WKZX-FM

WKZX-FM (93.5 FM is a radio station broadcasting a Regional Mexican format. Licensed to Lenoir City, Tennessee, it serves the Knoxville, Tennessee area.

WKZX-FM
CityLenoir City, Tennessee
Broadcast areaKnoxville, Tennessee
Frequency93.5 MHz
BrandingLa Líder
SloganMúsica en tu Idioma (Music in Your Language)
Programming
FormatRegional Mexican
Ownership
OwnerBP Broadcasters LLC
History
First air dateSeptember 19, 1967
Former call signsWLIL-FM (1967–2000)
Technical information
Facility ID73210
ClassA
ERP2,000 watts
HAAT176 meters
Transmitter coordinates35°42′38.00″N 84°10′46.00″W
Links
Websitewww.laliderwkzx.com

History

Arthur Wilkerson, owner of WLIL (730 AM), applied for an FM frequency on June 16, 1967. The Federal Communications Commission granted the construction permit on September 1 of that year,[1] and WLIL-FM signed on at 93.5 on September 19, partially simulcasting the AM frequency.[2] It was the second attempt at FM radio from WLIL; Wilkerson had shut down the first, which operated at 100.3—later 100.5—MHz from 1952 to 1955, because he felt if WSM couldn't make a go of it in Nashville, he could not in Lenoir City.[3]

In addition to his radio stations, Wilkerson owned a lumber mill and built custom homes. He served as president of the Tennessee Association of Broadcasters. Wilkerson was also a pilot and restaurant owner.

Wilkerson died in 1998. Two years later, B.P. Broadcasters purchased WLIL-AM-FM, which at the time ran country music formats, for $1 million.[4] B.P. built a new FM tower in the Glendale community near the Loudon-Blount county line.[3] The call letters of the FM station were changed to WKZX-FM on September 20, 2000, and the station changed formats to adult contemporary.

In 2004, WKZX-FM flipped to Regional Mexican.

gollark: I mean, they sort of indirectly are, and at least evolved vaguely for that.
gollark: Fears are not there to protect you, fears are mostly just pretty stupid?
gollark: <@160279332454006795> cease C++ utilisation.
gollark: YET.
gollark: I think apio is Latin derived and pyro/cryo Greek.

References

  1. FCC History Cards for WKZX-FM
  2. "WLIL-FM" (PDF). Broadcasting Yearbook. 1969. p. B-159 (323). Retrieved March 9, 2020.
  3. "WLIL Station History". WLIL. Retrieved March 9, 2020.
  4. "Changing Hands" (PDF). Broadcasting & Cable. August 28, 2000. p. 72. Retrieved March 9, 2020.


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