KQKQ-FM

KQKQ-FM
City Council Bluffs, Iowa
Broadcast area Omaha-Council Bluffs
Branding Sweet 98.5
Slogan Omaha's Sweetest Variety
Frequency 98.5 MHz
First air date 1969
Format Hot AC
ERP 100,000 watts
HAAT 336 meters
Class C
Facility ID 43238
Transmitter coordinates 41°18′25.00″N 96°1′37.00″W / 41.3069444°N 96.0269444°W / 41.3069444; -96.0269444
Owner NRG Media
(NRG License Sub, LLC)
Sister stations KMMQ, KOIL, KOOO, KOPW, KOZN, KZOT
Webcast Listen Live
Website q985fm.com

KQKQ-FM (98.5 FM) is a radio station broadcasting a hot adult contemporary format. Licensed to Council Bluffs, Iowa, United States, the station serves the Omaha metropolitan area. The station is currently owned by NRG Media.[1] Its studios are located at Dodge Street and 50th Avenue in Midtown Omaha, and its transmitter site is located in North Central Omaha at the Omaha master antenna farm on North 72nd Avenue and Crown Point.

History

KQKQ signed on in 1969 with a progressive rock format as "KQ98."

From September 1980 to March 2004, KQKQ was a Top 40/CHR station known as Sweet 98 FM, and was the Omaha market's first personality driven FM music station, putting new pressure on market leader KGOR's automated CHR/MOR operation.

Sweet 98 FM signed on the air in September 1980 with Mark Evans and Dick Warner together, they called themselves "The Breakfast Flakes." The remainder of the lineup included Gregory "Greg Koogler" MacArthur in the middays, Bruce "Doc Winston" Soderholm in the afternoons, Craig "Jay Taylor" Wendel in the evenings, and "Brooklyn Dave" holding down overnights. Brooklyn Dave only lasted a few months before being replaced by Ricky Jeffrey.

Operating on a shoestring budget in its early days, the station made its name through a variety of promotions and gimmicks under the guidance of General Manager and DJ William "Will" Honeylamb a.k.a. Billy Cunningham and Mark Evans who doubled as Sweet 98 FM's 1st program director. In September 1980, listeners were offered the opportunity to win $50,000 for answering their phones with the now iconic but legendary phrase, "I Listen to the new sound of Sweet 98 FM!"

At approximately the same time, the station opened its "Supermouth" contest, whereby local teens competed for a year-long stint as a Sweet 98 evening jock, a $1,000-a-month salary, a $1,000 wardrobe, and use of a new Pontiac Firebird, emblazoned with station logos and a giant Supermouth emblem on the hood. According to the station, it received over 5,000 applications, from which it auditioned over 300 in 30-second over-the-phone song intros. After narrowing the field to 20 semi-finalists who were given 15 minutes of live airtime apiece, 10 finalists received 30-minute auditions (again live). On February 14, 1981, after five hours of on-air auditions, Bill Cunningham proclaimed Alan Bone, an 18-year-old UNL student, the station's first Supermouth. In all, the station crowned seven Supermouths, the most successful of whom was Scotty "Hot Scott" O'Hanlon, who eventually dominated evenings for most of the late 80s.

Another 1981 promotion involved the station asking listeners to affix Sweet 98 FM's "stickificates" to their bumpers for a chance to win $98,000. After stringing the promotion out over several months by sending jocks out in a "Roving (Buick) Riviera" to pull stickificate-bearing cars over and give out small cash prizes and gift certificates, the station told listeners to bring their stickificates (and cars) to the Crossroads Mall parking lot at 72nd and Dodge one early June evening. The result was a colossal traffic jam, lots of chaos, and a cascade of publicity for the station proving to Billy, Mark, and all of the Sweet jocks that there is no such thing as bad publicity.

In 1982, the station initiated on-air bingo games as a means of increasing listenership, a promotional idea that dragged on for several ratings periods, in one form or another. "Big Guy" a squeaky voiced character created by Mark. Big Guy was the mascot of Sweet 98 FM's bingo promotions. In the fall of 1982 listeners were tormented for an entire afternoon when Big Guy ostensibly took over the control room and played the Toni Basil song "Mickey" over and over, while an exasperated Billy pounded on the studio door imploring Big Guy to give him back control of the station.

A later bingo promotion culminated in what was billed as the "world's largest bingo game", wherein roughly 10,000 listeners crowded into Omaha's Civic Auditorium for a long evening of shtick and bingo for thousands in cash and prizes. One memorable moment came when a seemingly meek elderly woman claimed to have a bingo and made her way, gingerly to the stage only to be told that she did not after all have the matching numbers. Upon receiving this news the formerly adorable grandmother unleashed a profanity laced tirade on Billy and the Sweet jocks, much to the delight of the crowd.

The Sweet 98 FM studios were originally located in a dilapidated building at 3600 Broadway in Council Bluffs. Formerly an apartment building next to what was rumored to have once been a brothel, the Council Bluffs digs were condemned on several occasions in the early 1980s and razed shortly after the move to downtown Omaha in 1987. So bad was the Council Bluffs facility that when a thunderstorm knocked the power out in 1982 the station operated off the generator of a run-down RV parked in the mud-and-gravel lot behind the building.

The downtown Omaha studios were much more plush and prominently located in the famed Old Market at 10th and Farnam. The window front studios featured a hydraulic lift which the jocks could raise and lower with a foot pedal to greet revelers who frequently passed by the while celebrating birthdays, weddings, and graduations and making song dedications.

A spaceman jumpsuit hung on the wall of the studio. It was ostensibly for the Sweet jocks to wear even though none of the Sweet jocks will admit to ever wearing it.

In 1992 after 12 years of crazy morning fun in Omaha. "The Breakfast Flakes" was officially off the air. Paving the way for a brand spanking new kind of a morning show for the '90's, it was called "Rockett in the Morning", starring G. Rockett Phillips, with Tommy Zenner, and Elizabeth "Liz" Adams. The show ran for 3 and 1/2 years and after Johnny Danger's morning show didn't work, G. Rockett got asked to come back for another year. And then, "Rockett in the Morning" was replaced again with "The Sweet 98 Morning Zoo" with Darren & Wayne and then later by Pat & JT.

Sweet 98 began hosting a big concert event in the late 90s known as "Sweetstock" which featured big named Top 40 bands at the time including NSync. The last Sweetstock event was held in 2002.

After dropping significantly in the ratings with KQCH (94.1 FM) taking over as the leading Top 40 station in Omaha during the early 2000s, "Sweet 98 FM" signed off at 3 p.m. on March 11, 2004, and began stunting with a robotic countdown accompanied by "On the Run" by Pink Floyd. The countdown ended at 3 p.m. the following day, when it flipped to Modern AC as "Q98Five, Modern Hit Music." The first song on "Q" was "How You Remind Me" by Nickelback.[2] The new format puts less emphasis on personalities and focuses more on music news and upcoming concerts in the Omaha area. While playing some of the same music that was featured in the CHR format, most hip hop, rap, teen pop and dance songs have been removed from the playlist for songs tailored more to an older adult listening audience. The format has since evolved to a more broad-based Hot AC.

On May 26, 2017, at 8:25 a.m., KQKQ rebranded back to the "Sweet 98.5" moniker, while retaining the Hot AC format and current airstaff.[3]

References

  1. "KQKQ-FM Facility Record". United States Federal Communications Commission, audio division.
  2. KQKQ Relaunches as Q98Five
  3. KQKQ is Sweet Once Again Radioinsight - May 26, 2017
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