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City | Osage City, Kansas |
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Broadcast area | Topeka/Lawrence, KS |
Branding | 92.9 The Bull |
Slogan | 20 in a Row Country |
Frequency | 92.9 MHz |
First air date | 1981 |
Format | Country |
ERP | 42,000 watts |
HAAT | 163 meters |
Class | C2 |
Facility ID | 7946 |
Former callsigns | KKYD, KANS, KZOC |
Owner | Great Plains Media (Great Plains Licensee, Inc.) |
Sister stations | KLWN, KKSW, WKSW, WGSQ, WHUB, WPTN, WDQZ, WRPW, WYST |
Webcast | Listen Live |
Website | bull929.com |
KMXN (92.9 FM) is a radio station that broadcasts in a country music format. The radio station is licensed to Osage City, Kansas, and the station serves the Topeka and Lawrence areas. The station is currently owned by Great Plains Media and broadcasts in HD Radio.
Originally, the station served Emporia at 92.7 FM, with a transmitter located north of the city near Admire. The earliest call letters are KZOC, first assigned in 1981. The station went on the air in late 1982. The format was country music. The station eventually moved to 92.9 FM and upgraded power to 36,000 watts in 1989.
In 1995, the station flipped to oldies. The station changed call letters to KANS-FM on April 1. The oldies format was satellite-fed. Owner C&C Consulting downgraded the transmitter to 7,900 watts in 2000.
After a sale to 3 Point Communications in July 2003, the station relocated its transmitter to a location between Scranton and Carbondale; the purpose of this was to target Topeka. After this, the station began stunting with a continuous loop of Tone Loc's "Wild Thing." On August 11, 2003, "Wild 92-9", Topeka's Hottest Jams, made its debut with a Rhythmic CHR format. On August 18, 2003, KANS-FM changed call letters to KKYD, with the KANS call letters being moved to KRWV (then located at 99.5 FM, now at 96.1 FM) in Emporia. The station was an affiliate for the Portland, Oregon-based morning show "The Playhouse" and "Pocos Pero Locos", a Hispanic-targeting hip hop show. Despite the new owners using the same playlist for several months, the station actually did well in the ratings, though advertising revenues were low.