KBPA

KBPA (103.5 MHz, "103.5 Bob FM") is a radio station licensed to San Marcos, Texas and serving the Greater Austin metropolitan area. Owned by Sinclair Telecable and operated under the name Waterloo Media, it broadcasts an adult hits format.

KBPA
CitySan Marcos, Texas
Broadcast areaAustin-Round Rock metropolitan area
Frequency103.5 MHz (HD Radio)
Branding103.5 Bob FM
SloganWe Play Anything.
Programming
FormatFM/HD1: Adult hits
HD2: Rhythmic contemporary (Mega 103-5 HD2)
Ownership
OwnerSinclair Telecable
OperatorWaterloo Media
Sister stationsKGSR, KLBJ (AM), KLBJ-FM, KLZT, KROX-FM
History
First air dateJune 1, 1971 (as KRMH at 103.7)
Former call signsKRMH (1971-1976)
KCSW (1976-1982)
KEYI (1982-1986)
KEYI-FM (1986-2004)
Former frequencies103.7 MHz (1971-1983)
Call sign meaningK Bob Plays Anything
Technical information
Facility ID41213
ClassC0
ERP100,000 watts
HAAT383 meters (1,257 ft)
Links
WebcastBob FM Webstream
Mega 103.5 Webstream
Website1035bobfm.com
megahd2.com (HD2)

KBPA's transmitter is located off Jack C. Hays Trail in Buda, Texas.[1] Its studios and offices are located along Interstate 35 in North Austin.

KBPA broadcasts in HD Radio; its second subchannel broadcasts a rhythmic contemporary format as Mega 103-5 HD2.

History

Rock and adult contemporary

The station signed on the air on June 1, 1971 at 103.7 FM as KRMH.[2] The station was known as "Good Karma", a suitable name for a progressive rock station on the fringe of Austin ("Broadcasting from beautiful downtown Buda!") in its "Hippy-Dippy" age. It was licensed to San Marcos on 103.7 MHz. KRMH was owned by, and named for, Advance Inc., whose president was R. Miller Hicks.[3] The station was one of the few to broadcast in quadraphonic stereo.

In 1976, the Pioneer Broadcasting Company of Austin, which also owned 1490 AM KNOW, acquired KRMH and shifted it to an adult contemporary sound as KCSW;[4] the call letters changed on July 26, 1976.[5] Five years later, the station was acquired by Hicks Communications Inc. of Dallas; upon closing, KCSW changed its call letters to KEYI and rebranded as Key 103, keeping the adult contemporary format.[6] In 1983, the station moved from 103.7 FM to 103.5 FM with a power increase to 100,000 watts. Hicks sold the station to Degree Communications for $15.5 million in 1988;[7] the limited partnership restructured, giving GE Capital control, three years later.[8] That transaction amounted to receivership; a year later, KEYI was sold to San Antonio businessman Van Archer, doing business as Mercury Broadcasting, for $3 million.[9]

Oldies 103

KEYI moved to oldies as "Oldies 103" in 1994 in the wake of Austin's oldies station, KFGI-FM, flipping to hot adult contemporary.[10] Two years later, Clear Channel Communications bought KEYI and KFON AM for $3.1 million.[11] Clear Channel attempted to sell KEYI and 44 other stations, in divestiture action spurred by its merger with AMFM, to Hispanic Broadcasting Corporation in a 2000 deal that was scuttled when the United States Department of Justice denied it over equity ties between Clear Channel and HBC; Clear Channel then sold KEYI to Secret Communications.[12] Secret owned KEYI less than a year before selling it in 2001 to LBJS Broadcasting Company, a partnership of the LBJ Company and Sinclair Telecable (no relation to Sinclair Broadcast Group).[13] LBJ would exit radio after six decades by selling its majority interest in the partnership to Emmis Communications in 2004, a $105 million purchase.[14] The new partnership was named Emmis Austin Radio Broadcasting Co., LP.

Bob FM

In September 2004, KEYI-FM flipped to adult hits as "Bob FM", changing its call letters to KBPA on September 8.

