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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

KUTX
Belo Center for New Media - KUTX/KUT offices
Broadcast areaAustin-Round Rock metropolitan area
Frequency98.9 MHz (HD Radio)
HD-2 AMX.fm
HD-3 TMX.fm
BrandingKUTX 98.9
Programming
FormatAdult album alternative (Public)
AffiliationsNPR
Ownership
OwnerThe University of Texas at Austin
KUT, KVRX
History
First air date
1988
Former call signs
KLTD (1988-1993)
KUTZ (1993-1996)
KJFK (1996-2000)
KHHL (2000-2009)
KXBT (2009-2013)[1]
Call sign meaning
University of TeXas
Technical information
Facility ID59982
ClassC3
ERP1,600 watts
HAAT390 meters (1,280 ft)
Links
WebcastListen Live
Websitekutx.org
amx.fm (HD2)
tmx.fm (HD3)

KUTX (98.9 FM) is a non-commercial radio station licensed to Leander, Texas and serving the greater Austin, Texas area with an adult album alternative format.[2] The station is owned by University of Texas at Austin with headquarters at the Belo Center for New Media (A0704) on the University of Texas at Austin campus.[3]

YouTube Encyclopedic

  • 1/5
    Views:
    139 950
    727
    16 908 892
    14 597
    7 400
  • KUTX Live: PREP
  • KUTX September Artist of the Month: Moody Bank$ - Full KUTX session
  • Black Pumas - Colors (Live in KUTX Studio 1A)
  • Adrian Quesada's Boleros Psicodélicos in KUTX Studio 1A
  • The Backseat Lovers in KUTX Studio 1A - Full Session

Transcription

History

98.9 signed on in 1988 at 99.1 FM as KLTD, "Kool 99 FM" with the Satellite Music Network's "Kool Gold" format by Adams Broadcasting, which eventually spun off the Kool Gold format to Dial Global. On July 3, 1993, KLTD changed calls to KUTZ and format to hard rock as part of the Satellite Music Network-Z Rock Network.

In 1996, 98.9 FM changed to news/talk as KJFK, which lasted until September 2000 when Border Media Partners acquired the station and changed formats to Rock AC as "The Hill", KHHL. Later, 98.9 FM became Spanish CHR, "Exitos 98.9", and then "La Ley 98.9" with a Regional Mexican format.

The Regional Mexican format lasted until November 29, 2009, when Bain Capital took over most of the assets of the Austin, Texas cluster of Border Media Partners, and changed formats to talk radio as "98.9 The Big Talker" and new calls KXBT.

As "98.9 The Big Talker", the station's weekday line-up included The Sean Rima Show during morning rush hour/drive time hours, The Glenn Beck Program during late-morning and early-afternoon hours (often referred to in radio station lingo as the Rush Limbaugh time slot), The Dave Ramsey Show during mid-afternoon hours, "Tabu" (a male-oriented sex and relationships show) Saturdays and Sundays 9pm-Midnight with Rachael Wax, The Schnitt Show during late-afternoon hours, and The Mark Levin Show during late-rush hour and early-evening hours. The weekends included The Jesus Christ Show, The Otherside with Steve Godfrey, Leo Laporte The Tech Guy, John Clay Wolfe, and The Weekend. The station was also the Houston Texans affiliate for the Austin, Texas market.

On August 15, 2011, after a listener survey and facing stagnant ratings, BMP Radio dropped the news/talk format in favor of Classic Hits. From August 15, 2011 to September 3, 2011, KXBT simulcasted KXXS ("True Oldies 92.5"). The True Oldies Channel programming moved permanently to 98.9 FM on September 3 as "98.9 Austin's Greatest Hits", and KXXS dropped the oldies format in favor of ESPN Deportes, formerly located on KWNX.

As of January 23, 2012, KXBT began airing local programming Monday-Friday 6am-7pm and added a local morning show from 6am-10am with Bo Chase In The Morning as well as syndicated host Tom Kent weekdays from 7pm-12am. Scott Shannon's satellite-fed True Oldies Channel continued to air overnights and Sundays at 7pm. On Saturdays, KXBT aired Saturday Night Dance Fever live at the Iron Cactus North on Stonelake Boulevard in Austin. The program featured dance classics of the 1970s, 1980s, and early-1990s.

On July 7, 2012, as part of Border Media's Austin selloff, the Board of Regents at the University of Texas announced their intention to vote on their acquisition of KXBT for $6 million; while questions about the proposal tabled the vote for some time, it was approved on August 23, and UT shortly after announced their intention to move KUT's music programming to 98.9 under new calls KUTX by the start of 2013. On November 26, KXBT announced that their classic hits format would end the following Friday, the 30th.[4] At 2 p.m. that day, Austin's Greatest Hits signed off with Don McLean's "American Pie", and 98.9 began playing Christmas music while promoting the upcoming launch of KUTX, starting with "Here Comes Santa Claus" by Elvis Presley from the 1957 album Elvis' Christmas Album.[5] On December 26, at Midnight, after playing "Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer" by Burl Ives & the Videocraft Chorus, 98.9, finishing out the entire soundtrack to the television special of the same name, began its "Music Preview", with the first song as KUTX being "We Can Work It Out" by The Beatles. The jockless preview gave way to the fully staffed version of the format on January 2.[6] KUTX is marketed as "The Austin Music Experience." Music shows moved from KUT include Eklektikos, hosted by John Aielli (with KUT since 1966); Left of the Dial with Jeff McCord; and shows hosted by Jay Trachtenberg, and Jody Denberg.

References

  1. ^ "Call Sign History". FCC Media Bureau CDBS Public Access Database. Retrieved April 16, 2010.
  2. ^ "Station Information Profile". Arbitron. Retrieved April 16, 2010.
  3. ^ "Contact Directions." KUTX. Retrieved on December 18, 2014. See image "KUT Public Media Studios 300 W. Dean Keeton (A0704) Austin, TX 78712-1061"
  4. ^ "radio insight". Retrieved 30 November 2012.
  5. ^ Austin's Greatest Hits Signs Off
  6. ^ 98.9 KUTX Austin Begins Preview Mode (Accessed December 31, 2012)

External links

30°23′28″N 97°50′13″W / 30.391°N 97.837°W / 30.391; -97.837

This page was last edited on 10 October 2023, at 00:11
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