KLMO-FM What is now KQKS originally
signed on at 104.3 FM in September 1964 as KLMO-FM, the FM counterpart of KLMO (now
KRCN). In December 1986, Western Cities Broadcasting purchased KLMO-FM. The company would move the transmitter site closer to Denver, increase power from 28,000 watts to 58,000 watts, and raise antenna height from 88 feet to 980 feet. The
call sign would be switched to KQKS, and the format flipped to
Adult Contemporary. At the time, the station was known as "104.3 Kiss FM."
Top 40 KS104 In mid-1987, the branding was shortened to "KS104". On August 1, 1987, amidst heavy competition against three other FM adult contemporary stations in Denver, and with only one Top 40 station in the market, KQKS segued to a Mainstream Top 40 format, again as "KS104." By 1989, KQKS evolved into a Dance-leaning Rhythmic Top 40 outlet. By 1993, the station shifted back to mainstream contemporary hits when it was left as the market's sole surviving Top 40 radio station. The air staff at the time included Mark Speers and Laurie Michaels in mornings, PJ Cruise in middays, Michael Hayes in afternoons, Sweet G in evenings, Ed Atkins in late evenings, JJ Cruze on overnights, and Brandon Scott on swing. By 1995, KS104 was competing heavily against KWMX and
KALC, particularly for the young female audience. As a direct result, KQKS returned to a rhythmic contemporary direction that year. But by 1996, KQKS was struck by a major blow when the entire on-air staff defected across the street to newly minted Rhythmic Contemporary rival
KJMN, and began attacking "KS104" on-air and on the streets. The station ran automated without live air staff for the remainder of its time at 104.3.
Move to 107.5 FM In November 1996, Western Cities sold "KS104" to Jefferson-Pilot Communications (now known as
Lincoln National Corporation) for $15 million. Jefferson-Pilot continued to run the station
jockless for two more months. On January 8, 1997, Jefferson-Pilot moved KQKS to 107.5 FM and relaunched it as "KS1075", replacing KHHT's low-rated mainstream Top 40 format. KQKS's former home at 104.3 FM switched to
Classic Country on January 18. (104.3 is now
sports radio KKFN.) The move boosted KQKS's ratings, resulting in KJMN throwing in the towel on March 30, 1997. Since then, KQKS has faced several competitors. In 2009,
Clear Channel Communications flipped
KPTT (which had once competed against KQKS as Top 40/CHR KFMD from 2000 to 2005) to Rhythmic Top 40, resulting in KQKS adding more rap to its
playlist. While Rap and Hip-hop accounts for over 50% of KS1075's playlist, the station, like most of the other Rhythmic outlets in the United States, has added some Rhythmic Pop/Dance tracks due to changing tastes among its listeners.
Ownership changes In late 2005, Lincoln Financial Group acquired Jefferson-Pilot, which in turn resulted in Lincoln Financial becoming KQKS' parent company. The firm decided to keep Jefferson-Pilot's broadcasting properties in its portfolio despite offers by other broadcasting groups to buy the stations. On April 3, 2006, KQKS and the other stations began replacing the ownership on-air liners "A Jefferson-Pilot Station" with "A Lincoln Financial Station." In June 2007, Lincoln Financial announced that would put its television and radio stations up for sale. KQKS and its sister stations in Denver were among the properties being shopped around by Lincoln Financial, until the company suspended those plans in 2008. On December 8, 2014,
Entercom announced it would purchase
Lincoln Financial Group's entire 15-station lineup in a $106.5 million deal, and would operate the outlets under a
local marketing agreement (LMA). The company would retain KQKS along with
KRWZ,
KQMT,
KALC,
KEZW, and translator K276FK while divesting itself of
KKFN,
KYGO-FM,
KOSI, and
KEPN to satisfy ownership limits. The FCC approved the deal on June 26, 2015. ==107.5 History==