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Wikipedia

WFNI

WFNI (1070 AM) is a commercial radio station in Indianapolis, Indiana.[2] It is owned by locally based Emmis Communications and carries a sports radio format, featuring ESPN Radio programming. The studios and offices are located at 40 Monument Circle in downtown Indianapolis.[3]

WFNI
Broadcast areaIndianapolis metropolitan area
Frequency1070 kHz
Branding1070 The Fan
Programming
FormatSports
AffiliationsESPN Radio
Ownership
Owner
History
First air date
October 30, 1938
(84 years ago)
 (1938-10-30) (as WIBC at 1050)
Former call signs
WIBC (1938–2007)
Former frequencies
1050 kHz (1938–1941)
Call sign meaning
W FaN Indianapolis
Technical information[1]
Licensing authority
FCC
Facility ID19521
ClassB
Power50,000 watts day
10,000 watts night
Transmitter coordinates
39°57′21″N 86°21′30″W / 39.95583°N 86.35833°W / 39.95583; -86.35833
Links
Public license information
  • Public file
  • LMS
1070 at Emmis Communications

WFNI's AM signal, 50,000 watts by day and 10,000 watts at night, went dark at midnight on August 3, 2021. Emmis Broadcasting sold the land on which the six-tower array stood, off Perry Worth Drive near Interstate 65 in Whitestown, Indiana.[4] Emmis says it's looking for a new site for its AM transmitter but none has been found yet.[5]

1070 AM as WIBC Edit

Early years Edit

The station signed on the air on October 30, 1938; 84 years ago (1938-10-30).[6] Its original call sign, WIBC, stood for the owner, the Indiana Broadcasting Company. The construction permit had previously held the call letters WGVA, for Glenn Van Auken.[7] He was the company's president. WIBC began as a 1,000-watt daytime-only station.[7] It was sold in 1939 to H. G. Wall.[7]

The station was approved in 1940 to broadcast at night. It moved from 1050 to 1070 kilocycles as part of the enactment of the North American Regional Broadcasting Agreement (NARBA) in 1941. With the move, the daytime power increased to 5,000 watts.[7] Initially independent, the station became a network affiliate of the Mutual Broadcasting System in April 1941.[8]

WIBC was sold in 1944 to the Indianapolis News, making it the first newspaper in Indiana to own a radio station.[9] Four years later, WIBC was separated from the Indianapolis News and sold directly to Charles M. Fairbanks and his associates, who owned the newspaper.[10] In 1950, WIBC got a power boost to 50,000 watts by day and 10,000 watts at night.[7]

Fairbanks attempted to start a television station on Channel 13. However, the Federal Communications Commission ruled in favor of the competing bid of the Cincinnati-based Crosley Broadcasting Corporation, which launched WLWI. Fairbanks sued, arguing that a local owner should be prioritized for the last VHF allocation available in town. Fairbanks prevailed in the initial battle to have the 1957 grant to Crosley overturned, but the FCC set aside the order in 1961.[11] The two parties settled the dispute in 1962 when Crosley sold Fairbanks its Atlanta television station.[12]

In 1960, WIBC added an FM station at 93.1, WIBC-FM, which initially aired an automated classical music format in its early years.[13]

Indianapolis 500 Edit

Beginning in 1946, WIBC carried the Indianapolis 500 as a Mutual Broadcasting System affiliate, since Mutual had the rights to broadcast the motor race.[14] WIBC establish a broadcasting tradition when the station struck a last-minute deal to provide coverage of the 1952 Indianapolis 500, with Sid Collins as the lead announcer, after Mutual pulled out as the Indianapolis 500 official broadcaster.

The next year, its coverage grew to include personalities from and was simulcast on the other major stations in town: WFBM (1260 AM), WIRE (1430 AM), WISH (1310 AM), and WXLW (1590 AM).[15] WIBC became the flagship station of the Indianapolis Motor Speedway Radio Network and remains so as WFNI.

"Radio Indiana, WIBC" Edit

As television took over most network programming in the 1950s and 60s, WIBC switched to a middle of the road (MOR) format of popular adult music, news, sports and talk. The station established itself as a highly regarded full service broadcaster, placing an emphasis on its colorful air personalities.

