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Wikipedia

WPLJ

WPLJ (95.5 FM) is a non-commercial Christian adult contemporary music radio station licensed to New York City. It is owned by the Educational Media Foundation (EMF) and broadcasts EMF's flagship programming service, K-Love. WPLJ's transmitter is located at the Empire State Building and broadcasts four HD Radio digital subchannels in addition to its analog transmission.

WPLJ
Broadcast areaNew York metropolitan area
Frequency95.5 MHz (HD Radio)
BrandingK-Love (primary)
Programming
Language(s)English
FormatChristian adult contemporary
Subchannels
AffiliationsK-Love
Ownership
OwnerEducational Media Foundation
WARW
History
First air date
May 4, 1948 (74 years ago) (1948-05-04)
Former call signs
  • WJZ-FM (1948–1953)
  • WABC-FM (1953–1971)
  • WPLJ (1971–1987)
  • WWPR (1987–1988)
Call sign meaning
named after the Four Deuces song "W-P-L-J" (artifact of former format)
Technical information
Licensing authority
FCC
Facility ID73887
ClassB
ERP6,700 watts
HAAT408 meters (1,339 ft)
Transmitter coordinates
40°44′53″N 73°59′10″W / 40.748°N 73.986°W / 40.748; -73.986
Translator(s)
Links
Public license information
  • Public file
  • LMS
Websiteklove.com

History

As WABC-FM

The station went on the air on May 4, 1948, under the call sign WJZ-FM.[1] In March 1953, the station's call letters were changed to WABC-FM following the merger of the American Broadcasting Company (ABC) with United Paramount Theatres.[2][3][4] As most FM stations did during the medium's formative years, 95.5 FM simulcast the programming of its AM sister station, WJZ/WABC (770 AM).

In the early 1960s, however, WABC-FM began to program itself separately from WABC (AM). During the 1962–63 New York City newspaper strike, the station programmed news for 17 hours daily.[5][6] Two-and-a-half years before WINS launched its own around-the-clock, all-news format in April 1965, it was the first such attempt in the New York market. This was followed by stints with Broadway show tunes and general freeform programming, including broadcasts of New York Mets baseball games.[7] WABC's AM personalities, such as Dan Ingram, Chuck Leonard, and Bob Lewis, hosted programs on the FM side which were the total opposites of the top 40-powered sound for which they were better known on AM. WABC-FM continued to simulcast its AM sister station during Herb Oscar Anderson's morning drive program.

At the start of 1968, ABC split its radio network into four distinct components, one of which was dedicated to FM radio.[8] The following year, WABC-FM and its sister stations — KABC-FM in Los Angeles; WLS-FM in Chicago; KGO-FM in San Francisco; WXYZ-FM in Detroit; KQV-FM in Pittsburgh; and newly acquired KXYZ-FM in Houston — began carrying an automated, youth-oriented, progressive rock format known as Love.[9]

As WPLJ

Album rock era (1971–1983)

 
WPLJ's logo from the early 1970s. All of ABC's FM stations adopted this same logo style at this time; a version of this is still in use today by former sister station KLOS, which broadcasts on the same frequency.

In late 1970, Allen Shaw, the then-president of ABC's FM station group, announced two big changes to take place in early 1971: ABC dropped Love and installed completely live-and-local, freeform rock formats. The network also applied for call letter changes for the seven stations.[10][11] The New York outlet was slated to be renamed WRIF, but a clerical error on the part of the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) resulted in those calls being awarded to the former WXYZ-FM in Detroit — whose own request for WDAI ("Detroit Auto Industry") was itself given mistakenly to WLS-FM in Chicago — leaving WABC-FM to start from scratch for its own rebranding. On February 14, 1971, the station's call letters changed to WPLJ,[12] chosen after Allen Shaw noticed the letter combination as the name of a song on the 1970 Mothers of Invention record, Burnt Weeny Sandwich. The song, "W-P-L-J", was originally performed by the Four Deuces in 1955 and stood for "White Port and Lemon Juice".[13] On the air, the station hired John Zacherle, Alex Bennett, Vin Scelsa, Jimmy Fink, and Michael Cuscuna (from WMMR and WXPN in Philadelphia) as personalities. All seven ABC-owned FM stations also adopted a shared logo styling with the callsign and frequency within a multi-colored oval; WRIF and KLOS (the former KABC-FM) continue to use a form of this logo to the present day.

