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Encyclopedia > Drive 105
Drive 105 transmitters
Call sign/Frequency Location Power Class
WGVX 105.1 MHz Lakeville 2,600 watts A
WGVY 105.3 MHz Cambridge 25,000 watts C3
WGVZ 105.7 MHz Eden Prairie 6,000 watts A

Drive 105 is a radio station (arguably, a tiny radio network) serving the Minneapolis-St. Paul region, and an area of central Minnesota to the north. The station has three relatively weak FM signals. The ultimate owner of the station is Disney/ABC.


In the 1990s, the station was owned by Cargill Communications and operated as REV-105, “Revolution Radio,” using the call signs KREV, WREV, and KCFE for the three different frequencies. REV-105 played a fairly wide variety of music, generally based around modern rock, and put a lot of time into promoting music from local performers. Area highschoolers would contribute to some of the programming put on the air.


The station became a focal point for critics of the Telecommunications Act of 1996 when it was purchased by competitor Disney/Capitol Cities/ABC and changed formats on March 11th, 1997. Fans of the station banded together to protest the action, and the group Americans for Radio Diversity was formed.


The papers to make the purchase official were signed at noon on March 11th, and the station changed formats very soon thereafter at 1:15 PM. It lasted for several months as the hard rock X105, but the station had a string of format changes until settling as Drive 105 for a few years.

Name (call signs) Format
X105 (KXXP/KXXU/KXXR) Hard rock (1997)
Zone 105 (KZNZ/KZNR/KZNT) Adult alternative (1997–1999)
Classic alternative (1999–2000)
Alternative rock (2000–2001)
V105 (WGVX/WGVY/WGVZ) Rhythmic oldies (2001–2002)
Drive 105 (WGVX/WGVY/WGVZ) Adult album alternative (2002– )

Many observers were confused by the purchase of REV-105 in 1997. At the time, ABC already owned two powerful 100 kilowatt stations in the Twin Cities, KQRS and KEGE (93.7 FM “The Edge”), so the buyout of a weaker station with only a moderate ratings share didn't make sense. KEGE was the most direct competitor to REV-105, having broadcast a modern rock/alternative format at the time.


Curiously, that station had been a hard rock station for a few years up until 1994, known as “93X.” After REV-105 had been purchased and operating as X105 for a few months, the KEGE returned to a hard rock format as 93X on September 18th and X105 switched to an adult alternative format a week later. After a few months, 93X took the KXXR callsign from the former X105.


In one aspect, many feel that the motivation to purchase REV-105 was probably to eliminate the competition with money rather than savvy programming. However, another important point is that a huge wave of consolidation was sweeping across the United States at the time, and the purchase of the station by ABC could be seen in some ways as a defensive maneuver against other growing radio conglomerates such as Chancellor Broadcasting which then owned seven radio stations in the Twin Cities and was eventually bought by radio giant Clear Channel Communications in 1999.


Prior to becoming REV-105, the three transmitters were known by other names. Today's WGVX originated as KZPZ in 1990, then changed to WTCX in 1993, before becoming KREV in 1994. WGVY began as KXLV in 1983, became one of the many WLOL reincarnations in 1991, and then became WREV in 1994. WGVZ started as KOUO in 1992, and was briefly jazz station KCFE from 1993 until it was eventually purchased to become REV-105's third transmitter. Some consider REV to have been a successor to another "alternative" station that shut down in the early 1990s, KJJO 104.1 FM (now WXPT). In 2005, some former REV hosts came back together on the Minnesota Public Radio station KCMP 89.3.


External links

References

  • Reece, Doug (April 4, 1998). KREV Fans Rally for Radio Diversity. (http://www.radiodiversity.com/billboard.html) Billboard. (archived at Americans for Radio Diversity)
  • Hwang, Francis (April 3, 1997). Radio-Free Minneapolis. (http://www.beatworld.com/press/mndaily2.html) The Minnesota Daily. (archived at Beatworld.com)
  • REV 105, the Reader and Life on Main Street. (http://www.mndaily.com/daily/1997/03/13/editorial_opinions/erev.ed/) The Minnesota Daily.
  • Haugen, Dan. The End of Radio As We Know It. (http://www.startribune.com/stories/615/42586.html) Minneapolis Star Tribune.
  • Rand, Michael. Radio Killed the Radio Star. (http://sjmc.cla.umn.edu/stupro/resonance/Feature-1.htm)
  • Northpine.com News Archive: March 1997 (http://www.northpine.com/broadcast/archive/news0397.htm)
  • Northpine.com News Archive (http://www.northpine.com/broadcast/archive/)

  Results from FactBites:
 
Valle Crucis Conference Center - Where We Are (1428 words)
Drive approximately three (3) miles to the intersection with NC-194 (in front of Valle Crucis Elementary School).
Drive approximately 1.3 miles, past the Valle Crucis Conference Center sign and around a sharp righthand curve, to the parking lot of Holy Cross Church.
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WGVX - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (2063 words)
Drive 105 is an adult-oriented alternative rock radio station serving the Minneapolis-St. Paul region via three different frequencies, and an area of central Minnesota to the north.
Drive 105's current format is a hybrid of two different formats: alternative rock and adult album alternative.
Drive 105, along with sister stations KQRS and KXXR (93X), are often referred to as Disney's "Wall Of Rock".
  More results at FactBites »


 
 

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