In the 1970s, the WIBC stable included Jerry Baker, who was also the voice of Indiana University Hoosiers basketball and the Indiana Pacers; Paul Page, the voice of the Indianapolis 500 on radio and later on television, and who served as an award-winning newsman at WIBC in the early 1970s, reporting from the first Indianapolis-area traffic helicopter (known as the "Ten Seven-Oh Whirlybird") until a serious crash nearly killed him and his pilot in 1977;[16] and Chuck Riley, who did afternoons before becoming a very successful voice-over talent in Los Angeles. Doing sports on Riley's afternoon drive-time show was "Hockey Bob" Lamey, who got that nickname from doing play-by-play for the short-lived Indianapolis Racers WHA team a decade before the Indianapolis Colts moved from Baltimore and named Lamey the "Voice of the Colts". Another long-time fixture was former news director Fred Heckman, who began at WIBC in 1957 and was recognized for his "My Town Indy" features.

During the Great Blizzard of 1978, WIBC was granted temporary emergency authorization for nighttime broadcasting at full daytime power (50 kW) until the storm was over. Normally the station was licensed to transmit with only 10 kW of power at night.

Switch to talk Edit

Over the 1980s, more talk programming was added and music was reduced, as listeners increasingly turned to FM for music. Under new general manager Tom Durney, WIBC became a full-time talk radio station in January 1993—eliminating all music shows—and also updated its presentation and cut back its news department.[17] The moves were controversial: news director Heckman walked out, claiming a hostile working environment, while far-right host Stan Solomon's statements resulted in a suspension and backlash from advertisers.[17]

Current owners Emmis, who also owned WENS (97.1 FM), purchased WIBC and the FM station, by then WKLR-FM, in 1994 from Horizon Broadcasting for $26 million.[18] Heckman, who had sued WIBC for age discrimination, settled his claim[19] and returned to the station later that year.[20] He remained at WIBC until retiring in 2000 at the age of 76.[21]

Sports radio WFNI Edit

 
Former station logo as "1070 and 107.5 The Fan", used from 2017 until the station ending on August 2, 2021

WFNI was born as a result of a three-frequency, two-company station swap. These moves were provoked in part because Emmis had acquired the rights to the Indianapolis Colts football team for the 2007 season, which left the station with the rights to all major sports teams in Indianapolis. To avoid tedious shuffling of games among its stations and frequent preemption of regular programming, Emmis decided to clear a frequency for a new all-sports station in Indianapolis. The move began on October 8, 2007, when the format and branding of Top 40 WNOW-FM ("Radio Now"), which was struggling, was sold to Radio One and moved to 100.9 MHz, the former frequency of now defunct smooth jazz WYJZ. This was done so that Emmis could clear the 93.1 frequency for news/talk WIBC, which had been on 1070 kHz on the AM dial.

On October 8, 2007, it was announced [1] that effective December 26, the WIBC call letters and news/talk programming would move to 93.1 FM, and that WIBC's sports programming would remain on 1070 AM, joined by programming from ESPN Radio, effective January 7, 2008. The new call letters WFNI were announced in December. 93.1 began stunting an all-Christmas music format as WEXM between October 8 and December 25.[22] With the 1070 frequency open, Emmis launched its sports radio format on December 26 with a series of classic Indianapolis sporting events, ahead of its official launch date, January 7, 2008.

Prior to WFNI's launch, ESPN Radio talk programming had been heard on 950 WXLW, a lower-power station, from 2002 to 2007. Before that, 1260 WNDE was an ESPN Radio network affiliate from 1992 to 1994 and again from 1996 until switching to Fox Sports Radio in 2002. WIBC carried some ESPN Radio programming from 1994 to 1996, mostly GameNight on weekend evenings and some major live sporting events.

ESPN Radio's national sports broadcasts (MLB baseball, college football and NBA basketball) were all heard on WFNI, finally sorting out an unusual rights division among as many as four stations in the market during the early 2000s. (The NBA had often been heard on WIBC and Sunday Night Baseball on WNDE, regardless of which station had the main network affiliation.)

