KTXX-FM

KTXX-FM (104.9 MHz, "The Horn") is a commercial FM radio station licensed to Bee Cave, Texas and serving the Greater Austin radio market. The station broadcasts a sports radio format and is owned by Genuine Austin Radio. KTXX-FM's transmitter is located on Route 71 on the west side of Austin.[1] The station has studios along Loop 360 in Southwest Austin.

KTXX-FM
CityBee Cave, Texas
Broadcast areaAustin-Round Rock metropolitan area
Branding104.9 The Horn
Frequency104.9 MHz (HD Radio)
Translator(s)98.5 K253AN (Sunset Valley, relays HD2)
105.3 K287FG (Austin, relays HD4)
106.5 K293BF (Comanche Trail, relays HD3)
First air date1984 (as KFFQ Llano, Texas)
FormatFM/HD1: Sports
HD2: Regional Mexican "Fiesta 98.5"
HD3: Spanish Christian "Keilah Radio"
HD4: Classic Hits "105.3 The Bat"
ERP3,200 watts
HAAT136.2 meters (447 ft)
ClassA
Facility ID40762
Transmitter coordinates30°14′56.80″N 97°54′5.20″W
Former call signsKFFQ (1984-1985)
KLKM (1985-1995)
KBAE (1995-2000)
KXXS (2000-2007)
KXBT (2007-2009)
KHHL (10/2009-11/2009)
AffiliationsSB Nation Radio
OwnerGenuine Austin Radio, L.P.
Sister stationsKTAE, KOKE-FM
WebcastListen Live
Listen Live (HD2)
Listen Live (HD3)
Listen Live (HD4)
Websitehornfm.com
fiesta971.com (HD2)
keilahradio.com (HD3)
1053thebat.com (HD4)

KTXX-FM broadcasts in the HD Radio format. It has two translator stations on 105.3 and 106.5 which carry programming heard on two of the station's HD subchannels. In addition, most of KTXX-FM's sports programming is simulcast on AM 1260 KTAE in Taylor and its translator, 101.9 K270CO.

Programming

KTXX-FM calls itself "The Horn," referring to the Texas Longhorns. It is the flagship station for the University of Texas at Austin sports teams. KTXX-FM carries local sports shows during the day and airs programming from Houston-based SB Nation Radio nights and weekends.

History

KFFQ and KLKM

The station first signed on in 1984 as KFFQ, playing country music.[2] It was originally licensed to Llano and was owned by Duane Fox.

In 1988, it was acquired by Maxagrid Broadcasting, which switched 104.9 to a beautiful music format as KLKM.[3] Around 2000, the station changed its city of license to Dripping Springs, Texas. Also in 2000, the station became "Digital 104.9" KXXS.

104.9 The Beat

In February 2007, that format and call sign moved to 92.5, to make room for rhythmic contemporary station KXBT as Beat 104.9. This was the third incarnation of "The Beat," which originally launched on 104.3 in 1998 as KQBT, although it later adopted the KXBT call letters on the same frequency after six months. The format moved from 104.3 due to a change in ownership when Entercom sold that frequency to Univision. The staff and lineup from "The Beat" was still intact, even though new owner Entercom let them go. They were hired by Border Media Partners (BMP).

On September 26, 2008, BMP announced that KXBT will flip to Spanish Contemporary. On September 29, 2008, KXBT became a simulcast of KXXS. This allowed the station to be heard around Greater Austin, with KXBT serving the western portion and KXXS covering the eastern part of the market. The simulcast was called "Digital 104.9 y 92.5". The "Digital" simulcast was broken up in mid-2009, when 104.9 flipped to Regional Mexican. The Spanish Contemporary format was retained on 92.5. "The Beat" aired on 105.9 KFMK and later 102.3 KPEZ.

Sports Radio

On November 2, 2009, the format changed to all-sports, and was branded as "104.9 The Horn". The brand is a tribute to the University of Texas at Austin sports teams, the Texas Longhorns. At first, KTXX-FM aired local sports shows and carried ESPN Radio programming nights and weekends.

On January 2, 2014, the ESPN Radio programming was dropped. KTXX-FM became a hybrid of sports talk and classic hits. Morning and afternoon drive time, as well as the noon hour, remained local sports talk, while the other non-sporting event hours became classic hits. On May 5, 2014, more sports talk was added. The schedule had sports talk from 6 a.m. to 7 p.m. and classic hits the rest of the time, unless a sporting event or specialty program was being broadcast.

In February 2015, The Horn dropped the classic hits portion of its format and began airing sports full-time with NBC Sports Radio programming heard nights and weekends, and NBC Sports updates during the day.[4] NBC Sports was later replaced with SB Nation Radio, based in Houston. KTXX-FM's city of license was switched to Bee Cave, Texas, although its studios and transmitter remain in Austin.

On June 16, 2015, KTXX-FM became the flagship station of the Texas Longhorns.[5]

References

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