KLJA

KLJA
City Georgetown, Texas
Broadcast area Austin, Texas
Branding 107.7 Más Variedad
Frequency 107.7 MHz (also on HD Radio)
107.7 HD-2 for Tejano
First air date October 31, 1991 (as KNNC)
Format Spanish Adult Hits
ERP 10,500 watts
HAAT 154.8 meters
Class C3
Facility ID 55475
Callsign meaning K La JefA (former branding)
Former callsigns KJWL (1989-1991, CP)
KNNC (1991-1997)
KAHK (1997-2001)
KTND (2001-2003)
KINV (2003-2008)
KHZS (2008-2009)
Owner Univision Radio
(Univision Radio License Corporation)
Sister stations

KLQB

Also part of Univision cluster: KAKW-DT and KTFO-CD
Webcast v6.player.abacast.net/2295
Website www.univision.com/austin/klja

KLJA (107.7 FM) is a radio station broadcasting a Spanish Adult Hits format. Licensed to Univision Radio in Georgetown, Texas, USA, it serves the Austin area. The station has a transmitter in Georgetown and has studios along MoPac Expressway in Northwest Austin.

History

Sign-On, Austin's Original Alternative

KNNC's early 90s "Psychobaby" logo.

The station signed on the air In October 1991 as "107.7 K-Nack" KNNC, giving Austin its first commercial Alternative/Modern Rock-formatted station under the ownership of Rees-Slaymaker Radio Partnership. The station, always hampered by its relatively small 3 kW signal broadcasting from the far northeastern corner of the market, faced competition in 1995 when Sinclair Telecable launched 101X on its Austin rimshot, KROX-FM. At the time, KROX was licensed to Giddings and, while it broadcast with a full 100 kilowatts, its tower was located between Bastrop and La Grange and only provided listenable coverage to southeastern portions of the Austin market. In 1997, Sinclair (a Virginia-based radio operator, not to be confused with Sinclair Broadcasting) leased KNNC and began simulcasting 101X on 107.7 to supplement KROX's then-weak northern metro signal.

Sale To Simmons, Flip To Classic Hits

Later in 1997, Rees-Slaymaker sold KNNC to Utah-based Simmons Media Group, who ended the 101X simulcast and flipped 107.7 to a 70s-based Classic Hits format as "107.7 the Hawk" KAHK. As the 80s Hits format was picking up steam nationally in the early 2000s, Simmons flipped KAHK to an 80s-based format as "107.7 the End, Austin's 80s Channel" KTND in February 2001.[1][2] After only about a year, KTND shifted to Modern Rock, placing the station back into competition with KROX (which by that time had relicensed to Buda and upgraded its facilities to fully cover the Austin market.)

Switch To Spanish

Simmons began divesting stations outside of its home market of Salt Lake City in 2003, with KTND being sold to Univision, along with their entire Albuquerque station cluster. Univision's purchase of the station was their entry into the Austin radio market, and was preceded by the purchase of TV station KAKW in 2002. Upon taking control of the station in April 2003, Univision launched Regional Mexican "La Invasora" on the station, which was recalled KINV. Univision changed formats on the station again in 2005, and KINV became Latin Classic Hits "Recuerdo 107.7". In 2008, following the demise of the Latin Pop format on what was then KXXS (98.9), KINV flipped to Latin Pop as "Hitz 107.7" KHZS. Just shy of Hitz 107.7's first birthday, KHZS returned to Regional Mexican format as "La Jefa" on October 16, 2009. On September 11, 2013, La Jefa moved to sister station KLQB (104.3) and KLJA shifted to a younger-skewing version of the Regional Mexican format as "El Sancho 107.7", "El Sancho"—translating colloquially to "the other one"—has a double meaning: an "alternative" (as in: to KLQB's programming) or "the other man" (as in: a "mister").[3]

References

External links

Coordinates: 30°37′23″N 97°38′35″W / 30.623°N 97.643°W / 30.623; -97.643

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 4/6/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.