In September 1971, Allen Shaw and ABC programming executive Bob Henaberry designed and pioneered the very first album-oriented rock (AOR) format on WPLJ, playing only the best cuts from the best-selling rock albums with a minimum of disc jockey talk. Using the slogan "Rock 'N Stereo", the station played artists such as Led Zeppelin, The Beatles, Aerosmith, Jimi Hendrix, Cream, The Doobie Brothers, Steely Dan, Elton John, Deep Purple, Billy Joel, Rod Stewart, David Bowie, and The Allman Brothers. The station also played pop songs from artists such as James Taylor, Stevie Wonder, and Carly Simon, distinguishing itself from top 40 stations (such as co-owned WABC) by playing more tracks from their albums. The station's Arbitron ratings shot up dramatically, and WPLJ became New York's most listened-to FM rock station for most of the 1970s.[citation needed]

In 1973, ABC transferred Willard Lochridge, the general manager of WRIF in Detroit, to New York to manage WPLJ. The following year, Lochridge brought his Detroit program director, Larry Berger to WPLJ, and adopted a new slogan: "New York's Best Rock". Some of the personalities on the station during this period included Jim Kerr, Pat St. John, Jimmy Fink, Carol Miller, Tony Pigg, John Zacherle, Alex Bennett, Bob Marrone, and Dave Charity. Berger himself hosted a Sunday night call-in show, in which he discussed seemingly any topic with listeners — except the specifics of the playlist. During these call-in segments, some callers suggested that the station sped up (or "pitched up") the music so that they could fit in more commercials while still being able to claim that they played a large number of songs per hour. Berger repeatedly denied that this practice was in use at WPLJ. In the September 20, 1999, episode of Crap from the Past, host Ron "Boogiemonster" Gerber suggested that music was sped up on WPLJ to make the same music sound less dynamic on other stations.

Another Sunday night show began in 1973, then-Father Bill Ayres' long-running show, at first called On This Rock and later (after Ayres left the priesthood in the 1980s) titled The Bill Ayres Show.[14] Known on-air as Father Bill Ayres, the show mixed spirituality and social consciousness together with the music of Harry Chapin, Bob Seger, and others. The show also aired on its sister station WABC on Sunday mornings within the last years of its top 40 music format. Ayres continued to host the show until the transfer of control of WPLJ to Educational Media Foundation in May 2019.

By the late 1970s, WPLJ tended to emphasize harder rock artists such as Led Zeppelin (there was a nightly "Get the Led Out" segment), Kansas, Boston, and Queen, which all happened to get less airplay than on competing station WNEW-FM. At this point, the station reduced its play of softer pop songs, and their ratings remained competitive. Mark Goodman came to WPLJ from Philadelphia in 1980 and was on the air as word broke out of John Lennon's murder the evening of December 8. Goodman departed the station a few months later to become one of the original VJs for the MTV cable channel.[citation needed] In 1981, Berger hired Marc Coppola, a rock-oriented disc jockey from suburban rival WBAB on Long Island, to do the 10 p.m.-2 a.m. shift Monday through Saturday.

During its AOR phase, the station was noted for its promotional montages consisting of snippets of classic rock songs spliced together by St. John, emphasizing a subject or theme, such as gasoline (during the gas shortages of the 1970s). From the time of Berger's arrival, WPLJ beat main rock rival WNEW-FM in virtually every Arbitron ratings period.[citation needed]

In 1982, WPLJ received a direct competitor in WAPP, which adopted a near-identical AOR format to WPLJ (WAPP launched its rock format commercial-free and remained so for the summer of 1982). WAPP beat WPLJ in the ratings in the fall of 1982, and WPLJ reacted by adding more new wave such as A Flock of Seagulls, Dexy's Midnight Runners, The Go-Go's, Elvis Costello, Men at Work, and Soft Cell, mixed in with the usual AOR fare. WPLJ's ratings ended up besting those of WAPP after the latter started playing commercials in the fall of 1982. In early 1983, the station added "Billie Jean" by Michael Jackson, playing it several times a day (many AOR stations, including WNEW-FM, added that song and it charted on the rock tracks chart). In March 1983, WPLJ added Jackson's other hit "Beat It", which received very positive reaction. While Jackson was not a typical AOR artist, that cut was played by many AOR stations due to Eddie Van Halen's role in the song. The station also dropped most 1960s songs by May and was cutting back on AOR artists while playing more contemporary rockers.

