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WHYY-FM

WHYY-FM (90.9 MHz, "91 FM") is a public radio station licensed to serve Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. Its broadcast tower is located in the city's Roxborough section of the city at (40°2′30.9″N 75°14′21.9″W / 40.041917°N 75.239417°W / 40.041917; -75.239417)[2] while its studios and offices are located on Independence Mall in Center City Philadelphia. The station, owned by WHYY, Inc., is a charter member of NPR and contributes several programs to the national network.

WHYY-FM
Broadcast areaDelaware Valley
Frequency90.9 MHz (HD Radio)
BrandingWHYY NPR
Programming
FormatPublic radio
Affiliations
Ownership
OwnerWHYY, Inc.
WHYY-TV
History
First air date
December 14, 1954; 68 years ago (1954-12-14)
Former call signs
WUHY (1963–1983)
Call sign meaning
"Wider Horizons for You and Yours"
Technical information[1]
Licensing authority
FCC
Facility ID72336
ClassB
ERP13,500 watts
HAAT280 meters (920 ft)
Transmitter coordinates
40°2′30.40″N 75°14′22.60″W / 40.0417778°N 75.2396111°W / 40.0417778; -75.2396111 (WHYY-FM)
Repeater(s)See § New Jersey expansion and controversy
Links
Public license information
  • Public file
  • LMS
WebcastListen live
Websitewhyy.org/radio-podcasts/

History edit

WHYY signed on the air on December 14, 1954, owned by the Metropolitan Philadelphia Educational Radio and Television Corporation.[3] It was the first educational station in Philadelphia. The transmitter, originally located at 17th and Sansom Streets in Philadelphia, was donated by Westinghouse Broadcasting.[4] In 1957, it added a sister television station, WHYY-TV on channel 35.

In 1963, WHYY-TV moved from channel 35 in Philadelphia to the stronger channel 12 in Wilmington, Delaware. At the time, Federal Communications Commission (FCC) regulations did not allow co-owned television and radio stations to share the same base callsign if they were licensed in different markets. Philadelphia and Wilmington, then as now, are separate radio markets (though 90.9, like most major Philadelphia stations, has long claimed Wilmington as part of its primary coverage area), though they have long been a single television market. As a result, the radio station was forced to change its call sign to WUHY. 90.9 FM regained its original call sign in 1983 after the FCC eased this restriction.

When NPR was formed in 1970, the station became a charter member and was one of the 90 stations that carried the initial broadcast of All Things Considered.

Programs produced edit

 
The entrance to WHYY on 6th Street, across from Independence Mall and the National Constitution Center, in Philadelphia
  • NPR: Fresh Air with Terry Gross, a Peabody Award-winning weekday magazine of contemporary arts and issues, is one of public radio's most popular programs. 5.3 million people listen to the broadcast on 640 National Public Radio stations across the country, as well as in Europe on the World Radio Network.[5] The program originated in 1975 as a local show before going national in 1987.
  • Radio Times With Marty Moss-Coane, a daily hour-long program that tackles a wide range of issues.[6]
  • You Bet Your Garden (1998-2018), an organic gardening call-in talk show hosted by Mike McGrath that moved to WLVT in Bethlehem in 2018.[7]
  • Voices in the Family with Dr. Dan Gottlieb, psychologist and family therapist, along with guest experts, opens the line to callers to discuss issues that affect individuals and society, with special focus on family issues.[8] Its executive producer is Maiken Scott, WHYY's Behavioral Health Reporter.
  • The Pulse is a show that focuses on stories at the heart of health, science and innovation in the Philadelphia region. The show is hosted by WHYY's Behavioral Health Reporter Maiken Scott and distributed on the Public Radio Exchange.[9]

Format change edit

Until 1990, WHYY served the region as a non-commercial station with a format that featured mostly classical music with some jazz and folk music. The management decision to establish a news/talk radio format was a departure from the classical music that most public radio stations were programming. The format switch left the privately owned WFLN as the only Philadelphia classical station and resulted in protests from many of the station's listening audience who were among WHYY's major contributors. After WFLN's new owners also abandoned the classical format in the late 1990s, Temple University's WRTI (90.1 FM) began programming classical music during the day to serve the displaced listeners.

