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WNNX

WNNX (100.5 FM) is a commercial radio station licensed to College Park, Georgia, featuring a classic alternative format as "99X". Owned by Cumulus Media, the station serves the Atlanta metropolitan area. WNNX's studios are located in Sandy Springs, while the transmitter resides atop the Westin Peachtree Plaza Hotel in Downtown Atlanta. In addition to a standard analog transmission, WNNX is available online.

WNNX
Broadcast areaAtlanta metro area
Frequency100.5 MHz (HD Radio)
Branding99X
Programming
FormatClassic alternative
Ownership
Owner
History
First air date
1947
(77 years ago)
 (1947)
Former call signs
Call sign meaning
"Ninety-Nine X"
Technical information[1]
Licensing authority
FCC
Facility ID6809
ClassC2
ERP13,500 watts
HAAT298 meters (978 ft)
Transmitter coordinates
33°45′36″N 84°23′20″W / 33.760°N 84.389°W / 33.760; -84.389
Repeater(s)99.7 WWWQ-HD2 (Atlanta)
Links
Public license information
  • Public file
  • LMS
WebcastListen live
Website99xatl.com

History edit

Moving from Alabama edit

The 100.5 frequency has been in metro Atlanta, licensed to College Park, since early 2001. Before then, the station was licensed to Anniston, Alabama, as WHMA-FM.[2] It started out as a simulcast of WHMA (1400 AM). WHMA-AM-FM were network affiliates of ABC. In the 1970s, WHMA-FM began airing its own country music format as "Alabama 100." (After the move, that call sign shifted to another existing station in Alabama, becoming 95.3 WHMA-FM "The Big 95" in Alexandria.)

Interested in moving the station to the more lucrative Atlanta radio market, owner Robert Gammon proposed that WHMA-FM be re-licensed to Sandy Springs. It would remain at 100,000 watts effective radiated power (ERP) as a Class C station. An agreement had already been made with the nearest co-channel station, WSSL-FM in upstate South Carolina for it to move its transmitter a bit further from Atlanta. However that station was sold to Clear Channel Communications in the interim and the agreement was negated. Additionally, the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) ruled that Sandy Springs was "not a community", citing its unincorporated status and letters of support from local organizations in Sandy Springs that had "Atlanta" as their addresses. At that time, Sandy Springs was part of unincorporated Fulton County, before it became an incorporated city in 2006.

After exhausting his funds in pursuit of the reallocation, Gammon sold WHMA-FM to Susquehanna Radio.[3] In a revised application before the FCC, Susquehanna proposed a different city of license, College Park. The FCC approved the application, mostly because the new application downgraded the class of the station from C (up to 100 kW at 600 meters or 1,968 feet) to C3 (up to 25 kW at 100 meters or 328 feet) to protect the licensed broadcast range of WSSL-FM. Susquehanna was also forced to slightly null the station's signal away from the direction of WSSL-FM, to stay in compliance with spacing rules. When it went on the air in Atlanta, the station had an effective radiated power of 3,000 watts, using the Turner Broadcasting tower, which gave it a height above average terrain (HAAT) of less than 1,000 feet.

The move created spectrum space for two new radio stations in Alabama, but forced two low-power stations off the air: Southern Polytechnic State University low-power station WGHR and Georgia Public Broadcasting FM translator W264AE, both on 100.7 MHz.

Q100 (2001–2008) edit

The first format for 100.5 FM in Atlanta was Top 40 station WWWQ ("Q100"), which made its debut on January 23, 2001. It was the first mainstream Top 40 outlet in Atlanta since WAPW flipped to alternative as WNNX in October 1992, as well as a brief stint on WBTS when it debuted in 1999.[4][5] Despite its 3,000 watt signal, Q100 often received higher Arbitron listenership ratings than several of its 100,000-watt competitors, including sister station 99X.

Susquehanna continued to pursue a larger signal for the station, eventually earning approval from the FCC to go from Class C3 to Class C2. The upgrade occurred on October 24, 2005 at 5:00 PM, when the station moved from the Turner Broadcasting tower to the Westin Peachtree Plaza Hotel. WWWQ was now powered at 12,500 watts, using a tower that better covered the Atlanta market.[6] In 2006, Cumulus Media acquired Susquehanna, including both 99X and Q100.

