KIOC

KIOC is a mainstream rock formatted radio station in Beaumont, Texas. It serves the entire Golden Triangle region and is owned by iHeartMedia, Inc.. Its studios are located southeast of the I-10/US 69 interchange in Beaumont, and its transmitter is located in Vidor, Texas.

KIOC
CityOrange, Texas
Broadcast areaBeaumont/Port Arthur/Orange
Golden Triangle
BrandingBig Dog 106
SloganThe Only Station That Rocks Beaumont
Frequency106.1 MHz
First air dateJune 23, 1978
FormatMainstream rock
Language(s)English
ERP100,000 watts
HAAT326 meters (1,070 ft)
ClassC0
Facility ID33060
Call sign meaningIOC resembles 106
AffiliationsPremium Choice
iHeartRadio
OwneriHeartMedia, Inc.
(Capstar TX LLC)
Sister stationsKCOL-FM, KKMY, KYKR, KLVI
WebcastListen Live
Websitebigdog106.iheart.com

History

The Birth of "K106"

KIOC was founded by Ken Stevens. The facility was built in 1977 and signed on over the air June 23, 1978 as "K106". Programming was the Drake Chenault CHR / Top40 format. Its one and only antenna site has been on the side of the Channel 4 (KJAC, now KBTV) tower in Vidor, Texas, making 106.1 the highest FM (~1000 ft) in the immediate Golden Triangle (not counting the rimshots to the west trying to program for the Houston market).

During the 1980s, KIOC was locked in a fierce battle with crosstown Top 40 KZZB ("B95").

On November 26, 1991, B95 went silent after its new owner bankrupted it. Gulf Star (owned by Steven Hicks of the Hicks Broadcast family from Beaumont) bought the silent 95.1 and eventually took on KYKR-FM's country music format after GulfStar sold the former 93.3, KYKR's home for decades to Tichenor Broadcasting who wanted to use it as a Houston station, leaving K106 as Southeast Texas' CHR standard bearer.

K106 Becomes the Golden Triangle's "Big Dog"

In 1993, K106 moved in a rock-based top 40 direction, using the slogan "all rock, no rap." After briefly taking on an alternative format and returning to Top 40 as "Hot 106" in the mid-90s, KIOC became "Big Dog 106" in 1997.

Former DJ's on the station included Mark Landis & The Nut Hut (mornings), Pam (Hoose) Pace (mid-days), Jack "Dangerous" Daniels (afternoons), Steven Wild "The Love Child" (evenings), Angel Sonnier (overnights), Skid Marxx (Shon Hodgkinson, promotions director), Michelle (Blake) Hinch, Derek Hayes, Slade Ham, Chris Chambers (Ken Rojas), Cort Crusher (Cort Kennedy), Lisa Daniels, Kurt (Johnson) Kruzer, Tad Vincent (Tad Licatino), Patrick Sanders and Jay Kelly.

In 2009, KIOC adopted Clear Channel's Premium Choice Active rock format, becoming musically identical outside of morning drive to several of its rock and alternative sister stations.

Ironically, the 95.1 and 106.1 frequencies, which were once bitter rivals, are now co-owned.

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