WAEG

WAEG is a commercial smooth jazz radio station in Evans, Georgia, broadcasting to the Augusta, Georgia area. The station is licensed by the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) to broadcast on 92.3 FM, with an effective radiated power (ERP) of 6 kW. The station's studios (which are shared with its other sister stations) are located at the aptly named intersection of Broadcast Drive and Radio Station Road in North Augusta, South Carolina, while a transmitter tower is located northwest of Evans.

WAEG
CityEvans, Georgia
Broadcast areaAugusta, Georgia
Frequency92.3 MHz
BrandingSmooth Jazz 92.3 FM
SloganThe Smoothest Place on the Radio
Programming
FormatSmooth Jazz
Ownership
OwnerPerry Broadcasting
Sister stationsWFXA, WAKB, WTHB
History
First air date1992 (as WYFZ)
Former call signsWYFZ (1991-1994)
Call sign meaningAugusta
Evans
Georgia
Technical information
Facility ID31941
ClassA
ERP6,000 watts
HAAT100 meters
Links
WebcastListen Live
Website923smoothjazz.com

History

92.3 FM signed on in mid-1992 as WAFJ, as a simulcast of Bible Broadcasting Network's 100.9 WYFA Waynesboro. In June 1994, both stations were sold and switched to an UC format as "The New 92.3 and 100.9 The Beat" with 92.3 picking up the WAEG call letters.

Radio One acquired the simulcast in 2001 and switched it to CHR format while still using "The Beat" brand. By 2002, the station simulcast was broken off causing 100.9 to drop from the air. Within a year 92.3 switched formats to Modern Rock while 100.9 was launched as WTHB-FM a gospel station.

In August 2007, Perry Broadcasting acquired Radio One's cluster of Augusta stations. Immediately after, WAEG's format was changed to Smooth Jazz. This move left Augusta without a modern rock station, except for the wide variety of rock that plays on WGAC-FM 95.1, or the very few that play on WHHD 98.3.

WAEG, which features programming from the Smooth Jazz Network, is one of the few terrestrial smooth jazz stations remaining on analog radio in the United States.

gollark: I assume this will be the Macron CPU?
gollark: It seems like a great alternative to C, which I do not use.
gollark: It will copy the existing H.264/AAC things.
gollark: Reencoding is to be avoided if possible, due to quality loss apiids.
gollark: Those are standard codecs, you should just be able to `ffmpeg -i 20220112_203847_001.mp4 -c copy bees.mp4`.

See also

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.