KMJO
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KMJO | |
City of license | Hope, North Dakota |
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Broadcast area | Fargo-Moorhead |
Branding | Mojo 104.7 |
Slogan | Get Your Mojo On |
Frequency | 104.7 MHz |
First air date | 2002 (as KDAM) |
Format | Commercial; Classic hits |
ERP | 100,000 watts |
HAAT | 214 meters |
Class | C1 |
Facility ID | 88502 |
Callsign meaning | MoJO 104 |
Former callsigns | KCHY CP (2000-2002), KDAM (2002-2007), KMXW (2007) |
Owner | James Ingstad (Radio Fargo-Moorhead, Inc.) |
Sister stations | KBVB, KFGO, KRWK, KVOX, WDAY-FM |
Webcast | Listen Live! |
Website | www.mojo104.com |
KMJO (104.7 FM, "Mojo 104.7") is a radio station broadcasting an oldies/classic hits format. Licensed to Hope, North Dakota, it serves the Fargo-Moorhead metropolitan area. It first began broadcasting in 2002 under the call sign KDAM. The station is currently owned by James Ingstad's Radio Fargo-Moorhead, Inc.
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[edit] History
[edit] 104.7 The Dam
A construction permit (CP) was granted in 2000 by the FCC with the call sign KCHY, broadcasting 200 watts covering Hope, North Dakota. Clear Channel Communications paid $800,000 for the CP for KCHY in 2002, and changed the call sign to KDAM.
KDAM signed on with 100,000 watts in October 2002, stunting with clips of songs of all genres, billing itself as "Quick 104.7", and playing ten songs per minute while other stations play ten songs per hour. The modern rock format known as "The Dam 104.7" debuted days later. It became popular, and gained larger Arbitron ratings than rival heritage active rock station KQWB-FM "Q98" at times. Despite a rimshot signal, "The Dam" also attracted more than 2% of radio listeners in the Grand Forks, North Dakota market, somewhat competing with co-owned active rock station KJKJ "KJ 108".
[edit] 104.7 The Wolf
KDAM began stunting as "Quick 104.7" again, and later flipped to a country music format as "104.7 The Wolf" in December 2005, competing with KVOX-FM "Froggy 99.9". The format flip caused controversy with listeners, and several online petitions[1] were created to bring The Dam back. The Wolf was not as successful as "The Dam", and attracted less than 1% of listeners in the Fargo-Moorhead Arbitron radio market.
On September 28, 2006 that KDAM and the other Clear Channel stations in Fargo were sold to James Ingstad, who lives in Fargo. Ingstad once owned the stations and sold them in 2000, though KDAM didn't sign on until 2002. The sale was approved by the FCC on January 19, 2007.
[edit] Mix 104.7
On February 26, 2007, KDAM began stunting with an adult hits format, as "Ed FM", with talk show host Ed Schultz in the logo on its Web site. The station changed its call sign to KMXW and became an adult contemporary station as "Mix 104.7" on March 1, 2007, competing with Triad Broadcasting's Hot AC station KLTA "FM 105.1".
[edit] Mojo 104.7
The station began airing Christmas music as a stunt on November 9, 2007 along with KEGK. On November 26, 2007 the station changed to a oldies/classic hits format with the name "Mojo 104.7", and changed its call sign to KMJO.
[edit] External links
- Mojo 104.7
- Dam The Wolf
- Query the FCC's FM station database for KMJO
- Radio Locator information on KMJO
- Query Arbitron's FM station database for KMJO
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