WPRK

WPRK 91.5 FM is a non-commercial college radio station located in Winter Park, Florida, United States. It is owned and operated by Rollins College. Its signal is audible in most of the Orlando metropolitan area. WPRK features programming from nearly every mainstream and non-mainstream music genre.

WPRK
CityWinter Park, Florida
Frequency91.5 MHz
Branding"Voice of Rollins College"
Programming
Formatcollege radio
Ownership
OwnerRollins College
History
Call sign meaningWinter PaRK
Technical information
Facility ID57473
ClassA
ERP1,300 watts
HAAT32 meters
Links
Websitewprk.org

History

WPRK began broadcasting on December 8, 1952,[1] with a dedication address from then President-Elect Dwight D. Eisenhower.[2] The station originally operated on 88.1 MHz with 10 watts of power but eventually moved to 91.5 MHz and increased to 1,300 watts effective radiated power.

During its first decade of broadcasting WPRK operated for approximately five hours every evening, transmitting a variety of material including classical music, interview programs, quiz shows, and occasional live broadcasts of concerts and speeches occurring on campus.[3] The hours of operation gradually expanded. By the mid-1970s WPRK was typically on the air from noon to midnight, featuring classical music during the day, a variety of student-selected radio formats at night, and live play-by-play coverage of selected Rollins soccer and basketball games.

In 1989 students were given more authority over the programming and operation of WPRK; by 1991 the station was described as "completely student-run." The amount of time allocated to classical music was reduced and the length of the broadcast day was expanded, with the station operating from 8 am to 2 am daily.[4] Consistent 24-hour broadcasting began in the mid-1990s.

In the summer of 2000, Community Communications, owner of WMFE-FM 90.7, offered to take over the operations of WPRK in a proposed partnership which greatly interested the college.[5] Students, listeners and other supporters formed an organization called "SaveWPRK.com" to oppose the merger and find other sources of funding for the station.[6] On February 1, 2001, the Rollins College administration announced its decision to retain control of WPRK.[7]

From January 17–21, 2005, the station launched its first WPRK Marathon, also known as the 110-Hour Marathon, a fundraiser in which DJ Dave Plotkin attempted to break the world record for longest consecutive on-air DJ session.[8]

Following Hurricane Irma on September 10, 2017, WPRK's antenna sustained serious damage that caused for the removal of the antenna. From September 2017 till August 2018, the station continued to offer their programming as a streaming service. In August 2018, WPRK went back on air and once again broadcast on FM.

Notable alumni DJs

gollark: Anyway, it *can't* spread easily over wireless networks because the only thing it had for that was (it's still there but disabled on SC by default) EZCopy, which does disks.
gollark: ... how?
gollark: What would it *do*?
gollark: There is actually a feature where it can accept commands over LAN networks, which is designed for the Potatodatacentre but does work everywhere.
gollark: Spreading to disks, anyway.

References

  1. "Station WPRK Gives First Broadcast" in: Winter Park Herald, December 11, 1952
  2. "Reference URL Share Add tags Comment Rate 1 2 3 4 5 Dedication Address by President-Elect Dwight D. Eisenhower for Rollins College FM Station". Retrieved 13 November 2012.
  3. Local press clippings from 1958-1962 displayed in an online brochure retrieved 2008-11-05
  4. "Listeners are up for new WPRK" in: Orlando Sentinel, April 18, 1991, page E-5
  5. "Not so fast: College radio deal could take months" in: Orlando Business Journal, July 21, 2000 snippet retrieved 2008-11-04
  6. "WPRK Fans Declare for Independence" in: Orlando Sentinel, January 12, 2001, Calendar section page 12
  7. "WPRK Stays with Rollins" in: Orlando Sentinel, February 2, 2001, page C-2
  8. "110 hours on the air" in: USA Today, January 22, 2005 retrieved 2008-11-04

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