Everything about Cfox-fm totally explained
CFOX-FM (identified on air and in print as
99.3 The Fox) is a Canadian radio station in the
Greater Vancouver region of
British Columbia. It broadcasts at 99.3 MHz on the
FM band with an
effective radiated power of 75,000 watts from a transmitter on
Mount Seymour in the
District of North Vancouver. Studios are located in downtown Vancouver, and the station is owned by
Corus Entertainment. CFOX has a
modern rock format.
History
CFOX began broadcasting on October 15,
1964 on 99.3 MHz with 100,000 watts, under the call sign CKLG-FM (not to be confused with the
new CKLG-FM in Vancouver on 96.9 MHz, a
Jack FM station). Transmissions originally came from the south slope of Fromme Mountain in North Vancouver.
CKLG-FM initially began with an
easy listening format, but in the fall of
1967, it started experimenting with rock music at night. In October that year, CKLG-FM program director Frank Callaghan hired record store owner Bill Reiter (who later went on to become part of the Dr. Bundolo's Pandemonium Medicine Show comedy troupe) to host the
jazz/
blues program
Groovin' Blue on Saturday evenings. CKLG-FM soon shifted to become Canada's first full-time FM rock music station on
March 16,
1968, with the expansion of
Groovin' Blue to six nights a week and the addition of tracks from rock, folk and popular albums. In
1970, CKLG-FM added a two-hour daily talk show hosted by Allen Garr, which ran on the station until
1975. By 1973, CKLG-FM had compiled a library of 3000 albums, and all its programming was aired live except on Sunday mornings, with special programming on the station including the Allen Garr talk show, live concerts and a Saturday sock-hop program. In 1976, under the guidance of new program director Roy Hennessy (a former morning host on CKLG-AM), the FM station made the gradual transition to a
progressive rock format.
At noon on
January 6,
1979, CKLG-FM changed to CFOX, a call sign first used by a
defunct AM radio station in
Montreal,
Quebec in the 1960s and 1970s. The switch was marked by
The Beatles song
The End, followed by
The End by
The Doors, then followed by three minutes of silence. The first song on the "new" CFOX was
Steely Dan's "FM".
In 1984, CFOX moved its transmitter to the Rogers Broadcast multiplex on nearby Mount Seymour in order to reduce multipath reception problems.
On
August 20,
1992, the
Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission (CRTC) approved the sale of CFOX and CKLG from Moffat Communications Ltd. to
Shaw Communications. This was part of Moffat's sale of its radio division. Transfer of CKLG/CFOX to Shaw was completed on
September 1, 1992. Shaw's broadcasting division became Corus Entertainment in 1999. When
Western International Communications, owner of classic rocker
CFMI, sold its radio stations to Corus in 2000, CFOX shifted from
album oriented rock to alternative rock, aiming at
Rogers' former alternative rocker 104.9 Xfm (CKVX-FM 104.9), which signed on
December 31,
1999.
Rogers changed CKVX from alternative rock to a
smooth jazz/
adult contemporary hybrid as 104.9 Clear FM, under the
CKCL callsign on
December 26,
2003, making CFOX the lone alternative rocker in Vancouver. CFOX mixed in classic
hard rock and
heavy metal music like what its sister station,
CFPL-FM in
London, Ontario, did in January 2004.
Station personnel
Current DJs
- Mornings: The Jeff O'Neill Show with Jeff O'Neill, Scotty, and Charis
- Middays: Neil Morrison
- Afternoons: Todd and Karen
- 6 O'Clock: Rock Report with Todd and Danger
- Evenings: Danger
- O Lana or Scott Alan
- Weekends: Scott Alan, Lana, The Strombo Show, 90's Brunch, Totally Out Of Order Countdown, Ongoing History Of New Music
Further Information
Get more info on 'Cfox-fm'.
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