KJRB

Radio station in Spokane, Washington
47°30′7″N 117°23′8″W / 47.50194°N 117.38556°W / 47.50194; -117.38556Translator(s)94.1 K231CU (Spokane)LinksWebcastListen LiveWebsite941thebear.com

KJRB (790 AM) is a commercial radio station in Spokane, Washington. KJRB is owned by Stephens Media Group, through licensee SMG-Spokane, LLC, and airs a mainstream rock radio format. It calls itself "94.1 The Bear".

KJRB has a daytime power of 4,400 watts; at night, to protect other stations on AM 790, it reduces power to 34 watts. It uses a non-directional antenna at all times. The transmitter is on East Stutler Road off U.S. Route 195 in Spangle, Washington.[1] KJRB also simulcasts on FM translator 94.1 K231CU, powered at 99 watts.[2]

History

KJRB has had a long and colorful history showcasing many famous disc jockeys, including Randy Evans and Treasure Goodtimes (now known as Ichabod Caine and Scallops), Larry "SuperJock" Lujack, Charlie Brown (who went to KUBE 93 FM and later KJR-FM 95.7 in Seattle), Ric Hansen, Jim Kampmann, Danny Holiday (Daniel Thygesen), Joe Michaels, Jack "Commander Dunk" Gordon, Ross Woodward, Norm Gregory, Brian Gregory, Ricky Shannon, Suds Coleman, Rick Rydell, Marie McCallister, Steven West, Ralphie Koal, with Frank Hanel and "Sunshine" Shelly Monahan.

KJRB's call letters originally reflected the fact that it had been owned by Kaye-Smith Enterprises, the owners of then-Top 40 station KJR in Seattle. KJRB moved towards an Oldies format in the 1980s, a news/talk station in the early 1990s, and sports as 790 The Fan, from 1999 until April 2008, when the sports format was moved to sister station 1510 KGA. In return, KGA's news/talk format moved to KJRB.

During the station's early years as a sports station, KJRB also broadcast "hot talk" shows such as Don and Mike, Tom Leykis and Phil Hendrie, with evening and weekend programming provided by Fox Sports Radio, Sporting News Radio and Westwood One.[3]

On October 24, 2012, KJRB shifted its format to All-News.[4] On September 19, 2013, KJRB changed format to Classic country, branded as "The Eagle". On June 1, 2015, KJRB switched back to the sports format as "Fox Sports 790." That gave Mapleton Communications two all-sports stations in Spokane, KJRB and KGA. On March 28, 2016, KJRB changed the format to adult standards, branded as "Magic 790". On March 21, 2017, KJRB changed the format to classic rock, branded as "94.1 The Bear" (simulcasting on FM translator K231CU 94.1 FM Spokane).[5]

94.1 The Bear logo until August 2018.

On September 30, 2019, the station was sold to Stephens Media Group after Stephens acquired most of the properties of former owner Mapleton Communications.

Translator

KJRB also broadcasts on the following FM translator:

Broadcast translator for KJRB
Call sign Frequency City of license ERP (W) Class FCC info
K231CU 94.1 FM Spokane, Washington 99 D FMQ

Previous logos

References

  1. ^ Radio-Locator.com/KJRB
  2. ^ Radio-Locator.com/K231CU
  3. ^ "KJRB Facility Record". United States Federal Communications Commission, audio division.
  4. ^ "KJRB Spokane Shifts to News".
  5. ^ Mapleton Launches 94.1 The Bear Spokane Radioinsight - march 22, 2017

External links

  • KJRB in the FCC AM station database
  • KJRB in Nielsen Audio's AM station database
  • K231CU in the FCC FM station database
  • K231CU at FCCdata.org
  • FCC History Cards for KJRB
  • 94.1 The Bear Facebook page
  • v
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Radio stations in Spokane, Washington, metropolitan area
This area also includes Coeur d’Alene, Idaho.
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By FM frequency
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Radio stations in the Idaho Panhandle
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See also
List of radio stations in Idaho
List of radio stations in Washington