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Wikipedia

WODE-FM

WODE-FM (99.9 FM, "99.9 The Hawk") is a commercial FM radio station licensed to serve Easton, Pennsylvania. The station's service contour covers the Lehigh Valley area of Pennsylvania and New Jersey.[3]

WODE-FM
Broadcast areaLehigh Valley
Frequency99.9 MHz (HD Radio)
Branding99.9 The Hawk
Programming
FormatClassic rock
SubchannelsHD2: Simulcast of WEEX (sports)
Ownership
Owner
WEEX, WWYY, WLEV, WCTO
History
First air date
1948 (1948) (as WEEX-FM at 98.3)
Former call signs
  • WEEX-FM (1948–1973)
  • WQQQ (1973–1989)
  • WHXT (1989–1991)
Former frequencies
98.3 MHz (1948-1950s)
Call sign meaning
Oldies (previous format)
Technical information[1]
Licensing authority
FCC
Facility ID8595
ClassB
ERP
  • 50,000 watts (analog)
  • 2,000 watts (digital)[2]
HAAT137 meters (449 ft)
Transmitter coordinates
40°42′30.3″N 75°12′58.6″W / 40.708417°N 75.216278°W / 40.708417; -75.216278 (WODE-FM)
Translator(s)See tables below
Links
Public license information
  • Public file
  • LMS
WebcastListen Live
Website999thehawk.com

The station is owned by Cumulus Media, through licensee Radio License Holding CBC, LLC, and broadcasts a classic rock radio format, playing rock hits from the 1960s into the early 1990s. WODE-FM's transmitter, studios, and offices are on Paxinosa Road West in Easton. The station is frequently at or near the top of the ratings in the Allentown-Easton-Bethlehem radio market.

WODE-FM broadcasts using HD Radio, and simulcasts the sports programming of sister station 1230 AM WEEX on its HD2 subchannel.

History edit

WEEX-FM edit

The station began operations on 98.3 FM as a stand-alone FM station. It got its construction permit from the Federal Communications Commission in 1948, and signed on the air in June 1950.[4] Its call letters stood for the Easton Express, Easton's daily newspaper as well as the station's owner. WEEX-FM was originally powered at only 1,000 watts.

In 1956, WSAN in nearby Allentown decided to give up its FM station on 99.9 MHz.[5] The Easton Express took over the 99.9 frequency, boosting WEEX-FM's power to 16,000 watts.[6] Also in the late 1950s, the newspaper put an AM station on the air at 1230 kHz under the WEEX call sign. In the early 1960s, WEEX switched to a Top 40 format and used the FM station to simulcast much of the programming to cover areas where the AM station's 1,000 watt signal could not be heard.

Beautiful music edit

In the late 1960s, WEEX-FM's simulcast with the AM was broken off under new Federal Communications Commission (FCC) rules which forbid full-time AM/FM simulcasts. The FM station switched to beautiful music under the WQQQ call sign.

The call letters were chosen because the lower-case Q closely resembled the number 9, hence the station's frequency 99.9. The station offered an instrumental-based easy listening format, playing cover versions of pop songs, as well as Broadway and Hollywood showtunes. A few times per hour a soft vocal was mixed in.

Contemporary hits edit

In late 1982, The Easton Express acquired The Globe-Times, a newspaper in nearby Bethlehem. To satisfy the FCC's media ownership rules, both WQQQ and WEEX were sold off to Wilks-Schwartz Broadcasting, so that the Easton Express would not own too many media outlets in the same market.

On April 4, 1983, WQQQ swapped formats with its AM sister station, WEEX. WEEX had evolved by 1981 from Top 40 into an adult contemporary format. WEEX's disc jockeys moved to 99.9 FM. WQQQ's easy listening format was moved to WEEX but it played more vocals than it did on FM.

The former WEEX format was modified on FM into mainstream CHR/Top 40. The station kept the WQQQ call sign but became known as "Q 100". Initially, the station focused on current pop music, but also played a moderate amount of 1960s and 1970s oldies until about 1985. Throughout the 80s, WQQQ aired a Saturday evening oldies show. But by 1986, the regular rotation was mostly current and recent titles.

