WWPL

WWPL (96.9 FM, "Pulse FM") is a contemporary hits radio station licensed to Goldsboro, North Carolina, which is east of the Raleigh-Durham Triangle. The station is owned by Curtis Media Group. Its studios are located in Raleigh, and the transmitter tower is near Princeton, North Carolina.

WWPL
CityGoldsboro, North Carolina
Broadcast areaRaleigh/Goldsboro/
Rocky Mount/Greenville, North Carolina
Frequency96.9 MHz
BrandingPulse 96.9 102.5
SloganAll the Hits!
Programming
FormatTop 40/CHR
Ownership
OwnerCurtis Media Group
(New Age Communications, Ltd.)
Sister stationsWBBB, WGBR, WKIX-FM, WPLW, WPLW-FM, WPTF, WPTK, WQDR-FM
History
First air date1946 (1946) (as WGBR-FM at 99.7)
Former call signsWGBR-FM (1946–1950)
WEQR (1950–1989)
WKTC (1989–1998)
WKIX (1998–2001)
WYMY-FM (2001)
WYMY (2001–2013)
WBZJ (2013–2014)[1]
Former frequencies99.7 MHz (1946-1950)
93.3 MHz (1950-1954)
Call sign meaningW W PuLse
Technical information
Facility ID48369
ClassC0
ERP100,000 watts
HAAT300 meters (980 ft)
Transmitter coordinates35°23′52″N 78°8′7″W
Repeater(s)102.5 FM (WPLW-FM)
Links
WebcastListen live
WebsitePulse FM Online

History

Originally WGBR-FM at 99.7 FM and then 93.3 FM, this Goldsboro, NC station for most of its early history originally simulcast its AM counterpart. It switched its call letters to WEQR in 1950. During much of the late 1970s and into the '80s, the station, under the nickname "Q96", underwent several format changes over the years including soft rock (1978-1980), contemporary rock (1980-1984) and adult contemporary (to 1987) until evolving into a CHR station. In 1989, Curtis Media Group bought the station and moved the country music format and calls of Tarboro's WKTC from 104.3 to 96.9. The WEQR letters and hot adult contemporary format went to the former WOKN at 102.3 FM. "Katie Country" existed at 96.9 until January 9, 1998. The 96.9 frequency was then given the WKIX calls from what is now WBBB. This station also ran a country format, simulcasting with WKXU in Burlington as "Kix 96.9 and 101.1".[2][3] This station simulcast WWMY from 2001 to 2003 as an 80s station until it changed its format and language.

When WYMY switched to regional Mexican and the name "La Ley 96.9" in 2003, it was the strongest FM Spanish-language station in the Southeastern United States.[4]

On April 3, 2012, WYMY began a simulcast on WZTK,[4] 101.1 FM in Burlington, North Carolina, which lasted until January 3, 2013.

On January 3, 2013 at 12:00am, WYMY changed their format to urban adult contemporary, branded as "96.9 BZJ" under new call letters, WBZJ.[5] The radio station carried the nationally syndicated Steve Harvey Morning Show and urban adult contemporary programming throughout the remainder of the day.

On March 11, 2014 WBZJ changed their format back to regional Mexican, once again branded as "La Ley 96.9" and simulcasting WYMY. [6]

On September 3, 2014, WBZJ changed their format to CHR, branded as "Pulse FM" (simulcasting WPLW-FM 102.5 FM Hillsborough, NC).[7] On September 11, WBZJ changed their call letters to WWPL to go with the "Pulse FM" branding, as the former WWPL on 102.3 changed its calls to WFNL-FM.

gollark: Installation only takes hours!
gollark: Use Arch Linux, the superior Linux.
gollark: Isn't the market for high-powered VPSes/servers quite saturated at this point?
gollark: Even with computers they still managed to mess the phone network up so horribly.- calls appear to use an awful voice codec- multimedia messages are overcharged massively for- caller ID spoofing is a very common thing- mobile phones have stupidly complex modem chips with excessive access to the rest of their phone, closed source firmware and probably security bugs- SIM cards are self contained devices with lots of software in *Java*?! In a sane system they would need to store something like four values.- "eSIM" things are just reprogrammable soldered SIM cards because apparently nobody thought of doing it in software?!- phone towers are routinely spoofed by law enforcement for no good reason and apparently nobody is stopping this- phone calls/texts are not end to end encrypted, which is practical *now* if not when much of the development of mobile phones and whatever was happening- there are apparently a bunch of exploits in the protocols linking phone networks, like SS7
gollark: I think if a tick takes a few seconds or something.

References

  1. "Call Sign History (WBZJ)". FCC Media Bureau CDBS Public Access Database. Retrieved 2009-03-24.
  2. "Raleigh-Durham FM Dial". Archived from the original on 2003-02-01. Retrieved 2010-04-29.
  3. David Menconi,"KIX Walks; 96.1 to Shift", News & Observer, January 9, 1998.
  4. "Raleigh-Durham's La Ley 96.9 to add second FM signal; expands coverage west to Greensboro-Winston Salem-High Point market". Curtis Media Group. Retrieved 2012-04-06.
  5. "Curtis Media Launches 96.9 WBZJ Raleigh". January 3, 2013.
  6. La Ley Raleigh Returns to 96.9
  7. Pulse 102 Raleigh Moves on to 96.9
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