WRQI

WRQI (94.3 FM) is a classic rock music formatted radio station in Saegertown, Pennsylvania and is branded as "Rocky 94 & 107". WRQI simulcasts with WRQW 107.7 FM (licensed to Cooperstown), serving Titusville, Oil City, Franklin, and Tionesta. Until May 2007, this station was known as WHUZ.

WRQI / WRQW
CityWRQI: Saegertown, Pennsylvania
WRQW: Cooperstown, Pennsylvania
Broadcast areaMeadville-Franklin, Pennsylvania and Erie, Pennsylvania
FrequencyWRQI: 94.3 MHz
WRQW: 107.7 MHz
BrandingRocky 94 & 107
Programming
FormatClassic rock
AffiliationsPittsburgh Steelers
Ownership
OwnerForever Broadcasting, LLC
Sister stationsWGYI, WGYY, WHMJ, WUZZ, WKST, WXMJ, WYLE
History
First air dateWRQI: January 19, 1979 (as WYSS)
WRQW: September 7, 2000 (as WMHU)
Former call signsWRQI:
WYSS (1979-1983)
WEOZ (1983-1995)
WMDE (1995-2000)
WHUZ (2000-2007)
WUZZ (2007-2018)
WRQW:
WMHU (2000-2001)
WHUG (2001-2002)
WUUZ (2002-2018)
Call sign meaning"Rocky"
Technical information
Facility IDWRQI: 12918
WRQW: 88380
ClassWRQI: A
WRQW: A
ERPWRQI: 2,150 watts
WRQW: 4,500 watts
HAATWRQI: 168 meters (551 ft)
WRQW: 115 meters (377 ft)
Links
WebcastListen Live
WebsiteRocky 94 & 107 Online

History

Beginnings as WYSS

WRQI, the first of these two stations, first went on the air January 19, 1979 as WYSS. Though licensed to Saegertown, the station operated from Meadville (where it remains today), the seat of government from Crawford County, Pennsylvania, for most of its existence. The station signed on with a Top 40 format under the ownership of Saegertown Broadcasting Inc., a company headed by Arthur Arkelian, and maintained studios on Broad Street in Saegertown.

The call letters were changed from WYSS to WEOZ in 1983. With the call letters came a change in ownership as the station was sold to Osborne Broadcasting, a company headed by Thomas Osborne, that year. The station also moved shortly afterwards from Saegertown to Meadville. WEOZ was then sold to Community First Broadcasting, a company headed by Werner Poegel, in August 1988 for $436,943.00. The format was then changed to a blend of adult contemporary and oldies programmed mostly from compact disc which was novel at the time. Community First Broadcasting maintained ownership of WEOZ until financial circumstances forced the station to go dark in August 1991. The station was dark for several years.

The station returned under a new set of call letters, a new owner, and a new format. Rechristened as WMDE, the station programmed a modern rock format under its previous owner, the now defunct Great Circle Broadcasting. Ultimately the station was sold to Forever Broadcasting with the format being tweaked to "classic hits" as WUZZ 94.

107.7 signs on

Forever Broadcasting was issued a construction permit for a new "drop-in" frequency of 107.7 in Cooperstown. The permit was granted on September 11, 1997. The station signed on as WMHU September 7, 2000 as a simulcast outlet of WMDE. In March of the following year, the call letters were changed to WHUG, and the station became a simulcast outlet of WXXO and WOXX in Cambridge Springs and Franklin, duplicating the "Kiss" monikered adult contemporary programming offered on those two channels.

WUZZ 94 & 107

The station once boasted a large live and local staff of on air personalities, over the years it became largely automated. Live shows included the WUZZ Rockin' Morning Show, hosted by program director Rockin' Rich from 6am-10am, and a live afternoon show hosted by Reno. Weekends were typically automated, with the WUZZ music playing without any air personalities. Syndicated shows hosted by Dee Snider and Sammy Hagar aired on Saturday evenings, during a timeslot that once housed "Big Hair Saturday Night" - another elimination of local programming and live personalities on the station. Dave English, who is Tadpole on sister station Froggy, voicetracked the weekday midday show, which was previously hosted live.

Rocky 94 & 107

On June 11, 2018, WUZZ and WUUZ rebranded as "Rocky 94 & 107".[1] On June 12, WUZZ and WUUZ changed their call letters to WRQI and WRQW, respectively. The station features the Westwood One satellite Classic Rock X format with local personality "Rockin'" Rich Anton live in morning drive.

Pittsburgh Steelers football

Rocky 94/107 is the radio home for Pittsburgh Steelers football during the NFL season.

gollark: I prefer Rust.
gollark: ```perl -wlne'END{print$n}eof&&$n++;/<title>([^<]+)/i&&$n--' *Contents 1 Interpretation 2 Implementations 2.1 In Perl 2.2 In shell scriptsInterpretationThe code in question (from the collection "The road to Perligata") is a lament over the coming apocalypse, an expression of the author's Weltschmerz and the futility of all human endeavors. Let us take it step by step:-wlne' The world is near its end.END{print$n} At the end the sum of all our sins and virtues will be reckoned and the judgement revealed.eof&&$n++; As the evil of mankind ends, perhaps the end itself is a positive thing./<title>([^<]+)/ We are preoccupied with fame and titlesi And insensitive to the suffering of others.&&$n-- All this is for nought, and only hastens our demise.' * For in the end, we are but stardust. ```
gollark: They'll probably say "lambdas are evil" because python hates functional programming a lot of the time.
gollark: *considers creating an esowiki page for haskell and golang*
gollark: ``` func AddInt32(addr *int32, delta int32) (new int32) func AddInt64(addr *int64, delta int64) (new int64) func AddUint32(addr *uint32, delta uint32) (new uint32) func AddUint64(addr *uint64, delta uint64) (new uint64) func AddUintptr(addr *uintptr, delta uintptr) (new uintptr) func CompareAndSwapInt32(addr *int32, old, new int32) (swapped bool) func CompareAndSwapInt64(addr *int64, old, new int64) (swapped bool) func CompareAndSwapPointer(addr *unsafe.Pointer, old, new unsafe.Pointer) (swapped bool) func CompareAndSwapUint32(addr *uint32, old, new uint32) (swapped bool) func CompareAndSwapUint64(addr *uint64, old, new uint64) (swapped bool) func CompareAndSwapUintptr(addr *uintptr, old, new uintptr) (swapped bool) func LoadInt32(addr *int32) (val int32) func LoadInt64(addr *int64) (val int64) func LoadPointer(addr *unsafe.Pointer) (val unsafe.Pointer) func LoadUint32(addr *uint32) (val uint32) func LoadUint64(addr *uint64) (val uint64) func LoadUintptr(addr *uintptr) (val uintptr) func StoreInt32(addr *int32, val int32) func StoreInt64(addr *int64, val int64) func StorePointer(addr *unsafe.Pointer, val unsafe.Pointer) func StoreUint32(addr *uint32, val uint32) func StoreUint64(addr *uint64, val uint64) func StoreUintptr(addr *uintptr, val uintptr) func SwapInt32(addr *int32, new int32) (old int32) func SwapInt64(addr *int64, new int64) (old int64) func SwapPointer(addr *unsafe.Pointer, new unsafe.Pointer) (old unsafe.Pointer) func SwapUint32(addr *uint32, new uint32) (old uint32) func SwapUint64(addr *uint64, new uint64) (old uint64) func SwapUintptr(addr *uintptr, new uintptr) (old uintptr)```Seen in standard library docs.

References

  1. WUZZ Gets Rocky Rdaioinsight - June 11, 2018

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