At the time, Q100 was the only Top 40/CHR station in the Allentown/Easton/Bethlehem radio market, competing with then-dominate album rock station WZZO for first place in the ratings. However, on January 26, 1987, former mainstream adult contemporary station WAEB-FM switched to CHR as "Laser 104.1 WAEB-FM". While the change did not have an immediate impact on Q100's ratings, a burnt-out transmission line in the summer of 1988 forced the station to broadcast on low-power for a period of two weeks. This caused Q100's ratings to slip, allowing WAEB-FM to beat Q100 in the ratings.

In 1989, Roth Broadcasting acquired WQQQ and WEEX from Wilks-Schwartz, and later during the last week of August 1989, Q100 switched to a dance-leaning CHR format as "Hot 99.9" under the WHXT call sign. The format lasted about a year before returning to mainstream CHR.

After an uphill ratings battle with its rival WAEB-FM for almost two years, Hot 99.9 was unable to make any significant gains due to budget and signal issues. However, in its final ratings trend as a CHR, WHXT had beaten WAEB-FM by two-tenths of a point.

Oldies edit

On August 23, 1991, WHXT dropped its CHR format for oldies. The format played the hits of the 1950s, 1960s, and a few songs from the early 1970s. The call sign became WODE-FM (standing for "oldies") and the station became known as "Oldies 99" under programming consultant Pete Salant.

The station was sold to Patterson Broadcasting and became "Oldies 99.9" in the mid 1990s (adding the "point nine" in its handle as more radios employed digital tuners). In 1997, Capstar bought WODE-FM and WEEX as part of a multi-station deal, but spun the Easton stations off to Clear Channel Communications. Capstar had to do this because the Lehigh Valley has only five FM stations, and under FCC rules, no one company could own more than half. Capstar was already buying WZZO and WAEB-FM. Under Clear Channel ownership, WODE-FM continued its oldies format.

In 2000, Clear Channel announced a merger with AM/FM Broadcasters (a company which was created as a result of a merger with Capstar and Chancellor). AM/FM already owned WZZO and WAEB-FM. Clear Channel would not be allowed to keep all three stations upon the merger, so it decided to swap WODE-FM and WEEX with Nassau Broadcasting Partners. Nassau was given cash plus WODE-FM and WEEX, while Clear Channel obtained stations in New Jersey, including WNNJ, WNNJ-FM, WSUS, WHCY, and management agreements for WDLC and WTSX. Clear Channel also kept the former Capstar/AM-FM stations.

Classic hits edit

On August 31, 2001, at noon, WODE-FM switched from oldies to classic hits. The station was originally called "99-9 The River" but was forced to change its name because Clear Channel owned the rights to the name "The River". WODE-FM became known as "99-9 The Hawk". Its slogan was "The Valley's Classic Hits Station". The station's ratings generally led the market with the key 25-54 audience. WODE-FM hit #1 in the Fall 2001 Arbitron ratings in the Allentown market.

WODE-FM, along with nine other Nassau stations in New Jersey and Pennsylvania, was purchased at bankruptcy auction by NB Broadcasting in May 2012. NB Broadcasting was controlled by Nassau's creditors — Goldman Sachs, Pluss Enterprises, and P.E. Capital. WODE-FM was included in the deal after Goldman Sachs rejected a bid from Cumulus Media for the station.[7][8] In November, NB Broadcasting filed a motion to assign its rights to the stations to Connoisseur Media.[9] The sale to Connoisseur Media, at a price of $38.7 million, was consummated on May 29, 2013.

Classic rock edit

With the sale completed in July 2013, Connoisseur Media tweaked the format, giving it more of a rock focus and changing the slogan to "Classic Rock of the 70s, 80s and More".

In late 2013, WODE-FM acquired translator W234AX (94.7 FM), licensed to serve Allentown, from Family Life Ministries.[10] The translator broadcast WODE-FM analog/HD1 programming until April 15, 2016, when it began simulcasting the programming of alternative rock sister station 107.1 WWYY via WODE-FM-HD2.[11]

Effective June 26, 2019, Connoisseur Media swapped WODE-FM, sister stations WEEX, WTKZ, and WWYY, and translator W234AX to Cumulus Media in exchange for WEBE and WICC.

