KJMN

Coordinates: 39°23′7″N 105°2′52″W / 39.38528°N 105.04778°W / 39.38528; -105.04778
Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

KJMN
  • Entravision Communications Corporation
  • (Entravision Holdings, LLC)
History
First air date
1979 (as KMJD)
Former call signs
KMJD (1979-1983)
KRKY (1983-1984)
KADX (1984-1988)
KZRZ (1988-1989)
KYBG-FM (1989-1995)
KNRX (1995-1996)
Call sign meaning
K JaMmiN' (previous branding of its Rhythmic Dance Top 40 format)
Technical information
Facility ID10056
ClassC2
ERP42,000 watts
HAAT163 meters (535 ft)
Transmitter coordinates
39°23′7″N 105°2′52″W / 39.38528°N 105.04778°W / 39.38528; -105.04778
Links
WebcastListen Live
Websiteradiolasuavecita.com/denver/

KJMN (92.1

Sports Authority Field at Mile High
, and the transmitter is west of Castle Rock.

History

Country: 1979-1983

The 92.1 signal signed on the air in 1979 as country KMJD.

Adult contemporary: 1983-1984

In 1984, the format changed to adult contemporary with the call letters KRKY.

Jazz: 1984-1988

In 1984, the format changed to jazz with the call letters KADX.

Rock: 1988-1989

In 1988, the format changed to rock with the call letters KZRZ.

Country: 1989-199?

In 1989, the format returned to country with the call letters KYBG.

Talk: 199?-1995

The format shifted to talk radio at some point, keeping the KYBG call letters.

Modern rock: 1995-1996

On March 29, 1995, the station changed formats to modern rock as "92X" with the call letters KNRX.[3]

Rhythmic: 1996-1997

On February 29, 1996, at 8:00 pm, KNRX shook up the market by luring the airstaffers away from

Rhythmic Top 40 KQKS (then known as KS104) and launched KJMN "JAM'N 92.1".[4] During its Rhythmic tenure, they would attack KQKS on air and on the streets, but the tactics would backfire the following November when KQKS was sold to Jefferson-Pilot
, who would later shake up the airwaves in February 1997 by moving KQKS to 107.5 FM and quickly reclaiming their listeners/ratings thanks to the 107.5 signal having three times the power of 92.1 at the time.

KJMN's on-air staff included: Mornings—Mark & Laurie, Mark & Mercedes, Middays/Overnights—Brandon Scott, Afternoons—Michael Hayes, Nights—Sweet G, Late Nights—Ed Atkins. Weekends—Kevin O'Brien, Jess Kendall, Jay.

Spanish: 1997-present

After EXCL Communications (later Entravision) acquired the station in January 1997, they pulled the plug on "JAM'N 92.1" that March 30 to bring Denver its first Spanish FM outlet, launching Spanish AC "Radio Romántica 92.1", but kept the KJMN calls. However, by 2004, they would flip to Entravision's Spanish Top 40 "Super Estrella" format. The station is currently a "satellite" repeater station programmed out of Los Angeles, running local Denver advertising. No original programming is done in Denver.

In January 2009, KJMN switched formats from Super Estrella's Spanish AC format to the "Jose" Spanish adult hits format.[5]

On January 10, 2018, as part of a company-wide change, KJMN and sister simulcaster KMXA dropped the "Jose" format and flipped to an 80s/90s Spanish hits format as "La Suavecita."[6]

On January 21, 2019, KMXA split from its simulcast with KJMN and switched to "ESPN Deportes" Spanish sports, while KJMN rebranded as "La Suavecita 92.1".[7]

Previous logos


(KJMN's logo under previous simulcast with KMXA 1090 AM)

References

  1. ^ "KJMN Facility Record". United States Federal Communications Commission, audio division.
  2. Arbitron
    .
  3. ^ http://www.americanradiohistory.com/Archive-RandR/1990s/1995/RR-1995-04-07.pdf [bare URL PDF]
  4. ^ "Local radio wars rage on; Grunge-rock station the latest casualty", The Denver Post, February 29, 1996.
  5. ^ "KJMN Call Sign History". United States Federal Communications Commission, audio division.
  6. ^ Entravision Brings La Suavecita to 11 Markets
  7. ^ ESPN Deporters Returns to Denver Rdaioinsight - January 21, 2019

External links

This page is based on the copyrighted Wikipedia article: KJMN. Articles is available under the CC BY-SA 3.0 license; additional terms may apply.Privacy Policy