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==History== ===3DB=== {{Main|3DB (Melbourne)}} 3DB was awarded its broadcast licence in 1925 but did not immediately come on air due to debates in Federal Parliament as to whether or not Australia should proceed with the then-unique system of A Class (later [[Australian Broadcasting Corporation|ABC]]) and B Class (later commercial) stations.<ref name="Griffen-Foley, Bridget 2009">[[Griffen-Foley, Bridget]], ''Changing Stations: The Story of Australian Commercial Radio'', [[University of New South Wales Press]], 2009, Sydney</ref> The station was originally owned by Druleigh Business and Technical College Pty Ltd,<ref name="McLaughlin, Bill 1885">McLaughlin, Bill, ''From Wireless to Radio: The 3DB Story'', [[Herald & Weekly Times]] Melbourne, 1985</ref> hence the callsign '''DB'''. 3DB eventually made its on-air debut on 21 February 1927<ref>{{cite news |title=New Broadcasting Station |work=[[The Argus (Melbourne)]] |date=22 February 1927 |page=10}}</ref> in a fairly low-key manner.<ref name="Griffen-Foley, Bridget 2009"/> From 1929 until 1987, 3DB was owned and operated by the [[Herald & Weekly Times]] (HWT), owners of ''[[The Herald (Melbourne)|The Herald]]'' and ''[[The Sun News-Pictorial]]'', then separate [[newspaper]]s. For most of this era 3DB was one of Melbourne's most popular stations, topping ratings surveys for some decades.<ref>Jones, Colin, ''Something in the Air: A History of Radio in Australia'', Kangaroo Press, 1995.</ref> 3DB was extremely popular in all fields in which it broadcast. Music ranged from [[pop music]] and [[Top 40]] to [[classical music|classical]], some of it live. The station was also a big producer of [[radio drama]] (including [[soap opera]]s), live [[variety (radio)|variety]] programs, quizzes, etc. 3DB also transmitted many sporting events, particularly [[horse racing]], [[Australian Football League|VFL]] football, and [[test cricket]] from England. 3DB's women's programs and children's session were also popular.<ref>various program guides of different areas, in the collection of Albert Isaacs, Melbourne.</ref><ref name="McLaughlin, Bill 1885"/> One of the most important people in 3DB's history was [[David Thomas Worrall]],<ref>{{cite book|url=http://adb.anu.edu.au/biography/worrall-david-thomas-12074|title=Australian Dictionary of Biography|first=John|last=Spierings|chapter=Worrall, David Thomas (1894β1968)|publisher=National Centre of Biography, Australian National University|via=Australian Dictionary of Biography}}</ref> who was appointed manager of the station by the ''Herald and Weekly Times''{{'}} Sir [[Keith Murdoch]] in 1929, and who was to remain as manager until 1958. He was responsible for introducing many big budget programs. From 1942 onwards, 3DB was the radio broadcaster of the [[Royal Children's Hospital, Melbourne|Royal Children's Hospital]]'s [[Good Friday Appeal]] and played a major part in promoting the appeal, with the sums raised annually increasing dramatically from 1942 onwards.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://goodfridayappeal.com.au/about-us/our-history/funds-raised-year-by-year/|title = Funds raised year by year}}</ref><ref name="Carty, Bruce 2011">Carty, Bruce, ''On the Air: Australian Radio History'', privately published, 2011, Gosford, N.S.W.</ref><ref>{{Cite book|chapter-url=http://adb.anu.edu.au/biography/worrall-david-thomas-12074|title = Australian Dictionary of Biography|chapter = Worrall, David Thomas (1894β1968)|publisher = National Centre of Biography, Australian National University}}</ref> After purchasing the [[Geelong Advertiser]] and its subsidiary [[K Rock 95.5|3GL]] in 1987, the Herald and Weekly Times owned more than one station in the Melbourne/Geelong region and, thus, was required by the [[Australian Broadcasting Tribunal]] to divest itself of one station. 3DB was sold and actually had four owners for short periods in the 12 months of 1987. [[Albert Music|J Albert & Son]], a [[Sydney]] based music company and owners of [[KIIS 106.5|2UW]], purchased 3DB in late 1987 and changed the [[call sign]] to '''3TT'''. The last program to be broadcast under the 3DB call sign, in the very early hours of 2 April 1988, was a repeat of [[Bert Newton]]'s 1987 documentary on the 60th anniversary of 3DB. ===3TT=== The 3TT station name and a classic hits format were launched at 5.00 am on 2 April 1988. The first song played was [[The Doobie Brothers]] "[[Listen to the Music]]". The major reason cited for the change of name was the fact that 3DB had recently broadcast under the slogan ''3DB - The New Beginning'' and it was felt that that would have made it difficult to dramatically change the format whilst retaining the name, 3DB. However, the new owners had actually considered a few other new call-signs, particularly names which included the same initial being repeated twice, such as 3BB or 3MM.