City | Little Rock, Arkansas |
---|---|
Broadcast area | Little Rock metropolitan area |
Branding | B-98.5 FM |
Slogan | "Today's Hits, Yesterday's Favorites" |
Frequency | 98.5 MHz |
First air date | 1991 |
Format | Adult Contemporary |
ERP | 100,000 watts |
HAAT | 392 meters |
Class | C0 |
Facility ID | 19559 |
Former callsigns | KZOU-FM, KLAZ-FM |
Owner |
Cumulus Media (Radio License Holding CBC, LLC) |
Sister stations | KAAY, KARN, KARN-FM, KIPR/KPZK-AM, KLAL |
Webcast | Listen Live |
Website | http://www.b98.com/ |
KURB (98.5 FM, "B-98.5") is an Adult Contemporary radio station in Little Rock, Arkansas. It is owned by Cumulus Media. The station's studios are located in Little Rock off Chenal Parkway, and the transmitter tower is located on Shinall Mountain, near the Chenal Valley neighborhood of Little Rock. KURB is the area's continual top performer for women listenership.
The station's current lineup includes mornings with Lisa Fischer, Jennifer Christman and Chris Cannon; mid-days with Randy Cain; and afternoon drive with Becky Rogers. Chris Counts covers the morning traffic reports; Chris Ingram covers the afternoon traffic reports. The station has John Tesh's Intelligence for your Life, Sunday through Friday nights at 7pm.
The station also has a positive reputation in the community with its involvement with charitable organizations, most notably Arkansas Children's Hospital where more than $1.1 million has been raised through a very successful three-day radiothon in March of every year. The station won the "Ken Peterson Founder's Award for Station of the Year" in 2008 for its work with ACH. B98 was competing against stations in the US, UK and Canada.
Personalities who have previously worked at KURB include Little Rock radio icon Craig O'Neill, who left the station in 2000 for a position in local television. He now anchors evening newscasts for Little Rock's CBS-TV affiliate, KTHV.
KURB was originally supposed to be KAAY-FM. However, low penetration of FM receivers and the success of KAAY 1090 kept the project from getting off the ground.
The station signed on with call letters now on a CHR in Hot Springs, KLAZ. KLAZ 98 began like many FM's in the early 70's, with a progressive "underground" format. It adopted the top-40 format in the late 70's and benefitted from the increasing popularity of FM radio and being one of the first FM's in the market doing the format.
Although it changed calls to KZOU and became Zoo 98 in the mid-80's, it was wildly successful and ran original sister station KAAY out of the format. Zoo 98 was also the only station to beat KSSN in the first 10 years of its existence. It mopped the floor with top-40 competitor KKYK, though it would eventually fall to KKYK after a series of missteps, including letting popular morning man Craig O'Neill leave for KKYK, and an ownership change at KKYK that took the station and its format more seriously. Despite being overtaken by KKYK in '89, KZOU would continue to be a top-5 station.