1980s In 1980, the Christian Life Center First Assembly of God of
Santa Rosa, California, received a construction permit to operate a new noncommercial radio station in that city, KCLB on 91.9 MHz. The church, however, was being affected by a major scandal involving its trust fund, which had forced it into bankruptcy two years prior and had required the church to abandon its plans for the time being. Later in 1980, under new management, the church hoped to raise the funds to put the nearly fully equipped station on the air as a contemporary Christian music radio station. In 1982, after several attempts to purchase a station in San Francisco, the Educational Media Foundation purchased KCLB for $65,760. Bob Anthony Fogel, a former DJ at KFRC, founded EMF, which in its early years was also known as Christian Media Ministries.
Charles Colson assisted in fundraising efforts for KCLB in the San Francisco area. KCLB signed on October 15, 1982; the first song played on the station was "Praise the Lord" by
the Imperials, which was a hit on the
Christian music charts in 1979. KCLB expanded in 1987 with new translators at
San Rafael and
Salinas. On August 1, 1988, KCLB changed its call letters to KLVR and adopted its present K-LOVE moniker. A month and a half later, on September 12, its wooden transmitter building on Geyser Peak was burned to the ground by a brush fire believed to have been set by an arsonist. After the fire, the transmitter was relocated to
Mount Saint Helena. The new location improved signal strength, and listeners reported they could now hear the station as far as away. By 1989, KLVR had expanded further to include translators covering
Santa Cruz,
San Jose, and
Los Gatos.
1990s K-Love expanded its reach during the 1990s by purchasing small stations and translators, and repeating its signal. In 1992, K-LOVE began using satellite technology to expand to locations further away than just northern California. The Educational Media Foundation continued to purchase small translators in California but also bought stations in
Portland, Oregon (KLVP),
Phoenix, Arizona (KLVA),
Oklahoma City (
KYLV) and
San Antonio (KZLV). During the 1990s, K-Love also began to expand its on-air personalities. David Pierce joined in 1991 from KLTY in Dallas/Ft. Worth. Also Mike Novak, JD Chandler and Larry Wayne started working air shifts in the late 1990s. In addition to expanding the on-air talent, K-LOVE expanded its facilities and moved its headquarters from
Santa Rosa to
Sacramento in 1993. The Colorado radio network was sold for a reported $16.6 million. A Colorado Christian University release said the board considered "many offers from Christian, as well as other suitors," but the priority was finding a buyer committed to "top-quality Christian programming." In 2003, the EMF took advantage of a window of time where the
Federal Communications Commission (FCC) allowed for the filing of new applications for FM translators, dubbed the "
Great Translator Invasion". During that time, the FCC received over 13,000 applications for original construction permits on translators. The EMF filed over 800 applications, of which over 250 were approved, with most of those now carrying the K-Love network. In January 2007, the EMF purchased 94.3
WJKL Elgin, Illinois, which broadcasts to the
Chicago area, for $17 million. Shortly after the purchase, a flood hit the WJKL transmitter site that knocked the station off the air for more than a week. WJKL has since moved and now broadcasts from
Oakbrook Terrace, Illinois, to the
Chicago market. On November 30, 2007, K-LOVE purchased 97.3
KCXM, which was an ESPN radio affiliate for
Kansas City, for $16 million. The call letters were changed to KLRX shortly after and now broadcasts from
Lee's Summit to the Kansas City area. As a result, these and other station purchases, plus the new translators approved during the 2003 filing window, the K-Love radio network grew to be the largest broadcaster of contemporary Christian music in the world. By 2010, K-Love had an estimated listenership of 6 million people. In 2002, the EMF moved its headquarters from Sacramento, California, to
Rocklin. The new headquarters now housed K-Love,
Air1 and
Christian Music Planet magazine. The show continued with Jon and Sherry for 7 years until March 28, 2009, when it was announced that they would step down due to family issues. Host Lisa Williams assumed the duties of hosting the program, and was later joined by Eric Allen. and Kelli Caldwell, which eventually became the afternoon show. On October 1, 2008, Mike Novak was named president and CEO of the EMF, replacing Dick Jenkins, and as a result stopped having a regular on-air shift. On July 15, 2009, the EMF bought 101.9
WKLU in
Indianapolis, for $4.75 million, plus $1.55 million for the studio. The studio then became the broadcast location for the
K-Love Morning Show.
