KUZZ
City | Bakersfield, California |
---|---|
Branding | KUZZ AM 55/FM 107.9 |
Slogan | Bakersfield's Best Country Music Station |
Frequency |
AM: 550 kHz FM: 107.9 MHz |
First air date |
1947 (AM 1490) 1966 (FM 107.9) |
Format | Country |
Power | AM: 5,000 watts |
ERP | FM: 6,000 watts |
HAAT | FM: 416 meters |
Class |
AM: B FM: B |
Callsign meaning | After "Cousin" Herb Henson, local TV star and station manager prior to Buck Owens' purchase of station [1] |
Former callsigns |
For AM 550: KCWR (1990-1997) KUZZ (1986-1990) KAFY (1950-1986)[2] For 107.9 FM: KKXX-FM (1977-1988) KZIN-FM (1969-1977) KBBY-FM (1966-1969)[3] |
Former frequencies | AM: 1490 kHz (1947-1950) |
Owner |
Buck Owens Production Company (Owens One Company Inc.) |
Sister stations | KCWR, KRJK |
Webcast | Listen Live |
Website | kuzz.com |
KUZZ (550 AM) and KUZZ-FM (107.9 FM) are American radio stations licensed to serve Bakersfield, California, United States. The stations are owned by Buck Owens Production Company (which is controlled by the estate of the late Buck Owens) and the licenses are held by Owens One Company Inc.[4]
They broadcast a simulcast country music format to the inland central California region.[5] KUZZ's radio signals can extend over 100 miles, from Los Angeles on some nights to Fresno with a little better audio in the north, all away to Barstow in the Mojave Desert and to Santa Maria by the Pacific Ocean.
KUZZ was also the call sign of television station channel 45 which Owens owned at one time. It is now MyNetworkTV affiliate KUVI.
KUZZ was KAFY on 1490 kHz in 1947. It moved to 550 kHz in 1950.
History
In 1958, KUZZ (then KIKK) first began broadcasting a country music format on 800 AM. In 1960, the station manager, a local country and western star named "Cousin" Herb Henson, changed the calls to KUZZ. In 1966, country music singer Buck Owens purchased the station and kept the country format. One year later in 1967, Owens also purchased the 107.9 frequency. When Owens purchased the frequency, he did not actually start playing country music. He started it out as an alternative rock station. The calls letters for the new 107.9 would be KBBY-FM.[6]
In 1969 after low ratings at 107.9, Owens flipped the station to country and western and changed the call letters to KZIN-FM. KUZZ and KZIN were sister stations and both played a country format but KZIN differed from KUZZ by playing more new country than KUZZ. In 1977, plans were made to purchase rival country station AM 970 KBIS-AM. During that same time 800 AM was being sold to the Church of the Foursquare Gospel, which was headquartered in Los Angeles. The plan for 800 AM was to flip the format from country to a Christian format.
In January 1977, 107.9 KZIN-FM flipped formats from country to an album oriented rock station. The first song on the new 107.9 was "New Kid In Town" by the Eagles. The new calls letters were KKXX-FM. At this time, 970 AM KUZZ became a full-time 24-hour country station (before then, it had been known as a "daytimer" and would only broadcast during the day and turn off at night). In 1984, Buck Owens increased the power of KUZZ to 5,000 watts and also purchased another AM country radio station, 550 KAFY.[7]
A couple years later, management at the station 970 AM KUZZ and 550 KAFY, decided to exchange dial positions. With music formats on the decline on the AM band, people were not listening to AM radio as in previous generations. In 1988, after competitors were saying they would bring country music to the FM dial, Owens decided to do that as well. He flipped rock station 107.9 KKXX to contemporary country KUZZ.[8] The logo of the station is an artist impression of Owens' famous red, white, and blue guitar, which he used throughout most of his career.
Programming
The programming on this station features local personalities, most notably the locally produced morning show Gradowitz in the Morning which includes host Steve Gradowitz and Geoff Emery.[9] Other weekday programming includes Casey McBride on mid-mornings and Brent Michaels on mid-days. Brent's show features "The Country Cafe", an hour of requests during the lunch hour. Chris Conner is on afternoons and Kendra Anne is on nights. The night show is an all-request show and includes "The Top 8@8", a countdown of the eight most requested songs of the day. Overnights feature the syndicated show "After Midnite". Weekend and fill-in hosts include Ken Richards, Tanya, Chris Townsend, Kerri Caffee, Kenny Hernandez, Hailey Archer, and Jim Diamond. The KUZZ news department is operated under the direction of Suzanne Grant.
References
- ↑ "About Us". KUZZ Bakersfield.
- ↑ "AM 550 KUZZ Callsign History". FCC. Retrieved September 3, 2008.
- ↑ "FM 107.9 KUZZ Callsign History". FCC. Retrieved February 21, 2008.
- ↑ "Buck Owens Production Company Inc. | Bakersfield, CA | Company Profile, Research, News, Information, Contacts". Goliath.ecnext.com. Retrieved 2011-08-17.
- ↑ "Station Information Profile". Arbitron. Archived from the original on 2010-03-01.
- ↑
- ↑ Jose Fritz. "ARCANE RADIO TRIVIA: July 2005". Tenwatts.blogspot.com. Retrieved 2011-08-17.
- ↑ "KUZZ Bakersfield Best Country Music Radio Station". Kuzzradio.com. Retrieved 2011-08-17.
- ↑ "DJ Bios". KUZZ Bakersfield.
External links
- KUZZ official website
- FCC History Cards for KUZZ
- FCC History Cards for KUZZ-FM
- Query the FCC's AM station database for KUZZ
- Radio-Locator Information on KUZZ
- Query Nielsen Audio's AM station database for KUZZ
- Query the FCC's FM station database for KUZZ
- Radio-Locator information on KUZZ
- Query Nielsen Audio's FM station database for KUZZ
Coordinates: 35°20′25″N 118°56′19″W / 35.34028°N 118.93861°W