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City | Longview, Texas |
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Broadcast area | East Texas |
Slogan | East Texas #1 For New Country |
Frequency | 105.7 MHz |
Translator(s) | 106.1 K291CH Tyler |
First air date | 1974 |
Format | Country |
ERP | 100,000 watts |
HAAT | 352 meters (1,155 ft) |
Class | C0 |
Facility ID | 54844 |
Transmitter coordinates | 32°35′37″N 94°49′10″W / 32.59361°N 94.81944°W |
Affiliations | Fox News Radio |
Owner |
Alpha Media LLC (Alpha Media Licensee LLC) |
Sister stations | KOOI-FM KKUS-FM KOYE-FM KFRO-AM |
Website | kykx1057.com |
KYKX (105.7 FM) is a radio station broadcasting a country music format. Licensed to Longview, Texas, United States, the station serves the East Texas area. The station is currently owned by Alpha Media LLC, through licensee Alpha Media Licensee LLC, and features programming from Fox News Radio. The current studio locations of KYKX are at 4408 North US Highway 259 in Longview and 210 South Broadway Ave., Suite 100 in Tyler.
KYKX's East Texas sister stations are 104.1 KKUS Tyler, 96.7 KOYE Frankston, and 106.5 KOOI Jacksonville.
KYKX can trace its roots back to Longview's first FM station, KLTI-FM, which went on the air at 105.9 MHz on October 27, 1948. KLTI-FM was founded and operated by R.G. LeTourneau of the LeTourneau Institute and LeTourneau Industries, and was co-operated with KLTI(AM) 1280 kHz. KLTI-FM ran an easy listening and classical music format, and provided functional music to local businesses. Functional music on FM was a predecessor of Muzak, providing background music to businesses and operated via a decoder box that would receive a tone from the station that muted the station's commercials. KLTI(AM) and KLTI-FM transmitted from a tower on Signal Hill in south Longview, across from LeTourneau Industries. The tower, a south Longview landmark because of its unique Eiffelized style, still stands today and is used by low power television station KLGV-LP. KLTI-FM went off the air sometime in 1955 or 1956.
In 1959, H.A. (Tony) Bridge and Radio Longview, Inc purchased KLTI, including the Signal Hill tower, transmitter, and studios. This purchase also included equipment from the defunct KLTI-FM that was most likely used in some extent to bring Longview's second FM station to the air 4 years later. Bridge changed the calls of KLTI to KLUE and put in place a Top 40 format that was a fixture in Longview on 1280 kHz until the early 1980s.
On March 3, 1963, Bridge signed on KLUE-FM at 105.7 MHz. Its initial power was 6.2 kW. KLUE-FM was not a simulcast of KLUE(AM), and most likely had an automated easy listening format, with stacks of records repeating every day. In 1967, KLUE-FM upgraded their power to 36 kW.
In 1969, the calls were changed to KHER-FM.
On July 1, 1974, KHER-FM was sold to Rusty Reynolds' and Dick Osborne's Stereo 105 Inc., the calls were changed to KYKX, and the country music format began, and has maintained the format to the present. Rusty eventually moved the transmitter to West Mountain at 100KW, and was upgraded to a "Class C". The studios were moved to Judson Road.