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Kiss
Kiss-100-logo.png
City of license London, Severn Estuary and East Anglia
Broadcast area United Kingdom:
London, Severn Estuary, East Anglia (FM);
National (DAB)
Frequency FM
- 100.0 MHz (London)
- 101.0, 97.2 MHz (South Wales & the West)
- 105.6, 106.1, 106.4, 107.7 MHz (East of England)
DAB
- 11D (England and Wales)
- 12A (Scotland)
Sky: 0178
Virgin Media: 963
Freeview: 713
First air date 1 September 1990
Format Dance / hip hop / R & B
Audience share 2.2% (December 2012, [1])
Owner Bauer Radio
Sister stations Magic 105.4
Heat Radio
Kerrang! Radio
Key 103
Website www.kissfmuk.com

Kiss is a UK radio station broadcasting on FM and National DAB, specialising in hip hop, R&B, urban and electronic dance music. It also broadcasts on DAB Digital Radio around the UK & nationally on Freeview, Sky and TalkTalk TV. The Station forms part of the Bauer Passion Portfolio.

Contents

History [edit]

Kiss FM began in October 1985 as a pirate radio station, broadcasting first to South London then across the whole city, on 94FM. The station had gained a large audience by the time it was awarded a legitimate licence in 1990. It was suggested that the station had commanded almost 500,000 listeners while operating as an unlicensed pirate station. Kiss FM was established by Gordon 'Mac' McNamee (later its Managing Director until December 1997) and his friends; Tosca, Pyers Easton and George Power. Gordon Mac approached a successful London club promoter, Guy Wingate, to discuss ways of improving the Kiss FM profile. As a result, Wingate launched the very successful Kiss nights at the Wag Club (which included the first ever Acid House party[citation needed], an idea put forward by Kiss DJs Colin Faver and Danny Rampling). These nights increased the station's credibility with its target audience and Wingate joined the Kiss team, followed shortly thereafter by Lindsay Wesker.

Kiss 100's iconic logo 1990 to 1998

Kiss was 'owned' by Gordon Mac and in 1986 he sold shares to 10 of the DJs, including Tim Westwood, Jonathan More, Norman Jay, Trevor Nelson and others. Gordon Mac, Wesker and Wingate, the team of DJ's and a large number of volunteers took the station forward through a combination of grim determination and clever marketing. In 1988, the Department of Trade And Industry advertised the first new radio licence in London for many years and Kiss FM mounted a strong campaign to be awarded this licence. Despite public support, the licence was awarded to Jazz FM (now Smooth Radio). In the weekend that followed the announcement of the award, the Kiss team roamed London soliciting signatures for a public petition that was delivered on the Monday morning to the then Home Secretary, Douglas Hurd.

New licences were subsequently advertised and this time Kiss,. with significant public and listener support, was awarded one of these.[1]

On 1 September 1990 Kiss relaunched as a legal station, with its studio and offices located on the Holloway Road, and financial support from EMAP. Many of the station's past DJs have become influential in popular music, including Paul 'Trouble' Anderson, Trevor Nelson, Judge Jules, Chris Philips, Dave Pearce, Sarah HB, Steve Jackson, Colin Dale, Norman Jay, Nick Power, Richie Rich, Coldcut, Tony De Vit, Jazzie B, Gilles Peterson, Pete Wardman, Hixxy & Sharkey, Slipmatt, Graham Gold, Squirrel and DJ Vibes.

1999 rebranding and criticism [edit]

EMAP took full control of Kiss 100 as early as 1992, but there was no significant rebranding of Kiss 100 and the Kiss brand until 1998. The rebranding resulted in a new logo being adopted in 1999. EMAP wanted to align Kiss 100 with the rest of its radio operations and to do so, Mark Story (previously of Magic 105.4) was engaged in January 1999 as the new Director of Music Programming. At the same time, the Kiss studios and offices was moved from its original roots to EMAP's main premises in Central London. These changes led to criticism from both former presenters and listeners alike, concerned that Kiss 100 was losing its musical direction.

Kiss 100's logo 1999 to 2008

One of Kiss 100's most popular DJs, Steve Jackson, was sacked in December 1998, which was followed by a high profile court case.[2] At the same time, a number of other founding DJs decided to quit the station in protest at the changes being implemented,[3] whilst others were lured away by the increasingly dance-oriented BBC Radio 1. Many listeners equate Gordon Mac's final show on 28 March 1998 and subsequent departure from the station as the spiritual end of the original Kiss.

