KOOO

KOOO
City La Vista, Nebraska
Broadcast area Lincoln/Omaha, Nebraska
Branding 101.9 The Keg
Slogan Variety That Rocks!
Frequency 101.9 MHz
First air date 1958-06-22 (as KFMQ at 95.3)
Format Rock hits
ERP 100,000 watts
HAAT 365 meters (1,198 ft)
Class C
Facility ID 35067
Transmitter coordinates 41°03′1.00″N 96°11′33.00″W / 41.0502778°N 96.1925000°W / 41.0502778; -96.1925000
Former callsigns KFMQ (1958-1992)
KYNN (1992-1994)
KGDE (1994-1998)
KZFX (1998-2002)
KLTQ (2002-2007)
Former frequencies 95.3 MHz (1958-1973)
Owner NRG Media
(NRG License Sub, LLC)
Sister stations KMMQ, KOIL, KOPW, KOZN, KQKQ, KZOT
Webcast Listen Live
Website 1019thekeg.com

KOOO (101.9 FM, "101.9 The Keg") is a radio station broadcasting a rock hits music format.[1] Licensed to La Vista, Nebraska, United States, the station serves the Lincoln and Omaha areas. The station is currently owned by NRG Media, LLC.[2] Its studios are located at Dodge Street and 50th Avenue in Midtown Omaha, and its transmitter site is located southwest of Springfield, Nebraska.

History

The station was assigned the call letters KFMQ-FM beginning in 1958, and was located on 95.3 FM. In 1973, KFMQ moved to 101.9 FM. The station was initially licensed to Lincoln.

Beginning in 1973, 101.9 was known as "Q102, Nebraska's Rock & Roll Legend", carrying an Album Rock format. The format lasted until October 3, 1992, when, without warning, the format was dropped and flipped to "Omaha's Young Country, 101.9 KYNN". While the "Hit Kicker" began to gnaw its way up the ratings chart, the station failed to make money, with Midwest Communications selling the station to Mitchell Broadcasting. On February 21, 1995, after stunting with an automated countdown, KYNN became Nebraska's first alternative rock station as "101.9/107.7 The Edge", with a translator on K299AK 107.7 FM to better cover Omaha (at the time, the station's transmitter was located southeast of Eagle, Nebraska; the transmitter would be moved to its current location in late 2001, while K299AK would later simulcast KBLR's then-urban contemporary format until 2007, when that format moved to KCTY and the translator was discontinued due to a new sign-on from Malvern, Iowa), with new call letters KGDE.[3] Ironically, the move from Rock to Alternative would have made sense prior to the attempted country format, but the format didn't exist commercially yet. On April 10, 1998, at 3 p.m., "The Edge" signed off and began stunting by playing It's the End of the World as We Know It (And I Feel Fine) by R.E.M on a loop until 8 p.m. that evening, then went into a simulcast of Sweet 98, before flipping to classic hits as "101.9 The Fox" on the 13th at 5:30 AM, with new call letters KZFX adopted on April 24. "The Fox" ended on February 1, 2002, as 101.9 began stunting with the song "Winter Wonderland" on a loop until flipping to AC as "Lite Rock 101.9" on the 4th at 9 a.m., with new call letters KLTQ to go along with the change. The format lasted until 3 p.m. on December 26, 2007, when 101.9 flipped to Adult Hits as "101.9 The Big O", and adopted its current call letters two days later.

On August 11, 2014, 101.9's website was replaced by a picture of a genie's lamp, with the words, "WHAT'S YOUR WISH?". At the same time, KOOO removed all imaging on the former "Big O." The new format, according to website registration, was to be country as 101.9 The Hog.[4] These rumors were confirmed, as 101.9 began running liners the following day saying that the following day at 4 PM, "your wish will come true". 1019thehog.com also ran a countdown clock to the same time, saying the similar "Your Wish Comes True [*] days [*] hours [*] minutes [*] seconds August 13, 2014". However, in a similar way as WLTQ in Milwaukee did so in 2004, KOOO instead flipped to 80s-based Classic rock as 101.9 The Keg at the promised time. The last song on "The Big O" was Goodbye by Night Ranger, while the first song on "The Keg" was "Kickstart My Heart" by Mötley Crüe.[5] The station has since evolved towards a more broad-based rock hits direction (similar to its previous adult hits format) with the addition of 80s pop and 90s and early 2000s rock tracks.

History of KOOO call letters

The KOOO call letters were previously assigned to a Dallas, Texas station (which was also known as KEWS-FM for a time). Before that, KOOO was a country music station in Omaha, simulcasting on 1420 AM and 104.5 FM.

References

  1. "KOOO Facility Record". United States Federal Communications Commission, audio division.
  2. "Station Information Profile". Arbitron. Archived from the original on 2010-03-01.
  3. http://www.americanradiohistory.com/Archive-RandR/1990s/1995/RR-1995-02-24.pdf
  4. Big O Departing Omaha
  5. KOOO Becomes The Keg
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