Top 40 era (1983–1992)

In early 1983, the station began a transition from AOR to top 40/CHR. With word that a top 40 format was coming to WVNJ-FM (100.3 FM), WPLJ moved further in a CHR direction. Though the station began playing artists like Lionel Richie and Michael Jackson, Larry Berger stated that he did not make the decision to move to a CHR format until the last week of June; WPLJ adopted a rock-leaning CHR format on June 30, 1983. At that point, the station played predominantly AOR and new wave rock cuts, and mixed in two or three rhythmic pop cuts like "Flashdance... What a Feeling" by Irene Cara, "Time (Clock of the Heart)" by Culture Club, "She Works Hard for the Money" by Donna Summer, and others. The station maintained its "New York's Best Rock" slogan, even though the station moved away from playing predominantly rock songs. Berger discussed the changes on his call-in show in July 1983, to the disapproving reaction from the rock audience.[15] (Competitor WNBC had been a de facto AM top-40 station while WYNY had been the de facto FM hits station throughout the early 1980s, playing many current songs as part of its hot adult contemporary format). WPLJ's airstaff, which stayed on during the early transition months, gradually changed, as WNEW-FM picked up some of the station's best-known disc jockeys such as Carol Miller and Pat St. John. (Jim Kerr and sidekick Shelli Sonstein remained with the station through the end of the decade.) Jimmy Fink, Tony Pigg, and Marc Coppola eventually moved to Infinity Broadcasting's WXRK when it debuted a couple of years later.

In August 1983, at the same time WVNJ had been re-christened as WHTZ ("Z100"), WPLJ became known as "The Home of the Hits", and in October, added top 40-style jingles. In a way, it was "New York's Hit Music Station" just before WHTZ went on the air. The following spring, WPLJ identified itself very briefly as "The New Musicradio PLJ" before segueing to "Hitradio 95" just a short time later. In early 1985, the station became known on-air as "Power 95".[16] Ratings went up after switching to CHR, though they were still just behind Z100 most of the time.

On December 17, 1987, the station changed its call letters to WWPR (to complement its "Power 95" branding). (Rival WHTZ joked that the "PR" in the calls stood for "Puerto Rican" and that the station planned to flip to a Spanish-language format.) The WPLJ call-sign returned the following year, on December 21, 1988, when research indicated that listeners still identified the station as WPLJ.[17] Berger departed in 1988, replaced immediately by his music director Jessica Ettinger, who was named acting program director. In 1989, general manager Dana Horner hired Gary Bryan from KUBE in Seattle as program director. Bryan also served as morning show host beginning that July, ousting 15-year WPLJ morning host veteran Jim Kerr, and creating an audience outcry.[18]

WPLJ continued to be successful until 1990, when ratings started to decline. With significant pop competition — WQHT ("Hot 97") playing dance and urban pop songs and WHTZ playing mainstream pop music — WPLJ dropped the "Power 95” branding and returned to identify by its call letters; musically, the station began leaning toward more pop-rock hits. In May, Bryan left the station to host rival WHTZ's morning zoo program beginning that August.[19] ABC brass then replaced Horner with Mitch Dolan as general manager and president of programming, while Tom Cuddy was named vice president of programming,[20] and Rocky Allen was named as the station's new morning host in August.[21][22]

WPLJ began to regain some momentum; however, in early 1991, Cuddy and Dolan hired Scott Shannon, who had just left his rock hits project, KQLZ ("Pirate Radio") in Los Angeles. Shannon, who was responsible for WHTZ's early success and served as that station's first morning zoo host, took over as WPLJ's program director and morning show host (replacing Rocky Allen) in April 1991. The station then immediately rebranded as "Mojo Radio" on April 2 (Shannon's first show was on April 11), and the station began playing mainstream pop music, with ratings improving slightly.[23][24][25][26] After Shannon had a series of morning show co-hosts over the summer, Todd Pettengill joined as his permanent co-host on August 19, 1991, forming Scott & Todd in the Morning. Also, WPLJ began dayparting its programming by leaning towards adult top 40 with more gold and recurrents being played during the daytime hours, while still playing some rhythmic-leaning material during the evening hours.[27][28][29][30]

