City | Sudbury, Ontario |
---|---|
Branding | The New Hot 93.5 |
Slogan | Sudbury's #1 Hit Music Station |
Frequency | 93.5 MHz (FM) |
First air date | 1965 (FM 92.7) 1990 (AM 790) 2009 (FM 93.5) |
Format | CHR |
ERP | 43 kilowatts Vertical 100 kWs Horizontal |
HAAT | 150.2 meters (493 ft) |
Class | C1 |
Owner | Newcap Broadcasting |
Sister stations | CHNO-FM |
Website | www.hot935.ca |
CIGM-FM is a Canadian radio station, which broadcasts in Sudbury, Ontario. As of August 25, 2009, the station airs a CHR format at 93.5 MHz on the FM dial with the branding The New Hot 93.5. The station is owned and operated by Newcap Broadcasting.
The station first aired at 92.7 FM in 1965, with the call letters CKSO-FM, airing a more extensive schedule of CBC Radio programming than its AM sister station CKSO. It adopted the CIGM calls and a country music format in 1978, after CBC Radio was granted a license for its own O&O station, CBCS-FM.
CIGM and CKSO were owned by Cambrian Broadcasting. The GM in the station's call sign was chosen to honour George Miller, one of the founding investors in the company.
As part of Cambrian's sale of CKSO-TV to Mid-Canada Communications in 1979/1980, the company's shareholders dissolved Cambrian and reincorporated themselves as a new company, called United Broadcasting, which retained ownership of the radio stations. In 1986, United Broadcasting sold CKSO and CIGM to Telemedia.
On March 16, 1990, the CRTC approved Telemedia Communications Ontario Inc.'s application to amend the Promise of Performance for CIGM-FM by changing the music format from Group III (Country and Country-Oriented) to Group IV (40% Pop and Rock-Softer; 60% Pop and Rock-Harder). Two months later, on May 18, 1990, CKSO and CIGM swapped frequencies. CIGM moved to CKSO's 790 slot on the AM dial, and CKSO took on the new call letters CJRQ and CIGM's 92.7 FM frequency. After the 1990 swap, the CKSO call sign no longer existed in the Sudbury area until an unrelated Christian music radio station (as CKSO-FM) began test transmissions in late 2002.