WLRB (FM)

WLRB (102.7 FM) is a non-commercial radio station located in the Atlantic City area on 102.7 FM. The station serves Atlantic, Cape May, Cumberland and Southern Ocean Counties in New Jersey. The transmitter is located on the roof of the Ocean Club Condominium Complex in Atlantic City.[1]

WLRB
CityOcean City, New Jersey
Broadcast areaAtlantic City, New Jersey
Frequency102.7 MHz
BrandingK-Love
SloganPositive, Encouraging
Programming
FormatContemporary Christian
Ownership
OwnerEducational Media Foundation
History
First air dateJune 28, 1991
Former call signsWSKR (1991–1994)
WJSE (1994–2010)
WWAC (2010–2019)
Technical information
Facility ID51575
ClassA
ERP4,100 watts
HAAT121.7 meters
Transmitter coordinates40°43′13″N 75°35′44″W
Links
WebcastListen Live
Websiteklove.com

History

Early years

The station began broadcasting on June 28, 1991 as WSKR [2] with a locally-produced sports format. "Score 102-7" eventually simulcasted Philadelphia's sports WIP(AM) from 6AM to 6PM weekdays.

The station changed its call letters to WJSE in November 1994, broadcasting various versions of a rock format. From November 1999 until December 16, 2005, WJSE was the South Jersey home of the syndicated Howard Stern Show. On January 8, 2006, the Scotty and Alex Show replaced Stern after he moved his radio show to Sirius Satellite Radio and in February 2007, the syndicated Mancow Show replaced Scotty and Alex after the duo moved their show over to Free FM formatted WYSP in Philadelphia.

On December 16, 2005 (the last day of Howard Stern's terrestrial radio show), WJSE along with many of the other soon to be former Stern affiliates including flagship station WXRK in New York City broadcast Stern's last show live over the Internet, which until then was strictly forbidden under the syndication agreement between Stern, his production company One-Twelve, Inc., his employer CBS Radio, the syndicator Westwood One and the affiliates that broadcast The Howard Stern Show.

The station was a finalist for Radio and Records magazine's 2007 Industry Achievement Award for best Alternative Station for markets 100 and up. Other finalists include WKZQ-FM, KQXR, WBTZ, KXNA, and WSFM.[3]

By 2006, WJSE shifted from alternative rock as Digital 102.7 to active rock as 102.7 The Ace. In late July 2008, it became 102.7 JSE Rocks. The active rock format shifted to alternative rock by 2009.

Wild 102.7

In May 2010, speculation began swirling around a format flip for WJSE. It was speculated that WJSE was to flip to a simulcast of WPTY Long Island. The rumors became reality on July 1, 2010, when it was comfired that WJSE would indeed flip to a rhythmic top 40/dance format, and adopt the revamped moniker "Wild 102-7, Atlantic City's Party Station." It even got the new calls WWAC and a change of COL to Ocean City, all to improve signal coverage. The station was launched on July 2, 2010 at 9:55 P.M.[4][5][6]

As of 2011, WWAC's playlist shifted more toward a CHR format.

AC 102.7

On September 19, 2011, the station changed its name to AC 102.7, retaining the contemporary hit radio format.

Sale to EMF

On June 20, 2018, Longport Media sold WWAC to the Educational Media Foundation for $570,000.[7] On July 10, 2019, the station changed its call sign to WLRB. On July 11, 2019, the station went dark and returned to the air the following day, switching to the national K-Love feed.[8]

Logo history

gollark: Why not just directly do payments from that somehow?
gollark: So you also have to manually muck around with a tablet or something to declare how much money it should let you take?
gollark: ?
gollark: What if it makes, say, 100 transactions for 1 currency unit to get around that?
gollark: Basically payment is very hard.

References

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