Hot AC era (1992–2019)

By February 1992, the station shifted to what was becoming a popular format: hot adult contemporary (hot AC), at about the same time a slightly different version was being pioneered in Houston at KHMX. In an attempt to differentiate itself from its competitors, WPLJ adopted the slogan "No Rap, No Hard Stuff, No Sleepy Elevator Music, Just the Best Songs on the Radio". In addition, the "Mojo Radio" moniker was dropped and the station began using the moniker "95-5 PLJ" (with the "W" typically omitted except for legal station identification).[31]

The station playlist featured many songs familiar only to New Yorkers and obscure oldies that would not have been typical for the format in other markets. (In a bit of irony, WPLJ may have helped pioneer many of the concepts made popular by the diverse-playlist, music-intensive adult hits format of 2005.) Initially, WPLJ leaned towards 1970s hits, as well as mixing in liberal doses of disco, and did regular theme weekends featuring one-hit wonders and number-one songs, among others. Eventually, it also dedicated Monday-Saturday nights to playing nothing but 1970s music, hosted by former WKTU disc jockey Al Bandiero, a practice that continued for the next few years.

In January 1993, Rocky Allen returned to WPLJ, this time to do afternoon drive for several years, until moving to WABC for the morning drive slot in January 1999. (Allen returned again to WPLJ in late 2005.) In 1995, WPLJ signed an agreement with Usen Group of Tokyo, a 500-channel audio cable system, to carry the station live in real-time throughout Japan. Also, from August 7 to 13 of that year, WPLJ was simulcast on Heart 106.2 in London as part of testing transmissions before it signed on September 5 with a hot AC format.[32] In mid-1996, WPLJ began syndicating Scott & Todd to WMTX in Tampa, Florida (where Scott had launched the "morning zoo" concept into nationwide success) and WKLI-FM in Albany, New York (where Todd would get his first big-market break), with a nationwide syndication deal launching in May 1997.[33][34] The syndication attempt ended October 16, 1998, as management desired to refocus the show to a local audience.[35]

On February 5, 1999, WPLJ abruptly moved to a modern adult contemporary format, a variation of the hot AC format. The station eliminated all 1970s music from the playlist and changed its slogan to "New York's Hit Music Station Without the Rap" in an attempt to distance itself from competitors that played rap music. In addition, many on-air personalities exited, including Kristie McIntyre, Danny & Onions, and WPLJ veteran Fast Jimi Roberts.[36] However, modern AC had peaked in 1997-98, and the station transitioned back to a hot AC format, with its playlist consisting of songs from the 1980s, 1990s, and the present.

2000s

In 2005, with ratings in decline, WPLJ once again started to play more music from the 1970s and 1980s. Given its heritage as both a rock station in the 1970s and a pioneering hot AC in the early and mid-1990s, many people in the radio business saw this move as a precursor to the station switching to an adult hits format.[by whom?] However, they were beaten by WCBS-FM, which abruptly switched from oldies to the Jack FM format on June 3, 2005 (WCBS-FM would return to the oldies/classic hits format two years later). WPLJ returned to playing music of the late 1980s, 1990s, and 2000s.[citation needed]

While not an overall ratings success, WPLJ had for years been among the more financially successful stations in the New York City market, billing in excess of $40 million per year. WPLJ did extremely well with adult women in the lucrative nine northern New Jersey counties adjacent to New York City.[citation needed]

During its top 40 years, WPLJ used jingles from JAM Creative Productions, some of which were packages previously used on sister station WABC during its top 40 days; since becoming a hot AC station, WPLJ had used jingles from TM Studios.[citation needed]

WPLJ and WABC were included in the sale of ABC Radio and the ABC Radio Networks by The Walt Disney Company to Citadel, announced in February 2006 and finalized on June 12, 2007.

In late February 2008, the Rocky Allen Showgram featuring Rocky Allen and Blain Ensley was dropped as part of a company-wide series of staff cutbacks at Citadel.[37] On February 16, 2009, WPLJ started airing the syndicated program The Billy Bush Show in the evenings.[38] He was later replaced by local host Ralphie Aversa.

