KRQB

KRQB (96.1 MHz) is one of four Southern California FM radio stations branded as "Que Buena" and which all play Regional Mexican music. Its owner is Estrella Media. KRQB shares the same weekday morning show as the three Los Angeles-area Que Buena stations, but has local DJs the rest of the day. KRQB is licensed to San Jacinto, California, and serves the Riverside-San Bernardino radio market.

KRQB
CitySan Jacinto, California
Broadcast areaRiverside-San Bernardino, California
Frequency96.1 (MHz)
Branding"La Que Buena 96.1"
Programming
FormatRegional Mexican
Ownership
OwnerEstrella Media
(LBI Radio License LLC)
Sister stationsKBUA, KBUE, KEBN, KVNR, KWIZ
Also part of the Liberman Cluster: TV Station KRCA
History
First air date1990 (1990)
Call sign meaningK Riverside Que Buena
Technical information
Facility ID25809
ClassA
ERP1,400 watts
HAAT209 meters (686 ft)
Transmitter coordinates34.037°N 116.969°W / 34.037; -116.969
Links
WebcastListen Live
WebsiteQueBuena961.com

KRQB has an effective radiated power (ERP) of 1,400 watts, as a Class A station. Its transmitter is off Pisgah Peak-Oak Glen Road in Yucaipa.[1]

History

In 1990, the station signed on as KWRP.[2] It programmed an adult standards music format and was owned by the H.S.C. Radio Corporation. On January 22, 2003, the station made a switch, airing Regional Mexican music under the branding of "Fiesta Mexicana." It later re-branded to "Ranchera 96.1" on February 25, 2003.

Over the next couple of years, the station evolved into hurban music, changing its call sign to KWIE, known as "Wild 96.1." The playlist consisted of Hip-Hop/R&B and Reggaeton, and used the slogan Hip-Hop y más. In late 2006 KWIE changed to a Rhythmic Contemporary format. It kept the Hip-Hop and R&B music, but eliminated Reggaeton. As a result, the slogan changed from "Hip-hop y más" to "#1 for Hip-Hop." With the rhythmic contemporary format, KWIE competed with 99.1 KGGI, a rhythmic station also heard around the Inland Empire.

On July 19, 2007, the station was sold to Liberman Broadcasting Inc. for $25 million. When the deal closed, the KWIE call letters moved to 93.5 FM in Ontario, California (formerly under the call sign KDAI). That station simulcasts 93.5 KDAY in Redondo Beach. Liberman switched 96.1 to the call letters KRQB, representing Riverside Que Buena.

On August 1, 2007, KRQB launched the "Que Buena" Regional Mexican format in the Inland Empire. KRQB joined the trimulcast of the three Los Angeles-area stations (KEBN Garden Grove, KBUE Long Beach, and KBUA San Fernando) in broadcasting Don Cheto's popular morning show. The midday, PM drive, evening and weekend dayparts have a team of local, Inland Empire DJs, different than those heard on the LA trombo.

gollark: Xylophone Yttrium Zoo, India.
gollark: Either by starting at the *maximum* length for everything and seeing where it can be shifted to be smaller, or starting at a more optimistic one and trying to make it actually work
gollark: They have to run a bunch of optimization passes over it.
gollark: This is actually a thing I read about on the fasm forum or something.
gollark: Is it capable of functional list operations too?!

References

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