WFNI's current local weekday lineup consists of The Wake-Up Call with Kevin Bowen and Andy Sweeney from 7-10 a.m.; Query and Company, with former WIBC and WNDE host Jake Query from noon to 3:00 p.m.; and The Ride with longtime Indy drive-time host JMV (John Gliva) from 3:00 to 6:00 p.m..

Local sports Edit

WFNI was the flagship station of the NBA's Indiana Pacers, and the co-flagship, alongside sister station WLHK, for the NFL's Indianapolis Colts. WFNI was also the flagship of the Indianapolis Motor Speedway Radio Network, carrying the Indianapolis 500 (simulcast with WIBC), the rest of the NTT IndyCar Series, and all NASCAR races held at IMS.

In addition, WFNI aired the Indiana High School state championship games in football and girls' and boys' basketball (which was shared with WIBC in the event of Pacers conflicts).

Previously, WFNI aired Indiana University football until 2021, when it moved to WIBC, the longtime Indianapolis home of Indiana's men's basketball games. In addition, they were also the flagship for Butler Bulldogs men's basketball from 2010 to 2021.

FM 107.5 The Fan Edit

The simulcast with FM translator W298BB (107.5 FM) was officially launched on February 19, 2013, following a short test period.[23] At first, the translator sometimes broke away from 1070 with a different broadcast schedule, carrying ESPN Radio's The Herd and SVP & Rusillo in middays before simulcasting WFNI's The Ride with JMV. All other local shows and local play-by-play were simulcast, with the AM and FM feeds splitting whenever conflicts arose.

On October 16, 2015, Emmis split the simulcast of WFNI and W298BB. A new translator, W228CX at 93.5, began simulcasting WFNI full-time, as W298BB began carrying ESPN Radio on a full-time basis.[24]

On March 30, 2017, the simulcast switched back to W298BB, due to problems with W228CX interfering with other nearby stations, while also discontinuing the full-time ESPN national feed. With the move, WFNI began calling itself "107.5 and 1070 The Fan."[25] Some time later, 93.5 was itself revived, with the branding changing to "93.5 and 107.5 The Fan".

The AM frequency went off the air at midnight on August 3, 2021, as Emmis sold portions of the land on which the AM station's transmitters are located for commercial development.[26]

On June 13, 2022, Emmis announced it would sell its entire cluster in Indianapolis to Urban One. [27] Emmis continues to own the license and occasionally run WFNI on a temporary transmitter since it was signed off to preserve the license with the national master ESPN Radio schedule outside its hourly station identification.

