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KTJM (98.5 ) is a licensed to Port Arthur, Texas. It is owned by and airs a . The and offices are located at 3000 Bering Drive in Southwest Houston. Programming is with 101.7 KNTE Bay City, Texas.

KTJM has an effective radiated power (ERP) of 100,000 , the highest permitted for non-grandfathered FM stations in the U.S. The is on Cleveland Street in Devers, Texas. Radio-Locator.com/KTJM The tower gives KTJM a height above average terrain (HAAT) of . With the tall tower located roughly halfway between Houston and Beaumont, KTJM is able to cover both .


History
The station in 1963 as KPAC-FM, owned by Port Arthur College, 1250 AM . Information from the Broadcasting Yearbook 1965 page B-155 It operated with a 960-watt signal on a 500-foot tower it shared with 1250 AM. Afterwards, KPAC-FM became an automated station, playing instrumental of popular songs, as well as and Hollywood show tunes.

The station changed its to KHYS in 1978, flipping to an format after the AM and FM pair were bought by based-Clear Channel Communications. In the mid 1980s, the format changed again, this time to Urban Adult Contemporary as "Y98.5, The Best Variety Of Hits and Dusties."

In 1988, a 2,000-foot tower was built near Devers for the station. The format changed to Urban Contemporary, using the moniker "Kiss 98.5." That put KHYS in head-to-head competition with , "Majic 102".

KYOK 1590 AM flipped from Gospel to Rap as "Yo 1590 Raps!" in February 1991, leading KHYS to change back to "Y98.5", with the slogan "Y98.5 Is Back, playing the best variety of Hits and Dusties."

In 1993, 103.3 and 1590 KYOK began simulcasting "Y98.5". KJOJ-FM continued to simulcast with 98.5 until December 2020. The station would play Smooth Jazz on Sundays.

The station started playing on Sundays. It proved so popular that on March 8, 1995, the simulcast flipped full time to , known as "Smooth FM 98.5 and 103.3".

On February 24, 1997, after stunting with continuous play of the song Kiss by Prince, the station's format changed to Rhythmic Contemporary as "Kiss 98-5, Kiss Again 103-3". The stations targeted the Hispanic youth market by playing heavy doses of and , mimicking the style of Power 96 in . In June 1998, the "Kiss 98-5, Kiss Again 103-3" format was tweaked again to rival 104.1 , by playing Rock and Pop based Top 40.

On January 1, 1999, the station jumped on the bandwagon as "98.5 The Jam". The call letters were changed to KTJM to match the new branding, becoming only the third set of call letters assigned to the facility since its sign on.

From 1999 to 2001, the station's moniker changed to "Houston's Jammin' Oldies," then to "Houston's Jammin' Hits", accompanied by a slight tweak in the each time.

In July 2001, the station flipped to the current "La Raza" format after being bought by Liberman Broadcasting. In 2019, Liberman ran into financial problems and declared Chapter 11. After reorganization, the corporate name changed to .


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