KIKT

KIKT
City of license Cooper, Texas
Broadcast area Greenville, Texas and Vicinity
Branding 93.5 The Coyote
Slogan "Hometown Radio"
Frequency 93.5 MHz
First air date 1984-04-02 (as KGVL-FM)
Format Country music
ERP 12,500 watts
HAAT 124.0 meters
Class C3
Facility ID 21597
Transmitter coordinates 33°13′16.00″N 95°41′20.00″W / 33.2211111°N 95.6888889°W
Callsign meaning KIcK of Texas
Former callsigns KGVL-FM (1984-?)
Affiliations Today's Best Country (Citadel)
Owner Hunt County Radio
(Hunt County Radio, LLC)
Sister stations KGVL
Website http://935thecoyote.com/

KIKT (93.5 FM) is a radio station broadcasting a Country music format. Licensed to Cooper, Texas, USA, the station serves the Greenville, Hunt County area. The station is currently owned by KGVL Radio, LLC.[1]

History

The previous Logo for KIKT under the previous monkier Kik-FM

The station went on the air as KGVL-FM on 1984-04-02. On 1984-09-04, the station changed its call sign to the current KIKT.[2]

Has aired different formats, including top 40 in the past. DJs who moved on to major market airwaves include Walt "the Trooper" Troup (KSCS/Dallas), Trey Elliot (KRSR Dallas) and Mike Sheppard (KRSR, KVIL, KZPS Dallas).

With the recent change of logo and motto, "Hometown Radio" KIKT-FM was known as KIK-FM and played a variety of Country favorites.

KIK-FM carried on the tradition of broadcasting local events such as the Annual Rally Around Greenville, Greenville's Business Expo, Greenville Lions Friday Night Lights Tailgate Parties. Currently KIKT carries local area sports as well as local area events.

Cumulus Media announced on June 19, 2009 that it will sell its Greenville cluster (including KIKT) to Alpha Horne, a local resident forming the company KGVL Radio LLC. Horne will pay the first $150,000 to Cumulus, who in Atlanta will hold the “seller paper” note for the remaining balance of $450,000. But one year later on June 29, 2010, Horne announced that he would resell the station along with sister station KGVL back to Cumulus.[3] KIKT was then sold to Hunt County Radio along with KGVL shortly after the Cumulus resumed control.

KIKT was then renamed "93.5 The Coyote" Continuing the Country Format.

References

  1. "KIKT Facility Record". United States Federal Communications Commission, audio division.
  2. "KIKT Call Sign History". United States Federal Communications Commission, audio division.
  3. http://heraldbanner.com/local/x383288486/Local-radio-stations-change-hands-again

External links