KQBU-FM
City | Port Arthur, Texas |
---|---|
Broadcast area | Golden Triangle/Greater Houston |
Branding | "93.3" |
Frequency | 93.3 MHz |
First air date | 1980 |
Format | Regional Mexican |
ERP | 97,000 watts |
HAAT | 595 meters (1,952 ft) |
Class | C |
Facility ID | 25583 |
Transmitter coordinates | 30°3′5″N 94°31′37″W / 30.05139°N 94.52694°W |
Callsign meaning | K Que Buena |
Former callsigns |
KYKR-FM (1980–1992) KLTN (1992–1998) KOVE-FM (1998–2001) KQBU-FM (2001–2007) KPTY (2007–2009) |
Owner |
Univision Radio (Tichenor License Corporation) |
Sister stations |
KLAT, KLTN, KOVE, KAMA Also part of the Univision Cluster: TV Stations KFTH-DT and KXLN |
Website | KQBU-FM Online |
KQBU-FM (93.3 FM, "93.3") is a radio station broadcasting a Regional Mexican format. The studios are located at the Univision building at 5100 Southwest Freeway in Houston, Texas and transmitter is located in Devers, Texas. Licensed to Port Arthur, Texas, USA, it primarily serves the Beaumont-Port Arthur area (it formerly served the Greater Houston area). It first began broadcasting in 1980 under the call sign KYKR-FM. The station is currently owned by Univision Radio (DBA Tichenor License Corporation). The call letters changed to KQBU-FM on March 10, 2009.
Station history
KQBU-FM was first assigned the call sign KYKR-FM on April 1, 1980, as "Kicker 93". On July 2, 1992, the call sign was changed to KLTN as "Estereo Latino 93.3". On June 25, 1998, the station was then changed to "K-Love 93.3 y 104.9", a simulcast with 104.9 FM (now KAMA-FM), with the new call sign KOVE-FM. On July 30, 2001, the call sign was changed to KQBU-FM with the moniker "La Que Buena 93.3" for its first run on this frequency.
"Party 93-3"
On December 4, 2007, KQBU, Que Buena 93.3, a Regional Mexican outlet, became the new home of the "Party", who relocated to make room for KAMA "Amor 104.9". After that switch was made, it added the syndicated Big Boy's Neighborhood, with Big Boy, Luscious Liz, and Tattoo. The KPTY call sign was officially moved to 93.3 FM on December 11, 2007.
On July 5, 2008, the station immediately stopped targeting the Greater Houston area. Everything that the station had that referenced Houston were immediately dropped, including its slogan, and even moved its broadcasting studios from Southwest Houston to Beaumont. The move was noticed in the ratings, as KPTY, which had good numbers in the Houston Arbitrons, began to dip after the frequency switch and in the process, lost a fraction of listeners due to the 93.3 signal not covering all of the Houston metro.
Return to "Que Buena 93.3"
On February 27, 2009, Univision's Houston cluster announced that it was letting go most of its employees. KPTY would unfortunately be the biggest casualty of this move as the entire airstaff was pink-slipped and the station went jockless. At 10 P.M. on February 28, the station went live for a nightclub broadcast as scheduled. Many of the personalities that saw the format through its run from its early days at 100.7 and then later on 104.9, were on hand to send off "Houston's Party Station." At the end of the live broadcast at 2 A.M., the station returned to Regional Mexican and its former Que Buena 93.3 moniker on March 1. The call sign was officially changed back to KQBU-FM on March 10, 2009.
Callsign & moniker history
- KYKR-FM - 04/01/1980 [Kicker 93] serving Beaumont
- KLTN - 07/02/1992 [Estereo Latino 93.3]
- KOVE-FM - 06/25/1998 [K-Love 93.3 y 104.9]
- KQBU-FM - 07/30/2001 [La Que Buena 93.3]
- KPTY FM - 2001-2009 [Party 93-3]
- KQBU-FM - 2009–present [La Que Buena 93.3]
Former logos
External links
- KQBU-FM website
- Query the FCC's FM station database for KQBU
- Radio-Locator information on KQBU
- Query Nielsen Audio's FM station database for KQBU