WABE

WABE FM 90.1 is a radio station in Atlanta, Georgia, that is affiliated with National Public Radio (NPR) and Public Radio International (PRI). WABE's format features mostly news/Talk programming. It carries the NPR flagship programs Morning Edition and All Things Considered, with locally produced City Lights hosted by Lois Reitzes and Closer Look hosted by Rose Scott.

WABE
CityAtlanta, Georgia
Broadcast areaAtlanta metropolitan area
Frequency90.1 MHz (HD Radio)
90.1 HD-2 for Classical music
Branding90.1 FM WABE (FM & HD-1)
WABE Classics (on HD-2)
SloganWhere ATL meets NPR
Programming
FormatPublic radio
AffiliationsNational Public Radio
Public Radio International
American Public Media
Ownership
OwnerAtlanta Public Schools
(Board of Education, City of Atlanta)
Sister stationsWPBA-TV
History
First air dateSeptember 13, 1948
Call sign meaningAtlanta Board of Education
Technical information
Facility ID3538
ClassC0 NCE
ERP100,000 watts
HAAT334.1 metres (1,096 feet)
Transmitter coordinates33°45′32″N 84°20′07″W
Links
WebcastListen live
m3u
Websitewabe.org

The station is licensed to the Atlanta Board of Education (hence the "ABE" in the broadcast callsign). In September 1994, a nonprofit corporation, the Atlanta Educational Telecommunications Collaborative, Inc., was founded to provide financial, promotional, and volunteer support for WABE (as well as WPBA-TV and Atlanta Public Schools cable channel 22). WABE's signal reaches practically all of the northwestern and north-central parts of the state. It is the dominant public radio station in metropolitan Atlanta, but starting on June 30, 2014, has been joined during the daytime by Georgia Public Broadcasting Atlanta on 88.5 WRAS-FM. GPB provides public radio programming to most of the rest of the state.

WABE also broadcasts the Georgia Radio Reading Service and Vietnam Public Radio subcarriers on its frequency.

History

WABE has always been operated by the city school system. The license was donated to the school board by the Rich's Foundation on September 8, 1948. It went on the air five days later as Georgia's first educational radio station. It also may well have been the first-ever noncommercial radio station in the Southern U.S., at least on the FM broadcast band. Its first radio studios were located in two rooms of the former Atlanta City Hall. The station moved, along with television station WETV (channel 30, now WPBA), into facilities in northeast Atlanta in 1958, where both stations remain to this day.

The school board used WABE strictly as a medium for educational (i.e., in-school) broadcasts until sometime in the early 1970s, when classical music broadcasts (and likely evening broadcasts also) premiered on the station. It was a charter member of NPR in 1971, and the school board saw enough promise in the fledgling venture to cut educational programming to six hours a day. On April 13, 1974, WABE boosted its transmission power from 10,000 to 30,000 watts and began broadcasting in stereo. By 1982, the educational programs heard during school hours moved, thanks to the development of subcarrier technologies, to subchannels, leaving the main FM frequency free to broadcast music and news shows for adults.

The station finally expanded its hours to around-the-clock service and built a much more powerful transmitter on Stone Mountain allowing it to expand its power to a full 100,000 watts. It remained on Stone Mountain until 2004, when transmission moved to the TV tower next to sister station WPBA in the DeKalb County portion of East Atlanta. The short tower atop one of the highest points in metro Atlanta was and still is that of WGTV, the GPTV (now GPB TV) station for the area. WPBA had to leave when the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) forced all television stations to go digital, and the tower was not strong enough to hold four antennae—the other being NOAA Weather Radio station KEC80. (A larger tower was out of the question, as it is scenic and within state-owned Stone Mountain Park.)

Since that time, WABE has grown steadily in listeners served, mainly because Atlanta is one of the nation's fastest-growing metropolitan areas, and the fastest-growing of the largest 15 or so media markets, now ranked seventh in potential radio listeners by Arbitron.

