KHTS-FM

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KHTS-FM
KHTS-FM Channel 933 logo-cr.png
CityEl Cajon, California
Broadcast areaGreater San Diego
Frequency93.3 MHz (HD Radio)
BrandingChannel 93.3
Programming
Language(s)English
FormatFM/HD1: Top 40 (CHR)
HD2: LGBTQ community, dance ("Pride Radio")
AffiliationsiHeartRadio
American Top 40
Premiere Networks (Hit Nation)
Pride Radio (HD2)
Ownership
OwneriHeartMedia, Inc.
(iHM Licenses, LLC)
KGB, KGB-FM, KIOZ, KLSD, KMYI, KOGO, KSSX
History
First air date
1961 (as KUFM)
Former call signs
KUFM (1961-1963)
KECR (1963-1990)
KECR-FM (1990-1995)
KHTS (1995-2003)
Call sign meaning
K-HiTS (reference to station's top 40 format)
Technical information
Facility ID20697
ClassB
ERP50,000 watts
HAAT147 meters (482 ft)
Transmitter coordinates
32°43′48″N 117°05′2″W / 32.73000°N 117.08389°W / 32.73000; -117.08389Coordinates: 32°43′48″N 117°05′2″W / 32.73000°N 117.08389°W / 32.73000; -117.08389
Links
WebcastListen Live
Listen Live (HD2)
Websitechannel933.iheart.com
prideradio.iheart.com(HD2)

KHTS-FM (93.3 FM) is a Top 40 (CHR) radio station that is licensed to El Cajon, California and serves the San Diego market. The station is owned by iHeartMedia, Inc., through licensee iHM Licenses, LLC, and brands as "Channel 93.3", sounded out as "Channel 9-3-3". The station's studios are located in San Diego's Serra Mesa area, while the transmitter is located in Chollas View, which is east of Balboa Park and west of Emerald Hills, sharing facilities with KLSD. The station is available in HD Radio; the HD2 subchannel airs an LGBT-leaning dance hits format, carrying iHeart's Pride Radio network.

History[]

Early beginnings, KECR (1961–1995)[]

The station signed on in 1961 as KUFM, later becoming KECR, then KECR-FM. For most of its existence prior to 1995, the station was owned by the religious Family Radio organization and aired its talk radio programming. Originally, the station maintained a localized board operator to air local news and weather, but when satellite technology became available, it became a repeater for KEAR in San Francisco. This religious format continued until 1995, when Jacor Communications purchased KECR-FM for $13.8 million.[1] Family Radio now broadcasts in San Diego on KECR (910 AM). This acquisition marked Jacor's entry into San Diego. Shortly after the acquisition closed, the station acquired the KHTS callsign.

Channel 933 launches (1996–1998)[]

In March 1996, KHTS began stunting with a simulcast of Tampa, Florida-based WFLZ-FM (coincidentally, also on 93.3 FM in that market) in an early form of voicetracking, allowing Jacor to plan for and hire for a new station without having to depend on a commercial-free "many-songs-in-a-row" gimmick during the transition period.[2] This brought personalities such as Bubba The Love Sponge to the market, along with WFLZ referencing San Diego weather and events in their programming. This also allowed sufficient time to finish construction on the studios, which at the time, were located on Pacific Highway, about a mile from Pechanga Arena. The simulcast was broken on August 30, 1996, with the stunting shifting to a 43-hour loop of remixes of the then-popular song "Macarena" by Los Del Rio.

On September 1, 1996, at 10 a.m., the stunting shifted to a broadcast of that day's San Diego Chargers game in place of XETRA-AM, which is required by law to carry Mexican presidential addresses under its Mexican radio license. At 4 p.m. that day, KHTS officially flipped to a dance-heavy Rhythmic contemporary format, branded as "Channel 933".[3] The station would also air attack liners against rivals XHITZ-FM, KFMB-FM, and KKLQ; the latter two have since changed formats.

Nationwide/Jacor merger, Clear Channel acquisition (1998–2003)[]

By summer 1998, KHTS would move away from its dance-heavy approach to a more mainstream direction due to the Nationwide/Jacor merger. The merger would have brought KKLQ into the same ownership, but that station was spun off to Hispanic Broadcasting Corporation (now Univision Radio) in order to comply with the FCC ownership limits.[4] During the first week of August in 1998, KHTS flipped to its present CHR format, inheriting the playlist from KKLQ (now KLNV). The station also launched Club 933, a dance mix show featuring dance remixes of contemporary hits. By 2000, outdoor advertising firm Clear Channel (through its radio and communications division) took ownership of the station. During this time, the station's transmitter was on Mount San Miguel, given El Cajon being its city of license. In 2001, the transmitter moved to its present site, sharing an antenna with sister station KLSD, in order to provide better coverage of the San Diego metropolitan area.[5] The station's studios were also moved to their present location in Serra Mesa. Despite all these changes, the station remains licensed to El Cajon.

