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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

CKPK-FM
Broadcast areaGreater Vancouver
Frequency102.7 MHz (HD Radio)
Branding102.7 Now! Radio
Programming
FormatAdult contemporary
SubchannelsHD2: Alternative Rock 102.7 The Peak
Ownership
Owner
CJJR-FM
History
First air date
1923; 101 years ago (1923) (as CFXC AM)
November 2008; 15 years ago (2008-11) (as CKPK-FM)
Former call signs
CFXC (1923–1926)
CJOR (1926–1988)
CHRX (1988–1994)
CKBD (1994–2008)
Former frequencies
440 metres (1923–1925)
1030 kHz (1925–1930)
1210 kHz (1930–1933)
600 kHz (1933–2008)
100.5 MHz (2008–2012)
Call sign meaning
CK PeaK (former branding)
Technical information
ClassC
ERP70,000 watts
HAAT682.4 metres (2,239 ft)
Transmitter coordinates
49°21′15″N 122°57′30″W / 49.3543°N 122.9583°W / 49.3543; -122.9583 (CKPK-FM Tower)
Links
WebcastFM/HD1: 102.7 Now Radio Listen Live
HD2: The Peak Listen Live
WebsiteFM/HD1: 1027nowradio.com
HD2: thepeak.fm

CKPK-FM (102.7 MHz) is a commercial radio station in Vancouver, British Columbia, known as 102.7 Now! Radio. Owned by Pattison Media, it broadcasts an adult contemporary format. Its studios are on West 8th Avenue in the Fairview neighbourhood of Vancouver, while its transmitter is located atop Mount Seymour.

The station first signed on with an experimental license in 1923 as CFXC, and was renamed CJOR in 1926. It moved to its long-time home of 600 AM in 1930. CJOR operated as the Vancouver affiliate of the CBC's Dominion Network from 1944 through the network's closure in 1962. It was later acquired by Jim Pattison after the death of its previous owner George Clarke Chandler. In November 2008, after over 80 years as an AM station, the station, adult standards CKBD, moved to FM as adult album alternative (AAA) 100.5 The Peak. In 2012, the station moved once again to 102.7 FM. Ten years later in 2022, the rock format was moved to HD Radio in favour of its current format.

History

Early years

In 1923, the station was originally launched by the electrical store Hume and Rumble as experimental station CFXC. It broadcast on 440 metres with a power of 10 watts. It switched to the frequency of 1030 kilocycles in 1925. The following year, the station was acquired by George Chandler. Under Canadian broadcast policy at the time, CFXC was shut down.[1] A new license was issued to Chandler for CJOR. The station subsequently increased power to 50 watts in 1928 and shared time with CNRV, then moved its frequency to 1210 AM and the studios relocated to 840 Howe Street (with another boost in power to 500 watts) in 1930, and then to 600 in 1933.

CJOR increased its transmission power to 1,000 watts in 1941, moving its transmitter site to Lulu Island. (After the station switched to FM in 2008, CISL moved to the Lulu Island location, making it the oldest broadcasting site in the Vancouver radio market in continuous operation.)

CBC Dominion Network

In 1944, CJOR became the Vancouver network affiliate of the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation's (CBC) Dominion Network. It increased power again in 1947, this time to 5,000 watts, using two 280-foot towers at a site in Richmond. That same year, Chandler established "CJOR Ltd." to run the station.

In 1961, CJOR further increased power to 10,000 watts, using a three tower array. It became an independent station the following year after CBC ceased the Dominion Network's operations.

New ownership

Following George Chandler's death in 1964, the Jim Pattison Group acquired the station the following year. The Board of Broadcast Governors (predecessor of the Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission, or CRTC) had decided not to allow the station parent CJOR Ltd. to renew the license. CJOR Ltd. was then owned by Chandler's widow Marie. The Board of Governors requested that a new buyer for CJOR be found. By the 1970s, the station shifted its focus away from music to talk radio, with such colourful and opinionated personalities as Jack Webster, Pat Burns, and eventually, former British Columbia premier Dave Barrett.

On October 31, 1983, with the pending demolition of the Grosvenor Hotel on Howe Street, CJOR relocated from the hotel's basement to its present studios at 1401 West 8th Avenue. On September 2, 1988, at noon, CJOR dropped its talk radio format, flipping to classic rock under new call letters CHRX. The first song was Bob Seger's "Old Time Rock & Roll". (The former CJOR call sign currently belongs to a radio station in Osoyoos.) The station was very popular during the late 1980s, but started experiencing declining ratings by the early 1990s.