Programming

Well into the 2010s, WABE continued to air classical music during the day, which was unusual for a market of Atlanta's size. As a result, many NPR programs that became mainstays after the network's rapid programming expansion in the 1980s, such as The Diane Rehm Show, Talk of the Nation, Here and Now, On Point, The Story with Dick Gordon and the BBC World Service were not heard in Atlanta until WABE launched an all-NPR news stream on its third HD subcarrier. After years of member consultations WABE dropped daytime classical programming in favor of locally based news programming in 2015.

WABE airs Morning Edition, All Things Considered, Here and Now, Fresh Air and Marketplace on its analog signal, and Wait Wait...Don't Tell Me!, It's Been a Minute, Bullseye, Hidden Brain, Snap Judgment, Live from Here, Ask Me Another and This American Life are heard on weekends. A full-time classical HD station and a full-time News station are also available all three channels stream live on the Internet.

The BBC World Service airs on WABE's HD news channel.

The station broadcasts the following HD Radio subchannels:[1]

Channel Callsign Name Programming
90.1FMWABE-HD190.1 FM WABEBroadcast stream, News/Talk/Cultural
90.1-2FMWABE-HD2WABE ClassicsClassical
90.1-3FMWABE-HD3WABE NewsBBC World Service

Local weekday hosts

Lisa Rayam: hosts Morning Edition.

Lois Reitzes: longtime host of the morning classical-music program "Second Cup Concert" and of the Atlanta Symphony Orchestra broadcasts. Now hosts the local Arts and Cultural program "City Lights". She came to WABE in 1979 from WFIU-FM in Bloomington, Indiana. Reitzes served as a classical-music host for WFIU while working toward a double major in piano and musicology at Indiana University. Reitzes is also an accomplished pianist.

Rose Scott: hosts "Closer Look"

Jim Burress: hosts All Things Considered.

Previous hosts

Steve Goss: joined WABE after 28 years at Peach 94.9 FM (WPCH, later WLTM) as local host of Morning Edition. Now heard on "Mara's Music Mix" with Mara Davis.

Denis O'Hayer: the former political reporter for WXIA-TV and longtime news anchor at NewsRadio 640 WGST in Atlanta—anchored the afternoon All Things Considered, and Morning Edition (When Steve Goss retired). Denis now hosts the WABE podcast "Political Breakfast".

Robert Hubert: hosts Atlanta Music Scene, heard on Sunday evenings.

WABE reporters include Jim Burress, Martha Dalton, Lisa Hagan, Molly Samuel and Johnny Kauffman.

Local specialty program hosts

Herman H. Johnson: a legendary Atlanta broadcaster in his own right, he has hosted the Saturday-night Jazz Classics show since the late 1970s. He also hosts 'Blues Classics" on Friday Nights. Johnson, known only by his first initial (he has admitted on the air that his actual first name is Herman), for many years was a disc jockey on WAOK-AM, one of Atlanta's heritage African-American stations. The program's theme is a rendition of the Battle Hymn of the Republic by jazz artist and Episcopal clergyman Tom Vaughn.

Podcasts

Buried Truths: Peabody Award–winning series hosted by Hank Klibanoff.

Political Breakfast: hosted by Denis O'Hayer.

Bottom of the Map: hosted by Christina Lee and Dr. Regina N. Bradley.

Trivia

WABE's call sign was WPBA-FM for much of April 1984, at the same time WETV's call sign was changed to WPBA. The radio station's call sign was changed back in May because of confusion.

During the 1980s and 1990s the station's afternoon classical program was called Kaleidoscope, hosted by Jonathan Phelps.

In the Telltale Games video game series The Walking Dead, the character Carley is a reporter for WABE.

gollark: Actually, that would still work even if my backend used HTTPS, which it does.
gollark: I mean, it would be if you somehow got me to click on an evil link and put in the details.
gollark: ... that is NOT how it works.
gollark: > Not using Nginx 1.19 I seeI need that one njs module which isn't available from the package manager at that version.
gollark: You realise you can't read HTTP traffic from me without... actually being on the same network?

References

  1. "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2015-07-22. Retrieved 2015-05-31.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link) HD Radio Guide for Atlanta
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