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WKST-FM (96.1 MHz), is a commercial radio station licensed to Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. The station is owned by iHeartMedia and airs a Top 40 (CHR) format, branded as 96.1 Kiss. WKST operates with an Effective radiated power (ERP) of 44,000 watts, making it a class B station. The station broadcasts from a transmitter located in Baldwin.
Call sign Frequency City of license [1] [2] Licensee Format [3]; KDKA: 1020 AM: Pittsburgh: Audacy License, LLC: News/Talk: KDKA-FM: 93.7 FM: Pittsburgh: Audacy License, LLC
The following year, WKMC was joined by an FM sister, WHPA, (now WRKY-FM) licensed to Hollidaysburg. That station signed on December 1, 1978. That station signed on December 1, 1978. On July 8, 1980, WKMC applied to the FCC to change its community of license from Martinsburg to Roaring Spring, but keeping Martinsburg as a second city in its ...
The station broadcast a country music format as KGLL-FM, 96.1 The Eagle until October 7, 2000, when it flipped to CHR as 96.1 Kiss FM. It initially carried Rick Dees in the Morning from KIIS-FM until 2002, when it switched to a local morning show hosted by program director Chris Kelly.
KISS-FM is the brand name of a Top 40 music format heard on FM radio stations in many cities in ... WKST-FM: 96.1: FM: Pittsburgh: Pennsylvania: CHR WKSB: 102.7: FM ...
WPKF (96.1 FM, "Kiss FM") is a top 40 (CHR) radio station licensed to Poughkeepsie, New York and serving the Mid-Hudson Valley of New York state. The station is owned by iHeartMedia, Inc. and broadcasts from a tower mounted on the roof of the Ross Pavilion at the Hudson River Psychiatric Center in Poughkeepsie.
KIIS-FM, also known as "102.7 KIIS-FM", Top 40 station (owned by iHeartMedia as its flagship "KISS-FM" brand) KKDM , also known as "Kiss 1075", in Des Moines, Iowa KSME , better known as "96.1 Kiss FM" in Greeley, Colorado
In March 1986 the station went to 24-hour classic rock; Benns changed the calls to WMYG and the station referred to itself as "Magic Y-97 FM" (it shortened the brand to simply "Magic 97 FM" later that year). In 1991, the station switched to a current-based rock format, and the calls were changed to WRRK, taking on the branding "97 Rock." When ...