WJAB

WJAB (90.9 FM) is a National Public Radio-affiliated college radio station in Huntsville, Alabama. It primarily features jazz and blues music programming aimed toward African-American residents of the northern counties of Alabama and several counties in southern middle Tennessee.[2] WJAB's signal travels in about a 120-mile radius.

WJAB
CityHuntsville, Alabama
Frequency90.9 FM (MHz)
Slogan"Smooth Jazz & Cool Vocals"
Programming
FormatJazz/Blues
AffiliationsNational Public Radio, The African American Public Radio Consortium, Public Radio International, American Urban Radio Network
Ownership
OwnerAlabama A&M University
History
First air dateOctober 2, 1991
Call sign meaningJazz And Blues[1]
Technical information
Facility ID697
ClassC1
ERP100,000 watts
HAAT102 meters (335 feet)
Transmitter coordinates34°47′09″N 86°34′00″W
Links
WebcastListen Live
WebsiteOfficial Website

The station is licensed to Alabama Agricultural and Mechanical University (known as "Alabama A&M" for short) in Normal, Alabama, which is actually located within the city of Huntsville. The Telecommunications Center of the University operates the station partly as a laboratory for student announcers, producers, and journalists.

History

Beginning in the late 1970s, Alabama A&M made numerous attempts to obtain funding from the state of Alabama and the Corporation for Public Broadcasting in order to establish a radio station of its own. The FCC originally allocated the callsign WAED for the station.[3] The call sign was previously owned by The Big JAB, an AM station in Westbrook, Maine.

The Telecommunications Center under the direction of the late Dr. Hayward O. Handy and Elizabeth Sloan-Ragland was best known during the 1970s and 1980s for producing several weekly public affairs and features shows seen on Alabama Public Television, including Montage and Upstate. The Center also produced The Alabama A&M Football Review with announcer Ike Rooks, which aired on Huntsville-area commercial television stations.

After years of bureaucratic wrangling and waiting for governments to afford the needed appropriations, AAMU realized its goal in 1991. Since that time, the station has consistently placed the concerns of its listeners in very high regard with programming such as interview shows, music of all varieties throughout the Pan-African world, and live broadcasts of AAMU football and men's basketball games.

The station was assigned the WJAB call letters by the Federal Communications Commission on January 23, 1990.[4]

Notable personalities have included "The Maestro" Shawn Patrick, Jackie Anderson, Marcus Simms, Joy Sidney, Douglas Turner, Theodore Lindsey, Heidi Traylor, Joyce Coffman, Kerry Macklin, Erica Fox, Don Juan, Toni Neal, Sam Terry, Ellen Washington, Billy “Brother B.J.” Lewis, Shannon Rice and Chris Carlisle.

gollark: ```osmarks@fenrir ~/Downloads [SIGSEGV]> calibre-debug -gcalibre 4.13 embedded-python: False is64bit: TrueLinux-5.5.13-arch2-1-x86_64-with-glibc2.2.5 Linux ('64bit', 'ELF')('Linux', '5.5.13-arch2-1', '#1 SMP PREEMPT Mon, 30 Mar 2020 20:42:41 +0000')Python 2.7.17Linux: ('', '', '')Interface language: NoneSuccessfully initialized third party plugins: Gather KFX-ZIP (from KFX Input) (1, 29, 0) && DeDRM (6, 6, 3) && Package KFX (from KFX Input) (1, 29, 0) && KFX metadata reader (from KFX Input) (1, 29, 0) && KFX Input (1, 29, 0)Turning on automatic hidpi scalingdevicePixelRatio: 1.0logicalDpi: 96.1119113573 x 96.0945812808physicalDpi: 112.286084142 x 112.758381503Using calibre Qt style: Truefish: “calibre-debug -g” terminated by signal SIGSEGV (Address boundary error)```with calibre.
gollark: I checked, I have more but they all break.
gollark: I only have something like three installed as far as I know, and they're all broken.
gollark: I'd kind of expect other people to have noticed and reported this if it is actually a general problem with these versions, since I'm using calibre and qt from the repos.
gollark: I tried downgrading it from 5.14.2 to 5.14.1 or something, but that didn't do anything, and I probably can't downgrade further without just reverting all my package versions to a week or so ago, which is not ideal.

See also

References

  1. Nelson, Bob (2008-10-18). "Call Letter Origins". The Broadcast Archive. Retrieved 2008-10-31.
  2. "Station Information Profile". Arbitron. Archived from the original on March 1, 2010.
  3. "Station Search Details". CDBS Public Access Database. FCC Media Bureau.
  4. "Call Sign History". CDBS Public Access Database. FCC Media Bureau.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.