City | Tulsa, Oklahoma |
---|---|
Broadcast area | Tulsa, Oklahoma |
Branding | 103.3 The Eagle |
Slogan | Tulsa's Only Classic Rock |
Frequency | 103.3 MHz |
First air date | November 1, 1966 (as KORU) |
Format | Classic rock |
ERP | 100,000 watts |
HAAT | 390 meters |
Class | C |
Facility ID | 9801 |
Callsign meaning | K J StaR (previous branding) |
Former callsigns | KORU (1966-1973) KKUL (1973-1978) KTFX (1978-1995) |
Owner |
Cox Media Group (Cox Radio, Inc.) |
Sister stations | KWEN, KRMG, KRMG-FM, KRAV-FM, KOKI-TV, KMYT-TV |
Webcast |
Direct Stream mp3 (copy/paste only) Direct stream AAC (copy/paste only) Streaming Player |
Website | 1033theeagle.com |
KJSR (103.3 FM, "103.3 The Eagle") is an American radio station licensed to serve the community of Tulsa, Oklahoma. The station is owned by Cox Media Group and the broadcast license is held by Cox Radio. Its studios are located in South Tulsa and the transmitter is in southeast Tulsa County near Coweta, Oklahoma.
KJSR broadcasts a classic rock format.
Mornings: Dena Fletcher
Afternoons: Wavy Davy Michaels
Nights: Tyler
Weekends: Jill Munroe, Tommy Russell, Kelley Cash, Ray Wilson
Weather provided by Co-owned television station Fox23 KOKI
The station signed on the air in 1966 as religious KORU, owned by famed Tulsa-based televangelist Oral Roberts. The studios were located in the iconic prayer tower on the ORU campus. In the mid-1970s the station aired an Urban Contemporary (or Soul) format as KKUL "K-Cool". In 1977 KKUL was sold to William H. "Bill" Payne, and changed to Top 40 as KTFX "The Superfox 103".
In November 1979 KTFX changed to a country format as "The Country Fox" which lasted until 1995. It was the first station to air a full-time country music format on FM in the Tulsa market.
In 1995, KTFX was sold to Cox Radio, the format changed to a classic hits format as KJSR "Star 103.3", airing classic rock music. The KTFX calls and country format moved to 102.3 (now News/Talk KRMG-FM) in 1995.