Rock 100.5 (2008–2022) edit

 
"Rock 100.5" logo (2008–2019)

On January 11, 2008, Cumulus announced that Q100 would move to the 100,000-watt signal at 99.7 MHz, replacing "99X", on January 25. The transition began on January 21, when WWWQ's "The Bert Show" was simulcast on both stations. (99X's morning show was cancelled the week before.) 99X signed off on 99.7 FM/HD1 and moved to 99.7-HD2, with Q100 moving to 99.7 FM/HD1, at 5:30 a.m. on January 25.[7][8] On the same day, at 6 a.m., 100.5 began stunting, first with Beyoncé Knowles singing "To the Left" (from her song "Irreplaceable") and morning show host Bert Weiss redirecting listeners to the new frequency. At 10 a.m., the stunting then switched to a loop where eight different formats were presented, with listeners having the option to call the station and vote on which was their favorite. On January 28, 2008, at 5:45 a.m., The Regular Guys announced the debut of "Rock 100.5", carrying a radio format similar to their previous station WKLS (formerly "96 Rock"), which itself changed formats to active rock as "Project 9-6-1". Rock 100.5's first song was "Baba O' Riley" by The Who. WWWQ and WNNX swapped call signs the following day.

In 2010, WNNX became the FM flagship radio station of the Atlanta Braves for that season through 2013, along with WCNN, which continues carrying the team's games to this day. The rights were moved to then-sister station WYAY starting with the 2014 season.[9] After WYAY was sold to the Educational Media Foundation in 2019, WNNX resumed carrying Braves broadcasts.[10] In 2022, WNNX once again dropped their Braves affiliation.[11]

Throughout the station's existence, WNNX has shifted among different genres of rock. When "Rock 100.5" first launched, the station aired a predominantly album-oriented rock format. In April 2009, the station began leaning towards adult album alternative. In 2010, the station shifted back to its broad-based AOR format, which lasted until late 2011, when the station shifted towards classic rock. Ratings for the station at that time were shaky, as the station usually pulled between a 1.5 and 2 share.

WNNX returned to a mainstream rock direction in 2012, following the flips of WKLS from active rock to Top 40/CHR and WZGC from adult album alternative to sports in the Fall of that year.

Merger with "98-9 The Bone" edit

On January 28, 2013, WNNX and sister station W255CJ ("98-9 The Bone") began promoting changes to the two stations on their Facebook and Twitter pages, promoting a "bigger and better change" to come starting February 1. There were rumors that Cumulus' Atlanta management was planning a merger of the two formats on one frequency, presumably on 100.5.

The official change took place on that Friday, February 1, at Midnight, when 98.9 and 100.5 began simulcasting. At 10 AM, the official relaunch took place, as WNNX shifted to active rock. The first song after the relaunch was "Chalk Outline" by Three Days Grace. The simulcast lasted until February 4 at Noon, when 98.9 flipped to a new format, Christian country, under the name "The Walk."[12][13]

"Atlanta's Classic Rock" edit

After broadcasting an active rock format for barely a year, the station shifted back to classic rock on January 3, 2014, now competing with Cox Media Group's WSRV. WNNX's playlist was similar to what it was in 2012, prior to its shift to active rock.[14]

"Atlanta's Rock Station" edit

The station's next format adjustment began in mid-2016 with a slogan tweak to "Atlanta's Rock Station." No personnel changes were made, and the music was slightly updated to focusing more on chart topping rock hits between the 1980s, 1990s, and recurrent releases, including the grunge era of rock played more. This format direction helped increase the station's ratings. On August 30, 2019, WNNX shifted back to an active rock lean in their mainstream rock format.[15]

99X on 100.5 (2022–present) edit

On December 1, 2022, WNNX dropped Elliot in the Morning after eight months.[16] The next day, at 5 p.m., after playing "Enter Sandman" by Metallica, WNNX dropped the rock format and began stunting with a loop of "Bitter Sweet Symphony" by The Verve, with sweepers stating "It's coming, same as it ever was. Monday morning, 6 a.m." The stunt was likely an allusion to the anniversary of a stunt pulled by former 99X DJ Sean Demery in October 1997, when he garnered local attention after playing the song in a similar loop shortly after its release. At the promised time, WNNX flipped to classic alternative as "99X”, marking the return of the 99X brand to a full powered signal for the first time since 2008. The first song on the revived "99X" was "Video Killed the Radio Star" by The Buggles, the same song that had launched the original incarnation 30 years prior. A letter on the station's website and Twitter page declared that the station's full-staffed launch had been set for January 3, 2023, effectively making the interim period a soft launch of the format; while there had been no official confirmation from Cumulus or the station at the time of launch, Cumulus hired several original station staffers for the station's new incarnation, including Steve Barnes, Leslie Fram, Steve Craig, Will Pendarvis, Jill, and Matt ‘Organic’ Jones.[17][18]

