Supriya Ghosh (Editor)

WHKF

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Translator(s)
  
See table

ERP
  
1,350 watts

Frequency
  
99.3 MHz

Format
  
Top 40

Area
  
Harrisburg

First air date
  
July 1965

HAAT
  
207 Meters

City of license
  
Harrisburg

Owner
  
iHeartMedia Inc

Branding
  
99.3 Kiss FM


Broadcast area
  
Harrisburg, Pennsylvania

Slogan
  
"Harrisburg's #1 Hit Music Station!

Sister stations
  
WRBT, WRVV, WHP, WTKT, WKBO

WHKF (99.3 FM, "KISS-FM") is a commercial FM radio station licensed to serve Harrisburg, Pennsylvania. The station is owned by iHeartMedia, Inc. through licensee Clear Channel Broadcasting Licenses, Inc. and broadcasts a contemporary hit radio (CHR) format. WHKF is one of the many "KISS-FM" branded stations owned by iHeartMedia, Inc.

Contents

History

The station first signed on the air in July 1965 by Hudson Broadcasting Corp. as WSFM. The studios and transmitter were co-located with WCMB on Poplar Church Road (40°15′45.10″N 76°54′37.155″W) in Wormleysburg, Pennsylvania. Through the 1960s and early 1970s it was MOR like its sister station, but it did not duplicate WCMB. In 1978 it was changed to ROCK 99 CHR (AKA Top 40) and began competing head to head with WKBO AM 1230 and WQXA Q-106 (in York, PA). In 1981, the format changed to Adult Contemporary, and is first called WSFM-99, and then Sunny 99-FM. For a short time in the mid-1980s, it was a CHR station known as 99 HIT-FM. Through the early 1990s as WIMX it was known as MIX 99.3 a rhythmic CHR. WIMX became WYMJ but did not change format.

In 1995, then owner, Barnstable Broadcasting, swapped formats with its KOOL 94.9 and its 99.3 signal - moving the popular oldies format to 99.3, KOOL 99.3 WWKL-FM. The 94.9 signal became MAGIC 94.9 WYMJ, AC, a change that lasted exactly one year when it was flipped to Country as BOB 94.9.

Through the 1990s the station changed ownership several times during the radio ownership consolidations, first to Barnstable Broadcasting (in 1988), then to Dame Media in 1997 and finally to Clear Channel Communications in 1999. In 2001, Clear Channel dumped the legendary oldies station (KOOL 99.3) in favor of KISS-FM, a station aimed at teens.

Prior to launching, Clear Channel began stunting by playing a continuous sound effect of a small, noisy crowd. As the station's launch drew closer, the voiceover began announcing "Tomorrow at noon ... the talking stops." This was thought to be a direct shot at popular afternoon drive talk show host Bruce Bond, of Wink-104, who has since left that station.

Translators

WHKF-HD2 programming (K-Love) is broadcast on the following translator:

References

WHKF Wikipedia


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