Translators edit

WODE-FM-HD2 programming (WEEX simulcast) is broadcast on the following translator:

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "Facility Technical Data for WODE-FM". Licensing and Management System. Federal Communications Commission.
  2. ^ "FCC 335-FM Digital Notification [WODE-FM]". fcc.gov. Federal Communications Commission. March 29, 2016. Retrieved May 13, 2018.
  3. ^ "54 dBu Service Contour for WODE-FM, Easton, PA, 99.9 MHz". fcc.gov. Federal Communications Commission. January 28, 2016. Retrieved December 4, 2016.
  4. ^ Broadcasting Yearbook 1952 page 244
  5. ^ "For the Record: Actions of Jan. 23", Broadcasting, February 6, 1956, page 101.
  6. ^ Broadcasting Yearbook 1960 page A-216
  7. ^ "10 Nassau Stations Go To NB Broadcasting LLC". All Access. May 30, 2012. Retrieved November 10, 2012.
  8. ^ Pierce, David (June 12, 2012). "Pocono radio stations now in the hands of creditors". Pocono Record. Retrieved November 10, 2012.
  9. ^ "Connoisseur Moves To Assume Debtor's Bid To Buy 10 Nassau Stations, Including WPST". All Access. November 21, 2012. Retrieved November 21, 2012.
  10. ^ Venta, Lance (October 23, 2013). "FCC Applications 10/23: COL Change In Washington". radioinsight.com. Retrieved December 4, 2016.
  11. ^ Venta, Lance (April 15, 2016). "Spin Radio Expands To Lehigh Valley". radioinsight.com. Retrieved December 4, 2016.

External links edit

  • 99.9 Official website
  • WODE in the FCC FM station database
  • WODE in Nielsen Audio's FM station database
  • W234AX in the FCC FM station database
  • W234AX at FCCdata.org

