KJXJ

KJXJ
City of license Franklin, Texas
Broadcast area College Station area
Branding ESPN Aggieland
Frequency 103.9 MHz
First air date 1982-06-01 (as KCRM)
Format Sports
ERP 8,700 watts
HAAT 167.5 meters
Class C3
Facility ID 72718
Transmitter coordinates 30°53′5″N 96°32′29″W / 30.88472°N 96.54139°W / 30.88472; -96.54139Coordinates: 30°53′5″N 96°32′29″W / 30.88472°N 96.54139°W / 30.88472; -96.54139
Former callsigns KCRM (1982-1993)
KHLR (1993-2001)
KXCS (2001-2007)
Affiliations ESPN Radio
Owner Brazos Valley Communications, Ltd.
Webcast Listen Live
Website espnaggieland1039.com

KJXJ (103.9 FM) is a sports radio station owned by Brazos Valley Communications, Ltd.[1] licensed to Franklin, Texas with studios in Bryan, Texas.

Personalities

Kotter-Weekdays 6am-10am

Dee-Weekdays 2pm-7pm

History

The station first existed as KCRM from 1982-06-01 to 1993-12-27, before changing its call sign to KHLR. On 2001-04-09, the station call sign became KXCS-FM, which it kept until receiving its existing call sign of KJXJ on 2007-03-29.[2]

KXCS-FM

KXCS used the slogans "103.9 XCS, Everything That Rocks" and "Aggieland's New Rock Alternative, 103.9 The X", and once carried the Lex and Terry and Loveline programs.

Transition to KJXJ

On the evening of 2007 March 19, DJs announced that the station was changing from the Rock/Alternative Rock format. The last DJs that night were Kira McKinney (on-air moniker: "The Queen of Rock") to 10 PM, and Dex Peck from 10 PM-midnight. The last songs under the old format: "I Ran (So Far Away)" by A Flock of Seagulls; "Snakes on a Plane (Bring It)" by Cobra Starship; "Joker and the Thief" by Wolfmother; "Teenage Dirtbag" by Wheatus; and "Another One Bites the Dust" by Queen, dedicated by Dex to a list of staffers.

The transition day of March 20th was a confusing and motley collection of music not conforming to a single genre. Across the course of the day, listeners heard a bizarre mixture of Rap, Classic Rock, Show Tunes, TV Theme Songs, Reggae, Easy Listening, and others. Shortly after midnight, the audio feed abruptly cut off in the middle of a long string of Irish Drinking Songs, and suddenly new programming came over the air, identifying the broadcast as a Jack FM station. On 2007 April 3, this station began identifying itself as KJXJ-FM.

Return to Rock

logo used under previous format

On September 20, 2010, KJXJ abandoned the Jack format and became "Rock 103.9."[3]

ESPN Aggieland

On March 2, 2015 KJXJ changed their format from rock to sports, branded as "ESPN Aggieland".[4]

References

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Sunday, February 14, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.