References Edit

  1. ^ "Facility Technical Data for WFNI". Licensing and Management System. Federal Communications Commission.
  2. ^ "AM Query Results -- Audio Division (FCC) USA".
  3. ^ 1070TheFan.com/Station-Info
  4. ^ "WFNI-AM Radio Station Coverage Map". radio-locator.com.
  5. ^ WIBC.com "Original WIBC Frequency Goes Silent for Now" July 19, 2021
  6. ^ "WIBC To Go On Air Today; Dedicatory Program At 12". Indianapolis Sunday Star. October 30, 1938. p. 4. Retrieved June 16, 2020.
  7. ^ a b c d e FCC History Cards for WFNI
  8. ^ "A new radio program". Indianapolis News. April 8, 1941. p. 10. Retrieved June 16, 2020.
  9. ^ "The News Acquires Radio Station WIBC". Indianapolis News. February 16, 1944. p. 1. Retrieved June 16, 2020.
  10. ^ "WIBC Being Sold to Fairbanks, Associates". Indianapolis News. August 30, 1948. p. 19. Retrieved June 16, 2020.
  11. ^ "FCC Sets Aside Order Putting WLWI Off Air". Anderson Herald. Associated Press. November 23, 1961. p. 7. Retrieved June 16, 2020.
  12. ^ "Petitions May Resolve TV Licensing". Indianapolis Star. June 12, 1962. p. 23. Retrieved June 16, 2020.
  13. ^ "Broadcasting by Station WIBC-FM to Start Monday". Indianapolis News. December 1, 1960. p. 61. Retrieved June 16, 2020.
  14. ^ Cochran, Polly (May 30, 1952). "Everyone In Reach Of Radio Will Have 'Ticket' To Race". Indianapolis Star. p. 18. Retrieved June 17, 2020.
  15. ^ "Radio Coverage Bigger As Stations Combine Forces". Indianapolis Star. May 30, 1953. p. 19. Retrieved June 16, 2020.
  16. ^ Rubinton, Noel. "WIBC Radio's Paul Page, 2 Others Hurt: Copter Crashes At High Speed". Indianapolis Star. p. 1. Retrieved June 16, 2020.
  17. ^ a b Shaffer, David J. (August 8, 1993). "WIBC's Durney is making radio waves". Indianapolis Star. pp. D1, D2. Retrieved June 16, 2020.
  18. ^ Dinnen, S.P. (April 16, 1994). "Emmis tunes in for market share, to buy WIBC, WKLR for $26 million". Indianapolis Star. p. A1, A2. Retrieved June 16, 2020.
  19. ^ "Heckman, WIBC settle age-discrimination suit". Indianapolis Star. May 21, 1994. p. E2. Retrieved June 16, 2020.
  20. ^ "Less talk and more Heckman at WIBC". The Star Press. Associated Press. September 17, 1994. p. 1A. Retrieved June 16, 2020.
  21. ^ Allan, Marc D. (September 29, 2000). "After 43 years in his town, WIBC's Heckman to sign off". Indianapolis Star. pp. A1, A7. Retrieved June 16, 2020.
  22. ^ Smith, Erika D. (October 9, 2007). "On-air musical chairs: Pop makes way for talk on FM with WIBC move". Indianapolis Star. pp. A1, A5. Retrieved June 16, 2020.
  23. ^ . Your Midwest Media. February 19, 2013. Archived from the original on March 17, 2013. Retrieved February 24, 2013.
  24. ^ "W228CX-FM 93.5 MHz - Indianapolis, IN". radio-locator.com.
  25. ^ "1070 and 107.5 Reunited" (blog)
  26. ^ Brown, Alex; Inside INdiana Business (July 19, 2021). "Emmis sells 1070 tower site, signal to go dark". WISH-TV. Retrieved July 20, 2021. {{cite web}}: |last2= has generic name (help)
  27. ^ Emmis Sells Indianapolis Stations To Urban One

External links Edit

  • WFNI in the FCC AM station database
  • WFNI on Radio-Locator
  • WFNI in Nielsen Audio's AM station database
  • FCC History Cards for WFNI