Ofcom record fine [edit]

In June 2006, Kiss 100 was fined a record fee for any UK commercial radio station of £175,000 by media regulator Ofcom. Ofcom punished Kiss 100 for "numerous and serious breaches" of broadcasting codes after receiving 10 complaints from April to November 2005. They involved prank calls on the Bam Bam breakfast show where consent was not sought from the "victims" and controversial material aired when children were likely to be listening. Kiss 100 said it accepted the findings and apologised for any offence [4]

September 2006 relaunch [edit]

Emap introduced a second major revamp of the Kiss brand on 6 September 2006.[5] This included a new logo designed by ODD, a renewed focus on dance music, more specialist shows and a new website for all 3 Kiss stations at kissfmuk.com replacing the previous website at kiss100.com.

The relaunch was implemented simultaneously with the rebranding of Kiss 100's sister dance stations, Vibe 101 and Vibe 105-108 as Kiss 101 and Kiss 105-108 respectively.

The changes at Kiss 100 were introduced to address falling listener figures and to keep the station competitive in the highly-contested London market.

Recent Times [edit]

In December 2010, Ofcom approved the request from Bauer Radio to drop local programming content from the three Kiss stations, creating a national service.[6] On the condition that Kiss would be available on 35 DAB multiplexes around the UK on the day local information is dropped and rising to 38 within 3 months of the changes.

In December 2012, Kiss 100 appeared nationally on Digital One's national multiplex on DAB.

In February 2013, Kiss owner Bauer Media has confirmed it will drop the station from local stereo DAB slots in favour of a national mono channel, running at 80 kbps.[7]

Programming [edit]

The Kiss schedule at present is:[8]

Monday–Thursday [edit]

Time Main presenter(s)/programme Location
00:00 – 01:00 Midnight Mix (Mon), Logan Sama (Tue), The Kiss Dubstep Show (Wed), DJ Hype (Thu) London
01:00 – 02:00 Sinden (Mon), Kiss Ibiza (Tue–Fri)
02:00 – 06:00 Freddie Smith
06:00 - 10:00 Rickie, Melvin and Charlie in the Morning: Rickie Haywood Williams, Charlie Hedges and Melvin O'Doom
09:00 – 11:00 Justin Wilkes
11:00 – 12:00 Kisstory with Justin Wilkes
12:00 – 15:00 Neev Spencer
15:00 – 19:00 Michael Lewis & Clara Amfo
19:00 – 22:00 Jez Welham
22:00 – 00:00 AJ (Mon–Thu)

Friday [edit]

Time Main presenter(s)/programme Location
00:00 – 01:00 The Kiss Hip Hop Show London
01:00 – 02:00 Kiss Ibiza (Tue–Fri)
02:00 – 06:00 Freddie Smith
06:00 - 10:00 Rickie, Melvin and Charlie in the Morning: Rickie Haywood Williams, Charlie Hedges and Melvin O'Doom
09:00 – 11:00 Justin Wilkes
11:00 – 12:00 Kisstory with Justin Wilkes
12:00 – 15:00 Neev Spencer
15:00 – 19:00 Michael Lewis & Clara Amfo
19:00 – 22:00 Friday Night Kiss with Steve Smart
22:00 – 00:00 DJ EZ

Saturday [edit]

Time Main presenter(s)/programme Location
00:00 – 02:00 DJ Piooner London
02:00 – 04:00 Kiss Ibiza
04:00 – 06:00 Neev Spencer
06:00 – 10:00 Clara Amfo
10:00 – 11:00 Kiss 10 O'Clock Takeover
11:00 – 14:00 Jez Welham
14:00 – 17:00 Martin Archer
17:00 – 20:00 Kissalicious
20:00 – 23:00 Saturday Night Kiss with Steve Smart
23:00 – 00:00 Kiss Presents Hed Kandi: Hed Kandi

Sunday [edit]

Time Main presenter(s)/programme Location
00:00 – 02:00 Saturday Night Kiss London
02:00 – 03:00 Charlie Hedges
04:00 – 06:00 The Rehab
06:00 – 10:00 Freddie Smith
10:00 – 11:00 Kiss 10 O'Clock Kisstory Takeover
11:00 – 14:00 Martin Archer
14:00 – 17:00 Michael Lewis
17:00 – 19:00 Kiss UK Hot40 Big Beats Chart: Rickie Haywood Williams and Melvin O'Doom
19:00 – 22:00 Kiss Never End Weekend
22:00 – 23:00 Never End Kiss Weekend - Dixon Brothers
23:00 – 00:00 Never End Kiss Weekend - TS5

Presenters [edit]

Kiss 100 presenters across the day include Rickie Haywood Williams & Melvin, Justin Wilkes (b. 16 January), Neev Spencer, Jez Welham, Martin Archer and Freddie Smith. Specialist output begins at 10pm, AJ King presents Evenings during the week, but Fridays are controlled by Steve Smart from 10pm - 12am the music at this time is mainly UK garage and weekend shows include Hed Kandi Mix & The KISS Hip Hop Show.