<ref name="Carty, Bruce 2011"/> Lawrence Costin who had been on the 3DB announcing staff for over 30 years was the only 3DB on-air personality to be retained by 3TT; as a newsreader and reporter.<ref name="Carty, Bruce 2011"/><ref>{{cite web | url=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YXLGFV7mTjk | title=Interview with Lawrence Costin | website=[[YouTube]] }}</ref> ===From AM to FM=== At midnight on 23-24 June 1990 the station converted to FM broadcasting on 101.1 MHz.<ref>http://www.mediaspy.org/forum/index.php?/topic/3670-radio-history/?view=findpost&p=706879 {{Dead link|date=March 2022}}</ref> 3DB/3TT's old AM frequency of 1026 AM was returned to the government, and from 1991, it was used by the ABC for '''3PB''', which broadcast intermittently with live coverage of federal parliament. In 1994, 3PB became a full-time news and parliament station [[ABC NewsRadio]]. The events leading up to the transference of 3TT's licence to the [[FM radio]] band are quite complicated and political. Broadcasting on the FM band commenced in the US as early as 1933. There had been Australian experiments on the FM band in earlier years, but in the 1970s the [[Gough Whitlam|Whitlam]] Labor government decided to issue the first permanent FM licences in Australia to community radio stations. The first such licence in Melbourne was issued to [[3MBS]] in 1975. The [[Malcolm Fraser|Fraser]] coalition government continued the Whitlam policy and expanded the range of FM broadcasters, firstly by introducing the Australia-wide [[ABC Classic FM|ABC FM]] network. This was followed by a number of brand new commercial stations; the first to open in Melbourne being [[Triple M Melbourne|EON FM]]. Not surprisingly, there were protests from commercial stations on the AM band because they were not able to bid for stations on the FM band. This was seen by many as a big problem as FM was then seen as the future of radio broadcasting, and many stations who had pioneered the commercial side of the Australian industry saw themselves as being left out of its future development, even though many of them - including 3TT - had a history dating back to the 1920s. The Fraser government was not prepared to allocate FM licences to all AM stations, which is what the industry wanted, and what had occurred in many overseas countries. However, under some pressure, in the late 1980s the government decided to transfer one or two stations in the major cities from the AM to FM band, using a much criticised auction-style system in which those stations wishing to transfer bands were to put in bids, with the highest bids being accepted. In Melbourne the two highest bids were to be accepted, with six of the seven existing AM stations placing bids. (The exception being [[3AW]] which argued that its older listening-base preferred the AM band to the FM band.) The three highest bids were received from: [[Gold 104.3|3KZ]] - $32 million; [[3AK]] - $22 million; and 3TT - $11 million. The vast disparity in the bids suggests that there was no collusion between stations, and virtually no industrial espionage. Further, [[Magic 1278|3XY]] which had put in an even lower bid was quite convinced that it would get one of the two FM licences being offered.<ref name="radiorecall.blogspot.com.au">{{Cite web|url=http://radiorecall.blogspot.com.au/2010/06/melbourne-3tt-3ttt.html|title=Melbourne: 3TT, 3TTT|date=19 June 2010}}</ref> In 1987, [[Kerry Packer]] of [[Are Media|Australian Consolidated Press]] had sold the [[Nine Network|Nine Television Network]] to [[Alan Bond (businessman)|Alan Bond]], and 3AK was included in the deal, even though Bond had made it clear that he was interested in the TV stations but not in radio - he therefore defaulted on his payment for an FM licence.<ref>see [[3AK]]</ref><ref name="radiorecall.blogspot.com.au"/> The second Melbourne FM licence on offer was, therefore, eventually given to the third-highest bidder, 3TT. ===TT-FM=== Initially from opening on 24 June 1990, 3TTT retained the format of 3TT, using the on-air name '''101.1 TT-FM'''. The first song that aired on TT-FM was "[[In the Air Tonight]]" by [[Phil Collins]]. In 1993, TT-FM was relaunched as an adult contemporary music station. === Mix 101.1 === In June 2001, the station rebranded to '''Mix 101.1''' after joining the [[KIIS Network|Mix Network]]. The station was similar to [[KIIS 106.5|Mix 106.5]] in Sydney in creating an emphasis on more music and less talk. The last song that aired on Mix 101.1 was "[[Bye Bye Bye]]" by [[NSYNC]]. === KIIS 101.1 === In November 2014, the [[Australian Radio Network]] announced that Mix 101.1 would rebrand to '''KIIS 101.1''' on 19 January 2015 with a new breakfast and drive show. ''[[Matt & Jane]]'' replaced ''[[Chrissie & Jane]]'' in the station's breakfast timeslot, with existing presenter [[Jane Hall (actress)|Jane Hall]] to remain alongside former [[Fox FM (Melbourne)|Fox FM]] breakfast and [[Triple M Melbourne|Triple M]] drive host [[Matt Tilley]].