CEO controversy edit

Controversy erupted in the summer of 2007 when station Chief Executive Officer Bill Marrazzo was cited by the watchdog group Charity Navigator as the highest paid CEO in all of public broadcasting.

In an August 2007 article, popular Philadelphia Inquirer columnist Karen Heller called for a boycott of WHYY. And in September 2007 an anonymous group of WHYY employees sent an open letter to Marrazzo, the Inquirer, the Philadelphia Daily News and Philadelphia magazine, accusing him of "a serious lack of understanding when it comes to creating ... a healthy workplace" and assailing his salary as "excessive and inappropriate." The five-page letter concluded with a call for Marrazzo to resign.[10][11]

New Jersey expansion and controversy edit

 
Dorrance Hamilton Media Commons, part of the WHYY building near Franklin Square

On June 6, 2011, the New Jersey Public Broadcasting Authority agreed to sell five FM stations in Southern New Jersey to WHYY. The purchase was made through an anonymous one-million dollar grant and a non-cash agreement that included scholarships for students and teachers. The five stations were previously the southern portion of the New Jersey Network's statewide radio service.[12]

The transaction was announced by Governor Chris Christie, as part of his long-term goal to end state-subsidized public broadcasting. The governor's critics maintained that scrapping New Jersey Network effectively ended all non-commercial statewide news coverage. It was also noted that the sale eliminated a source of legislative oversight frequently critical of the Christie administration.[13]

WHYY assumed control of the stations through a management agreement on July 1, 2011, pending FCC approval for the acquisition. At that point, the stations began to simulcast WHYY-FM programming.[14] The five stations are:

Call sign Frequency City of license Facility ID ERP
W
Height
m (ft)
Class Transmitter coordinates
WNJB-FM[note 1] 89.3 FM Bridgeton, New Jersey 48934 2,500 vert, 1 horiz 67 meters (220 ft) A 39°27′35.40″N 75°09′26.70″W / 39.4598333°N 75.1574167°W / 39.4598333; -75.1574167 (WNJB-FM)
WNJM 89.9 FM Manahawkin, New Jersey 48460 250 vert, 1 horiz 69.5 meters (228 ft) A 39°41′53.40″N 74°14′4.50″W / 39.6981667°N 74.2345833°W / 39.6981667; -74.2345833 (WNJM)
WNJN-FM 89.7 FM Atlantic City, New Jersey 48483 6,000 vert, 25 horiz 84 meters (276 ft) A 39°27′40.40″N 74°41′4.50″W / 39.4612222°N 74.6845833°W / 39.4612222; -74.6845833 (WNJN-FM)
WNJS-FM[note 2] 88.1 FM Berlin, New Jersey 48486 80 vert, 1 horiz 287 meters (942 ft) A 39°43′41.40″N 74°50′37.60″W / 39.7281667°N 74.8437778°W / 39.7281667; -74.8437778 (WTHA)
WNJZ 90.3 FM Cape May Court House, New Jersey 48464 6,000 72 meters (236 ft) A 39°06′18.40″N 74°48′4.60″W / 39.1051111°N 74.8012778°W / 39.1051111; -74.8012778 (WNJZ)
  1. ^ WNJB-FM was sold to The Bridge of Hope, Inc., a Delaware-based nonprofit Christian radio broadcaster, and now simulcasts WKNZ.[15]
  2. ^ WNJS-FM was sold to Bux-Mont Educational Radio Association, and now simulcasts WRDV.[16]

The stations all operate at relatively low power due to the crowded state of the noncommercial end of the FM dial in the northeastern United States. They primarily serve areas of southern New Jersey not covered by the main WHYY-FM signal, which itself operates at a relatively modest 13,500 watts. However, their combined footprint extends WHYY-FM's coverage from Berks County to the Jersey Shore.[17]

