WATZ-FM

WATZ-FM (99.3 FM) and WRGZ (96.7 FM, "WATZ 99.3 and 96.7") are two radio stations simulcasting a country music format. The two stations are licensed to the cities of Alpena (WATZ) and Rogers City, Michigan (WRGZ). WRGZ first began broadcasting in 1984 under the call sign WMLQ while WATZ has been assigned the same call sign since it signed on in the late 1960s. The stations, along with sister station WATZ AM, are currently owned by Midwestern Broadcasting Company.

WATZ-FM & WRGZ
CityWATZ-FM: Alpena, Michigan
WRGZ: Rogers City, Michigan
Broadcast areaWATZ-FM:
WRGZ:
FrequencyWATZ-FM: 99.3 MHz
WRGZ: 96.7 MHz
BrandingWATZ
SloganToday's Country
Programming
FormatCountry
AffiliationsMichigan Radio Network
Ownership
OwnerMidwestern Broadcasting Company
(WATZ Radio, Inc.)
Sister stationsWBCM, WCCW, WCCW-FM, WJZQ, WTCM, WTCM-FM, WZTK
History
First air dateWATZ-FM: unknown
WRGZ: 1983
Former call signsWATZ-FM:
none
WRGZ:
WVXA (4/1/88-5/30/06)
WMLQ (3/5/84-4/1/88)
WNSR (1/9/84-3/5/84)
WOEA (7/19/83-1/9/84)
Former frequenciesWATZ-FM:
93.5 MHz (?-4/1/88)
WRGZ:
97.7 MHz (3/5/84-?)
Call sign meaningWRGZ: RoGerZ City
Technical information
Facility IDWATZ-FM: 71108
WRGZ: 49304
ClassWATZ-FM: C2
WRGZ: C2
ERPWATZ-FM: 17,000 watts
WRGZ: 42,000 watts
HAATWATZ-FM: 257 meters
WRGZ: 162 meters
Links
Websitewatz.com

WATZ history

WATZ signed-on the air in the late 1960s, as an adult contemporary station at 93.5 FM, known for several years as "Z93." In 1988, the format of WATZ-FM was changed to country and the frequency-signal moved to 99.3 so that the station could boost its power from 3,000 to 50,000 watts. For the next several years, WATZ-FM simulcasted the long-time country music format of sister station WATZ AM. In the mid-90s, WATZ AM had switched to a news/talk format while WATZ-FM retained the country format. WATZ-FM became a 24-hour broadcaster in 1999, using a satellite feed from Jones Radio Networks from 11 p.m. to 5:30 a.m. Prior to this, the station went off the air at 1 a.m.

WRGZ history

WRGZ began as the 26,000 watt WMLQ, "Mello-Q", an adult contemporary station at 97.7 FM, in 1984. The station went through numerous changes during the 1990s, including a move to the current 96.7 frequency and a long-running adult standards format as "Silver 97." In 1998, the station was purchased by Xavier University in Cincinnati and converted into a public radio station. It became a "repeater" of WVXU, the public radio station operated by the university, and its call letters were changed to WVXA. WVXA also featured a small amount of local programming in addition to the WVXU simulcast.

In August 2005, WVXA was sold to Cincinnati Public Radio, although it continued to serve as a "repeater" of WVXU. At the same time, the station's power was increased to 42,000 watts. Cincinnati Public Radio was not interested in retaining ownership of WVXU's "repeater" stations outside Ohio and sold the station to Midwestern in March 2006. After the sale was closed the following May, its call letters were changed to WRGZ and it began repeating WATZ. WRGZ allows WATZ's programming to be heard in areas where the 99.3 FM signal is not heard clearly, as far north as Cheboygan and into the eastern Upper Peninsula.

WATZ today

WATZ-FM remains locally owned and operated by the same company that founded the AM station in 1946. All of its programming from 5:30 a.m. to 11 p.m. on weekdays, and during the day on weekends (except for syndicated shows such as Bob Kingsley's Country Top 40) is broadcast from the station’s studios in downtown Alpena.

gollark: PSK31 or something.
gollark: They're the best way to get the necessary apiorange.
gollark: What? No. Digital modes.
gollark: Quite slowly, admittedly, but a few bits per second is usable for APIONET.
gollark: You can communicate across the world with certain anomalous digital modes.

References

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