wode, this, article, about, radio, station, plant, woad, surname, wode, wode, surname, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, remov. This article is about a radio station For the dye plant see Woad For the surname Wode see Wode surname 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 WODE FM news newspapers books scholar JSTOR November 2017 Learn how and when to remove this message WODE FM 99 9 FM 99 9 The Hawk is a commercial FM radio station licensed to serve Easton Pennsylvania The station s service contour covers the Lehigh Valley area of Pennsylvania and New Jersey 3 WODE FMEaston PennsylvaniaUnited StatesBroadcast areaLehigh ValleyFrequency99 9 MHz HD Radio Branding99 9 The HawkProgrammingFormatClassic rockSubchannelsHD2 Simulcast of WEEX sports OwnershipOwnerCumulus Media Radio License Holding CBC LLC Sister stationsWEEX WWYY WLEV WCTOHistoryFirst air date1948 1948 as WEEX FM at 98 3 Former call signsWEEX FM 1948 1973 WQQQ 1973 1989 WHXT 1989 1991 Former frequencies98 3 MHz 1948 1950s Call sign meaningOldies previous format Technical information 1 Licensing authorityFCCFacility ID8595ClassBERP50 000 watts analog 2 000 watts digital 2 HAAT137 meters 449 ft Transmitter coordinates40 42 30 3 N 75 12 58 6 W 40 708417 N 75 216278 W 40 708417 75 216278 WODE FM Translator s See tables belowLinksPublic license informationPublic fileLMSWebcastListen LiveWebsite999thehawk com The station is owned by Cumulus Media through licensee Radio License Holding CBC LLC and broadcasts a classic rock radio format playing rock hits from the 1960s into the early 1990s WODE FM s transmitter studios and offices are on Paxinosa Road West in Easton The station is frequently at or near the top of the ratings in the Allentown Easton Bethlehem radio market WODE FM broadcasts using HD Radio and simulcasts the sports programming of sister station 1230 AM WEEX on its HD2 subchannel Contents 1 History 1 1 WEEX FM 1 2 Beautiful music 1 3 Contemporary hits 1 4 Oldies 1 5 Classic hits 1 6 Classic rock 2 Translators 3 See also 4 References 5 External linksHistory editWEEX FM edit The station began operations on 98 3 FM as a stand alone FM station It got its construction permit from the Federal Communications Commission in 1948 and signed on the air in June 1950 4 Its call letters stood for the Easton Express Easton s daily newspaper as well as the station s owner WEEX FM was originally powered at only 1 000 watts In 1956 WSAN in nearby Allentown decided to give up its FM station on 99 9 MHz 5 The Easton Express took over the 99 9 frequency boosting WEEX FM s power to 16 000 watts 6 Also in the late 1950s the newspaper put an AM station on the air at 1230 kHz under the WEEX call sign In the early 1960s WEEX switched to a Top 40 format and used the FM station to simulcast much of the programming to cover areas where the AM station s 1 000 watt signal could not be heard Beautiful music edit In the late 1960s WEEX FM s simulcast with the AM was broken off under new Federal Communications Commission FCC rules which forbid full time AM FM simulcasts The FM station switched to beautiful music under the WQQQ call sign The call letters were chosen because the lower case Q closely resembled the number 9 hence the station s frequency 99 9 The station offered an instrumental based easy listening format playing cover versions of pop songs as well as Broadway and Hollywood showtunes A few times per hour a soft vocal was mixed in Contemporary hits edit In late 1982 The Easton Express acquired The Globe Times a newspaper in nearby Bethlehem To satisfy the FCC s media ownership rules both WQQQ and WEEX were sold off to Wilks Schwartz Broadcasting so that the Easton Express would not own too many media outlets in the same market On April 4 1983 WQQQ swapped formats with its AM sister station WEEX WEEX had evolved by 1981 from Top 40 into an adult contemporary format WEEX s disc jockeys moved to 99 9 FM WQQQ s easy listening format was moved to WEEX but it played more vocals than it did on FM The former WEEX format was modified on FM into mainstream CHR Top 40 The station kept the WQQQ call sign but became known as Q 100 Initially the station focused on current pop music but also played a moderate amount of 1960s and 1970s oldies until about 1985 Throughout the 80s WQQQ aired a Saturday evening oldies show But by 1986 the regular rotation was mostly current and recent titles At the time Q100 was the only Top 40 CHR station in the Allentown Easton Bethlehem radio market competing with then dominate album rock station WZZO for first place in the ratings However on January 26 1987 former mainstream adult contemporary station WAEB FM switched to CHR as Laser 104 1 WAEB FM While the change did not have an immediate impact on Q100 s ratings a burnt out transmission line in the summer of 1988 forced the station to broadcast on low power for a period of two weeks This caused Q100 s ratings to slip allowing WAEB FM to beat Q100 in the ratings In 1989 Roth Broadcasting acquired WQQQ and WEEX from Wilks Schwartz and later during the last week of August 1989 Q100 switched to a dance leaning CHR format as Hot 99 9 under the WHXT call sign The format lasted about a year before returning