wfni, 1070, commercial, radio, station, indianapolis, indiana, owned, locally, based, emmis, communications, carries, sports, radio, format, featuring, espn, radio, programming, studios, offices, located, monument, circle, downtown, indianapolis, indianapolis,. WFNI 1070 AM is a commercial radio station in Indianapolis Indiana 2 It is owned by locally based Emmis Communications and carries a sports radio format featuring ESPN Radio programming The studios and offices are located at 40 Monument Circle in downtown Indianapolis 3 WFNIIndianapolis IndianaBroadcast areaIndianapolis metropolitan areaFrequency1070 kHzBranding1070 The FanProgrammingFormatSportsAffiliationsESPN RadioOwnershipOwnerEmmis Communications sale to Urban One pending Emmis Radio License LLC Sister stationsWIBCWLHKWYXBHistoryFirst air dateOctober 30 1938 84 years ago 1938 10 30 as WIBC at 1050 Former call signsWIBC 1938 2007 Former frequencies1050 kHz 1938 1941 Call sign meaningW FaN IndianapolisTechnical information 1 Licensing authorityFCCFacility ID19521ClassBPower50 000 watts day10 000 watts nightTransmitter coordinates39 57 21 N 86 21 30 W 39 95583 N 86 35833 W 39 95583 86 35833LinksPublic license informationPublic fileLMS1070 at Emmis CommunicationsWFNI s AM signal 50 000 watts by day and 10 000 watts at night went dark at midnight on August 3 2021 Emmis Broadcasting sold the land on which the six tower array stood off Perry Worth Drive near Interstate 65 in Whitestown Indiana 4 Emmis says it s looking for a new site for its AM transmitter but none has been found yet 5 Contents 1 1070 AM as WIBC 1 1 Early years 1 2 Indianapolis 500 1 3 Radio Indiana WIBC 1 4 Switch to talk 2 Sports radio WFNI 2 1 Local sports 2 2 FM 107 5 The Fan 3 References 4 External links1070 AM as WIBC EditEarly years Edit The station signed on the air on October 30 1938 84 years ago 1938 10 30 6 Its original call sign WIBC stood for the owner the Indiana Broadcasting Company The construction permit had previously held the call letters WGVA for Glenn Van Auken 7 He was the company s president WIBC began as a 1 000 watt daytime only station 7 It was sold in 1939 to H G Wall 7 The station was approved in 1940 to broadcast at night It moved from 1050 to 1070 kilocycles as part of the enactment of the North American Regional Broadcasting Agreement NARBA in 1941 With the move the daytime power increased to 5 000 watts 7 Initially independent the station became a network affiliate of the Mutual Broadcasting System in April 1941 8 WIBC was sold in 1944 to the Indianapolis News making it the first newspaper in Indiana to own a radio station 9 Four years later WIBC was separated from the Indianapolis News and sold directly to Charles M Fairbanks and his associates who owned the newspaper 10 In 1950 WIBC got a power boost to 50 000 watts by day and 10 000 watts at night 7 Fairbanks attempted to start a television station on Channel 13 However the Federal Communications Commission ruled in favor of the competing bid of the Cincinnati based Crosley Broadcasting Corporation which launched WLWI Fairbanks sued arguing that a local owner should be prioritized for the last VHF allocation available in town Fairbanks prevailed in the initial battle to have the 1957 grant to Crosley overturned but the FCC set aside the order in 1961 11 The two parties settled the dispute in 1962 when Crosley sold Fairbanks its Atlanta television station 12 In 1960 WIBC added an FM station at 93 1 WIBC FM which initially aired an automated classical music format in its early years 13 Indianapolis 500 Edit Beginning in 1946 WIBC carried the Indianapolis 500 as a Mutual Broadcasting System affiliate since Mutual had the rights to broadcast the motor race 14 WIBC establish a broadcasting tradition when the station struck a last minute deal to provide coverage of the 1952 Indianapolis 500 with Sid Collins as the lead announcer after Mutual pulled out as the Indianapolis 500 official broadcaster The next year its coverage grew to include personalities from and was simulcast on the other major stations in town WFBM 1260 AM WIRE 1430 AM WISH 1310 AM and WXLW 1590 AM 15 WIBC became the flagship station of the Indianapolis Motor Speedway Radio Network and remains so as WFNI Radio Indiana WIBC Edit As television took over most network programming in the 1950s and 60s WIBC switched to a middle of the road MOR format of popular adult music news sports and talk The station established itself as a highly regarded full service broadcaster placing an emphasis on its colorful air personalities In the 1970s the WIBC stable included Jerry Baker who was also the voice of Indiana University Hoosiers basketball and the Indiana Pacers Paul Page the voice of the Indianapolis 500 on radio and later on television and who served as an