KSSZ

KSSZ (93.9 FM) is a radio station broadcasting a talk radio format. Licensed to Fayette, Missouri, United States, the station serves the Columbia, Missouri, area. The station is currently owned by Zimmer Radio Group of Mid-Missouri. The station also airs on translator K242CT on 96.3 FM.

KSSZ
CityFayette, Missouri
Broadcast areaColumbia, Missouri
Frequency93.9 MHz
BrandingThe Eagle 93.9
Programming
FormatTalk radio
Ownership
OwnerZimmer Radio
(Zimmer Radio of Mid-Missouri, Inc.)
KATI, KCLR, KCMQ, KFAL, KTGR, KTGR-FM, KTXY, KWOS, KZWV
History
First air date
May 14, 1993
Former call signs
KACJ (1993-1994)
KTLH (1994-1996)
KLSC (1996-1999)
Technical information
Facility ID5227
ClassC3
ERP25,000 watts
HAAT100 meters
Transmitter coordinates
39°3′28.00″N 92°28′49.00″W
Links
Websitetheeagle939.com

History

The station was initially licensed to Boonville, Missouri, and featured a Soft Adult Contemporary format as "Lite FM 93.9." At the time, however, the station only broadcast with 6,000 watts. After upgrading to 25,000 watts, the station became known as "Lite 93.9" and "93.9 K-Lite" while still airing the same Soft Adult Contemporary format.

In 1996, the station adopted a Classic rock format, which was initially successful but a 1998 realignment of Zimmer Radio's Mid-Missouri stations sent much of the classic rock programming to co-owned KCMQ. At this time, the frequency became Adult Contemporary "Mix 93.9," still with the KLSC call letters.

Late in 1999, the station became "Kiss 93.9" and featured an oldies-heavy Soft Adult Contemporary format, adopting the KSSZ call letters. "Kiss 93.9" failed to gain traction in the market, largely due to a lack of promotion and the heavily-automated format, which utilized personalities recorded from Seattle, Washington.

In the weeks following September 11, 2001, the station broadcast an all-news format, largely featuring the audio from Fox News Channel. In October of that year "Kiss 93.9" briefly returned to the previous format before becoming "The Eagle 93.9" featuring a talk radio format. It has become the longest-lasting, most stable and most competitive format in the frequency's history.


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