KQCS
City of license Bettendorf, Iowa
Broadcast area Quad Cities
Branding Star 93.5
Slogan Today's Best Variety
Frequency 93.5 FM (MHz)
First air date July 4, 1984 (as KBQC)
Format Hot AC
ERP 6,000 watts
HAAT 97 meters
Class A
Facility ID 19791
Transmitter coordinates 41°36′14.0″N 90°24′43.0″W / 41.60389°N 90.41194°W / 41.60389; -90.41194
Callsign meaning K Quad Cities Star
Former callsigns KBQC (1989-1990)
KGLR (1990)
KQCS (1990-1995)
KORB (1995-2004)
Owner Cumulus Broadcasting
(Cumulus Licensing)
Sister stations WXLP, KBEA, KBOB-FM, KJOC
Webcast Listen Live
Website star935fm.com

KQCS is a radio station licensed to Bettendorf, Iowa, whose format is hot adult contemporary. The station's frequency is 93.5 MHz, and broadcasts at a power of 6 kW. The transmitter for KQCS is located on 205th Street in rural LeClaire in Scott County.

Contents

As KBQC [link]

KQCS signed on the air as KBQC-FM (call letters stood for: "Bettendorf-Quad Cities" on July 4, 1984 broadcasting live from a bandshell in Middle Park, during the "Old Fashioned 4th of July" event staged by the city of Bettendorf. For several weeks prior to going "live", the station had broadcast The Beatles "Here Comes the Sun", continuously, as a teaser to the slogan of the station, "B-93, Where it's Always 93 and Sunny."

KBQC was Bettendorf's first licensed commercial radio station, and was built off an FCC construction permit issued in May 1983, after a contentious application process by several proposed owner/operators.

The prevailing party was Stromquist Broadcast Services, owned by Peter Stromquist, of Edina, Minnesota.

Mr. Stromquist and his first hired employee, Barry Martin, originally from Joplin, MO, and later known as "Martin in the Morning," oversaw construction from the ground up, of the transmitting facilities in LeClaire, IA, and of the new studios and offices on State Street in downtown Bettendorf, located adjacent to Omeara's Pub.

Stromquist sold his interest in the station in 1985 and went on to become VP/GM Europe Middle East, Africa for United Press International,,CEO of ABC's radio division in Asia, and Director of Mainland China operations for the broadcasting division of Paris-based Hachette media.

Martin subsequently became the morning host of KVON-AM in the San Francisco bay area for nearly 20 years, and is now working in a PR capacity for local government.

As KORB - "93ROCK" [link]

From 1995-2004, the station was KORB-FM broadcasting an active rock format that is now heard on KBOB-FM. From 1997-2000, Howard Stern was broadcast in the morning on the station.

KORB was one of the highest rated stations in the Quad Cities for a few years. However, the ratings of sister station WXLP were not as good, and it didn't help that the two shared somewhat-similar formats. It decided in 2004 to pull the plug on the 97X format, which had been on-the-air since 1978. 93ROCK became 97ROCK, retaining the WXLP call letters. As a result, a Hot AC format took over the 93.5 frequncy as Star 93.5-KQCS.

93.5 Today [link]

KQCS (commonly known as "Star 93.5") is owned by Cumulus Media, with studios located in Davenport, Iowa, (along with the co-located WXLP-FM, KBEA-FM, KBOB-FM and KJOC).

External links [link]


https://wn.com/KQCS

KQCS (FM)

KQCS (104.9 FM), also known as 104.9 The Hawk, is a commercial radio station located in DeWitt, Iowa, broadcasting to the Quad Cities, Iowa area on 104.9 FM.

History

WGEN-FM

The Quad-Cities allocation for 104.9 MHz dates to 1977, when the city of license was Geneseo, Illinois. The station signed on as WGEN-FM, the FM sister station of WGEN-AM (1500 kHz). The station formatted country music, along with community and farm news, local sports and St. Louis Cardinals baseball.

In 1996, both WGEN-AM and WGEN-FM were sold to Connoisseur Communications, owner of KJOC, KORB, WXLP and KBOB. For a time, the FM station was a repeater of KJOC's AM signal, while the AM signal was a simulcast of KBOB (at the time, located at 99.7 FM). By 1997, ownership of the AM and FM frequencies were split, and Connoisseur moved the city of license to DeWitt, Iowa; a new transmitter tower was built near Long Grove (about 7 miles south of DeWitt), and the studios were moved to Davenport in anticipation of its first new format under the new ownership.

Podcasts:

PLAYLIST TIME:
×