Sports and Christian programming

To remedy the ratings loss, in 1993, the station added sports talk shows to its programming. However, this did not boost the ratings. On January 7, 1994, at 6 p.m., after signing off with Led Zeppelin's "Stairway to Heaven", the station began stunting with the sound of ocean waves.

On January 9, at Noon, it switched formats and call signs again, becoming CKBD with the on-air brand The Bridge as Canada's first Contemporary Christian music station. The first song on "The Bridge" was "Awesome God" by Rich Mullins.[2] On July 31, 1998, the station changed to an adult standards format as 600 AM with the slogan "Unforgettable Adult Favourites".

Switch to FM, The Peak

On May 30, 2008, CKBD was given approval by the CRTC to move to 100.5 MHz on the FM dial.[3] As part of its move to FM, CKBD planned to switch from adult standards to adult album alternative (AAA) with a new call sign, CKPK-FM. On October 23, 2008, the FM station signed on for testing. The transmitter on 600 AM was shut down on November 13, 2008. The last program was a 25-minute summary of the station's 84-year history on the AM band, followed by "Thanks for the Memory" by Bob Hope.[4] Astral Media's CISL had flipped from oldies to adult standards just days before to take advantage of the move. At 7:20 that same evening, at a live party at the Seasons in the Park restaurant, "100.5 The Peak" launched with U2's "Elevation."[5]

CKPK-FM received a new competitor on Canada Day, 2009, when CHHR-FM began airing a AAA format. CHHR (now CHLG-FM) would change formats to classic hits on June 20, 2014.

Move to 102.7

On December 9, 2010, the Jim Pattison Group applied to exchange frequencies with non-commercial community radio station CFRO-FM, which then operated at 102.7 MHz.[6] The application was approved on September 9, 2011.[7] The swap took place almost a year later on September 10, 2012.[8]

During the summer of 2015, CKPK began evolving towards a more modern rock format. Eventually, CKPK began reporting on the Mediabase Canadian alternative rock panel.

Now! Radio

On July 22, 2022, it was announced that CKPK would drop its rock format on July 25, with its existing Peak format and programming moving to an HD Radio sub-channel and internet radio.[9] Radio Insight reported that Pattison had bought a domain name for the branding 102.7 Now! Radio—implicating the possibility of a hot adult contemporary "social radio" format modelled after sister stations CKNO-FM in Edmonton, CHNW-FM in Winnipeg, and CKCE-FM in Calgary (which uses a similar positioning as Today Radio), which feature a focus on topical discussions and listener interactions.[10]

On July 25, the station rebranded as 102.7 Now! Radio, featuring an adult hits-leaning adult contemporary format, with Christy Farrell and Fraser Tuff moving from CKCE to host its morning show.[10][11] The flip came nearly a month after Rogers' CKKS-FM had flipped from hot AC to modern rock itself on June 30.[12] In January 2023, CKPK laid off The Peak's on-air personalities; the company cited low adoption of HD Radio by local listeners as its reasoning for the cutbacks.[13]

Past station logos

References

  1. ^ Historical information on CFXC Archived 2016-12-20 at the Wayback Machine at Canadian Communications Foundation
  2. ^ "Birth of the Bridge: Remembering a Format Flip from Yesteryear". 26 June 2014.
  3. ^ "ARCHIVED - Licensing of new radio stations to serve the Vancouver radio market". 30 May 2008.
  4. ^ "600 CKBD Signs-Off". 13 November 2012.
  5. ^ "100.5 the Peak Debuts". 15 November 2008.
  6. ^ Broadcasting Notice of Consultation CRTC 2010-928
  7. ^ Broadcasting Decision CRTC 2011-580
  8. ^ The PEAK (is moving to a stronger frequency) TV Commercial Contest[permanent dead link]
  9. ^ Connie Thiessen, "Pattison to relaunch Vancouver’s 102.7 The PEAK on HD Radio". Broadcast Dialogue, July 22, 2022.
  10. ^ a b "102.7 Now Radio Debuts in Vancouver". RadioInsight. Retrieved 2022-07-25.
  11. ^ "Vancouver radio station 102.7 FM is mixing things up as NOW!radio". vancouversun. Retrieved 2022-07-27.
  12. ^ Venta, Lance (June 30, 2022). "Rogers Launches Sonic Radio Vancouver". RadioInsight. Retrieved June 30, 2022.
  13. ^ Thiessen, Connie (2023-01-12). "Vancouver's The Peak lays off talent as HD Radio experiment slow to gain traction". Broadcast Dialogue. Retrieved 2023-01-30.

External links

This page was last edited on 21 March 2024, at 08:18
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