- KLQB
Infobox Radio Station
name = KLQB
airdate =June 26 ,1998 (on 104.3)
frequency = 104.3 (MHz)
area =Taylor, Texas /Austin, Texas
format =Regional Mexican
owner = Univision Radio
erp = 48,000Watt s
branding = "104.3 La Que Buena"
slogan =
class =
website =
callsign_meaning =K La Que BuenaKLQB (104.3 La Que Buena) is a regional Mexican
radio station serving theAustin, Texas , area. The Univision Radio outlet broadcasts at 104.3MHz with an ERP of 48,000 Watts and is licensed toTaylor, Texas . Its transmitter is located inCoupland, Texas .History
KLQB was launched as KQBT on 104.3 FM (licensed to
Taylor, Texas ) in1998 after the frequency would be moved southward to the Austin area after previously serving Temple-Killeen market as KKIK. Soon enough, KQBT began targeting Austin in1998 as a Rhythmic Contemporary Hits station, playing Hip Hop,R&B , some Pop, and someDance . At the time, the station served as a rhythmic version of a younger Urban formatted radio station alternative to then co-ownedUrban AC station KJCE "K-Juice 1370" (now a talk radio station). This would eventually propel KQBT as one of Austin's Top 5 radio stations (sometimes #1) according to Arbitron ratings. By2001 , the station dropped Dance music and eventually Pop music from the playlist and has gone straight Hip Hop and R&B. But in2004 ,Howard Stern was expected back on the radio due in several markets due toClear Channel firing him for indecency. And KQBT, along with five other replacement radio stations owned by what was then called Infinity Broadcasting (which owned Stern's show through syndication), was selected to carry the morning drive. As a result, there would be uncertainty that the Hip Hop/R&B format would even survive with Howard Stern on the air, so the frequency flipped totalk radio , changed calls to KOYT and called itself "104.3 The Coyote." The FM Talk format did not do well at all; because of this, the ratings tanked. So the frequency returned to Rhythmic Contemporary Hits format five months later under the former branding "Beat 104.3" but with new call letters KXBT because KQBT was already assigned to a radio station inLlano, Texas , and later, a radio station inAlbuquerque, New Mexico now. Even though it is a Rhythmic, this time KXBT skewed slightly towards an unofficial Mainstream Urban format, unusual for the market's demographics given the fact less than 10% of the Austin radio market's population isAfrican American . To accommodate the return, the station held a campaign in early 2005 to "Make The Big Switch Back to the Beat," with the slogan at the time being "The People's Station" before finally settling on the current one, "The Beat of the ATX." It became home for a short time to the controversial Star and Buc Wild Morning Show from December 2005 to May 2006.The station is currently in a battle with Rhythmic rival KDHT, Mainstream rival
KHFI andRhythmic Adult Contemporary rivalKFMK-FM in Austin's Top 40 battle. Soon after the return to the format, KXBT has reintroduced Freestyle Dance music and added moreReggaeton music to the charts.In 2006,
CBS Radio divested its assets and sold the Austin radio cluster (also includesKAMX ,KKMJ andKJCE ) to Entercom. OnFebruary 21 ,2007 , Entercom announced that the 104.3 frequency and KXBT calls would be sold toUnivision and change to a Spanish format onFebruary 26 . The staff was already told of this stunning news before it was made public in the trades and was expecting to leave prior to the flip. Albeit that Univision owns Hip Hop music stations in San Antonio, Houston, Rio Grande Valley and Albuquerque, the Austin cluster of Univision did not want the format this time. After the announcement was made, Border Media flippedKXXS-FM Digital 104.9 to aRhythmic Top 40 format, hired the former KXBT staff, and relaunced as "The Beat 104.9", thus leaving the station virtually intact. The "Digital 104.9" format was relaunched on 92.5.External links
*FMQ|KLQB
*FML|KLQB
*FMARB|KLQB
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