In November 2022, WHYY began to reduce its New Jersey radio footprint by announcing that it would sell WNJB-FM to non-profit Christian Broadcast, The Bridge of Hope, Inc., which owns WKNZ in Harrington, Delaware.[15] The sale was approved by the FCC and was later completed in February 2023.[18]

In March 2023, WHYY also announced that it would sell WNJS-FM to the Bux-Mont Educational Radio Association which owns WRDV for $110,000. The sale of the station was consummated on June 15, 2023.[16]

Billy Penn edit

In April 2019 WHYY acquired local news web site Billy Penn (billypenn.com).[19][20] At its 2014 founding, the site was conceived as a "mobile-first" site packaging local news for millennials.[19] The purchase was compared to New York public radio station WNYC buying the Gothamist in February 2018.[20]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "Facility Technical Data for WHYY-FM". Licensing and Management System. Federal Communications Commission.
  2. ^ "FM Query Results for WHYY". fcc.gov. Federal Communications Commission. from the original on May 8, 2022. Retrieved January 6, 2020.
  3. ^ Broadcasting Yearbook 1958 page A-357
  4. ^ "History". WHYY. from the original on March 30, 2019. Retrieved April 11, 2019.
  5. ^ "About 'Fresh Air'". npr.org. from the original on May 5, 2016. Retrieved May 11, 2016.
  6. ^ "Radio Times with Marty Moss-Coane". WHYY. Retrieved August 27, 2022.
  7. ^ Vadala, Nick. "Out at WHYY, 'You Bet Your Garden' moves production to Bethlehem's PBS39". The Philadelphia Inquirer. Retrieved August 27, 2022.
  8. ^ "Voices in the Family". WHYY. Retrieved August 27, 2022.
  9. ^ "About The Pulse". WHYY. Retrieved August 27, 2022.
  10. ^ . Philadelphia City Paper. September 5, 2007. Archived from the original on October 26, 2007. Retrieved February 24, 2008.
  11. ^ Volk, Steve (October 5, 2007). "Dead Air". Philadelphia Magazine. from the original on August 3, 2016. Retrieved May 11, 2016.
  12. ^ (PDF) (Press release). WHYY, Inc. June 30, 2011. Archived from the original (PDF) on March 4, 2016. Retrieved May 11, 2016.
  13. ^ Grigoriadis, Vanessa (January 14, 2014). "The Time Chris Christie Shut Down a Public Television Station That Did a Tough Story on Him". Intelligencer. Retrieved August 27, 2022.
  14. ^ "WHYY Philadelphia Expands New Jersey Coverage, NJN Is Kaput". Atlantic City Central. July 1, 2011. from the original on September 15, 2011. Retrieved July 1, 2011.
  15. ^ a b Simon, Perry Michael (November 22, 2022). "WHYY/Philadelphia Sells South Jersey Simulcast FM To Bridge Of Hope". AllAccess.com. Retrieved December 22, 2022.
  16. ^ a b Michael Simon, Perry (March 12, 2023). "WHYY/Philadelphia Sells Off Another South Jersey FM". All Access.
  17. ^ "Coverage Area". whyy.org. from the original on June 1, 2016. Retrieved May 11, 2016.
  18. ^ New Jersey Expansion. The Bridge of Hope, Inc. November 23, 2022. Retrieved December 7, 2022.
  19. ^ a b Wolfman-Arent, Avi (April 15, 2019). "WHYY acquires local news site Billy Penn". WHYY. Retrieved August 21, 2022.
  20. ^ a b Fernandez, Bob (April 15, 2019). "Public radio's WHYY buys Billy Penn news site". The Philadelphia Inquirer. from the original on December 4, 2019. Retrieved August 21, 2022.

