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KHPT

KGLK
City Lake Jackson, Texas
Broadcast area Greater Houston
Branding Houston's Eagle
Slogan Houston's Only Classic Rock Station
Houston's Oldies Station (HD2)
Frequency 107.5 MHz (also on HD Radio)
107.5 HD-2 for Oldies
107.5 HD-3 for South Asian music (Hum FM Radio)
Translator(s) 106.1 K291CE (Sugar Land, relays HD3)
First air date 107.5: November 10, 1980 (as KGOL at 107.3)
August 5, 1986 (as KZFX at 107.5)
106.1: March 6, 2012 (as K294BH at 106.7)
Format 107.5: Classic rock
HD2: Oldies
HD3/106.1: South Asian music
Language(s) 107.5: English
HD2: English
HD3/106.1: Arabic
Audience share 107.5: 5.7 Increase (March 2017, Nielsen Audio[1])
ERP 107.5: 95,000 watts
106.1: 190 watts
HAAT 107.5: 601 m (1,972 ft)
106.1: 200 m (656 ft)
Class 107.5: C
106.1: D
Facility ID 107.5: 59951
106.1: 147704
Transmitter coordinates 29°17′16″N 95°13′53″W / 29.28778°N 95.23139°W / 29.28778; -95.23139
Callsign meaning K EaGLe K
Former callsigns KGOL (1980-1986)
KZFX (1986-1994)
KRQT (1994-1995)
KTBZ (1995-2000)
KLDE (2000-2006)
KHTC (2006-2009)
Former frequencies 107.3 MHz (1980-1986)
Owner Cox Enterprises
(Cox Radio, Inc.)
Sister stations KKBQ, KTHT
Webcast Listen Live
Website houstonseagle.com
KHPT
City Conroe, Texas
Broadcast area Greater Houston
Branding Houston's Eagle
Slogan Houston's Only Classic Rock Station
Best of the 80's...and More (HD2)
Frequency 106.9 MHz (also on HD Radio)
106.9 HD-2 for Adult Hits "The Point"
First air date February 14, 1965 (as KNRO)
Format Classic rock
Language(s) English
ERP 91,600 watts
HAAT 579 m (1,900 ft)
Class C
Facility ID 69564
Transmitter coordinates 30°13′53″N 95°7′26″W / 30.23139°N 95.12389°W / 30.23139; -95.12389
Callsign meaning K Houston's PoinT (current HD2 and former primary branding)
Former callsigns KNRO (2/14/1965-1980s)
KJOJ (1980s-1990)
KJZS (12/1990-3/6/1992)
KKHU (3/6/1992-9/4/1992)
KKZR (9/4/1992-3/6/1995)
KKHT (3/7/1995-10/4/2000)
KZJZ (10/4/2000-10/17/2000)
Owner Cox Media Group
(Cox Radio, Inc.)
Sister stations KKBQ, KTHT
Webcast Listen Live
Website houstonseagle.com
K291CE
City Sugar Land, Texas
Broadcast area Greater Houston
Branding Hum FM Radio
Frequency 106.1 MHz
First air date 2012
Format South Asian music
Language(s) Arabic
ERP 190 watts
Class D
Facility ID 147704
Callsign meaning Serially assigned
Former callsigns K294BH
Owner Primera Iglesia Evangelica de Apostoles y Profetas (operated by Hum Tum Radio)
Website humfmradio.com

KGLK (107.5 FM) and KHPT (106.9 FM, "Houston's Eagle") are a pair of simulcast classic rock formatted radio stations licensed to serve the communities of Lake Jackson, Texas, and Conroe, Texas, United States, respectively. Both facilities are owned by Cox Media Group, and are part of a four station cluster that includes KTHT and KKBQ, in the surveyed Houston metropolitan area. "The Eagle" is headquartered in Suite 2300 at 1990 Post Oak Blvd in the Uptown district in Houston, Texas, United States. KGLK's main transmitter facilities are located near Liverpool, TX with a backup transmitter site co-located at the KKBQ backup site. KHPT's main transmitter site is located in Splendora, Texas, and is shared with KSBJ.

Between the two frequencies, the Eagle covers more square miles than any station in southeast Texas.

Originally KGOL, the station began broadcasting to the Lake Jackson area at 107.3 FM as a Gospel station in the early 1980s.

The station moved north to include service to Houston and signed on at 107.5 FM on August 5, 1986, as classic rock-formatted KZFX "Z107". Z 107 competed primarily with KSRR and KLOL, having won the battle against KSRR who flipped to Top 40 (CHR), yet losing the rock war to KLOL, having been outlasted by it for another decade.

On October 31, 1994, at 11 a.m., the station flipped to alternative rock as KRQT, "Rocket 107.5". Under direction of new General Manager, Pat Fant (formerly of KLOL), the station re-launched the format in late May 1995 under the new callsign KTBZ and "107-5 The Buzz" moniker.


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