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Coordinates: 35°58′01″N 115°30′07″W / 35.967°N 115.502°W / 35.967; -115.502
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In 1983, the station changed its [[call sign|call letters]] to KEER. A year later in 1984, it switched formats to [[contemporary hit radio|Top 40]] as KYRK "Y-97." In the late 1980s, the slogan changed to "POWERFUL 97.1". Some of the KYRK DJs included Pat Garret, Anthony Miles, Shaun St John, "Wild Childhood" Johnny West, Don "Action" Jackson, Harmon and Holiday, Dr. Jerry Thomas, Greg Spin, James and The J Man. The station was known for the "Tookie-Tookie Bird" which was the cue to call in and win prizes. The bird appeared at local events, and was mocked on an episode of ''[[Cheap Seats (TV series)|Cheap Seats]]'' which featured the mascot appearing at a 1986 [[roller derby|International Roller Derby]] event televised by [[ESPN]] at the [[Castaways hotel and casino|Showboat Hotel & Casino]].
In 1983, the station changed its [[call sign|call letters]] to KEER. A year later in 1984, it switched formats to [[contemporary hit radio|Top 40]] as KYRK "Y-97." In the late 1980s, the slogan changed to "POWERFUL 97.1". Some of the KYRK DJs included Pat Garret, Anthony Miles, Shaun St John, "Wild Childhood" Johnny West, Don "Action" Jackson, Harmon and Holiday, Dr. Jerry Thomas, Greg Spin, James and The J Man. The station was known for the "Tookie-Tookie Bird" which was the cue to call in and win prizes. The bird appeared at local events, and was mocked on an episode of ''[[Cheap Seats (TV series)|Cheap Seats]]'' which featured the mascot appearing at a 1986 [[roller derby|International Roller Derby]] event televised by [[ESPN]] at the [[Castaways hotel and casino|Showboat Hotel & Casino]].


In 1993, Lotus Broadcasting purchased the station and switched call letters to KXPT "Key to the eXtreme Point Towers". For the first four and a half years, The Point aired an [[adult album alternative]] (AAA) format, playing new artists who went onto big careers, including [[Sheryl Crow]], the [[Dave Matthews Band]], [[Blues Traveler]], [[Jewel (singer)|Jewel]] and others. Original Point DJs included Chris Foxxo, Mike Foxxo, Rob Laundry and JD, Byrd (now with [[WDRV]] Chicago), Lark Williams, Dusty Street, Randy Morrison and Mike O'Brian (now at rival 96.3 [[KKLZ]]). In 1997 the station shifted to a [[Classic Hits]] format and in 2005 it moved to a Classic Rock format. In 2007 KXPT became the only classic rock station in the Las Vegas Valley as [[KKLZ]] changed to a classic hits format.
In 1993, Lotus Broadcasting purchased the station and switched call letters to KXPT "Key to the eXtreme Point Towers". For the first four and a half years, The Point aired an [[adult album alternative]] (AAA) format, playing new artists who went onto big careers, including [[Sheryl Crow]], the [[Dave Matthews Band]], [[Blues Traveler]], [[Jewel (singer)|Jewel]] and others. Original Point DJs included Chris Foxx, Mike Foxx, Rob Laundry and JD, Byrd (now with [[WDRV]] Chicago), Lark Williams, Dusty Street, Randy Morrison and Mike O'Brian (now at rival 96.3 [[KKLZ]]). In 1997 the station shifted to a [[Classic Hits]] format and in 2005 it moved to a Classic Rock format. In 2007 KXPT became the only classic rock station in the Las Vegas Valley as [[KKLZ]] changed to a classic hits format.


Current [[disc jockey|DJs]] on the station include "Foxx & Mackenzie" (Chris Foxx and Steph Mackenzie), Larko Williams (formerly of [[KOMP (FM)|KOMP]]), and Lorrin Bond. KXPT is unusual for a classic rock station, in that all of its weekday shows are either hosted or co-hosted by women. Mike Culotta, formerly of KOMP, was a DJ on the station until his death in December 2010 (though he didn't appear on the air in the months prior to his passing).
Current [[disc jockey|DJs]] on the station include "Foxx & Mackenzie" (Chris Foxx and Steph Mackenzie), Larko Williams (formerly of [[KOMP (FM)|KOMP]]), and Lorrin Bond. KXPT is unusual for a classic rock station, in that all of its weekday shows are either hosted or co-hosted by women. Mike Culotta, formerly of KOMP, was a DJ on the station until his death in December 2010 (though he didn't appear on the air in the months prior to his passing).

