WKU Public Radio

WKU Public Radio is the public radio service of Western Kentucky University in Bowling Green, Kentucky. It is a division of the Department of Information Technology at WKU. The network consists of four FM radio stations and one FM translator. Combined, the stations cover most of Western Kentucky and parts of Indiana and Tennessee, reaching into the northern suburbs of Nashville.

WKU Public Radio
CityBowling Green, Kentucky
FrequencyWKYU-FM: 88.9 MHz, Bowling Green
BrandingWKU Public Radio
Programming
FormatPublic radio (News, Information, Classical Music)
AffiliationsAmerican Public Media, National Public Radio, Public Radio International, Kentucky Public Radio
Ownership
OwnerWestern Kentucky University
Sister stationsWKYU-TV
Technical information
Repeater(s)WKPB 89.5, Henderson
WDCL-FM 89.7, Somerset
WKUE-FM 90.9, Elizabethtown
W277AA-FM 103.3, Somerset
Links
Websitewkyufm.org

Programming

WKUE airs news and informational programming on weekdays, with classical music heard at night. Weekends feature informational shows by day, with jazz on Saturday nights and specialty music programs Sunday evenings. Saturdays and Sundays at noon, Erika Brady hosts the "Barren River Breakdown" show. WKUE is an affiliate of National Public Radio, with shows from American Public Media and the Public Radio Exchange also heard.

Stations

The network consists of four full-power stations and an FM translator, all located in Kentucky and simulcasting the same programming at all times:

LocationCallsignFrequencyClassSign on dateNotes
Bowling GreenWKYU-FM88.9 FMC1January 14, 1980 (1980-01-14)Flagship station of WKU Public Radio; also serves north-central Tennessee
ElizabethtownWKUE90.9 FMC3October 15, 1990 (1990-10-15)Grade B coverage available in Louisville
Henderson / OwensboroWKPB89.5 FMC2April 1, 1990 (1990-04-01)Also serves southwest Indiana and southeast Illinois, including Evansville and Carmi
SomersetWDCL-FM89.7C1July 1985
W277AA103.3 FMD1993Translator of WDCL-FM
WKU Public Radio's network coverage area.

Together, the five stations reach 65% of Kentucky, including the fringes of the Louisville and Lexington areas. The stations also serve portions of Indiana, Illinois and Tennessee. Much of this area is composed of rural areas and small towns; Evansville is by far the largest city in the region.

History

WKYU-FM signed on for the first time on January 14, 1980. WDCL followed on February 22, 1983; WKPB on April 20, 1989, WKUE on June 1, 1990, and W277AA in 1993.

Until August 2009, the network was known as Western's Public Radio, airing mostly classical music during the day. However, on August 31, it rebranded itself as WKU Public Radio, and began airing mostly news and talk during the day. Prior to Western Public Radio's sign-on, the only portion of the coverage area that had a clear signal from an NPR station was Henderson and Owensboro, which received NPR programming from WNIN-FM in Evansville.

In 2016, WKYU-FM signed on a new service on a new FM translator station, W248CF. That translator airs classical music 24 hours a day. Since its signal does not reach too far outside of Warren County, it is repeated on WKYU-FM's second HD channel, and also streams live on the Internet.

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gollark: Except they're a grammar nazi and will only accept exactingly precise unambiguous Spanish.
gollark: On the "I just want opencomputers to do what I want", it does not *know* what you want, and "I want it to display the RF here" is not a precise enough specification. A precise enough specification of what you want (which is also in a format the computer can understand) would be... code.
gollark: It can't interact with stuff outside the game (except internet cards), and you can edit, download, and do whatever else to it from within an OC computer.
gollark: This does *not* run "outside the game".

References


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