Rickie, Melvin and Charlie Breakfast Show [edit]

The weekday breakfast show is presented by Rickie Haywood Williams, Melvin O'Doom and Charlie Hedges (born 18 July 1987), with Adam K (born c. 9 September 1967) as producer, who took over the slot from Robin Banks in May 2007. He in turn replaced the previous long serving breakfast host Bam Bam (real name Peter Poulton) in April 2006, moving from the drive-time slot. The original breakfast show team lasted two years, composed of Graham Gold, Mark Webster and Sarah HB. Graham stayed with the station as he was already presenting the Kiss 100 Dance Chart and later took over the shows of Judge Jules and Danny Rampling before being the first presenter of Friday Night Kiss which aired across all the E-Map Big City Stations. Mark returned to TV whilst Sarah went to Radio 1. Bam Bam left shortly after the station received a record fine from the industry regulator, Ofcom after a series of breaches of the broadcasting code.[4]

The Londoners were plucked from obscurity to front the Kiss 100 morning slot in a trial run in the summer of 2006. According to latest data, the duo had 776,000 listeners each week.[9] Overall the station now has 1.71 million listeners, and a 4.6 percent share, in the first three months of 2009.[10]

Patrick Forge [edit]

Patrick Forge hosted a two hour show on Sunday nights from 0100-0300. He played Soul Fusion, Acid jazz and associated forms, along with more modern records with underground jazzy, soulful sounds. He is one of the longest serving hosts of a show on the station, as he joined near the time Kiss turned from a pirate radio station into a commercial operator and left in 2010

John Digweed [edit]

From September 2000 to January 2011, John Digweed hosted a two-hour show featuring progressive house and trance. The first hour featured music played by Digweed, either mixed live or recorded from one of his past gigs. The second hour was a guest mix by a different artist each week. Guests on the show often include other world-famous DJs and new talents, such as Sasha, Sander Kleinenberg, Desyn Masiello, and James Zabiela.

DJ Hype [edit]

DJ Hype currently hosts a one hour drum and bass show every Wednesday from 2300 GMT. The show features the latest promo releases and also interviews and guest mixes.

DJ EZ [edit]

DJ EZ currently hosts a two hour UK garage show every Friday night from 10pm called 'Destination Weekend', including current and classic tracks from the UKG scene. Another show, airing on Saturday nights from 10pm-11pm called 'The Bassline Mix', focusing predominantly on Bassline came to an end on 1 November 2008. DJ EZ is a highly respected DJ in the UK garage scene and has released several garage compilation CDs entitled Pure Garage.

Logan Sama [edit]

Logan Sama currently hosts the first dedicated Grime show on legal radio every Monday night between the hours of 12pm-1am. Acting as a platform for some of the most exciting British underground MCing talent, the show has seen artists such as Dizzee Rascal, Kano, Wiley, Lethal B and Roll Deep all make several appearances. As a vital source of new music from the British grime scene, the show has regularly pulled in a large and dedicated listenership over its 3 year history.

See also [edit]

References [edit]

  1. ^ Hebditch, Stephen (1991). "AM/FM - Spring 1990". TQM Communications. 
  2. ^ Hartley-Brewer, Julia (18 August 1999). "Kiss DJ sacked 'for being black'". The Guardian (London). Retrieved 7 May 2010. 
  3. ^ NME.COM | News | THE BIG KISS-OFF
  4. ^ a b "Kiss FM handed record radio fine". BBC News. 20 June 2006. Retrieved 7 May 2010. 
  5. ^ Day, Julia (4 September 2006). "Kiss and shake up". The Guardian (London). Retrieved 7 May 2010. 
  6. ^ Today, Radio (2010). "Kiss allowed to go national". Radio Today. 
  7. ^ Today, Radio (2013). "Kiss to drop local DAB, Bauer confirms". Radio Today. 
  8. ^ "Schedule | KISS". Kissfmuk.com. Retrieved 2013-03-03. 
  9. ^ Tristan O'Carroll (2009-05-07). "RAJAR Q1 2009: Johnny and Lisa consolidate Capital FM's hold on the London breakfast radio show top slot - Media news". Media Week. Retrieved 2013-03-03. 
  10. ^ Plunkett, John (7 May 2009). "Rajars: Johnny Vaughan and Lisa Snowdon extend London breakfast lead". The Guardian (London). Retrieved 7 May 2010. 

External links [edit]

Coordinates: 51°30′58″N 0°08′18″W / 51.51598°N 0.13844°W / 51.51598; -0.13844


Original courtesy of Wikipedia: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kiss_(radio_station) — Please support Wikipedia.
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Tribune-Review
Wed, 24 Apr 2013 18:14:17 -0700

Jenny Pryor, a fifth-grade teacher at Whitehall, won an in-school appearance for the students with the Globetrotters through the 96.1 KISS radio station. The Harlem Globetrotters were in town for a game on April 21 at the Consol Energy Center in ...
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