WLYK

WLYK (102.7 FM) is a radio station licensed to Cape Vincent, New York. Owned by Border International Broadcasting and operated by Rogers Radio, a division of Canadian broadcaster Rogers Media, it broadcasts a contemporary hit radio format branded as Kiss 102.7. Although officially licensed to a community in the United States, the station primarily targets the larger neighboring Canadian market of Kingston, Ontario (where Rogers owns CKXC-FM and CIKR-FM), and is a member of Nielsen BDS' Canadian Border Stations Airplay panel in Watertown.

WLYK
CityCape Vincent, New York
Broadcast areaKingston, Ontario
Frequency102.7 MHz
BrandingKiss 102.7
SloganKingston's #1 for Hit Music
Programming
FormatCHR/Top 40
Ownership
OwnerBorder International Broadcasting, Inc.
OperatorRogers Media
Sister stationsCKXC-FM, CIKR-FM
History
First air dateJanuary 23, 1989 (as WKGG)
Former call signsWKGG (1989-1997)
WBDR (1997-2006)
WXKK (8/2006-9/2006)
WBDR (9/2006-2008)
Call sign meaningSounds like lake (former branding)
Technical information
Facility ID8567
ClassA
ERP6,000 watts
HAAT100 meters
Transmitter coordinates44°06′58″N 76°20′21″W
Links
WebcastListen Live
WebsiteKiss 102.7

History

WLYK signed on January 23, 1989, as WKGG, a repeater for WTOJ in Watertown, but with a Kingston focus. In late 1993, the station went silent. In 1997, Garry MC Colman returned the station to air with a CHR format as "The Border". In late 1997, 102.7 started simulcasting on 106.7 FM to better serve Watertown. After the split of the "Border" simulcast in August 2006, it flipped to country music as "KIX-FM" after Kingston station CFMK-FM changed formats from country to adult hits, with 106.7 continuing the "Border" format.

In December 2007, WBDR began stunting with all-Christmas music. This lasted until January 2, 2008, when the station switched to adult standards. The "Kix" country music format moved to CKXC-FM at the same time. On February 26, 2008, WBDR changed their call letters to WLYK.[1]

In September 2012, WLYK flipped to adult contemporary, maintaining its prior branding as The Lake.[2] On September 12, 2013, WLYK flipped to a contemporary hit radio format branded as Kiss 102.7, using the standard Kiss branding used by most of Rogers' CHR outlets.[3]

The station also has a rebroadcaster at 103.3, but it is unknown when it was launched.

Ownership and management

Ownership of Border International Broadcasting is currently divided between four shareholders: U.S. citizens John Clancy and David Mance (34% each), Rogers Broadcasting (20%), and Craig Harris (12%).[4] Harris also resides in the U.S. but currently lists his citizenship as Canadian.[4][nb 1]

In 2004, 20% of Border International Broadcasting was acquired by a Kingston-based numbered company.[5] The same company also secured a local marketing agreement to operate the station, which led to WLYK sharing operations with Kingston stations CIKR-FM and (later) CKXC-FM.[5] In late November 2008, Rogers Broadcasting announced it would acquire the remainder of K-Rock 105.7 Inc., owners of CIKR and CKXC, of which it already owned 25%, pending CRTC approval;[6] the transaction was completed the following May. Following the transaction, WLYK's website was not updated to follow the standard Rogers radio station template and referred to its operator as simply "The Radio Group"; however it did continue to feature the logos of CIKR and CKXC, and continued to list the same studio address as the Rogers stations.

Rogers ultimately also acquired the Kingston company's interest in the station in February 2011.[4] WLYK's website has since been updated to indicate Rogers's current management of the station.

Footnotes

  1. This may have been a typo as Harris had indicated U.S. citizenship on past ownership reports.[5]
gollark: There *are* standards.
gollark: There's Pale Moon, too, but that's kind of extremely niche.
gollark: <@656734749947068427> What are you doing to make Firefox randomly break? What OS?
gollark: LIES!
gollark: Redox is neat too, though.

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.