WGNE-FM

WGNE-FM (99.9 MHz) is a commercial FM radio station licensed to Middleburg, Florida, and serving the Jacksonville metropolitan area. It is owned by Renda Broadcasting and airs a country music radio format as "99.9 Gator Country." Its main competitor is iHeartMedia-owned 99.1 WQIK.

WGNE-FM
CityMiddleburg, Florida
Broadcast areaJacksonville metropolitan area
Frequency99.9 MHz
Branding99.9 Gator Country
SloganJacksonville's Hottest Country
Programming
FormatCountry music
Ownership
OwnerRenda Broadcasting
(Renda Broadcasting Corp. of Nevada)
Sister stationsWEJZ
History
First air dateJuly 14, 1972 (as WIYD Palatka)
Former call signsWIYD (1972-1982)
WNFY (1982-1983)
WNFI (1983-1993)
WFKS (1993-2000)
Technical information
Facility ID15897
ClassC1
ERP48,000 watts
HAAT300 meters (984 ft)
Transmitter coordinates30°19′22″N 81°38′34″W
Links
WebcastListen Live
Website999GatorCountry.com

WGNE's studios and offices are in the Arlington district of Jacksonville. The transmitter is downtown on a tower that also broadcasts Channel 12 WTLV and other Jacksonville TV and FM stations.[1]

History

On July 14, 1972, the station first signed on as WIYD, licensed to Palatka, Florida, a town about 50 miles south of Jacksonville.[2] It aired a beautiful music format as "Wide FM," and was the sister station to AM 1260 WWPF, both stations owned by Hall Communications. Because it broadcast from a tower only 180 feet tall, it was limited to serving the Palatka-St. Augustine area.

In 1978, the AM station switched its call sign to WIYD, while the FM station was sold to the Sis Radio Company and became WIYD-FM. The new owners got a construction permit from the Federal Communications Commission to construct a tower more than 900 feet tall, making 99.9 audible from Jacksonville to Daytona Beach.[3]

In 1981, the station was sold to the Ronnette Communications Corporation, with the studios and offices moving to Ormond Beach. It became Top 40 outlet WNFY.[4] In the Jacksonville radio market, it competed with long time Top 40 AM radio leader WAPE 690 (now WOKV) and FM challenger 102.9 WIVY (now WEZI). In about a year, WAPE left the Top 40 format for Oldies.

In 1983, the station switched its call letters to WNFI, while remaining Top 40. Its tower was now nearly 1,300 feet tall, with a power of 100,000 watts, allowing WNFI to be heard over much of the northern section of Florida's Atlantic coast.[5] In 1993, the station was sold again, this time to the Daytona Beach Broadcasting Corporation. The station remained Top 40 but the call letters were switched to WFKS to fit the new moniker "Florida's Kiss-FM."

In 1996, Renda Broadcasting paid $6.5 million for WNFI and 100.7 WKQL (now WMUV).[6] Renda switched WNFI's format to Country, renaming the station WGNE-FM and using the moniker "99.9 Froggy-FM." In 2005, the station's studios and offices moved to Atlantic Boulevard in Jacksonville.

In the early 2010s, the station's city of license was moved to Middleburg, Florida, an unincorporated community in Clay County, which borders Jacksonville. WGNE switched to a tower on Gator Bowl Boulevard in Jacksonville used by Channel 12 WTLV and other Jacksonville TV and FM stations. While the move improved the station's signal to office towers and apartment buildings in Jacksonville, as well as its northern suburbs, it reduced coverage to the south. The power was cut by more than half and the antenna height was reduced by 300 feet. WGNE switched its moniker to "99.9 Gator Country."

On Air Personalities

Steve Sutton- Sutton's radio career began in 1993 at WJRX in MacClenney. Sutton went on to the Hoyle & Fizz Show on WAPE in the morning, hosted a talk show on WCRJ-AM at lunch, and continued traffic reporting in the afternoon with Trane On The Radio at WAPE. In 1995, he began working full time at WAPE on Big Ape Morning Zoo alongside Eden Kendall, Amadeus, Hoyle, and Ashley King. After almost 12 years of the Big Ape Morning Zoo being on air, in December 2006 Sutton, Kendall, and Amadeus left WAPE. After about 6 months of being off the air, on June 20, 2007, the trio took over the morning show at 99.9 Gator Country.[7]

Eden Kendall- Kendall is a graduate of the University of Florida and the mother of two children. Kendall worked on Big Ape Morning Zoo alongside Steve Sutton, Amadeus, Hoyle, and Ashley King. After almost 12 years of the Big Ape Morning Zoo being on air, in December 2006 Sutton, Kendall, and Amadeus left WAPE. After about 6 months of being off the air, on June 20, 2007, the trio took over the morning show at 99.9 Gator Country.[8] As well as working on Gator Country's "Hometown Morning Show" Kendall also hosts WJXT's daytime broadcast, River City Live.[9] During the Jacksonville Jaguar's football season Kendall can also be seen on WCWJ's "The Mark Brunell Show.[10]

Amadeus- Amadeus moved to Jacksonville when he was in the 4th grade. After high school, Amadeus began working at Publix and took a part-time job at Turtle’s Records & Tapes. On January 1, 1990, Amadeus left Turtle's Records and Tapes to work part-time at 95.1 WAPE. In 1996, Amadeus got the opportunity to join the Big Ape Morning Zoo. in December 2006 Sutton, Kendall, and Amadeus left WAPE. After about 6 months of being off the air, on June 20, 2007, the trio took over the morning show at 99.9 Gator Country. Amadeus also hosted the CW-17 Weekend Showplace for 17 years.[11]

Brian Jordan- Jordan was born and raised in Jacksonville, Florida. Jordan worked at WAPE for 4 years. After taking a 2-year break Jordan began working at 99.9 Gator Country.[12]

Matt Basford- Basford was born and raised in Jacksonville, Florida and attended Hofstra University in New York. His career in radio began at the age of 16 years old when he worked WJAX, now known as WAPE. He has worked in radio in Chicago, Salt Lake City, New Orleans, and NPR in Los Angeles. While in Los Angeles, Basford worked as an actor in television and film as well as doing some improv and stand up comedy. Basford moved back to Jacksonville in 2000 and now works on 99.9 Gator Country and 96.1 WEJZ.[13][14]

gollark: How dare you call this computing revolution malware.
gollark: PotatOS emulates CraftOS, you know, for internal purposes.
gollark: Wow! Incredible!
gollark: Very little?
gollark: There are two advantages to tape FSes:extra spaceyou can play them to bleed ears

References

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