KMAJ-FM

KMAJ-FM
City of license Carbondale, Kansas
Broadcast area Topeka metro
Branding Majic 107.7
Slogan Today's Hits, Yesterday's Favorites
Frequency 107.7 MHz
First air date 1970 (as KSWT-FM)
Format Adult Contemporary
ERP 53,000 watts
HAAT 235.4 meters
Class C1
Facility ID 42012
Transmitter coordinates 38°57′15″N 95°54′43″W / 38.95417°N 95.91194°W / 38.95417; -95.91194Coordinates: 38°57′15″N 95°54′43″W / 38.95417°N 95.91194°W / 38.95417; -95.91194
Callsign meaning MAJic (Magic) branding
Former callsigns KSWT-FM (1970-1981)
Owner Cumulus Media
(Cumulus Licensing LLC)
Sister stations KDVV, KMAJ, KTOP-FM, KTOP, KWIC
Webcast Listen Live
Website kmaj.com

KMAJ-FM, branded as Majic 107.7, is a radio station serving Topeka, Kansas and vicinity with an adult contemporary format. It operates on FM frequency 107.7 MHz and is under ownership of Cumulus Media.

History

1970-1981: KSWT-FM - K-Sweet "Easy Listening"

KSWT signed on in 1970 with easy listening.[1]

1981-1995: KMAJ-FM - Magic 108

KMAJ was something of a Top 40 station, but before Hot AC was really a designated format. As the listeners grew older, KMAJ grew older with them.[1]

1995-present: KMAJ-FM - Majic 107.7

For a while, KMAJ was really a soft AC station. They picked up syndicated "Radio Delilah" for nights. It has since become a little more upbeat. The playlist is still quite wide. They're now positioned as "best of the 70s/80s/90s/today." Cumulus bought the station in the late 1990s. Cumulus tried to move the tower to McLouth, to add Kansas City coverage (and perhaps sell the station at a very high price). But the FCC shot that down, and KMAJ lost their tower lease. Cumulus had the green light to move the station's city of license to Shawnee, and join the Kansas City market, but declined. KMAJ-FM changed its city of license to Carbondale on June 25, 2009. Despite layoffs of longtime personalities, KMAJ remains at or near the top of the ratings in 2011.[1]

Starting the night of Thanksgiving Day, of each year, KMAJ plays Christmas music, 24/7, until December 26. In 2013, it flipped earlier, starting it on the evening of the 15th, as the first station in Kansas to air the music during the holidays.[2]

See also

References

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Sunday, September 13, 2015. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.