KNWS-FM

KNWS-FM, also known as Life 101.9, is a radio station in Waterloo, Iowa, United States, that is owned and operated by University of Northwestern - St Paul in Roseville, Minnesota, and supported by donations from the local community.

KNWS-FM
CityWaterloo, Iowa
Broadcast areaWaterloo/Cedar Rapids/Iowa City/Dubuque
Frequency101.9 MHz FM
BrandingLife 101.9
Programming
FormatContemporary Christian music
AffiliationsNorthwestern Media
Ownership
OwnerUniversity of Northwestern - St Paul
Sister stationsKNWS
History
First air date1965
Call sign meaningK-NorthWeStern College
Technical information
ClassC
ERP100,000 watts
HAAT479 meters (1,571 feet)
Links
Websitehttp://www.life1019.com/

Life 101.9 broadcasts Contemporary Christian music. Its signal covers Waterloo, Cedar Rapids, Iowa City and surrounding areas in eastern Iowa. A live stream is available on the Life 101.9 website, mobile app and on Amazon smart speakers. The station also broadcasts its programming on translator stations K245AZ, serving Dubuque at 96.9FM; and, K242BX, serving Marshalltown at 96.3 FM.

Adam Hannan and Kim Bindel host the Morning Show from 6-10am weekdays. Other station personalities include Jenn Pooler, Rick Hall and Logan Roush.

The radio station broadcasts commercial-free contemporary Christian music 24 hours a day.

Life 101.9 is active in the community and encourages listeners to help other non-profit organizations in Eastern Iowa on a regular basis.

Life 101.9's sister station, Faith Radio, broadcasts a Christian talk and teaching format.

Translators

Broadcast translators of KNWS-FM
Call signFrequency
(MHz)
City of licenseERP
(W)
ClassFCC info
K245AZ96.9Dubuque, Iowa170DFCC
K232EK96.3Marshalltown, Iowa250DFCC
K261DH100.1[note 1]Iowa City, Iowa47DFCC
  1. Translator owned by the Educational Media Foundation.
gollark: But did you *not* read "everyone listens to me" and something about everyone respecting them?
gollark: That's an orthogonal issue, mostly.
gollark: I like "respect" as "recognizing people as fellow humans who you should maintain some basic standard of niceness with". And "respect" as "admiring people based on achievements". And "respect" as "acknowledge people's opinions on things reasonably" and such. I do *not* like "respect" as "subservience"/"obedience" - the "respect for authority" sense. These are quite hard to define nicely and just get lumped into one overloaded word.
gollark: > I don't really like the term of "respect", because people use it to mean so many different often mutually exclusive things based on convenience then equivocate them in weird ways;
gollark: See, I consider this somewhat, well, worrying, given what I said about "respect" for authority figures being pretty close to "subservience" a lot.


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