In April 2009, WPLJ adopted a new slogan, "Scott and Todd in the Morning and Today's Best Music". A new logo was introduced that July.[citation needed]

2010s

On July 25, 2011, Scott and Todd, with the new addition of Cooper Lawrence, were part of a six-week summer test of 20th Television's nightly entertainment news magazine Dish Nation.[39] In January 2012, 20th announced the return of Dish Nation for a full 52-week season with Scott and Todd as members of its four-city roundtable.[40]

Citadel merged with Cumulus Media on September 16, 2011.[41] By October 2011, adult contemporary rival WWFS (owned by CBS Radio) shifted to hot AC; this gave New York City two hot adult contemporary stations for the first time since 1998, when WBIX dropped it for a rhythmic oldies format.

On February 7, 2014, Scott Shannon announced his retirement from WPLJ after 22 years. Co-host Todd Pettengill immediately took control of the morning show, which re-branded as The Todd Show on February 24.[42]

On January 5, 2015, The Todd Show was re-branded to Todd & Jayde in the Morning, with Jayde Donovan (Patricia Sweet) joining Pettengill as a co-host.[43] With the change, co-hosts Cooper Lawrence, Fitz, and Meatballs (Richard Deaver Jr.) were all released. Monk (Joe Pardavila), Annie (Anne Marie Leamy), and Johnny on the Street (John Mingione, formerly 'John Online' of WBLI on Long Island) were the other cast members of Todd & Jayde in the Morning. During this time, due to increased competition, WPLJ re-added 1980s and 1990s songs to its playlist, as well as adding more rhythmic material. By November 2015, the station removed most of the 1980s music from its playlist.

Sale and transition to K-Love

"May the 48-year run of this radio station prove to be a testament to the power and the love of terrestrial radio. And may the mere thought of the letters P-L-J bring a smile to your face, a warmth to your heart, and a tingle to your ears.

"Here’s to those who have walked these halls and breathed life into these microphones. It is with peace, love, and joy that we toast the white port lemon juice. Here’s to ‘PLJ!

"And for one final time–from high above Madison Square Garden–this is the world-famous WPLJ, New York."

Race Taylor, from his "farewell toast" to WPLJ

On February 13, 2019, WPLJ and five other Cumulus Media stations were sold to the Rocklin, California-based nonprofit broadcaster, Educational Media Foundation (EMF) for $103.5 million. This transaction would allow Cumulus to generate "substantial cash for debt repayment and investment in other business opportunities", according to its President and CEO Mary Berner.[44] After the sale received final approval by the FCC, EMF announced that WPLJ and the other Cumulus stations acquired would all begin broadcasting its primary programming service, K-Love, on June 1 at midnight local time;[45][46] this was later moved up to May 31 at 7:00 p.m., five hours earlier than originally planned.[47][48]

Current and surviving former WPLJ air personalities and staffers gathered together for a farewell celebration, held at The Cutting Room on May 23. It was the first event in what would be a week-long celebration of the station's 48-year run, which continued through the Memorial Day weekend with the station "clearing out the library" by playing songs from each year between 1971 and the present, along with vintage jingles and sweepers. The penultimate broadcast day on May 30 was filled with guest appearances from WPLJ alumni, including an on-air reunion of Todd Pettengill and his former morning co-host, Scott Shannon. The current airstaff began their goodbyes as well and that continued into May 31, with the final air shift handled by afternoon personality Race Taylor.[47][48][49]

The last songs heard on WPLJ were "Imagine" by John Lennon–the final song played by WABC before their format switch from Top 40 to talk in May 1982–followed by a cover version of "W-P-L-J" by Hall & Oates, recorded live during a visit by the group to the station several years earlier. Taylor then played the closing lyrics of "The End" by the Beatles, before offering WPLJ a final toast, completing the closedown at 7:02 p.m.[50] Following just over a minute of silence, EMF began operating WPLJ as the new New York City outlet of K-Love; K-Love programming had previously been heard in the New York area since May 2011 over Port Chester, New York-licensed WKLV-FM (96.7 FM). EMF changed WKLV-FM's call letters to WARW and its format to secondary service Air1 on July 19, 2019.