New technology (2003–2013)[]

On May 28, 2003, the station's callsign received the -FM suffix, becoming KHTS-FM. This was a legal change in order to avoid confusion of an AM talk radio station with the same call letters.[6] The callsign meaning also became "Hits" to reference the top 40 format. From 2001 until 2009, the station was the San Diego home for AJ Machado, at which time the morning show was called “AJ's Playhouse”. In 2004, the station began RDS broadcasting in preparation for a commencement of HD Radio broadcasting in 2005, showing song titles and other text information on certified devices. The technology was also fitted to sister station KGB-FM, and has since been fitted to the other three FM sisters in the cluster.

In 2006, the station added notable personality Geena The Latina, who came in from KIIS-FM, to co-host morning drive with AJ Machado.[7]

During the Harris Fire in October 2007, KHTS-FM suspended all music programming to air news updates from AM sister station KOGO, which applied to all of its sister stations. In addition, the news updates included the Witch Fire. This began on October 21, while normal programming resumed on the 24th at 11:00pm.

The station began to maintain a rhythmic-leaning direction (with occasional alternative music tracks) in 2013 while continuing to air dance mixes on weekends. This was mainly to compete with KEGY, but also due to XHITZ-FM de-emphasizing hip-hop around this time.

iHeart ownership (2014–present)[]

On September 16, 2014, Clear Channel spun off its radio and communications divisions into a new company; KHTS-FM then became a part of iHeartMedia, its present owner. At the same time, the station began airing programming from iHeartRadio. The station also unveiled a new logo, using the green and purple from the previous logo, but now adding a green decimal point for its frequency. Despite this, the numbers are still pronounced individually.

In July 2017, the station became the San Diego affiliate for American Top 40, and in February 2018, the station began airing the weekly, network-wide iHeartRadio Countdown show, hosted by KIIS-FM personality JoJo Wright.

In early 2020, iHeartMedia announced major personality layoffs across their portfolio of stations. On January 20, 2020, it was confirmed on social media that KHTS-FM had been affected, as Kramer from the Kramer and Geena morning show was out as morning host.[8] Two days later, it was announced that Frankie V would reunite with Geena after five years away at sister stations WJMN in Boston and KSSX in San Diego in the morning slot with "The Geena the Latina and Frankie Morning Show."[9]

Notable Former Airstaff[]

The following lists notable past airstaff, as calculated by the Wayback Machine:

  • AJ Machado (Formerly at KXSN, KYXY, and KMYI)
  • Hula Ramos (Formerly at KXSN, KYXY, and KMYI)
  • Boy Toy Jesse (Now heard on sister station KMYI mornings, and afternoons on KIIS-FM)
  • Sisanie (Now co-hosts On Air with Ryan Seacrest which also airs on KMYI and the KIIS-FM morning show in Los Angeles)[10]
  • Stephanie Sidela (Until departure in 2018, co-produced mornings and co-hosted Saturday nights; now at WTIC-FM)[11]
  • Nathan Fast (Now at KPLX in Dallas)[12]
  • Letty B (Dropped from Top 40 affiliates carrying the program in March 2019, now co-hosts mornings at WMIA-FM as of April 1, 2019)[13]
  • Alex (Continues at KIIS-FM)
  • Chuck Nasty "Nastyman" Zimmerman (Evenings on KCFX) Former morning show host of The Nastyman Morning Show, "The man with a tan from Guam". Originally with Lisa Vasquez 1999-2001 then with Bridgette Sarchino in 2001.
  • Rick Vaughn (Current Program Director of KENZ (FM) and KBER in Salt Lake City)[14] Former Mid-Day DJ 1999-2001
  • Rob Zilla (Now heard on KBZT, KYXY and KXSN)[15] Former DJ and promotions coordinator 1998-2003
  • Karen "Cha Cha" Harlow (Most recently heard on KFMB-FM now KFBG (FM). Formerly on XHPRS-FM, KNX (AM) and XHITZ-FM in the late 1980s and early 1990s during their AOR and Top 40 days) Former Channel 933 Afternoon DJ 1996-2006
  • Haze (Current Program Director of KHTS-FM and KMYI) Former evening DJ
  • Randy "Ranman" DeWitt (Former KXMX Mix 95.9 KFSH-FM morning show host and Co-Owner of Twin Peaks (restaurant chain)) Former Channel 933 DJ 1996-1999
  • Angel (Former KXMX Mix 95.9 KFSH-FM Mid-day DJ) Former Channel 933 DJ 1996-1999
  • Butch the Baker (Known by his real name Harold D Rose Jr. is the owner of Homies Cinnamon Rolls in Las Vegas)[16] He was a former DJ in the late 1990s and early 2000's on KHTS-FM and previously on KKLQ Q106 currently KLNV.
  • Chio the Hitman "Chio the Freakin Puerto Rican" Acosta (Former WOKQ morning show host).[17][18] Former morning show host on Channel 933, and previous DJ on KKLQ (Q106) currently KLNV.
  • Ron "Geronimo" Price (Current Program Director of KMVA)[19] Was a DJ and the APD of KHTS-FM 1996-1999
  • Boomer

