KMGL

"Magic 104.1" redirects here. For other radio stations that uses the "Magic 104" branding, see Magic 104.
KMGL
City Oklahoma City, Oklahoma
Broadcast area Oklahoma City Metroplex
Branding Magic 104.1
Slogan "Oklahoma City's At Work Station" (General)
"Oklahoma City's Official Christmas Music Station" (Nov. - Dec.)
Frequency 104.1 MHz
First air date 1965 (as KOFM)
Format Adult Contemporary
Christmas (Nov. - Dec.)
ERP 92,000 watts
HAAT 469 meters (1,539 ft)
Class C
Facility ID 55708
Callsign meaning K MaGic Listening
Former callsigns KOFM (1965-1986)
Owner Ty and Tony Tyler
(Tyler Media, L.L.C.)
Sister stations KOMA, KRXO-FM, KOKC, KJKE, KTUZ, KEBC
Webcast Listen Live
Website magic104.com

KMGL (104.1 FM, "Magic 104.1") is an adult contemporary music formatted radio station serving the Oklahoma City area and is owned by Ty and Tony Tyler, through licensee Tyler Media, L.L.C. The station's studios are located in Northeast Oklahoma City and a transmitter site is located a mile east from the studio.

History

The station began broadcasting in 1965 in Oklahoma City and was known by the call letters KOFM. It signed on the air as a beautiful music station and the home for the Indian Nations News Network (INN). During the early 1970s, KOFM adopted a hybrid format as programmed by current FOX Talk Radio VP of programming Mike Elder. The format provided a unique sound that included beautiful music mixed with rock album cuts by groups such as the Moody Blues and was called "Fresh Air". Later, KOFM was a top rated top 40 hit station programmed by Mike Miller, John Jenkins and Charlie Cooper and used the positioning statement "Rockin' With The Hits". On June 2, 1986, KOFM became KMGL and changed formats to Transtar's Format 41. Over time KMGL became a fully live adult contemporary formatted station under the direction of PD Charlie Cooper and current morning personality Steve O'Brien. KMGL has been one of Oklahoma City's top rated stations since the mid 1980s.

Today, the KOFM call letters are now used by a station in Enid, Oklahoma.

Ownership changes

On July 15, 2012, Ty and Tony Tyler's Tyler Media entered into an agreement with Renda Broadcasting to purchase that company's Oklahoma City radio cluster (KMGL, KOMA, KRXO and KOKC) for $40 million. In accordance to limits imposed by the Federal Communications Commission on the number of radio stations a single broadcasting entity can own in a single market, Tyler sold KTLR and KKNG to WPA Radio for $1.6 million.[1][2] Tyler's purchase of KMGL and its sister stations was consummated on November 13, 2012.

The Magic Of Christmas

Magic 104.1 used to sprinkle Christmas music in regular rotation and then on 12pm on Christmas Eve they would flip to all Christmas music branding it the "Magic Of Christmas" playing 36 hours of non stop Christmas music. In 2004 KYIS flipped to all-Christmas Music and KMGL would only play all-Christmas music on weekends and go back to regular music during the week. In 2006 KMGL would flip to all-Christmas music the following Monday after KQOB started Christmas music on the Friday before, since then KMGL has flipped to all-Christmas usually the week before Thanksgiving or the Friday after. KMGL usually has a good ratings following during this time. Oklahoma City's first radio station to do all-Christmas music was 97.7 KWHP during the 1960s followed by 94.7 KQSR starting on the Wednesday before Thanksgiving. KMGL is Oklahoma City's Official Christmas Music station as of November 20, 2009.

HD radio

KMGL along with its sister FM stations in Oklahoma City including KOMA and KRXO-FM broadcast on HD Radio for a short time from 2006 through 2008.

In 2005, Tony Renda Jr., the general manager of Renda Broadcasting said his company has signed a deal with iBiquity to convert all of the company's 24 stations in Pennsylvania, Florida, and Oklahoma to HD radio sometime in 2006.[3]

In early 2008, Renda switched off their HD signals on all three of their stations in Oklahoma City including KOMA-FM 92.5, KMGL-FM 104.1, and KRXO-FM 107.7 — because of a few coverage holes — areas that received a poor signal — at least until the spring 2008 ratings period ends. "It's a temporary problem," Don Pollnow, Renda market manager said. "Our engineer is working on it with the manufacturer."

Renda also has turned off KRXO's HD signal during its University of Oklahoma football broadcasts.

HD requires a delay, generally of at least eight seconds, to allow the signal to be encoded and matched up with the regular analog signal.

OU fans with radios at the stadium had complained that the station's play-by-play was behind the actual game action.[4][5]

It seems like Renda Broadcasting never switch any of their stations' HD signals back on ever since.

Tyler switch KRXO's HD signal back on a couple of months before they flipped it to Sports in Fall 2013 in order to move KRXO's Classic Rock format to its HD-2 subchannel and add its HD-3 subchannel to Spanish Oldies Exitos 96.5. In Winter 2014 KOMA's HD signal back on then add HD-2 subchannel to Alternative Rock 92.9 The Edge and its HD-3 subchannel to Hip-Hop V103.1. KMGL's HD signals still remain switched off.

Oklahoma City sister stations

References

External links

Coordinates: 35°33′36″N 97°29′10″W / 35.560°N 97.486°W / 35.560; -97.486

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