In addition to converting the 95.5 FM license to noncommercial educational status, EMF also acquired the WPLJ call letters from Cumulus.[51]

HD Radio

WPLJ signed on digital operations in late 2005. WPLJ-HD1 carries a digital simulcast of the analog signal. The WPLJ-HD2 subchannel originally broadcast all-70s hits,[52] and then programming from Scott Shannon's True Oldies Channel that was distributed by ABC Radio.[53] On July 4, 2014, WPLJ-HD2 flipped to an adult contemporary format known as "FAS" (referring to former sister station WFAS-FM, which flipped from AC to urban AC), due to the discontinuation of The True Oldies Channel's distribution. (The "FAS" programming was also relayed on translator W232AL (94.3 FM), located in White Plains, New York). The FAS programming moved to WPLJ-HD3 (which had previously aired a simulcast of WABC) in autumn 2017, with the Russian-language "Russkaya Reklama" programming moving from WNEW-FM-HD4 to WPLJ-HD2. On May 1, 2019, the FAS programming on WPLJ-HD3 and W232AL ceased operations.[54]

After EMF acquired the station on May 31, 2019, WPLJ-HD2 adopted a simulcast of the Christian-formatted "Bridge Radio" fed by WRDR in Freehold Township, New Jersey (this would later be moved to WPLJ-HD4, with the K-Love Classics service being installed on the HD2). Also in 2019, WPLJ-HD3 adopted a simulcast of the Christian-formatted "Air1".

Logo history

References

  1. ^ "WJZ-FM in New York operating at 95.5 mc." Broadcasting - Telecasting, May 10, 1948, pg. 80.
  2. ^ "Ambitious ABC planning initiated under new merged ownership." Broadcasting - Telecasting, February 16, 1953, pp. 27-29.
  3. ^ "It's now WABC-AM-FM-TV; ABC also changes slides." Broadcasting - Telecasting, March 2, 1953, pg. 70.
  4. ^ WABC-AM-FM-TV advertisement. Broadcasting - Telecasting, March 2, 1953, pg. 37.
  5. ^ "Strikebound N.Y. depends on air news." Broadcasting, December 17, 1962, pg. 44
  6. ^ WABC-FM advertisement. Broadcasting, December 24, 1962, pp. 38- 39
  7. ^ "Baseball tops $31 million." Broadcasting, February 19, 1968, pp. 40-49.
  8. ^ "600 stations set for new ABC."Broadcasting, January 1, 1968, pp. 42-44.
  9. ^ "ABC Radio sends its 'Love' to FM."Broadcasting, February 17, 1969, pg. 77.
  10. ^ "ABC puts a new emphasis on FM." Broadcasting, August 10, 1970, pg. 45.
  11. ^ "ABC asks FCC for ok to change FM calls." Broadcasting, September 14, 1970, pg. 48.
  12. ^ "For the record." Broadcasting, March 8, 1971, pg. 59
  13. ^ Neer, Richard (2001). FM: The Rise and Fall of Rock Radio. Random House Publishing. p. 85. ISBN 9781588360731.
  14. ^ Konig, Susan. "Q&A: Bill Ayres; In Forefront of Fighting World Hunger". The New York Times. March 29, 1998