External links edit

  • Official website
  • WHYY in the FCC FM station database
  • WHYY in Nielsen Audio's FM station database
  • WNJB-FM in the FCC FM station database
  • WNJB-FM in Nielsen Audio's FM station database
  • WNJM in the FCC FM station database
  • WNJM in Nielsen Audio's FM station database
  • WNJN-FM in the FCC FM station database
  • WNJN-FM in Nielsen Audio's FM station database
  • WNJZ in the FCC FM station database
  • WNJZ in Nielsen Audio's FM station database

whyy, public, radio, station, licensed, serve, philadelphia, pennsylvania, broadcast, tower, located, city, roxborough, section, city, 041917, 239417, 041917, 239417, while, studios, offices, located, independence, mall, center, city, philadelphia, station, ow. WHYY FM 90 9 MHz 91 FM is a public radio station licensed to serve Philadelphia Pennsylvania Its broadcast tower is located in the city s Roxborough section of the city at 40 2 30 9 N 75 14 21 9 W 40 041917 N 75 239417 W 40 041917 75 239417 2 while its studios and offices are located on Independence Mall in Center City Philadelphia The station owned by WHYY Inc is a charter member of NPR and contributes several programs to the national network WHYY FMPhiladelphia Pennsylvania U S Broadcast areaDelaware ValleyFrequency90 9 MHz HD Radio BrandingWHYY NPRProgrammingFormatPublic radioAffiliationsNPRPublic Radio ExchangeAmerican Public MediaOwnershipOwnerWHYY Inc Sister stationsWHYY TVHistoryFirst air dateDecember 14 1954 68 years ago 1954 12 14 Former call signsWUHY 1963 1983 Call sign meaning Wider Horizons for You and Yours Technical information 1 Licensing authorityFCCFacility ID72336ClassBERP13 500 wattsHAAT280 meters 920 ft Transmitter coordinates40 2 30 40 N 75 14 22 60 W 40 0417778 N 75 2396111 W 40 0417778 75 2396111 WHYY FM Repeater s See New Jersey expansion and controversyLinksPublic license informationPublic fileLMSWebcastListen liveWebsitewhyy wbr org wbr radio podcasts wbr Contents 1 History 2 Programs produced 3 Format change 4 CEO controversy 5 New Jersey expansion and controversy 6 Billy Penn 7 See also 8 References 9 External linksHistory editWHYY signed on the air on December 14 1954 owned by the Metropolitan Philadelphia Educational Radio and Television Corporation 3 It was the first educational station in Philadelphia The transmitter originally located at 17th and Sansom Streets in Philadelphia was donated by Westinghouse Broadcasting 4 In 1957 it added a sister television station WHYY TV on channel 35 In 1963 WHYY TV moved from channel 35 in Philadelphia to the stronger channel 12 in Wilmington Delaware At the time Federal Communications Commission FCC regulations did not allow co owned television and radio stations to share the same base callsign if they were licensed in different markets Philadelphia and Wilmington then as now are separate radio markets though 90 9 like most major Philadelphia stations has long claimed Wilmington as part of its primary coverage area though they have long been a single television market As a result the radio station was forced to change its call sign to WUHY 90 9 FM regained its original call sign in 1983 after the FCC eased this restriction When NPR was formed in 1970 the station became a charter member and was one of the 90 stations that carried the initial broadcast of All Things Considered Programs produced edit nbsp The entrance to WHYY on 6th Street across from Independence Mall and the National Constitution Center in PhiladelphiaNPR Fresh Air with Terry Gross a Peabody Award winning weekday magazine of contemporary arts and issues is one of public radio s most popular programs 5 3 million people listen to the broadcast on 640 National Public Radio stations across the country as well as in Europe on the World Radio Network 5 The program originated in 1975 as a local show before going national in 1987 Radio Times With Marty Moss Coane a daily hour long program that tackles a wide range of issues 6 You Bet Your Garden 1998 2018 an organic gardening call in talk show hosted by Mike McGrath that moved to WLVT in Bethlehem in 2018 7 Voices in the Family with Dr Dan Gottlieb psychologist and family