KBER

KBER
City Ogden, Utah
Broadcast area Salt Lake City-Ogden-Provo, Utah
Branding KBER 101
Slogan Utah's Rock Station
Frequency 101.1 MHz (also on HD Radio)
First air date July 13, 1975 (as KDAB)
Format Mainstream rock
ERP 25,000 watts
HAAT 1,140 meters (3,740 ft)
Class C
Facility ID 10779
Transmitter coordinates 40°39′34″N 112°12′5″W / 40.65944°N 112.20139°W / 40.65944; -112.20139
Callsign meaning K BEaR
Former callsigns KDAB (1975-1990)
Owner Cumulus Media
(Radio License Holding CBC, LLC)
Sister stations KBEE, KENZ, KFNZ, KHTB, KRUZ, KKAT, KUBL-FM
Webcast Listen Live
Website kber.com
The KBER Van, used for promotions and events.

KBER (101.1 FM) is a radio station broadcasting a mainstream rock format. Licensed to Ogden, Utah, USA, the station serves the Salt Lake City metropolitan area. The station is currently owned by Cumulus Media.[1] The station's studios are located in South Salt Lake (behind the I-15/I-80 interchange.

History

Prior to 1986, KBER was known as KDAB, and was licensed to Ogden (as KBER is to this day.) It was known then as "B101". KBER began on 106.5, but moved to its current position during the 1990s. It was purchased by Citadel Broadcasting during that time.[2] It also morphed into "101 The Bear". The station employed a number of on-air talent including "Uncle Nasty". Uncle Nasty's irreverent style translated into an instant following especially with Men 18-34. Uncle Nasty was on air 7pm to 12am, then moved to morning drive a year later. In 1998 the station reverted to the more familiar "KBER 101" slogan of its earlier years and is currently a top rated mainstream rock station in Salt Lake City Utah.[3] By 2008, the station's sister station KHTB became a modern rock station, carrying mostly newer rock. KBER gradually began to change its playlist to include more classic rock songs, although it has since returned to a mainstream rock format. Later on, Mediabase & Nielsen BDS began reporting KBER on the mainstream rock panel. Citadel merged with Cumulus Media on September 16, 2011.[4]

Early programming

The station arrived as one of the leading FM radio stations in the market with on air personalities Street and Katherine, Tom Collins, Kevin Lewis, John Edwards and Mark Christiansen to name a few. The early to mid 90's were the wild days with Cory "Porn Master" Draper, Casey "The Night Rocker" Baird, Kevin "Easy" Eason, Alan "Dr. Rock" Bain, Mark "Erection" Erickson, "Young Hung" Brandon Young, Ron Harrison, Allen "My Wife has me by the Balls" Handy, Helmut "No longer a part timer" Von Schmidt, Chris Howey "Opie Asswipe", Jamie "Hymie Escalante" Valle'e, the screaming weather man, Patrick "Skye Bleu" Burton, Michael Hayes, Nate "The Hitman" and others. Those were the days of Mike Marble's wildly successful KBER-RAFTERS Showcase Concert Series.[5]

The Ron & Allen Morning Show was wildly popular and they even had their own television show called "Rock Utah" which aired on local channel 30. Some of the more memorable events the morning show perpetrated were the "Heterosexual Pride Parade", a wrestling match between Ron and the "Punisher" against Allen and Hymie, which raised money for the MDA, Hymie taking the morn show and some listeners skydiving, Allen and Hymie driving a top fuel dragster at Bonneville Raceway, and a hoax which had listeners believing that Allen Handy had been arrested by the Secret Service. The show was every bit as wild as anything being done at the time in the largest markets, including Howard Stern in New York City. After Ron Harrison was summarily dismissed for an on-air stunt, Allen Handy and Michael Hayes took over as "Handy & Hayes" for several months carrying on the tradition of placing within the top 1-2 stations in the 18-34 demographic within Salt Lake City's market.[6][7]

Darby (now with sister station KENZ) hosted the midday show prior to Kelly Hammer taking over in 2008.[8] Prior to Darby, the midday shift was hosted by Helen Powers, who went on to work for a number of other radio stations.[9]

Current programming

Mornings during the week on KBER previously featured the sydnicated "Bob and Tom Show" (1998–present).[10] The morning show is now handled by Victor Cade along with co-host Rebecca Cade (no relation). Marci Wiser is the mid-day rock diva. Mick and Allen's "Freak Show" airs in the afternoons and is followed by Helmut Radio. Mick and Allen returned to KBER in 2005.[11] Weekends are currently hosted by Alan Bain, Casey Baird (who returned to KBER in 2016) and Victor Cade. "The Jimbo Show" airs Saturday nights 7 - midnight. Jimbo is also on Mick & Allen's "Freakshow". At 8 PM on Sunday nights, "Corky" hosts the "Salt Lake Soundcheck," which is one of only a handful of shows that airs local talent on Utah radio. Mitch is on Sunday nights following the "Salt Lake Soundcheck" as well as some weekday over-nights. Weekday overnights are also hosted by radio veteran Michael Cain. Along with regular shows, the station also does live broadcasts during business or station promotions at various events. Every year, KBER hosts an event known as "The North Pole Express" which is a take on the story The Polar Express and is an event co-hosted by the Make-A-Wish Foundation. It is held at Soldier Hollow, outside of Heber, Utah.[12]

Signal

KBER broadcasts an HD signal along with analog on 101.1 MHz. Its transmitter is located 18 miles (29 km) southwest of Salt Lake City on Farnsworth Peak. As with its sister FM stations, the station has an ERP of 25,000 watts. This, along with the characteristics and elevation of Farnsworth Peak allow KBER to be received in most of northern Utah, specifically the Wasatch Front.[13]

References

  1. "KBER Facility Record". United States Federal Communications Commission, audio division.
  2. Broadcast History, Salt Lake City Radio
  3. Radio-Info Market Data
  4. "Cumulus now owns Citadel Broadcasting". Atlanta Business Journal. September 16, 2011. Retrieved September 16, 2011.
  5. "KBER REPLACES `SHOCK JOCKS'WITH LESS RISQUE PAIR". Deseret News, The. March 15, 1991.
  6. "KBER AIRING LIVE MUSIC EVERY FRIDAY FOR 1 HOUR". Deseret News, The. July 15, 1994.
  7. Arbitron Analysis Heads West - All Access
  8. All Access - KBER's Darby Rocks Twice as Much
  9. All Access - Helen Powers Joins The Bear at WYYD
  10. "KBER tunes in all-talk morning show". Deseret News, The. January 16, 1998.
  11. "Mick, Allen show returns to KBER". Deseret News, The. March 11, 2005.
  12. "The Heber Polar Express". Deseret Morning News. December 11, 2008.
  13. KBER-FM Radio Station Information
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