References edit

  1. ^ "Facility Technical Data for WNNX". Licensing and Management System. Federal Communications Commission.
  2. ^ Broadcasting Yearbook 1950 page 69
  3. ^ "458 F.3d 1212: Bridge Capital Investors II v. Susquehanna Radio Corporation (No. 05-11052)". United States Court of Appeals, Eleventh Circuit. August 1, 2006.
  4. ^ Miriam Longino; Staff, "Hot Hits Q100 heats up market; Top 40 station starts shows today," The Atlanta Journal Constitution, January 23, 2001.
  5. ^ Q100 Launches In Atlanta (Radio & Records, 01/26/2001, page 3)
  6. ^ Broadcasting & Cable Yearbook 2007 page D-148
  7. ^ Rodney Ho, "Q100 moving to 99.7, Fram & Craig out at 99X, Regular Guys back?," The Atlanta Journal Constitution, January 11, 2008.
  8. ^ Richard L. Eldredge, "Peach Buzz: Q100 to take place of 99X; Fram fired," The Atlanta Journal Constitution, January 12, 2008.
  9. ^ "Braves renew with 680 The Fan and add 106.7 FM". Atlanta Business Chronicle. October 22, 2013.
  10. ^ "WNNX (Rock 100.5)/Atlanta Replaces WYAY As Braves' FM Game Coverage Simulcast Partner". All Access. March 27, 2019. Retrieved June 6, 2019.
  11. ^ "Radio Affiliates". Atlanta Braves. Retrieved June 9, 2022.
  12. ^ "Cumulus Planning More Atlanta Moves - RadioInsight". 1 February 2013.
  13. ^ . Archived from the original on 2013-05-12. Retrieved 2013-01-30.
  14. ^ Ho, Rodney. "Rock 100.5 shifts its music mix - again". Access Atlanta. Atlanta Journal-Constitution. Retrieved 28 November 2014.
  15. ^ Rock 100.5 Atlanta Moves to Active Rock
  16. ^ Venta, Lance (5 December 2022). "WNNX Drops Elliot in the Morning". Retrieved 5 October 2023.
  17. ^ Venta, Lance (5 December 2022). "WNNX Brings Back 99X - RadioInsight". Retrieved 5 December 2022.
  18. ^ 99X Returns on 100.5- Format Change Archive

External links edit

  • Official website
  • WNNX in the FCC FM station database
  • WNNX in Nielsen Audio's FM station database

