KJAV

KJAV
City of license Alamo, Texas
Broadcast area McAllen, Texas
Branding 104.9 Jack FM
Slogan "Playing what we want"
Frequency 104.9 MHz
Format Jack FM
ERP 6,420 watts
HAAT 194 meters (636 ft)
Class A1
Facility ID 51957
Callsign meaning K JAck FM Valley
Former callsigns KJAV (1980-2011)
KRIO-FM (2011)
Owner Border Media Partners
(BMP RGV License Company, LP)
Sister stations KBUC, KESO/XHRR, KSOX, KZSP, XHCAO, XHAVO
Webcast [1]
Website valleyjack.com

KJAV (104.9 FM, "104.9 Jack FM") is a radio station licensed to serve Alamo, Texas, USA. The station is owned by Border Media Partners and the broadcast license is held by BMP RGV License Company, LP.

KJAV broadcasts an adult hits format branded as "Jack FM" to McAllen, Texas, and the Rio Grande Valley.[1]

History

This station received its original construction permit from the Federal Communications Commission on October 9, 1979.[2] The new station was assigned the KJAV call sign by the FCC on January 14, 1980.[3] KJAV received its license to cover from the FCC on October 23, 1980.[4]

In August 1986, license holder Lonnie M. Horton reached an agreement to sell this station to Paulino Bernal. The deal was approved by the FCC on October 10, 1986, and the transaction was consummated on May 4, 1987.[5]

In October 2004, La Radio Cristiana Network Inc. (Paulino Bernal Jr., president) reached an agreement to sell this station to BMP Radio through their BMP RGB License Company, LP, subsidiary holding company for a reported $7 million.[6] The deal was approved by the FCC on December 14, 2004, and the transaction was consummated on January 16, 2005.[7] At the time of the sale, KJAV broadcast a Spanish-language Christian radio format.[6]

After BMP Radio bought the station in 2005, they changed the Spanish format of the station. Later it became a rhythmic oldies format, branded as "Jammin 104.9 The Valley's Old School". The station had a morning show on weekdays with Tony Fornia and then played music with no disc jockeys afterward. In August 2007, the station announced that it would soon change formats accompanied by the R.E.M. song "It's the End of the World as We Know It (And I Feel Fine)" every time it went to commercials. In mid-September 2007, the station flipped the format to Jack FM. In 2009 Jack FM began broadcasting the games of the Rio Grande Valley Vipers of the NBA Development League.

On February 17, 2011, KJAV changed its call letters to KRIO-FM.[3] This change proved short-lived as on March 3, 2011, KRIO-FM changed its call letters back to KJAV.[3]

References

External links