award winning newsman at WIBC in the early 1970s reporting from the first Indianapolis area traffic helicopter known as the Ten Seven Oh Whirlybird until a serious crash nearly killed him and his pilot in 1977 16 and Chuck Riley who did afternoons before becoming a very successful voice over talent in Los Angeles Doing sports on Riley s afternoon drive time show was Hockey Bob Lamey who got that nickname from doing play by play for the short lived Indianapolis Racers WHA team a decade before the Indianapolis Colts moved from Baltimore and named Lamey the Voice of the Colts Another long time fixture was former news director Fred Heckman who began at WIBC in 1957 and was recognized for his My Town Indy features During the Great Blizzard of 1978 WIBC was granted temporary emergency authorization for nighttime broadcasting at full daytime power 50 kW until the storm was over Normally the station was licensed to transmit with only 10 kW of power at night Switch to talk Edit Over the 1980s more talk programming was added and music was reduced as listeners increasingly turned to FM for music Under new general manager Tom Durney WIBC became a full time talk radio station in January 1993 eliminating all music shows and also updated its presentation and cut back its news department 17 The moves were controversial news director Heckman walked out claiming a hostile working environment while far right host Stan Solomon s statements resulted in a suspension and backlash from advertisers 17 Current owners Emmis who also owned WENS 97 1 FM purchased WIBC and the FM station by then WKLR FM in 1994 from Horizon Broadcasting for 26 million 18 Heckman who had sued WIBC for age discrimination settled his claim 19 and returned to the station later that year 20 He remained at WIBC until retiring in 2000 at the age of 76 21 Sports radio WFNI Edit nbsp Former station logo as 1070 and 107 5 The Fan used from 2017 until the station ending on August 2 2021WFNI was born as a result of a three frequency two company station swap These moves were provoked in part because Emmis had acquired the rights to the Indianapolis Colts football team for the 2007 season which left the station with the rights to all major sports teams in Indianapolis To avoid tedious shuffling of games among its stations and frequent preemption of regular programming Emmis decided to clear a frequency for a new all sports station in Indianapolis The move began on October 8 2007 when the format and branding of Top 40 WNOW FM Radio Now which was struggling was sold to Radio One and moved to 100 9 MHz the former frequency of now defunct smooth jazz WYJZ This was done so that Emmis could clear the 93 1 frequency for news talk WIBC which had been on 1070 kHz on the AM dial On October 8 2007 it was announced 1 that effective December 26 the WIBC call letters and news talk programming would move to 93 1 FM and that WIBC s sports programming would remain on 1070 AM joined by programming from ESPN Radio effective January 7 2008 The new call letters WFNI were announced in December 93 1 began stunting an all Christmas music format as WEXM between October 8 and December 25 22 With the 1070 frequency open Emmis launched its sports radio format on December 26 with a series of classic Indianapolis sporting events ahead of its official launch date January 7 2008 Prior to WFNI s launch ESPN Radio talk programming had been heard on 950 WXLW a lower power station from 2002 to 2007 Before that 1260 WNDE was an ESPN Radio network affiliate from 1992 to 1994 and again from 1996 until switching to Fox Sports Radio in 2002 WIBC carried some ESPN Radio programming from 1994 to 1996 mostly GameNight on weekend evenings and some major live sporting events ESPN Radio s national sports broadcasts MLB baseball college football and NBA basketball were all heard on WFNI finally sorting out an unusual rights division among as many as four stations in the market during the early 2000s The NBA had often been heard on WIBC and Sunday Night Baseball on WNDE regardless of which station had the main network affiliation WFNI s current local weekday lineup consists of The Wake Up Call with Kevin Bowen and Andy Sweeney from 7 10 a m Query and Company with former WIBC and WNDE host Jake Query from noon to 3 00 p m and The Ride with longtime Indy drive time host JMV John Gliva from 3 00 to 6 00 p m Local sports Edit WFNI was the flagship station of the NBA s Indiana Pacers and the co flagship alongside sister station WLHK for the NFL s Indianapolis Colts WFNI was also the flagship of the Indianapolis Motor Speedway Radio Network carrying the Indianapolis 500 simulcast with WIBC the rest of the NTT IndyCar Series and all NASCAR races held at IMS In addition WFNI aired the Indiana High School state championship games