therapist along with guest experts opens the line to callers to discuss issues that affect individuals and society with special focus on family issues 8 Its executive producer is Maiken Scott WHYY s Behavioral Health Reporter The Pulse is a show that focuses on stories at the heart of health science and innovation in the Philadelphia region The show is hosted by WHYY s Behavioral Health Reporter Maiken Scott and distributed on the Public Radio Exchange 9 Format change editUntil 1990 WHYY served the region as a non commercial station with a format that featured mostly classical music with some jazz and folk music The management decision to establish a news talk radio format was a departure from the classical music that most public radio stations were programming The format switch left the privately owned WFLN as the only Philadelphia classical station and resulted in protests from many of the station s listening audience who were among WHYY s major contributors After WFLN s new owners also abandoned the classical format in the late 1990s Temple University s WRTI 90 1 FM began programming classical music during the day to serve the displaced listeners CEO controversy editControversy erupted in the summer of 2007 when station Chief Executive Officer Bill Marrazzo was cited by the watchdog group Charity Navigator as the highest paid CEO in all of public broadcasting In an August 2007 article popular Philadelphia Inquirer columnist Karen Heller called for a boycott of WHYY And in September 2007 an anonymous group of WHYY employees sent an open letter to Marrazzo the Inquirer the Philadelphia Daily News and Philadelphia magazine accusing him of a serious lack of understanding when it comes to creating a healthy workplace and assailing his salary as excessive and inappropriate The five page letter concluded with a call for Marrazzo to resign 10 11 New Jersey expansion and controversy edit nbsp Dorrance Hamilton Media Commons part of the WHYY building near Franklin SquareOn June 6 2011 the New Jersey Public Broadcasting Authority agreed to sell five FM stations in Southern New Jersey to WHYY The purchase was made through an anonymous one million dollar grant and a non cash agreement that included scholarships for students and teachers The five stations were previously the southern portion of the New Jersey Network s statewide radio service 12 The transaction was announced by Governor Chris Christie as part of his long term goal to end state subsidized public broadcasting The governor s critics maintained that scrapping New Jersey Network effectively ended all non commercial statewide news coverage It was also noted that the sale eliminated a source of legislative oversight frequently critical of the Christie administration 13 WHYY assumed control of the stations through a management agreement on July 1 2011 pending FCC approval for the acquisition At that point the stations began to simulcast WHYY FM programming 14 The five stations are Call sign Frequency City of license Facility ID ERPW Heightm ft Class Transmitter coordinatesWNJB FM note 1 89 3 FM Bridgeton New Jersey 48934 2 500 vert 1 horiz 67 meters 220 ft A 39 27 35 40 N 75 09 26 70 W 39 4598333 N 75 1574167 W 39 4598333 75 1574167 WNJB FM WNJM 89 9 FM Manahawkin New Jersey 48460 250 vert 1 horiz 69 5 meters 228 ft A 39 41 53 40 N 74 14 4 50 W 39 6981667 N 74 2345833 W 39 6981667 74 2345833 WNJM WNJN FM 89 7 FM Atlantic City New Jersey 48483 6 000 vert 25 horiz 84 meters 276 ft A 39 27 40 40 N 74 41 4 50 W 39 4612222 N 74 6845833 W 39 4612222 74 6845833 WNJN FM WNJS FM note 2 88 1 FM Berlin New Jersey 48486 80 vert 1 horiz 287 meters 942 ft A 39 43 41 40 N 74 50 37 60 W 39 7281667 N 74 8437778 W 39 7281667 74 8437778 WTHA WNJZ 90 3 FM Cape May Court House New Jersey 48464 6 000 72 meters 236 ft A 39 06 18 40 N 74 48 4 60 W 39 1051111 N 74 8012778 W 39 1051111 74 8012778 WNJZ WNJB FM was sold to The Bridge of Hope Inc a Delaware based nonprofit Christian radio broadcaster and now simulcasts WKNZ 15 WNJS FM was sold to Bux Mont Educational Radio Association and now simulcasts WRDV 16 Map all coordinates using OpenStreetMapDownload coordinates