WJRL-FM

WJRL-FM (100.5 FM, "Rock 100.5") is an American radio station licensed to serve Slocomb, Alabama, United States. The station is owned by Robert Holladay and the license is held by Alabama Media, LLC.

WJRL-FM
CitySlocomb, Alabama
Broadcast areaDothan, Alabama
Frequency100.5 MHz
BrandingRock 100.5
SloganThe Rock of Dothan
Programming
FormatActive rock
Ownership
OwnerRobert Holladay
(Alabama Media, LLC)
Sister stationsWECB, WESP
History
First air date1991 (as WXUS)
Former call signsWXUS (1991-2005)
WLDA (2005-2013)[1]
Technical information
Facility ID60591
ClassC3
ERP16,500 watts
HAAT124.3 meters (408 feet)
Transmitter coordinates31°11′00″N 85°24′23″W
Links
WebcastWJRL Webstream
WebsiteWJRL Online

It broadcasts an active rock format to the Dothan, Alabama, area.[2]

History

This station received its original construction permit for a new FM station to serve Fort Rucker, Alabama, broadcasting with 3,000 watts of effective radiated power at 93.1 MHz from the Federal Communications Commission on December 5, 1990.[3] This was soon changed to 100.5 MHz, per Docket #87-618. The new station was assigned the call letters WXUS by the FCC on January 18, 1991.[1] WXUS received its license to cover from the FCC on February 28, 1992.[4]

In May 2003, Skyway Broadcasting, Ltd., reached an agreement to sell this station to Styles Broadcasting subsidiary Styles Media Group, LLC (Thomas A. DiBacco, managing member) for a total sale price of $750,000.[5] The deal was approved by the FCC on August 20, 2003, and the transaction was consummated on October 1, 2003.[6] The new owners had the FCC change the station's callsign to WLDA on March 4, 2005.[1]

On August 24, 2005, the FCC granted the station a construction permit to change its community of license to Slocomb, Alabama.[7] In 2006, Styles Broadcasting became the Magic Broadcasting Company.[8] WLDA received its license to cover this permit on August 25, 2008.[9]

On August 5, 2009 at 5 p.m. local time, Star 100.5 changed formats while retaining its branding, transitioning to classic hits and billing itself as playing "The Greatest Hits of All-Time."

On December 20, 2011, WLDA changed their format to urban contemporary, branded as "100.5 The Beat".

On January 23, 2013, WLDA changed their format from urban contemporary to rock, branded as "Rock 100.5".[10] On January 29, 2013, the station swapped call signs with sister station WJRL-FM, taking on the current WJRL-FM call sign.

gollark: You would *basically* be building a garbage collector into every single allocation of things containing references, bee cuboid.
gollark: As planned.
gollark: Macron is to have a borrow checker, then?
gollark: There are issues with type errors I can't work out.
gollark: I have reached partway to layer 4 (ish, stack frames aren't actually needed probably).

References

  1. "Call Sign History". FCC Media Bureau CDBS Public Access Database.
  2. "Station Information Profile". Arbitron.
  3. "Application Search Details (BPH-19880407NA)". FCC Media Bureau. December 5, 1990.
  4. "Application Search Details (BLH-19910529KC)". FCC Media Bureau. February 28, 1992.
  5. Carnegie, Jim (June 13, 2003). "Doing it in Dothan with Styles". Radio Business Report.
  6. "Application Search Details (BALH-20030527AGP)". FCC Media Bureau. October 1, 2003.
  7. "Application Search Details (BPH-20050218AAI)". FCC Media Bureau. August 24, 2005.
  8. "Life Story". Don McCoy's Magic House. Archived from the original on August 17, 2016. Retrieved December 19, 2008.
  9. "Application Search Details (BLH-20080814AAI)". FCC Media Bureau. August 25, 2008.
  10. http://radioinsight.com/blog/headlines/80678/rock-moves-in-dothan/
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