WKXB

WKXB
City Boiling Spring Lakes, North Carolina
Broadcast area Wilmington, North Carolina
Branding Jammin' 99.9
Slogan The Greatest Hits Of All Time
Frequency 99.9 (MHz)
First air date 1981
Format Rhythmic Oldies
ERP 26,000 watts
HAAT 177 meters
Class C2
Facility ID 59481
Transmitter coordinates 34°14′37″N 78°07′24″W / 34.24361°N 78.12333°W / 34.24361; -78.12333
Former callsigns WVBS (1981-1993)
Owner Capitol Broadcasting Company
Sister stations WAZO, WILT, WMFD
Webcast Listen Live
Website jammin999fm.com

WKXB ("Jammin' 99.9") is a Rhythmic Oldies formatted broadcast radio station licensed to Boiling Spring Lakes, North Carolina and serving the Wilmington, North Carolina area.

History

WKXB launched as adult contemporary formatted WVBS in the early 1980s. WVBS would flip to a Top 40 format in the late 1980s named All Hit "B100". In 1993, WVBS became Country formatted "Kix Country 99.9" with new calls WKXB. In 1999, WKXB again switched formats to Jammin' Oldies as "Jammin 99.9".[1] WKXB more than doubled its audience and became the number one station in the market.[2]

In 2001, WKXB shifted to a more Rhythmic Adult Contemporary format. As of 2012, it has returned to Rhythmic Oldies, predominantly from the 1960s thru 1980s.

In July 2004, NextMedia Group purchased WKXB and WSFM from Sea-Comm Inc., and WRQR, WAZO, and WMFD from Ocean Broadcasting LLC.[3]

In July 2008, Capitol Broadcasting announced its purchase of NextMedia's Wilmington stations.[4]

On March 31, 2010, WKXB reduced its power output from 100,000 watts to 35,000 watts in a transmitter and city of license move to Boiling Spring Lakes, North Carolina to allow a signal boost by co-owned and co-channeled WCMC-FM in the Raleigh market.

References

  1. Morgan Lee, "Station Jilts Country to Woo Female Listeners", Star-News, March 2, 1999.
  2. Toby Eddings, "WDAI returns to top of radio ratings," The Sun News, Aug. 22, 1999.
  3. Bonnie Eksten, "Ocean Broadcasting, Sea-Comm Stations Sold to NextMedia - New Owner to Operate Locally," Star-News, July 14, 2004.
  4. http://www.wral.com/business/story/3215727/, Retrieved on 2008/09/22.
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