<ref>{{cite news|last1=Cashmere|first1=Paul|author-link1=Paul Cashmere|title=Matt Tilley And Jane Hall Join New KIIS 101.1 Melbourne|url=http://www.noise11.com/news/matt-tilley-and-jane-hall-join-new-kiis-101-1-melbourne-20141116|access-date=3 October 2015|work=Noise11.com|date=16 November 2014}}</ref> ''Rosso on Drive'' was replaced by ''[[Hughesy & Kate]]'', hosted by [[Dave Hughes]] and [[Kate Langbroek]] and formerly of [[Nova 100]] breakfast. Both shows began on 19 January 2015, with the latter being networked across the [[KIIS Network]] of stations.<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.mix1011.com.au/entertainment/hughesy-and-kate-to-join-kiis-1011-in-2015|title = KIIS 1011 Melbourne}}</ref><ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.arn.com.au/assets/1579531/media-release---arn-s-mix-melbourne-rebrands-as-kiis-101-1-and-hughesy---kate-announced-as-national-drive.pdf |title=Archived copy |access-date=2014-11-10 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20141109000004/http://www.arn.com.au/assets/1579531/media-release---arn-s-mix-melbourne-rebrands-as-kiis-101-1-and-hughesy---kate-announced-as-national-drive.pdf |archive-date=9 November 2014 |df=dmy-all }}</ref> In October 2015, Jane Hall announced that she would be leaving the station and ''[[Matt & Jane]]'' at the end of the year to return to acting. She was replaced by [[Nova 100]] breakfast co-host [[Meshel Laurie]].<ref>{{cite news|title=Meshel Laurie Jumps Ship|url=http://www.radiotoday.com.au/news/whats-new/7780-meshel-laurie-jumps-ship.html|access-date=5 October 2015|work=Radio Today|date=5 October 2015}}</ref> In October 2017, [[Australian Radio Network|ARN]] announced that Matt Tilley, Meshel Laurie, Dave Hughes and Kate Langbroek would leave the station at the end of the year. ''Matt & Meshel'' was replaced by Jason 'Jase' Hawkins and Polly 'PJ' Harding. Will McMahon and Woody Whitelaw from [[Triple M Perth|Hit 92.9]] have been announced as the new drive hosts. ''[[Hughesy & Kate]]'' moved to [[Southern Cross Austereo]]'s [[Hit Network]] to replace ''[[Hamish & Andy (radio show)|Hamish & Andy]]''.<ref>{{Cite news|url=https://mumbrella.com.au/kiis-matt-meshel-will-woody-hughesy-kate-pj-jase-475004|title=Kiis axes Matt & Meshel for Kiwi breakfast duo in breakfast, hires Perth's Will & Woody to replace Hughesy & Kate in drive β Mumbrella|date=2017-10-09|work=[[Mumbrella]]|access-date=2017-10-09|language=en-US}}</ref> In July 2021, ARN announced that Jason 'Jase' Hawkins would be joined by Lauren Phillips with ''[[Jase & Lauren]]'' starting 9 August following Polly 'PJ' Harding's departure from the station on July 23, 2021.<ref>{{Cite web|date=2021-07-21|title=ARN confirms new KIIS 101.1 Breakfast show with Jase Hawkins & Lauren Phillips|url=https://www.radiotoday.com.au/kiis-1011-breakfast-jase-hawkins-lauren-phillips/|access-date=2021-07-23|website=Radio Today|language=en-AU}}</ref> In November 2023, after months of media speculation, it was announced that ''[[The Kyle and Jackie O Show]]'' would be networked from [[KIIS 106.5]] Sydney in 2024 effectively ending ''[[Jase & Lauren]].''<ref>{{Cite web |last=Patterson |first=Sarah |date=2023-11-21 |title=Confirmed: Melbourne gets Kyle & Jackie O in 2024 |url=https://radiotoday.com.au/confirmed-melbourne-gets-kyle-jackie-o-in-2024/ |access-date=2023-11-22 |website=Radio Today |language=en-AU}}</ref> The final show aired on Friday 1 December 2023. In March 2024, ''[[Jase & Lauren]]'' replaced ''[[Ben, Liam & Belle (radio show)|Ben, Liam & Belle]]'' to host breakfast on [[Nova 100]]. In March 2024, [[Australian Radio Network|ARN]] announced changes to its daytime programming with Gordie Waters being networked from Sydney into Melbourne and [[KIIS 97.3]] in Brisbane from April.<ref>{{Cite web |last=Patterson |first=Sarah |date=2024-03-22 |title=ARN announces changes to its daytime line up |url=https://radiotoday.com.au/arn-announces-changes-to-its-daytime-line-up/ |access-date=2024-03-23 |website=Radio Today |language=en-AU}}</ref> Byron Cooke had previously announced his resignation.<ref>{{Cite web |last=Patterson |first=Sarah |date=2024-03-15 |title=Byron Cooke announces KIIS departure |url=https://radiotoday.com.au/byron-cooke-announces-kiis-departure/ |access-date=2024-03-23 |website=Radio Today |language=en-AU}}</ref>
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