Tag Archives: KBKS



Clear Channel Seattle about to Peake

John Peake, most recently a producer with the John, Jay & Rich Show from Phoenix, joins the Clear Channel cluster in Seattle as Operations Manager and also as the new PD at KJR FM. He replaces Shellie Hart, who remains as programmer at KNBQ & KSGX, as well as on-air responsibilities at KUBE. Shellie now reports to Peake.
John Peake hails from Phoenix’s KZZP, also owned by Clear Channel. In Seattle, Peake will oversee CHR KBKS FM, Rhythmic CHR KUBE FM, KSGX FM Gen X Radio, Country KNBQ FM, Sports/Talk KJR 950 and Sports KHHO 850/Tacoma.

Share

On The Air – FM Music tops PPM rankings

The most recent People Meter ratings show Star 101.5 KPLZ back in the #1 spot, for the first time since 1989! Music stations KJR FM/Oldies, KRWM FM/Adult Contemporary, KZOK FM/Classic Rock, KBKS FM/Pop-Hip Hop, KMPS FM/Country, KJAQ FM/Top 40-Classic Rock, KKWF FM/Country & KCMS FM/Chrisitian [all music stations] took the top positions for listener ownership overall.
Stewart Ballinger, avid golfer and former owner/partner in KIXI Mercer Island & KFKF Bellevue, died this week. Ballinger changed the KFKF format from beautiful music to rock and roll. KFKF, as the new KZAM, was the first Seattle station to hire female deejays. Ballinger was 95.
Dr Demento takes his radio show exclusively to the Internet this fall. Demento will move his syndicated series from terrestrial channels to an Internet stream which will allow him flexibilty to play tunes that would otherwise be censored by radio stations now carrying the program.
KGY FM/Olympia, has yet to fully develop their website. The station plays a mix of Oldies & current Top 40 tunes with local deejays slaving over hot CD players and music servers. [It would have been much easier just to say "hot turntables", but those days are long gone]. “The Sound” carries hourly news reports from CBS along with local news.

Share

KLAY Radio: A piece of the Clay Huntington Legacy

Clay Hungtington has operated stations KFHA-Lakewood, KLAY FM Tacoma, KQLA-Lakewood and now KLAY 1180-Lakewood, serving the Tacoma and South Sound area for well over 50 years. [pictured: Clay Huntington, voice of Tacoma Tigers baseball 1946-1951;] Huntington’s early sports broadcast career includes stints at KTBI, KTNT and KMO radio stations and both KTVW and KTNT television. All of this, as well as sports broadcasts on a 14-station network that covered Washington, Oregon, and Alaska. His vast record of community involvement includes helping to fund the construction of Cheney Stadium in 1960 and bring Triple A baseball back to Tacoma.
KLAY 106.1 FM was the first STEREO FM station in the Puget Sound region. At that time, KLAY FM was a Beautiful Music station. Ahhh…the sounds of Mantovani, Enoch Light and Richard Claydermann. Beautiful music orchestrations, programmed as background music, pleasant, relaxing and suitable for the office, home or in the car. Listeners stayed with KLAY FM for hours each day at work and at home. This format was relaxing and almost hypnotic when programmed right.
Competition for this format grew during the 60s and early 70s, with several stations adopting the format for some period. Over time there was KEZX, KBRD, KSEA, KIXI and KBIQ. Oceans of Beautiful Music emanated from some great Puget Sound area radio channels.
KLAY FM switched to a very different sound in the latter part of the 60s, Progressive Rock. Again, the station performed well and many people still recall that era and the DJs of KLAY. For example, Steve Slaton, who went on to a career at Album Rock stations in Seattle.
The FM was sold in the early 80s and became KRPM FM [now KBKS]. Clay Huntington continues to operate the AM, located in Lakewood at 1180 AM. He is still at the helm each day as 1180 KLAY broadcasts a talk radio format. Featured are many local hosts, such as well known civic leader Mike Lonergan and longtime horse racing expert and broadcaster, Vic Cozzetti, known as Victor the Predictor.

Share

Old Call Letters – Where Are They Now?

As stations are bought and sold, many of the great call letter combinations are replaced with what might best represent the new on-air product, or so most new owners believe. Actually, we have lost most of the three-letter call signs due to this misguided theory. You can’t get those call signs back.
The four letter call signs come and go. These end up in other markets occasionally. Looking back at the list of Seattle area stations that have changed formats and ownership over the last 50 years, here is a sampling of those changes.
“Where Have All The Good Songs Gone?” KUUU – the oldies station in Seattle at 1590, once had the KSND call letters. Now, both sets of call letters are gone, as are those that followed at the 1590 position, KJET. KSND is the call sign now at a regional Mexican station in Monmouth, OR. KUUU, also known as U92, is a Rhythmic Top 40 radio station broadcasting to the Salt Lake City-Ogden-Provo, Utah areas. KJET call letters are used on 105.7 FM in Aberdeen, WA., these days.
The old progressive rocker in Seattle, KZAM, disappeared years ago. Those call letters were last seen at an FM country station in Ganado, TX.
KRPM Tacoma, played country music at 106.1, where KBKS FM now blasts out Hip Hop.

Audio MP3

The KRPM sign now hangs at the New Magic 107.5 in Billings, MT.. a soft rock station.
Long ago, stereo debuted in the Pacific Northwest at 106.1 on KLAY, with the music of Mantovani and 101 Strings. KLAY can be heard at 1180 AM, from studios in Lakewood, WA., with mostly talk show and barter programming.
Like KJET and KLAY, many of the call signs are snatched up by local broadcasters for stations in nearby communities. KBRD FM in Tacoma was a Beautiful Music station, similar to the old KLAY format of the early 60s. When Entercom brought the Mountain format to that FM frequency, the call letters changed to KMTT. The KBRD call letters ended up down the road in Lacey, WA on an AM station that programmed Big Band music. The station streams on the Internet and plays an eclectic mix of jazz, Big Band and Swing music from the WWII era.
There is a slew of old Tacoma call letters on the eastside of Washington these days.

Audio MP3

Thomas Read snagged KTBI, KTAC, KTW (once 1250 in Seattle) KGDN (remember that at 630 in Seattle) and a few of the old call signs from Eastern Washington that were shucked off in station sales or format changes, KSPO (good one!) and KYAK.

Share