KREM-FM In September 1955, the station
signed on as KREM-FM, the first FM station in Spokane. KREM-FM was co-owned with
AM 970 KREM (now
KTTO). KREM had been founded by Cole E. Wylie in 1946 and operated as a 250-watt station in Spokane. In a 1977 interview with radio broadcaster historian Richard Dunning, KREM was described as the "first non-network, independent, all music station" in Spokane. KREM had also put a television station on the air in 1954, a year before KREM-FM signed on.
KREM-TV carried
ABC and
DuMont Television Network programming at first, but today is a
CBS Network affiliate. In the 1950s and 1960s, when few people owned FM radios, KREM-FM
simulcast the AM station's programming. In 1958, KREM-AM-FM-TV were acquired by the
Seattle-based
King Broadcasting Company. Under King Broadcasting ownership, KREM-AM-FM became a
Top 40 station, vying with
KJRB for Spokane's young radio listeners. KREM-FM switched to a
progressive rock format in the late 1960s, while the AM continued its Top 40 format. Around 1980, KREM-FM moved to a more structured
album-oriented rock format, with a
playlist of the top tracks from the best selling rock
LPs.
Switch to KZZU In 1984, the radio stations were sold to Highsmith Broadcasting, while King Broadcasting kept
KREM-TV. At the time, different stations could not share the same
call sign if they had different owners, with the AM becoming KHIT, while the FM station became KZZU-FM. The station called itself "KZZU The Zoo" and "93 Zoo FM", launched by Program Director Bill Stairs. The Top 40 format once heard on the AM was switched to the FM station, complete with a "
morning zoo". The "Breakfast Boys Morning Show" (first hosted by Jim Arnold and Lee St. Michaels. After Michaels departed, Arnold teamed with Craig Johnson, then Arnold and Dave Sposito, then later with Sposito and Ken Hopkins) played the top hits and discussed
pop culture. Notable full-time air personalities included Eric Funk, Todd Brandt, Bo Rafferty, Pete Jensen, Brian Christian, Chuck Matheson, Scott Phillips, Casey Christopher, Lyn Daniels, Dan Roberts, Ronnie Blackwood, Jamie Patrick, Devin James, DK Erickson, Paul Gray and Harrison Wood. Through the 1980s and 1990s, KZZU aired a mainstream top 40 format. As the 1990s went on, the format shifted toward a more
rhythmic contemporary direction with a slight focus on
hip hop artists from the Inland Northwest. In the early 2000s, changing tastes towards rock music and increased competition caused KZZU to move more towards a
rock-leaning Top 40 as hip hop fell to the lower end of its playlist. In its last year as "93 Zoo FM", the station was noted in having an all-female DJ line up with the exception of
Rick Dees and
Hollywood Hamilton on Sundays.
From Zoo FM to ZZU On October 17,
2005, KZZU dropped the "Zoo FM" moniker in favor of "92.9 ZZU", and shifted to
adult top 40 in order to more effectively compete with
KCDA. The new format left Spokane without a mainstream top 40 outlet for five years. The new format initially leaned
alternative as KZZU removed all the hip hop from its playlist. Core artists included The Killers, Audioslave, Switchfoot and Green Day. Co-owned "Wired 96.9"
KEZE became Spokane's station for hip hop, R&B and rhythmic pop and dance product. KZZU's new format reunited the Breakfast Boys with Molly Allen, although the station stopped using "The Breakfast Boys"
moniker. Dave, Ken, Molly and producer Dan Roberts host the station's morning show, targeting an 18 to 49 year old
demographic. In
2008, after KEZE flipped from
rhythmic top 40 to
country, KZZU somewhat returned to its CHR roots by adding some rhythmic music during the evening hours while maintaining the Adult Top 40 format during the daytime. In 2011, KEZE dropped AAA (who adopted the format from KXLY-FM the year prior as part of a format swap) and returned to rhythmic contemporary music as "Hot 96.9". The format flip on KEZE resulted in KZZU dropping most (though not all) rhythmic music to avoid overlapping with KEZE. For a time,
Mediabase and
Nielsen BDS described KZZU as a
hot adult contemporary outlet. KZZU was reclassified as adult top 40 when
Mapleton Communications-owned
KZBD dropped
alternative rock for CHR, becoming "105.7 Now FM". ==Notable personalities==