KRNB

Radio station in Decatur, Texas
  • Decatur, Texas
Broadcast areaDallas-Fort Worth Metroplex/Decatur/Bowie/ Gainesville/Jacksboro/WeatherfordFrequency105.7 MHzBrandingSmooth R&B 105.7ProgrammingLanguage(s)EnglishFormatUrban adult contemporaryAffiliationsPremiere NetworksOwnershipOwnerService Broadcasting Corporation
Sister stations
KKDA-FMHistory
First air date
1996 (28 years ago) (1996)
Call sign meaning
K Rhythm aNd BluesTechnical informationFacility ID9747ClassCERP93,000 wattsHAAT576 metersLinksWebcastListen LiveWebsitekrnb.com

KRNB (105.7 FM) is an urban adult contemporary-formatted radio station in the Dallas–Fort Worth Metroplex. It is owned by Service Broadcasting Corporation alongside its sister station KKDA-FM. Its studios are located in Arlington, Texas[1] and the transmitter/antenna tower is located north of its city of license, Decatur, Texas.

History

KRNB was first launched at 6 a.m. on September 16, 1996, with an Urban Adult Contemporary format playing R&B music, hence the call sign. (Coincidentally, it is the western reflection of an R&B station in Philadelphia called WRNB.)[2][3] At the time, its only other competitor for the rest of the decade was KRBV, which went off the air as an R&B station in 1998 due to a transmitter problem that caused low ratings. In the early years of the station, it was home to The Tom Joyner Morning Show until 2002, when new competitor KSOC took over the affiliation to the show. (This marked the second station Tom Joyner DJ'ed in the Metroplex, as he worked at KKDA-FM before.)

After KRBV changed formats, KRNB was the sole Urban AC for two years. However, due to its transmitter location, it was easier to pick up in the northern and western portions of the Metroplex, but harder to pick up in the Southern and Eastern portions, especially in the southern half of Dallas and downtown Dallas. In 2002, KSOC changed formats from Jammin' Oldies to Urban AC; as a result, KRNB modified its format to R&B Oldies by playing only R&B music from the 1970s to the 1980s, and changed its branding from 105.7 KRNB to Old School 105.7. The modification did not last long; KRNB reverted to Urban AC in 2005, changed the name back to 105.7 KR&B ("&" in place of "N") and became the home of The Steve Harvey Morning Show through Premiere Radio Networks, a division of Clear Channel. (Before that, Harvey used to have a morning show on KBFB by syndicate of sister station KKBT in Los Angeles). In 2010, KRNB rebranded to "Smooth R&B 105.7" while keeping its current format. Harvey's morning show was dropped in September 2018 in favor for a local morning show called "The Morning Rush" hosted by comedian Rudy Rush and reality TV personality and model Claudia Jordan. However, in November 2019, "The Morning Rush" was canceled, and The Steve Harvey Morning Show returned. Like many Urban AC stations across the country, KRNB has a nighttime Quiet Storm show.

KRNB's current on-air personalities include Rudy Rush, Claudia Jordan, Sean Andre, Keith Solis, Lynne Haze and Janet G.

Since 2002, it has competed with KSOC (for a time branded as "K-Soul" from 2002 to 2011 and again in 2014; and as "Old School 94.5" from 2011 to 2014) with an Urban AC format. However, as of November 15, 2014, KSOC flipped to classic hip hop, leaving KRNB as the sole Urban AC station in the Metroplex until September 11, 2017, when KSOC (now KZMJ) returned to Urban AC as "Majic 94.5".[4]

Former KRNB

The original KRNB-FM was a tribal run student radio station in Neah Bay, Washington. Starting in 1976 the station provided news, weather and information for the Makah Indian Tribe. Located on the high school campus it was billed as "The Native American Voice of the Pacific Northwest" and operated at 10 watts with an international reach extreme southern Vancouver Island in Canada just across the Strait of Juan de Fuca. The station broadcast a wide range of formats including easy listening, contemporary 70s pop and at night album oriented rock. In 1982 the KRNB call letters surfaced in Memphis TN as "MAGIC 101" an R&B station now KJMS.

Signal

Unlike most of the area's FM stations like sister KKDA-FM, which transmit their signals from Cedar Hill, KRNB transmits its signal from an unincorporated area East of Alvord in Wise County. Therefore, KRNB's signal is much stronger in the Northwestern parts of the Dallas/Fort Worth metroplex as well as the cities of Decatur, Bowie, Gainesville, and Sherman, to as far north as South of Ardmore, Oklahoma, but is considerably weaker in Dallas and areas Southeast of the city itself.

References

  1. ^ "Smooth R&B 105.7 Has Moved To A New Location -". January 11, 2018. Retrieved October 15, 2018.
  2. ^ "New FM station will offer R&B". Dallas Morning News. 1995-10-22.
  3. ^ "New station a 'smooth operator'". Dallas Morning News. 1996-09-17.
  4. ^ "Majic Is Back In Dallas As KSOC Flips Back To Urban AC - RadioInsight". RadioInsight. 11 September 2017.

External links

  • KRNB official website
  • KRNB in the FCC FM station database
  • KRNB in Nielsen Audio's FM station database
  • DFW Radio Archives
  • DFW Radio/TV History
  • v
  • t
  • e
Radio stations in the Dallas–Fort Worth metroplex (Texas)
By AM frequency
By FM frequency
LPFM
  • 92.1
    • KPVC-LP
    • KXDE-LP
  • 92.9
  • 95.5
    • KRQP-LP
    • KSGV-LP
    • KVWR-LP
  • 102.5
  • 104.1
    • KEJC-LP
    • KLEJ-LP
  • 107.1
Translators
NOAA Weather Radio
frequencyDigital radio
by frequency & subchannelBy call signDefunct
Satellite radio local traffic/weather
XM Channel 135
Sirius Channel 135
Nearby regions
Abilene
Brownwood
Killeen–Temple
Lawton
Oklahoma City
Paris
Sherman–Denison
Tyler
Waco
Wichita Falls
See also
List of radio stations in Texas

Notes
1. Clear-channel stations with extended nighttime coverage.
2. Daytime-only AM radio station.
  • v
  • t
  • e
Urban Contemporary Radio Stations in the state of Texas
Stations
See also
adult contemporary
classic hits
college
country
news/talk
NPR
oldies
religious
rock
sports
top 40
urban
other radio stations in Texas

33°23′13″N 97°33′58″W / 33.387°N 97.566°W / 33.387; -97.566