KTFI (1270 AM) is a radio station broadcasting a comedy format. Licensed to Twin Falls, Idaho, USA, the station serves the Twin Falls area. The station is currently owned by Salt & Light Radio, Inc. and features programing from CBS Radio.
KTFI started in 1931 with studios at its current transmitter site until 1940 when station owner Florence Gardner had a new studio facility built in downtown Twin Falls. The station originally transmitted on 1320 kHz, moved to 1280 kHz in 1934 and then to 1270 kHz in 1942. It also transmitted on 99.7 FM from 1948 until sometime in the 1950s. In about 1980, the station callsign was changed to KTLC when the format was changed to Country.
KPDA may refer to:
KPDA (100.7 FM, "La Poderosa") is a radio station broadcasting a regional Mexican format. Licensed to Mountain Home, Idaho, USA, the station serves the Boise area. The station is currently owned by Kevin Terry, through licensee Radio Rancho, LLC.
The station (then at 99.1 FM) was assigned the call letters KQKZ on 1980-12-12. On 1984-11-01, the station changed its call sign to KJCY-FM, on 1989-06-01 to KLVJ-FM, on 1997-01-07 to KTPZ, on 2007-03-30 to KTPD, and on 2007-06-28 to KTMB. In 2008 Impact Radio Group acquired the station and moved the KQLZ calls to this frequency from the 100.7 frequency, and along with it replaced the Talk format with Oldies, featuring programing from ABC Radio Network's True Oldies Channel.
On September 4, 2009 at 12 noon, KQLZ ended three days of stunting with Michael Jackson's "Thriller" to become "99-1 The Bronco," playing country music. The move came after the demise of the syndicated "True Oldies Channel" and subsequent retirement of longtime Boise radio voice "Big" Jack Armstrong. Then at 3:49pm on September 4, the Country format was abruptly stopped, and the station was again relaunched, this time as "99.1 The Virus."