KRZR (FM)

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KRZR
City of license Hanford, California
Broadcast area Fresno, California
Branding Wild Hare
Slogan Fresno's Rock
Frequency 103.7 MHz (Also on HD Radio)
First air date 1976
Format Album Oriented Rock
Audience share 3.5 (Wi'08, R&R[1])
ERP 50,000 watts
HAAT 152.0 meters
Class B
Facility ID 48776
Transmitter Coordinates 36°33′12.00″N 119°45′10.00″W / 36.5533333, -119.7527778
Callsign meaning KRaZy Rock
RaZoR
Former callsigns KMGX (1982-1989)
Owner Clear Channel Communications
(Capstar TX)
Sister stations KALZ, KBOS, KCBL, KEZL, KFSO, KHGE, KRDU, KSOF
TV station KGPE pending sale to Providence Equity Partners
Website krzr.com

KRZR (103.7 FM) is a radio station broadcasting a Album Oriented Rock format. Licensed to Hanford, California, USA, the station serves the Visalia-Tulare-Hanford, Fresno area. The station is currently owned by Clear Channel Communications.[2] The station is also broadcast on HD radio.[3]

[edit] History

KRZR was throughout much of the 1980s a top 40 station with the cals KMGX, "X104." In 1989 it adopted a rock music format almost immediately.

The station currently known as KRZR broadcast at 103.7 FM. Originally known as KIOY "K-104", the station broadcast an Adult Contemporary/MOR format until the early 1980s when the call letters were changed to KMGX, and the nickname "Magic 104" was adopted. For much of the 1980s, the top-40 format of Magic 104 was more urban leaning than the format at rival KBOS, known at the time by the on-air moniker of "K-Boss 95". Playlists from 1985 show Sheena Easton, Prince, and Teena Marie getting heavy airplay at Magic 104, while KBOS was big on Billy Squier, Bruce Springsteen and David Lee Roth.

In the late 1980s KMGX's nickname was changed to "X-104", which lasted until 1989, when the impending format change caused local news coverage even before it happened.[citation needed]

Early in the summer of 1989, 103.7 KRZR took to the airwaves with much fanfare. KRZR introduced the "Rock 40" format to Fresno radio with an on-air offering of what is now widely described as "hair metal" or "glam metal" and various "format homeless" (at the time) artists such as Melissa Etheridge and Indigo Girls. Plenty of promotional attention was gained with a weekly giveaway of $10,000 to randomly spotted owners of cars sporting the station's bumper/window stickers and who called into the studio within the alloted time.[citation needed]

The original KRZR air staff included Pete Hansen and newswoman Kelly Boom (mornings), Kevin Musso (using the air name "Nick NRG", afternoon drive), Chris Daniel (evenings) and Scott Stevens (overnights). After the relatively early departure of music director and deejay McFly, program director E. Curtis Johnson presided over the midday shift. In July 1989, former crosstown KCLQ deejay Clay Steiner (using the air name "Matt 'The Healer' Clayton") hired on for weekends and overnights.

[edit] References

  1. ^ "Fresno Market Ratings", Radio & Records. 
  2. ^ KRZR Facility Record. United States Federal Communications Commission, audio division.
  3. ^ HD Radio Station Guide. HD Radio. iBiquity.

[edit] External links