to mainstream CHR After an uphill ratings battle with its rival WAEB FM for almost two years Hot 99 9 was unable to make any significant gains due to budget and signal issues However in its final ratings trend as a CHR WHXT had beaten WAEB FM by two tenths of a point Oldies edit On August 23 1991 WHXT dropped its CHR format for oldies The format played the hits of the 1950s 1960s and a few songs from the early 1970s The call sign became WODE FM standing for oldies and the station became known as Oldies 99 under programming consultant Pete Salant The station was sold to Patterson Broadcasting and became Oldies 99 9 in the mid 1990s adding the point nine in its handle as more radios employed digital tuners In 1997 Capstar bought WODE FM and WEEX as part of a multi station deal but spun the Easton stations off to Clear Channel Communications Capstar had to do this because the Lehigh Valley has only five FM stations and under FCC rules no one company could own more than half Capstar was already buying WZZO and WAEB FM Under Clear Channel ownership WODE FM continued its oldies format In 2000 Clear Channel announced a merger with AM FM Broadcasters a company which was created as a result of a merger with Capstar and Chancellor AM FM already owned WZZO and WAEB FM Clear Channel would not be allowed to keep all three stations upon the merger so it decided to swap WODE FM and WEEX with Nassau Broadcasting Partners Nassau was given cash plus WODE FM and WEEX while Clear Channel obtained stations in New Jersey including WNNJ WNNJ FM WSUS WHCY and management agreements for WDLC and WTSX Clear Channel also kept the former Capstar AM FM stations Classic hits edit On August 31 2001 at noon WODE FM switched from oldies to classic hits The station was originally called 99 9 The River but was forced to change its name because Clear Channel owned the rights to the name The River WODE FM became known as 99 9 The Hawk Its slogan was The Valley s Classic Hits Station The station s ratings generally led the market with the key 25 54 audience WODE FM hit 1 in the Fall 2001 Arbitron ratings in the Allentown market WODE FM along with nine other Nassau stations in New Jersey and Pennsylvania was purchased at bankruptcy auction by NB Broadcasting in May 2012 NB Broadcasting was controlled by Nassau s creditors Goldman Sachs Pluss Enterprises and P E Capital WODE FM was included in the deal after Goldman Sachs rejected a bid from Cumulus Media for the station 7 8 In November NB Broadcasting filed a motion to assign its rights to the stations to Connoisseur Media 9 The sale to Connoisseur Media at a price of 38 7 million was consummated on May 29 2013 Classic rock edit With the sale completed in July 2013 Connoisseur Media tweaked the format giving it more of a rock focus and changing the slogan to Classic Rock of the 70s 80s and More In late 2013 WODE FM acquired translator W234AX 94 7 FM licensed to serve Allentown from Family Life Ministries 10 The translator broadcast WODE FM analog HD1 programming until April 15 2016 when it began simulcasting the programming of alternative rock sister station 107 1 WWYY via WODE FM HD2 11 Effective June 26 2019 Connoisseur Media swapped WODE FM sister stations WEEX WTKZ and WWYY and translator W234AX to Cumulus Media in exchange for WEBE and WICC Translators editWODE FM HD2 programming WEEX simulcast is broadcast on the following translator Broadcast translator for WODE FM HD2 Call sign Frequency City of license FID ERP W HAAT Class Transmitter coordinates FCC info W234AX 94 7 FM Allentown Pennsylvania 157407 10 204 9 m 672 ft D 40 35 55 4 N 75 25 10 7 W 40 598722 N 75 419639 W 40 598722 75 419639 W234AX LMSSee also editMedia in the Lehigh ValleyReferences edit Facility Technical Data for WODE FM Licensing and Management System Federal Communications Commission FCC 335 FM Digital Notification WODE FM fcc gov Federal Communications Commission March 29 2016 Retrieved May 13 2018 54 dBu Service Contour for WODE FM Easton PA 99 9 MHz fcc gov Federal Communications Commission January 28 2016 Retrieved December 4 2016 Broadcasting Yearbook 1952 page 244 For the Record Actions of Jan 23 Broadcasting February 6 1956 page 101 Broadcasting Yearbook 1960 page A 216 10 Nassau Stations Go To NB Broadcasting LLC All Access May 30 2012 Retrieved November 10 2012 Pierce David June 12 2012 Pocono radio stations now in the hands of creditors Pocono Record Retrieved November 10 2012 Connoisseur Moves To Assume Debtor s Bid To Buy 10 Nassau Stations Including WPST All Access November 21 2012 Retrieved November 21 2012 Venta Lance October 23 2013 FCC Applications 10 23 COL Change In Washington radioinsight com Retrieved December 4 2016 Venta Lance April 15 2016 Spin Radio Expands To Lehigh Valley radioinsight com Retrieved December 4 2016 External links edit99 9 Official website WODE in the FCC FM station database WODE in Nielsen Audio s FM station database W234AX in the FCC FM station database W234AX at FCCdata org History of 99 9 during the WEEX FM and WQQQ era Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title WODE FM amp oldid 1219971585, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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