Logan Davis

I think Curtis Media Group is really trying to have KIX 102 FM be a North Carolina exclusive because for the majority of the time I was in Florida for vacation in July, the station's app and webcast would not work, but then they worked just fine when we got back to NC. Thankfully, Jammin' 99.9's webcast worked outside North Carolina because that's owned by a different company, specifically Capitol Broadcasting's Sunrise Broadcasting LLC. What I'm saying is, if y'all try to listen to KIX 102 FM for yourselves, it probably wouldn't work unless you're in North Carolina. But other companies thankfully have webcasts work outside their origin states. For example: I can play the webcast of a Kansas radio station known as 99.3 The Eagle here in North Carolina. That station's owned by Cumulus Media, which I found out that company does radio stations in more than one state. That said, in North Carolina, Cumulus Media has the station Q98 (WQSM-FM Fayetteville, NC; 98.1) which i thought was related to G105 at first but then I found out Q98 is owned by Cumulus Media, not iHeartRadio. Also, fun fact... When I first heard 99.3 The Eagle after Google's AI answering section recommended it to me after searching for a station that plays Casey Kasem's American Top 40 - The 80s on Sunday evenings (after missing KIX 102 FM and Jammin' 99.9's broadcasts of a certain AT40 episode), it was my first time listening to a station where the call sign starts with K instead of W. Because of how Kansas is west of the Mississippi River, stations like 99.3 The Eagle (that broadcasts in Topeka KS) use K, while areas that are east of the river like Wilmington, NC (for Jammin' 99.9) and Raleigh, NC (for KIX 102 FM) use W for radio call signs.

99.3 The Eagle's call sign is KWIC.
KIX 102 FM's call signs are WKIX for 102.9, WKXU for 102.5, and WKJO for 102.3.
Jammin' 99.9's call sign is WKXB.

And yeah. That's basically it.

3 months ago | [YT] | 18