary format as WKSF "Kiss FM". Prior to the sale, WISE had been a contemporary station, and rumors had circulated as early as February that the new ownership would transplant that format to the FM band, boosting ratings. The audience share for the FM frequency soared immediately, from 9.1 percent in 1984 to 27.8 percent in 1985, though within Asheville the station continued to lag the dominant WWNC (570 AM). WISE and WKSF were sold to Heritage Broadcast Group in 1986; the Asheville stations were at the time the largest owned by the Atlanta-based company. Between 1986 and 1993, the station's ratings declined in most years.
Osborn Communications agreed to buy WKSF from Heritage Broadcast Group in December 1993 and began managing the station in March 1994. Osborn flipped WKSF from Top 40 to country. There was no country station on FM, and FM country stations from beyond Asheville, such as WIVK in Knoxville, Tennessee, and WESC-FM in Greenville, South Carolina, had some listenership in the area. After the switch to country, the station's ratings stopped their decline, and in 1996, WKSF became the top-billing and highest-rated station in the market, dethroning WWNC, which Osborn had come to own.