WCYQ

WCYQ (100.3 FM) is a radio station in the Knoxville, Tennessee, area. The station broadcasts a country music format, which previously aired on 93.1 FM (now WNOX) until 2013.[1]

WCYQ
CityOak Ridge, Tennessee
Broadcast areaKnoxville Metropolitan Area
Frequency100.3 MHz
Branding100.3 The Wolf
SloganNew Country Now
Programming
FormatCountry
Ownership
OwnerSummitMedia
(SM-WCYQ, LLC)
Sister stationsWKHT, WNOX, WWST
History
First air date1974 (as WOKI-FM)
Former call signsWOKI-FM (1974-2005)
WNOX (2005-2013)
Call sign meaningW CountrY Q (previous branding)
Technical information
Facility ID49923
ClassC
ERP96,000 watts
HAAT618.2 meters (2,028 ft)
Transmitter coordinates36°11′54.00″N 84°13′52.00″W
Links
WebcastListen live
Websiteknoxvillewolf.com

WCYQ broadcasts from a 100,000-watt transmitter located on Cross Mountain[2](elevation 3534 ft) north of Briceville, Tennessee. Its signal can be received throughout East Tennessee as well as significant parts of southeastern Kentucky, and in small portions of Virginia, North Carolina, West Virginia and Georgia.

The former call sign WNOX was also the call letters of a co-owned AM station (now WNML) from the 1930s to 1988, and again from 1997 to 2005. It is no longer in use by the AM station, however.

History

WCYQ was first licensed in 1974 as WOKI-FM.

Dick Broadcasting acquired WNOX-FM/99.1 in Loudon, which became a simulcast signal for the news/talk programming WIVK. Shortly thereafter, the AM 990 call letters were changed back to WNOX (now WNML). The news/talk format resided on 990 AM & 99.1 FM, jointly called "NewsTalk99 WNOX" until the move to 100.3 FM (formerly WOKI) in 2005. 990 AM and 99.1 FM became WNML/WNML-FM, airing sports talk.

Citadel Broadcasting ended its lease agreement with Oak Ridge FM, Inc. for the 100.3 WNOX frequency two years early and announced that it would be broadcasting the programming of WNOX on both 100.3 WNOX and WOKI 98.7 from July 9, 2010, until August 1, 2010.[3] On July 7, 2010, Oak Ridge FM announced plans for WNOX to stay news/talk, but with different hosts.[4] Ed Brantley, the former general manager of the Knoxville Citadel radio group and a longtime WIVK-FM DJ, was hired as general manager of 100.3 FM, and John Pirkle of Oak Ridge FM said he would be an on-air personality.[3]

On July 19, 2010, WNOX moved its former programming to 98.7 WOKI, with 100.3 FM airing nothing but reminders that former WNOX listeners should turn to 98.7 because this was the new frequency.[5] On August 1, 2010 the station's owner, Oak Ridge FM, Inc. regained programming control of the station and resumed broadcasting a news/talk format.

On May 3, 2013, the sale of the station to Journal Broadcast Group[6] closed and upon taking possession, WNOX began stunting towards a new format to be launched on May 9, 2013. The talk programming moved to WKVL 850 AM Knoxville, Tennessee.[1] The country format of WCYQ moved to 100.3 permanently after simulcasting for two weeks and a classic hits format launched on 93.1 on May 23, 2013.[7]

On May 9, 2013, WNOX changed their call letters to WCYQ, swapping calls with WCYQ 93.1 FM Karns, Tennessee, which took the WNOX calls.

Journal Communications and the E. W. Scripps Company announced on July 30, 2014 that the two companies would merge to create a new broadcast company under the E. W. Scripps Company name that owned the two companies' broadcast properties, including WCYQ. The transaction was completed in 2015, pending shareholder and regulatory approvals.[8] Scripps exited radio in 2018; the Knoxville stations went to SummitMedia in a four-market, $47 million deal completed on November 1, 2018.[9]

On September 19, 2019 after stunting with construction sounds. WCYQ rebranded as "100.3 The Wolf".[10]

Former talk programming

Further reading

  • Ed Hooper (2009), Knoxville's WNOX. Arcadia Publishing. ISBN 0-7385-6653-5, ISBN 978-0-7385-6653-5

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gollark: Stupid AP times...
gollark: I mean, they're quite common.
gollark: I wonder why lunar heralds are considered valuable and picked up so fast.
gollark: In the aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaapppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppp, I mean.

References

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