Revision as of 01:47, 7 January 2022

KXPT
Broadcast areaLas Vegas Valley
Frequency97.1 MHz
Branding97.1 The Point
Programming
FormatClassic rock
Ownership
Owner
KENO, KKGK, KOMP, KRLV, KWID, KWWN
History
First air date
29 November 1961 (as KORK-FM)
Former call signs
KORK-FM (1961-1983)
KEER (1983-1984)
KYRK (1984-1993)
Call sign meaning
Key to the eXtreme Point Towers
Technical information
Facility ID38450
ClassC
ERP25,000 watts
HAAT1,120 metres
Links
WebcastListen Live
WebsitePoint97.com

KXPT (97.1 MHz) is a commercial FM radio station located in Las Vegas, Nevada. The station is owned by Lotus Communications and it airs a classic rock music format branded as "97.1 The Point."

KXPT's studios and offices are in the unincorporated community of Spring Valley in Clark County and its transmitter is on Potosi Mountain southwest of the Las Vegas Valley.

History

On 29 November 1961 at 11:29 PNST - Pacific Nevada Standard Time (UTC -8, UTC 19:29), the station first signed on as KORK-FM.[1] At first it simulcast its AM counterpart, KORK (1340 AM). But by the 1970s, under Donrey Media, it had switched to a beautiful music format, playing mostly instrumental versions of popular songs. At the time, it could only be heard in and around Las Vegas, broadcasting from a tower only 65 metres in height above average terrain.[2] But by the early 1980s, it got a boost in power to 50,000 watts and an increase in antenna height to 650 metres.

In 1983, the station changed its call letters to KEER. A year later in 1984, it switched formats to Top 40 as KYRK "Y-97." In the late 1980s, the slogan changed to "POWERFUL 97.1". Some of the KYRK DJs included Pat Garret, Anthony Miles, Shaun St John, "Wild Childhood" Johnny West, Don "Action" Jackson, Harmon and Holiday, Dr. Jerry Thomas, Greg Spin, James and The J Man. The station was known for the "Tookie-Tookie Bird" which was the cue to call in and win prizes. The bird appeared at local events, and was mocked on an episode of Cheap Seats which featured the mascot appearing at a 1986 International Roller Derby event televised by ESPN at the Showboat Hotel & Casino.

In 1993, Lotus Broadcasting purchased the station and switched call letters to KXPT "Key to the eXtreme Point Towers". For the first four and a half years, The Point aired an adult album alternative (AAA) format, playing new artists who went onto big careers, including Sheryl Crow, the Dave Matthews Band, Blues Traveler, Jewel and others. Original Point DJs included Chris Foxx, Mike Foxx, Rob Laundry and JD, Byrd (now with WDRV Chicago), Lark Williams, Dusty Street, Randy Morrison and Mike O'Brian (now at rival 96.3 KKLZ). In 1997 the station shifted to a Classic Hits format and in 2005 it moved to a Classic Rock format. In 2007 KXPT became the only classic rock station in the Las Vegas Valley as KKLZ changed to a classic hits format.

Current DJs on the station include "Foxx & Mackenzie" (Chris Foxx and Steph Mackenzie), Larko Williams (formerly of KOMP), and Lorrin Bond. KXPT is unusual for a classic rock station, in that all of its weekday shows are either hosted or co-hosted by women. Mike Culotta, formerly of KOMP, was a DJ on the station until his death in December 2010 (though he didn't appear on the air in the months prior to his passing).

The signal was once rebroadcast on a translator at 99.3 MHz in Henderson with the call sign K257BU; this translator then moved to 98.9 MHz and now broadcasts the sports radio format of 1340 KKGK.

References

35°58′01″N 115°30′07″W / 35.967°N 115.502°W / 35.967; -115.502