For its entire run, the station was the San Diego affiliate for the Evolution Beatport Show. This show ended its run in December 2016.

HD Programming[]

KHTS-FM was amongst the first HD Radio stations in San Diego. The HD2 subchannel carries Pride Radio — an LGBT lifestyle network featuring dance hits. Previously it carried a Latin CHR stream branded as Mega from 2005 until 2013.[20]

References[]

  1. ^ "Heftel Takes Sole Possession Of Miami Duopoly In $19.8 Million Deal" (PDF). Radio and Records. October 6, 1995. p. 4. Retrieved February 15, 2019.
  2. ^ "Rumors" (PDF). Radio and Records. March 22, 1996. p. 18. Retrieved February 15, 2019.
  3. ^ "KHTS/SD Channels In On CHR/Rhythmic" (PDF). Radio and Records. September 6, 1996. pp. 3, 28. Retrieved February 14, 2019.
  4. ^ "Skinning The Cat Six Ways, Jacor Style" (PDF). Radio and Records. September 4, 1998. pp. 46, 48. Retrieved February 15, 2019.
  5. ^ "KGB and KOGO, San Diego". Fybush.com. March 27, 2009. Retrieved February 14, 2019.
  6. ^ "KHTS-FM". FCCData.org. Retrieved February 14, 2019.
  7. ^ "Geena The Latina Rolls Into Mornings At KHTS". All Access. All Access Music Group. March 13, 2006. Retrieved February 15, 2019.
  8. ^ Venta, Lance (27 January 2020). "Ongoing List Of Those Affected By iHeartMedia Cuts". Radio Insight. Retrieved 22 January 2020.
  9. ^ Venta, Lance (22 January 2020). "Geena & Frankie V Reunite At Channel 93.3 Following iHeart Cuts". Radio Insight. Retrieved 22 January 2020.
  10. ^ Venta, Lance (December 5, 2015). "Sisanie Moves to On Air with Ryan Seacrest". RadioInsight. RadioBB Networks. Retrieved February 15, 2019.
  11. ^ Lee, Christine (September 17, 2018). "Meet Steph our newest Craig and Company member". 965TIC.radio.com. Entercom. Retrieved February 15, 2019.
  12. ^ Venta, Lance (September 14, 2018). "Nathan Fast Takes Mornings at 99.5 The Wolf Dallas". RadioInsight. RadioBB Networks. Retrieved February 14, 2019.
  13. ^ "Mack in the Morning with Letty B". Inside Radio. Retrieved 3 April 2019.
  14. ^ "ALTERNATIVE KHTB (ALT 101.9)/SLC FLIPS TO TOP 40 SIMULCASTING TOP 40 SISTER KENZ 94.9". Jay on the Web. Retrieved 31 October 2019.
  15. ^ https://www.linkedin.com/in/robzilla
  16. ^ https://homiescafe.com/about-us
  17. ^ "Chio Heads To WOKQ/WPKQ To Join Kira Lew In Mornings". Radioinsght. Retrieved 2019-03-25.
  18. ^ "Chio Acosta Retires From Mornings At WOKQ". Radioinsght. Retrieved 2021-12-17.
  19. ^ https://ramp247.com/programming/price-is-right-for-kmva-phoenix/
  20. ^ "San Diego HD-Radio Progress Report 2007". Society of Broadcast Engineers Chapter 36.

External links[]

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