WKSZ

From Infogalactic: the planetary knowledge core
Jump to: navigation, search

<templatestyles src="Module:Hatnote/styles.css"></templatestyles>

WKSZ
WKSZ logo
City of license De Pere, Wisconsin
Broadcast area Green Bay-Appleton-Oshkosh
Branding 95.9 Kiss FM
Slogan "Green Bay And The Valley's Hottest Hits"
Frequency 95.9 MHz
Format Rhythmic Top 40
Language(s) English
ERP 4,500 watts
HAAT 236 meters
Class C3
Facility ID 1518
Callsign meaning W-KSZ (sounds like "kiss")
Former callsigns WJLW (1983-1995)
Affiliations Premiere Networks
Owner Woodward Communications, Inc.
Sister stations WAPL, WHBY, WKZG, WKZY, WSCO, WZOR
Webcast Listen Live!
Website www.959KissFM.com

WKSZ (95.9 FM, "95.9 Kiss FM") is a Rhythmic Top 40 formatted radio station licensed to De Pere, Wisconsin, that serves the Green Bay and Appleton-Oshkosh areas. The station is owned by Woodward Communications.

95.9 frequency history

The history of the 95.9 MHz frequency in the Green Bay area dates back to the mid-1980s, with WJLW. Locally owned by Jack LeDuc (from whom the "JL" of the call letters originated), WJLW broadcast a country music format [1] until October 1995, when LeDuc sold the station to Woodward Communications. (LeDuc would resurrect the WJLW call letters, and its country format, one year later at the 106.7 frequency in Green Bay.)

The 95.9 frequency went dormant for a month until November 1995, when Woodward launched WKSZ as "95.9 Kiss FM." The station was positioned as a contemporary hit radio station, putting it in direct competition with Midwest Communications' heritage CHR station, WIXX.

Kiss FM's ratings managed to stay only in the middle of the Arbitron ratings for the Green Bay market, thanks to the long-time dominance of WIXX as the premiere hit radio station in Northeast Wisconsin. However, a ratings surge by WKSZ in 2001-2002 had the station beating WIXX in several key younger demographics. In response, Midwest Communications changed the format of their low-rated adult contemporary station, WLTM, to a rhythmic format as WLYD, "Wild 99.7."

In April 2003, after a stellar first book performance by Wild, Woodward pulled the plug on "95.9 Kiss FM." A local research project commissioned by Woodward indicated a format "hole" for hot adult contemporary, and after stunting with Christmas music, Woodward launched the new hot AC format on WKSZ as "Today's Best Variety, Mix 95.9". The move to hot AC, however, backfired for Woodward, as Mix 95.9's listener share sank to at or near the bottom of the Arbitron ratings in the Green Bay market.

In February 2006, Midwest Communications dropped WLYD's rhythmic format in favor of variety hits (as WZBY). One month later, on March 13, 2006, Woodward would fill the void "Wild 99.7" left behind, flipping WKSZ from Hot AC back to "Kiss FM", mixing Kiss' contemporary hit music with some rhythmic music formerly heard on "Wild." (Reviving the "Kiss FM" moniker was an acknowledgment that listeners still referred to WKSZ by that name, even during its "Mix" days.) A noticeable addition to "Kiss-FM" after its return has been the "tagging" of each song (artist and song title) at its conclusion, regardless of whether a DJ will be heard afterwards.

The 2006 return of Kiss paid off, for in the first Arbitron ratings book after the flip (spring 2006), WKSZ leaped to a fourth place ranking (of 21 stations) with an audience share that was five times greater than the share "Mix 95.9" pulled in during its waning days. The station finished second place in the most recent (fall 2010) Arbitron ratings for the Green Bay market.

The WKSZ call letters were first used in the Philadelphia market at 100.3 FM (now WRNB) before being relocated to WJLW in 1995.

External links

Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.