as KML GPX all coordinates GPX primary coordinates GPX secondary coordinates The stations all operate at relatively low power due to the crowded state of the noncommercial end of the FM dial in the northeastern United States They primarily serve areas of southern New Jersey not covered by the main WHYY FM signal which itself operates at a relatively modest 13 500 watts However their combined footprint extends WHYY FM s coverage from Berks County to the Jersey Shore 17 In November 2022 WHYY began to reduce its New Jersey radio footprint by announcing that it would sell WNJB FM to non profit Christian Broadcast The Bridge of Hope Inc which owns WKNZ in Harrington Delaware 15 The sale was approved by the FCC and was later completed in February 2023 18 In March 2023 WHYY also announced that it would sell WNJS FM to the Bux Mont Educational Radio Association which owns WRDV for 110 000 The sale of the station was consummated on June 15 2023 16 Billy Penn editIn April 2019 WHYY acquired local news web site Billy Penn billypenn com 19 20 At its 2014 founding the site was conceived as a mobile first site packaging local news for millennials 19 The purchase was compared to New York public radio station WNYC buying the Gothamist in February 2018 20 See also editWHYY TVReferences edit Facility Technical Data for WHYY FM Licensing and Management System Federal Communications Commission FM Query Results for WHYY fcc gov Federal Communications Commission Archived from the original on May 8 2022 Retrieved January 6 2020 Broadcasting Yearbook 1958 page A 357 History WHYY Archived from the original on March 30 2019 Retrieved April 11 2019 About Fresh Air npr org Archived from the original on May 5 2016 Retrieved May 11 2016 Radio Times with Marty Moss Coane WHYY Retrieved August 27 2022 Vadala Nick Out at WHYY You Bet Your Garden moves production to Bethlehem s PBS39 The Philadelphia Inquirer Retrieved August 27 2022 Voices in the Family WHYY Retrieved August 27 2022 About The Pulse WHYY Retrieved August 27 2022 Letter to the CEO Philadelphia City Paper September 5 2007 Archived from the original on October 26 2007 Retrieved February 24 2008 Volk Steve October 5 2007 Dead Air Philadelphia Magazine Archived from the original on August 3 2016 Retrieved May 11 2016 WHYY FM TO EXPAND COVERAGE IN NEW JERSEY AS PART OF AGREEMENT TO TAKE OVER FIVE NJN STATIONS PDF Press release WHYY Inc June 30 2011 Archived from the original PDF on March 4 2016 Retrieved May 11 2016 Grigoriadis Vanessa January 14 2014 The Time Chris Christie Shut Down a Public Television Station That Did a Tough Story on Him Intelligencer Retrieved August 27 2022 WHYY Philadelphia Expands New Jersey Coverage NJN Is Kaput Atlantic City Central July 1 2011 Archived from the original on September 15 2011 Retrieved July 1 2011 a b Simon Perry Michael November 22 2022 WHYY Philadelphia Sells South Jersey Simulcast FM To Bridge Of Hope AllAccess com Retrieved December 22 2022 a b Michael Simon Perry March 12 2023 WHYY Philadelphia Sells Off Another South Jersey FM All Access Coverage Area whyy org Archived from the original on June 1 2016 Retrieved May 11 2016 New Jersey Expansion The Bridge of Hope Inc November 23 2022 Retrieved December 7 2022 a b Wolfman Arent Avi April 15 2019 WHYY acquires local news site Billy Penn WHYY Retrieved August 21 2022 a b Fernandez Bob April 15 2019 Public radio s WHYY buys Billy Penn news site The Philadelphia Inquirer Archived from the original on December 4 2019 Retrieved August 21 2022 External links editOfficial website WHYY in the FCC FM station database WHYY in Nielsen Audio s FM station database WNJB FM in the FCC FM station database WNJB FM in Nielsen Audio s FM station database WNJM in the FCC FM station database WNJM in Nielsen Audio s FM station database WNJN FM in the FCC FM station database WNJN FM in Nielsen Audio s FM station database WNJZ in the FCC FM station database WNJZ in Nielsen Audio s FM station database Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title WHYY FM amp oldid 1185817080, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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