in football and girls and boys basketball which was shared with WIBC in the event of Pacers conflicts Previously WFNI aired Indiana University football until 2021 when it moved to WIBC the longtime Indianapolis home of Indiana s men s basketball games In addition they were also the flagship for Butler Bulldogs men s basketball from 2010 to 2021 FM 107 5 The Fan Edit The simulcast with FM translator W298BB 107 5 FM was officially launched on February 19 2013 following a short test period 23 At first the translator sometimes broke away from 1070 with a different broadcast schedule carrying ESPN Radio s The Herd and SVP amp Rusillo in middays before simulcasting WFNI s The Ride with JMV All other local shows and local play by play were simulcast with the AM and FM feeds splitting whenever conflicts arose On October 16 2015 Emmis split the simulcast of WFNI and W298BB A new translator W228CX at 93 5 began simulcasting WFNI full time as W298BB began carrying ESPN Radio on a full time basis 24 On March 30 2017 the simulcast switched back to W298BB due to problems with W228CX interfering with other nearby stations while also discontinuing the full time ESPN national feed With the move WFNI began calling itself 107 5 and 1070 The Fan 25 Some time later 93 5 was itself revived with the branding changing to 93 5 and 107 5 The Fan The AM frequency went off the air at midnight on August 3 2021 as Emmis sold portions of the land on which the AM station s transmitters are located for commercial development 26 On June 13 2022 Emmis announced it would sell its entire cluster in Indianapolis to Urban One 27 Emmis continues to own the license and occasionally run WFNI on a temporary transmitter since it was signed off to preserve the license with the national master ESPN Radio schedule outside its hourly station identification References Edit Facility Technical Data for WFNI Licensing and Management System Federal Communications Commission AM Query Results Audio Division FCC USA 1070TheFan com Station Info WFNI AM Radio Station Coverage Map radio locator com WIBC com Original WIBC Frequency Goes Silent for Now July 19 2021 WIBC To Go On Air Today Dedicatory Program At 12 Indianapolis Sunday Star October 30 1938 p 4 Retrieved June 16 2020 a b c d e FCC History Cards for WFNI A new radio program Indianapolis News April 8 1941 p 10 Retrieved June 16 2020 The News Acquires Radio Station WIBC Indianapolis News February 16 1944 p 1 Retrieved June 16 2020 WIBC Being Sold to Fairbanks Associates Indianapolis News August 30 1948 p 19 Retrieved June 16 2020 FCC Sets Aside Order Putting WLWI Off Air Anderson Herald Associated Press November 23 1961 p 7 Retrieved June 16 2020 Petitions May Resolve TV Licensing Indianapolis Star June 12 1962 p 23 Retrieved June 16 2020 Broadcasting by Station WIBC FM to Start Monday Indianapolis News December 1 1960 p 61 Retrieved June 16 2020 Cochran Polly May 30 1952 Everyone In Reach Of Radio Will Have Ticket To Race Indianapolis Star p 18 Retrieved June 17 2020 Radio Coverage Bigger As Stations Combine Forces Indianapolis Star May 30 1953 p 19 Retrieved June 16 2020 Rubinton Noel WIBC Radio s Paul Page 2 Others Hurt Copter Crashes At High Speed Indianapolis Star p 1 Retrieved June 16 2020 a b Shaffer David J August 8 1993 WIBC s Durney is making radio waves Indianapolis Star pp D1 D2 Retrieved June 16 2020 Dinnen S P April 16 1994 Emmis tunes in for market share to buy WIBC WKLR for 26 million Indianapolis Star p A1 A2 Retrieved June 16 2020 Heckman WIBC settle age discrimination suit Indianapolis Star May 21 1994 p E2 Retrieved June 16 2020 Less talk and more Heckman at WIBC The Star Press Associated Press September 17 1994 p 1A Retrieved June 16 2020 Allan Marc D September 29 2000 After 43 years in his town WIBC s Heckman to sign off Indianapolis Star pp A1 A7 Retrieved June 16 2020 Smith Erika D October 9 2007 On air musical chairs Pop makes way for talk on FM with WIBC move Indianapolis Star pp A1 A5 Retrieved June 16 2020 Format Changes Your Midwest Media February 19 2013 Archived from the original on March 17 2013 Retrieved February 24 2013 W228CX FM 93 5 MHz Indianapolis IN radio locator com 1070 and 107 5 Reunited blog Brown Alex Inside INdiana Business July 19 2021 Emmis sells 1070 tower site signal to go dark WISH TV Retrieved July 20 2021 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a last2 has generic name help Emmis Sells Indianapolis Stations To Urban OneExternal links EditWFNI in the FCC AM station database WFNI on Radio Locator WFNI in Nielsen Audio s AM station database FCC History Cards for WFNI Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title WFNI amp oldid 1177440629, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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