Sinclair Telecable acquired Emmis's stake in its Austin radio stations in June 2019 for $39.3 million.[15] The FCC approved the transaction, requiring a waiver since it maintained a grandfathered cluster not permissible under current radio ownership rules.[16]

In early 2019, Emmis filed with the Federal Communications Commission to relocate the KBPA transmitter site and city of license to Austin proper and decrease power slightly. The move is part of a multi-station allocation shuffle being led by the Educational Media Foundation and will allow EMF to add a signal serving the core of San Antonio on 103.7 MHz; the FCC approved the changes in January 2020.[17][18]

HD Radio

In 2009, KBPA brought back KXMG's former Dance Top 40 format and placed it on its HD2 channel, calling it "Mega 103-5 HD-2". In 2010 the format returned to the terrestrial broadcasting airwaves as a simulcast, broadcasting on translator K288FJ at 105.5 FM in Bastrop, Texas. In November 2010 the HD2 signal began simulcasting over the air on 102.7 (K274AX), which is licensed to Austin and can be heard within the central business area. That simulcast ended on December 13, 2010 at 12:06 am, with the translator going silent. At around 9 am that day K274AX switched to a simulcast of adult album alternative-formatted KGSR 93.3 FM Cedar Park, Texas.

gollark: I don't disagree that in practice you're probably fine using popular cryptographic stuff, I just don't like people wrongly saying that things are "mathematically proven".
gollark: Fascinating.
gollark: Obviously nobody has publicly disclosed how to break them (except with quantum computers), but that doesn't mean it's not possible, and the NSA hires a lot of mathematicians.
gollark: There aren't actually any mathematical proofs that breaking RSA and AES and whatever actually requires a really large amount of operations.
gollark: C does not have compile-time detection of such mistakes, so that's tricky.

References

  1. http://radio-locator.com/cgi-bin/patg?id=KBPA-FM
  2. "FM Station Will Open June 1st". Austin American. May 14, 1971. p. 20. Retrieved February 8, 2020.
  3. "New FM Station Hits Air in March". Austin Statesman. February 4, 1971. p. B-23. Retrieved February 8, 2020.
  4. "Stations alter formats". Austin American-Statesman. July 1, 1976. p. C14. Retrieved February 7, 2020.
  5. FCC History Cards for KBPA
  6. "Station renamed". Austin American-Statesman. December 22, 1981. p. B2. Retrieved February 8, 2020.
  7. "Transactions" (PDF). Radio & Records. February 26, 1988. p. 10. Retrieved February 8, 2020.
  8. "Transactions" (PDF). Radio & Records. September 20, 1991. p. 10. Retrieved February 8, 2020.
  9. Herndon, John (January 30, 1992). "KEYI sale shows radio downscaling". Austin American-Statesman. p. 15. Retrieved February 8, 2020.
  10. Herndon, John (November 3, 1994). "Ready for 'oldies' from '83? Neither am I". Austin American-Statesman. p. 28. Retrieved February 8, 2020.
  11. "Transactions" (PDF). Radio & Records. May 24, 1996. p. 8. Retrieved February 8, 2020.
  12. Smith, Dale (July 13, 2000). "¿Qué pasa at KEYI? Nada, after a glitch kills its Latin conversion". Austin American-Statesman. p. 14. Retrieved February 8, 2020.
  13. "Oldies 103 gets new owner". Austin American-Statesman. March 23, 2001. p. D1. Retrieved February 8, 2020.
  14. Davis Hudson, Eileen (May 10, 2004). "Market Profile: Austin, Texas" (PDF). Mediaweek. pp. 16–20. Retrieved February 8, 2020.
  15. "Emmis Communications sells its stake in 8 Austin radio stations for $39.3 million". Austin American-Statesman. June 10, 2019. Retrieved February 8, 2020.
  16. Ashworth, Susan (October 7, 2019). "Emmis Succeeds in Efforts to Transfer Austin Stations to STI Telecable". Radio World. Retrieved February 8, 2020.
  17. Venta, Lance (January 26, 2020). "FCC Report 1/26: Three Way Texas Allocation Change Approved". RadioInsight. Retrieved February 7, 2020.
  18. Jacobson, Adam (January 16, 2020). "EMF Frequency Change Wins Signal Alamo City Gain". RBR. Retrieved February 2, 2020.

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