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  17. ^ "WWPR (Power 95)/NY" (PDF). Radio & Records. December 23, 1988. p. 25. Retrieved April 19, 2019.
  18. ^ "Major Market Morning Men Move On Out" (PDF). Radio & Records. July 7, 1989. p. 1. Retrieved May 26, 2019.
  19. ^ "Bryan Joins Z100 Zoo" (PDF). Radio & Records. July 27, 1990. p. 1. Retrieved May 26, 2019.
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  27. ^ "Less Rap In Mojo Mix" (PDF). Billboard. August 9, 1991. Retrieved February 4, 2020.
  28. ^ "Vox Jox" (PDF). Billboard. August 17, 1991. p. 13. Retrieved May 9, 2019.
  29. ^ "WPLJ 25th Anniversary" (PDF). Billboard. December 21, 1996. Retrieved May 9, 2019.
  30. ^ "WPLJ/New York Celebrates 30 Years On The Air" (PDF). R&R. March 29, 2002. p. 1. Retrieved May 9, 2019.
  31. ^ "No Mo' Mojo" (PDF). Radio & Records. February 7, 1992. p. 24. Retrieved May 9, 2019.
  32. ^ Nielsen Business Media, Inc. (August 26, 1995). Billboard. Nielsen Business Media, Inc. pp. 113–. ISSN 0006-2510.
  33. ^ "At 25, WPLJ Finds Silver Lining in Pop". New York Daily News. Retrieved January 30, 2017.
  34. ^ "1997: The Year Of CHR Resurgence" (PDF). Radio & Records. December 19, 1997. p. 37. Retrieved May 9, 2019.
  35. ^ "Morning Miscellany" (PDF). Radio & Records. October 2, 1998. p. 28. Retrieved May 9, 2019.
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  37. ^ Fybush, Scott (March 3, 2008). "This Week's Bloodbath: Citadel". NorthEast Radio Watch.
  38. ^ . February 16, 2009. Archived from the original on July 8, 2011. Retrieved February 16, 2009.
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  40. ^ Downey, Kevin. . TV News Check. Archived from the original on May 28, 2014.
  41. ^ "Cumulus now owns Citadel Broadcasting". Atlanta Business Journal (subscription required). September 16, 2011. Retrieved September 16, 2011.
  42. ^ Venta, Lance (February 7, 2014). "Scott Shannon retires from WPLJ". RadioInsight. RadioBB Networks. Retrieved May 9, 2019.
  43. ^ "Jayde Donovan Joins WPLJ As Morning Co-Host". All Access. All Access Music Group. Retrieved January 30, 2017.
  44. ^ Venta, Lance (February 13, 2019). "Cumulus Sells Six To EMF & Swaps With Entercom In New York & Indianapolis". RadioInsight. Retrieved February 13, 2019.
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  50. ^ Aircheck of End of PLJ & Launch of K-Love
  51. ^ Venta, Lance (May 27, 2019). "EMF Sets New Call Letters For Cumulus/Aloha Acquisitions; WRQX Moves To..." RadioInsight. Retrieved May 27, 2019.
  52. ^ WPLJ 95.5 HD-2 New York - All 70s - March 23, 2006
  53. ^ . Scott Shannon's True Oldies Channel. Archived from the original on July 28, 2008. Retrieved December 19, 2008.
  54. ^ Venta, Lance (May 2, 2019). "94.3 WFAS Ceases Operations". RadioInsight. RadioBB Networks.