2010–present Into the new decade, the EMF began to purchase more full-power stations in medium and larger markets. Since 2010, K-Love had begun broadcasting, or upgraded signals in
Dayton, Ohio (WKCD formerly WCDR),
Jacksonville, Florida (WCRJ),
Knoxville, Tennessee (WYLV, formerly WDLF),
Salt Lake City, Utah (KKAT),
Stockton, California,
San Francisco, California (KLVS),
San Diego, California,
Camden, New Jersey and
Detroit, Michigan on WDKL 102.7
FM. The EMF acquired
WKLV-FM in
Port Chester, New York, in 2010, and in May 2011 re-located its transmitter to the
Trump Plaza in New Rochelle to cover
New York City. In July 2012, the EMF swapped
WLVM (formerly WABB
Mobile, Alabama) with
Cumulus Media, for Classic Hits WRQQ
Nashville, Tennessee (a major hub for the Christian music community and where the majority of
labels originate from). The EMF changed WRQQ's call sign to WLVU, which now broadcasts K-Love programming. 's K-Love-sponsored
Toyota Camry in the
NASCAR Nationwide Series. In July 2010, K-Love began sponsoring
MacDonald Motorsports' #18 car and
Michael McDowell in the
NASCAR Nationwide Series. Then in March 2012, K-Love announced it would be the primary sponsor of
Tony Pedregon's
Funny Car for 12 of the final 20 races of the
NHRA Full Throttle Drag Racing Series season. In February 2013, K-Love announced the inaugural
K-LOVE Fan Awards, a listener-voted awards show for contemporary Christian musicians held in Nashville. The inaugural ceremony was held in June 2013, and hosted by
Phil,
Kay,
Jasie, and Missy Robertson. In July 2011, Amanda Carroll became the new mid-morning host and the network announced that Lisa Williams and Eric Allen would no longer be hosting the
K-LOVE Morning Show. JD Chandler took their place until the
K-LOVE Morning Show with Craig, Amy, and Kankelfritz acquired the spot in November 2011. In December 2013, K-Love presented a Christmas music special for the cable network
Up,
K-Love Music City Christmas. The special was hosted by
Candace Cameron Bure, and featured performances of Christmas-themed music by various contemporary Christian musicians. In 2017, the EMF announced that it would acquire
KSWD in Los Angeles,
KSOQ-FM in San Diego County (licensed to
Escondido), and
WGGI in Scranton from
CBS Radio and
Entercom as part of their merger. The sale was approved on November 2, with KSWD flipping to K-Love as KKLQ; as
Univision holds local trademark rights to the "K-Love" name in connection to its Spanish adult contemporary station
KLVE (which has used the name since 1974), the station is marketed locally as "Positive, Encouraging 100.3" and "the K-Love for Christian music" to disambiguate it from KLVE. In March 2018, the EMF acquired Chicago's
WLUP from Merlin Media, after
Cumulus Media ended a
local marketing agreement with the station due to their bankruptcy. The station was taken over by the EMF under an LMA at midnight on March 10, 2018, and flipped to K-Love; the moment was preceded by several songs referencing
Satan, culminating with
AC/DC's "
Highway to Hell"—a subtle jab at the new ownership suggested by veteran Chicago broadcaster and former WLUP personality
Steve Dahl. In August 2018, after soft-launching it as an online radio station, K-Love launched
K-Love Classics—a new
classic hits network with a focus on contemporary Christian music from the 80s, 90s, and early 2000s. K-Love Classics was discontinued on November 2020; the network carried a transitional
Christmas music format until January 2021, when K-Love launched two decade-based networks to replace it—"K-Love 90s" and "K-Love 2000s". In 2019, the EMF announced that it would acquire five stations from Cumulus Media, including most prominently New York's
WPLJ. In February 2020, K-Love bought out Boston's last remaining rock station,
WAAF, which had been a rock mainstay of the Boston area since the 1970s. Fans congregated outside the studio while DJs Mistress Carrie and Mike Hsu with program director Joe Calgaro took the helm for a 14-hour farewell program. Again, the takeover was preceded by a classic song referring to Satan, "
Black Sabbath", from
Black Sabbath's
self-titled debut album. In the final hour, the hosts revealed that internal plans had been in place to "relaunch the station" on March 2, re-hiring station veteran Mike Brangiforte to host the morning show, replacing
The Mens Room with a local night host, teaming up Hsu with Calgaro, and instituting a revamped music playlist curated by Mistress Carrie. All of these plans were immediately aborted once the sale to EMF was announced, with the ensuing "WAAF"-branded rock programming operating "as a zombie jukebox on a pair of HD subchannels and Radio.com," without any air personalities. In September 2022, the network marked the 40th anniversary of KCLB's launch. In February 2026, it was announced that, jointly through a partnership with Radio Vita, K-Love would expand internationally to airing stations in Europe and Africa. ==Ministry==