wnnx, atlanta, radio, station, that, used, calls, from, 1992, 2008, wwwq, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sou. For the Atlanta radio station that used the WNNX calls from 1992 to 2008 see WWWQ This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources WNNX news newspapers books scholar JSTOR August 2008 Learn how and when to remove this message WNNX 100 5 FM is a commercial radio station licensed to College Park Georgia featuring a classic alternative format as 99X Owned by Cumulus Media the station serves the Atlanta metropolitan area WNNX s studios are located in Sandy Springs while the transmitter resides atop the Westin Peachtree Plaza Hotel in Downtown Atlanta In addition to a standard analog transmission WNNX is available online WNNXCollege Park GeorgiaBroadcast areaAtlanta metro areaFrequency100 5 MHz HD Radio Branding99XProgrammingFormatClassic alternativeOwnershipOwnerCumulus Media Radio License Holding SRC LLC Sister stationsWKHX FMWWWQHistoryFirst air date1947 77 years ago 1947 Former call signsWHMA FM 1947 2001 WWWQ 2001 08 Call sign meaning Ninety Nine X Technical information 1 Licensing authorityFCCFacility ID6809ClassC2ERP13 500 wattsHAAT298 meters 978 ft Transmitter coordinates33 45 36 N 84 23 20 W 33 760 N 84 389 W 33 760 84 389Repeater s 99 7 WWWQ HD2 Atlanta LinksPublic license informationPublic fileLMSWebcastListen liveWebsite99xatl wbr com Contents 1 History 1 1 Moving from Alabama 1 2 Q100 2001 2008 1 3 Rock 100 5 2008 2022 1 3 1 Merger with 98 9 The Bone 1 3 2 Atlanta s Classic Rock 1 3 3 Atlanta s Rock Station 1 4 99X on 100 5 2022 present 2 References 3 External linksHistory editMoving from Alabama edit The 100 5 frequency has been in metro Atlanta licensed to College Park since early 2001 Before then the station was licensed to Anniston Alabama as WHMA FM 2 It started out as a simulcast of WHMA 1400 AM WHMA AM FM were network affiliates of ABC In the 1970s WHMA FM began airing its own country music format as Alabama 100 After the move that call sign shifted to another existing station in Alabama becoming 95 3 WHMA FM The Big 95 in Alexandria Interested in moving the station to the more lucrative Atlanta radio market owner Robert Gammon proposed that WHMA FM be re licensed to Sandy Springs It would remain at 100 000 watts effective radiated power ERP as a Class C station An agreement had already been made with the nearest co channel station WSSL FM in upstate South Carolina for it to move its transmitter a bit further from Atlanta However that station was sold to Clear Channel Communications in the interim and the agreement was negated Additionally the Federal Communications Commission FCC ruled that Sandy Springs was not a community citing its unincorporated status and letters of support from local organizations in Sandy Springs that had Atlanta as their addresses At that time Sandy Springs was part of unincorporated Fulton County before it became an incorporated city in 2006 After exhausting his funds in pursuit of the reallocation Gammon sold WHMA FM to Susquehanna Radio 3 In a revised application before the FCC Susquehanna proposed a different city of license College Park The FCC approved the application mostly because the new application downgraded the class of the station from C up to 100 kW at 600 meters or 1 968 feet to C3 up to 25 kW at 100 meters or 328 feet to protect the licensed broadcast range of WSSL FM Susquehanna was also forced to slightly null the station s signal away from the direction of WSSL FM to stay in compliance with spacing rules When it went on the air in Atlanta the station had an effective radiated power of 3 000 watts using the Turner Broadcasting tower which gave it a height above average terrain HAAT of less than 1 000 feet The move created spectrum space for two new radio stations in Alabama but forced two low power stations off the air Southern Polytechnic State University low power station WGHR and Georgia Public Broadcasting FM translator W264AE both on 100 7 MHz Q100 2001 2008 edit Main article WWWQ The first format for 100 5 FM in Atlanta was Top 40 station WWWQ Q100 which made its debut on January 23 2001 It was the first mainstream Top 40 outlet in Atlanta since WAPW flipped to alternative as WNNX in October 1992 as well as a brief stint on WBTS when it debuted in 1999 4 5 Despite its 3 000 watt signal Q100 often received higher Arbitron listenership ratings than several of its 100 000 watt competitors including sister station 99X Susquehanna continued to pursue a larger signal for the station eventually earning approval from the FCC to go from Class C3 to Class C2 The upgrade occurred on October 24 2005 at 5 00 PM when the station moved from the Turner Broadcasting tower to the Westin Peachtree Plaza Hotel WWWQ was now powered at 12 500 watts using a tower that better covered the Atlanta market 6 In 2006 Cumulus Media acquired Susquehanna including both 99X and Q100 Rock 100 5 2008 2022 edit nbsp Rock 100 5 logo 2008 2019 On January 11 2008 Cumulus announced that Q100 would move to the 100 000 watt signal at 99 7 MHz replacing 99X on January 25 The transition began on January 21 when WWWQ s The Bert Show was simulcast on both stations 99X s morning show was cancelled the week before 99X signed off on 99 7 FM HD1 and moved to 99 7 HD2 with Q100 moving to 99 7 FM HD1 at 5 30 a m on January 25 7 8 On the same day at 6 a m 100 5 began stunting first with Beyonce Knowles singing To the Left from her song Irreplaceable and morning show host Bert Weiss redirecting listeners to the new frequency At 10 a m the stunting then switched to a loop where eight different formats were presented with listeners having the option to call the station and vote on which was their favorite On January 28 2008 at 5 45 a m The Regular Guys announced the debut of Rock 100 5 carrying a radio format similar to their previous station WKLS formerly 96 Rock which itself changed formats to active rock as Project 9 6 1 Rock 100 5 s