WNSC-FM

WNSC-FM is a National Public Radio station in Rock Hill, South Carolina. A member of South Carolina Public Radio (formerly ETV Radio), it carries programming from South Carolina Public Radio's all-news network.

WNSC-FM
CityRock Hill, South Carolina
Frequency88.9 MHz
Branding88.9 WNSC
Programming
FormatPublic radio, News/Talk
AffiliationsNPR, South Carolina Public Radio
Ownership
OwnerSouth Carolina Educational Television Commission
History
First air date1979
Call sign meaningNorth and South Carolina
Technical information
Facility ID60962
ClassC1
ERP100,000 watts
HAAT183 meters
Links
Websitescpublicradio.org

History

News and classical music

WNSC-FM signed on in 1979, and was originally known as WPRV. It was the first NPR station in the Charlotte area; the market's flagship NPR station, WFAE, didn't sign on until 1981. From its sign-on until 2001, it aired a format of NPR news and classical music along with the rest of what was then the South Carolina Educational Radio Network (SCERN).

Jazz and talk

In 2001, it broke off from the rest of the SCERN stations to air jazz music under the moniker of "Carolinas Jazz 88.9" in order to avoid programming conflicts with WFAE. Before the switch, WNSC-FM aired many of the same news and talk programs as WFAE, such as Fresh Air, Morning Edition and This American Life.[1] Barbara Nail moved from WFAE to host a jazz show on Friday nights. .[2]

However, on July 1, 2008, it joined ETV Radio's NPR news network. SCETV president Moss Bresnahan told The Charlotte Observer that SCETV didn't want to deny people on the South Carolina side of the Charlotte market access to SCETV's growing slate of local programming. The move left the Charlotte market without a jazz station of its own.[3]

Penetration

WNSC is one of only a few stations on the South Carolina side of the market (the other being WOSF, which is licensed to Gaffney) that penetrates Charlotte to any significant extent. Its 97,900-watt signal easily covers Charlotte itself, as well as Gaston and Union counties. However, it only provides fringe coverage to the northern part of the market (Concord, Lincolnton, Mooresville, etc.), largely because it must conform its signal to protect fellow NPR station WDAV, at nearby 89.9. Until the spring of 2011, it identified as "Rock Hill/Charlotte," making it the only ETV station to include a second city in its legal ID. This is despite the fact that sister station WLJK in Aiken also serves Augusta, Georgia.

Studios and tower

Its studios are at York Technical College, with its transmitting tower five miles south of Rock Hill (at 34° 50' 23.00" North Latitude, 81° 01' 6.00" West Longitude).

gollark: See, this is somewhat helpoidal, thanks.
gollark: I see.
gollark: So if I translate stuff by (0, 1) is that a ”linear transformation”, or not because 0, 0 is moved?
gollark: You ALSO said something about the origin there.
gollark: That's basically recursively defining things, unhelpful.

References

  1. Diane Suchetka, "WFAE Drops All That Jazz for an All-Talk Format," The Charlotte Observer, November 17, 2000, p. 1B.
  2. Mark Washburn, "WFAE Celebrates 20 Years on the Air," The Charlotte Observer, July 1, 2001, p. 1F.
  3. Washburn, Mark. Sorry, Jazz fans, change may have you singing blues Archived July 3, 2008, at the Wayback Machine, The Charlotte Observer, 2008-07-01.

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