first song was Baba O Riley by The Who WWWQ and WNNX swapped call signs the following day In 2010 WNNX became the FM flagship radio station of the Atlanta Braves for that season through 2013 along with WCNN which continues carrying the team s games to this day The rights were moved to then sister station WYAY starting with the 2014 season 9 After WYAY was sold to the Educational Media Foundation in 2019 WNNX resumed carrying Braves broadcasts 10 In 2022 WNNX once again dropped their Braves affiliation 11 Throughout the station s existence WNNX has shifted among different genres of rock When Rock 100 5 first launched the station aired a predominantly album oriented rock format In April 2009 the station began leaning towards adult album alternative In 2010 the station shifted back to its broad based AOR format which lasted until late 2011 when the station shifted towards classic rock Ratings for the station at that time were shaky as the station usually pulled between a 1 5 and 2 share WNNX returned to a mainstream rock direction in 2012 following the flips of WKLS from active rock to Top 40 CHR and WZGC from adult album alternative to sports in the Fall of that year Merger with 98 9 The Bone edit On January 28 2013 WNNX and sister station W255CJ 98 9 The Bone began promoting changes to the two stations on their Facebook and Twitter pages promoting a bigger and better change to come starting February 1 There were rumors that Cumulus Atlanta management was planning a merger of the two formats on one frequency presumably on 100 5 The official change took place on that Friday February 1 at Midnight when 98 9 and 100 5 began simulcasting At 10 AM the official relaunch took place as WNNX shifted to active rock The first song after the relaunch was Chalk Outline by Three Days Grace The simulcast lasted until February 4 at Noon when 98 9 flipped to a new format Christian country under the name The Walk 12 13 Atlanta s Classic Rock edit After broadcasting an active rock format for barely a year the station shifted back to classic rock on January 3 2014 now competing with Cox Media Group s WSRV WNNX s playlist was similar to what it was in 2012 prior to its shift to active rock 14 Atlanta s Rock Station edit The station s next format adjustment began in mid 2016 with a slogan tweak to Atlanta s Rock Station No personnel changes were made and the music was slightly updated to focusing more on chart topping rock hits between the 1980s 1990s and recurrent releases including the grunge era of rock played more This format direction helped increase the station s ratings On August 30 2019 WNNX shifted back to an active rock lean in their mainstream rock format 15 99X on 100 5 2022 present edit On December 1 2022 WNNX dropped Elliot in the Morning after eight months 16 The next day at 5 p m after playing Enter Sandman by Metallica WNNX dropped the rock format and began stunting with a loop of Bitter Sweet Symphony by The Verve with sweepers stating It s coming same as it ever was Monday morning 6 a m The stunt was likely an allusion to the anniversary of a stunt pulled by former 99X DJ Sean Demery in October 1997 when he garnered local attention after playing the song in a similar loop shortly after its release At the promised time WNNX flipped to classic alternative as 99X marking the return of the 99X brand to a full powered signal for the first time since 2008 The first song on the revived 99X was Video Killed the Radio Star by The Buggles the same song that had launched the original incarnation 30 years prior A letter on the station s website and Twitter page declared that the station s full staffed launch had been set for January 3 2023 effectively making the interim period a soft launch of the format while there had been no official confirmation from Cumulus or the station at the time of launch Cumulus hired several original station staffers for the station s new incarnation including Steve Barnes Leslie Fram Steve Craig Will Pendarvis Jill and Matt Organic Jones 17 18 References edit Facility Technical Data for WNNX Licensing and Management System Federal Communications Commission Broadcasting Yearbook 1950 page 69 458 F 3d 1212 Bridge Capital Investors II v Susquehanna Radio Corporation No 05 11052 United States Court of Appeals Eleventh Circuit August 1 2006 Miriam Longino Staff Hot Hits Q100 heats up market Top 40 station starts shows today The Atlanta Journal Constitution January 23 2001 Q100 Launches In Atlanta Radio amp Records 01 26 2001 page 3 Broadcasting amp Cable Yearbook 2007 page D 148 Rodney Ho Q100 moving to 99 7 Fram amp Craig out at 99X Regular Guys back The Atlanta Journal Constitution January 11 2008 Richard L Eldredge Peach Buzz Q100 to take place of 99X Fram fired The Atlanta Journal Constitution January 12 2008 Braves renew with 680 The Fan and add 106 7 FM Atlanta Business Chronicle October 22 2013 WNNX Rock 100 5 Atlanta Replaces WYAY As Braves FM Game Coverage Simulcast Partner All Access March 27 2019 Retrieved June 6 2019 Radio Affiliates Atlanta Braves Retrieved June 9 2022 Cumulus Planning More Atlanta Moves RadioInsight 1 February 2013 Atlanta Radio Insider Rock Gets an Extra Bone 98 9 Takes a Walk Archived from the original on 2013 05 12 Retrieved 2013 01 30 Ho Rodney Rock 100 5 shifts its music mix again Access Atlanta Atlanta Journal Constitution Retrieved 28 November 2014 Rock 100 5 Atlanta Moves to Active Rock Venta Lance 5 December 2022 WNNX Drops Elliot in the Morning Retrieved 5 October 2023 Venta Lance 5 December 2022 WNNX Brings Back 99X RadioInsight Retrieved 5 December 2022 99X Returns on 100 5 Format Change ArchiveExternal links edit nbsp Radio portal nbsp Georgia U S state portal Official website WNNX in the FCC FM station database WNNX in Nielsen Audio s FM station database Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title WNNX amp oldid 1221248480, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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