Further reading

  • Larry Berger's Years At WPLJ
  • (archived 2005)

External links

  • Official website
  • WPLJ in the FCC FM station database
  • WPLJ on Radio-Locator
  • WPLJ in Nielsen Audio's FM station database
  • FCC History Cards for WPLJ
  • W235BB in the FCC FM station database
  • W235BB on Radio-Locator
  • W283BA in the FCC FM station database
  • W283BA on Radio-Locator

wplj, this, article, lead, section, short, adequately, summarize, points, please, consider, expanding, lead, provide, accessible, overview, important, aspects, article, november, 2021, this, article, about, radio, station, song, written, four, deuces, four, de. This article s lead section may be too short to adequately summarize the key points Please consider expanding the lead to provide an accessible overview of all important aspects of the article November 2021 This article is about the radio station WPLJ For the song written by the Four Deuces see Four Deuces W P L J WPLJ 95 5 FM is a non commercial Christian adult contemporary music radio station licensed to New York City It is owned by the Educational Media Foundation EMF and broadcasts EMF s flagship programming service K Love WPLJ s transmitter is located at the Empire State Building and broadcasts four HD Radio digital subchannels in addition to its analog transmission WPLJNew York New YorkUnited StatesBroadcast areaNew York metropolitan areaFrequency95 5 MHz HD Radio BrandingK Love primary ProgrammingLanguage s EnglishFormatChristian adult contemporarySubchannelsHD2 K Love 90 sHD3 Air1HD4 WRDR simulcast Christian AffiliationsK LoveOwnershipOwnerEducational Media FoundationSister stationsWARWHistoryFirst air dateMay 4 1948 74 years ago 1948 05 04 Former call signsWJZ FM 1948 1953 WABC FM 1953 1971 WPLJ 1971 1987 WWPR 1987 1988 Call sign meaningnamed after the Four Deuces song W P L J artifact of former format Technical informationLicensing authorityFCCFacility ID73887ClassBERP6 700 wattsHAAT408 meters 1 339 ft Transmitter coordinates40 44 53 N 73 59 10 W 40 748 N 73 986 W 40 748 73 986Translator s 94 9W235BBHauppauge104 5W283BASeldenLinksPublic license informationPublic fileLMSWebsiteklove wbr com Contents 1 History 1 1 As WABC FM 1 2 As WPLJ 1 2 1 Album rock era 1971 1983 1 2 2 Top 40 era 1983 1992 1 2 3 Hot AC era 1992 2019 1 2 4 2000s 1 2 5 2010s 1 3 Sale and transition to K Love 2 HD Radio 3 Logo history 4 References 5 Further reading 6 External linksHistory EditAs WABC FM Edit The station went on the air on May 4 1948 under the call sign WJZ FM 1 In March 1953 the station s call letters were changed to WABC FM following the merger of the American Broadcasting Company ABC with United Paramount Theatres 2 3 4 As most FM stations did during the medium s formative years 95 5 FM simulcast the programming of its AM sister station WJZ WABC 770 AM In the early 1960s however WABC FM began to program itself separately from WABC AM During the 1962 63 New York City newspaper strike the station programmed news for 17 hours daily 5 6 Two and a half years before WINS launched its own around the clock all news format in April 1965 it was the first such attempt in the New York market This was followed by stints with Broadway show tunes and general freeform programming including broadcasts of New York Mets baseball games 7 WABC s AM personalities such as Dan Ingram Chuck Leonard and Bob Lewis hosted programs on the FM side which were the total opposites of the top 40 powered sound for which they were better known on AM WABC FM continued to simulcast its AM sister station during Herb Oscar Anderson s morning drive program At the start of 1968 ABC split its radio network into four distinct components one of which was dedicated to FM radio 8 The following year WABC FM and its sister stations KABC FM in Los Angeles WLS FM in Chicago KGO FM in San Francisco WXYZ FM in Detroit KQV FM in Pittsburgh and newly acquired KXYZ FM in Houston began carrying an automated youth oriented progressive rock format known as Love 9 As WPLJ Edit Album rock era 1971 1983 Edit This section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed July 2019 Learn how and when to remove this template message WPLJ s logo from the early 1970s All of ABC s FM stations adopted this same logo style at this time a version of this is still in use today by former sister station KLOS which broadcasts on the same frequency In late 1970 Allen Shaw the then president of ABC s FM station group announced two big changes to take place in early 1971 ABC dropped Love and installed completely live and local freeform rock formats The network also applied for call letter changes for the seven stations 10 11 The New York outlet was slated to be renamed WRIF but a clerical error on the part of the Federal Communications Commission FCC resulted in those calls being awarded to the former WXYZ FM in Detroit whose own request for WDAI Detroit Auto Industry was itself given mistakenly to WLS FM in Chicago leaving WABC FM to start from scratch for its own rebranding On February 14 1971 the station s call letters changed to WPLJ 12 chosen after Allen Shaw noticed the letter combination as the name of a song on the 1970 Mothers of Invention record Burnt Weeny Sandwich The song W P L J was originally performed by the Four Deuces in 1955 and stood for White Port and Lemon Juice 13 On the air the station hired John Zacherle Alex Bennett Vin Scelsa Jimmy Fink and Michael Cuscuna from WMMR and WXPN in Philadelphia as personalities All seven ABC owned FM stations also adopted a shared logo styling with the callsign and frequency within a multi colored oval WRIF and KLOS the former KABC FM continue to use a form of this logo to the present day In September 1971 Allen Shaw and ABC programming executive Bob Henaberry designed and pioneered the very first album oriented rock AOR format on WPLJ playing only the best cuts from the best selling rock albums with a minimum of disc jockey talk Using the slogan Rock N Stereo the station played artists such as Led Zeppelin The Beatles Aerosmith Jimi Hendrix Cream The Doobie Brothers Steely Dan Elton John Deep Purple Billy Joel Rod Stewart David Bowie and The Allman Brothers The station also played pop songs from artists such as James Taylor Stevie Wonder and Carly Simon distinguishing itself from top 40 stations such as co owned WABC by playing more tracks from their albums The station s Arbitron ratings shot up dramatically and WPLJ became New York s most listened to FM rock station for most of the 1970s citation needed In 1973 ABC transferred Willard Lochridge the general manager of WRIF in Detroit to New York to manage WPLJ The following year Lochridge brought his Detroit program director Larry Berger to WPLJ and adopted a new slogan New York s Best Rock Some of the personalities on the station during this period included Jim Kerr Pat St John Jimmy Fink Carol Miller Tony Pigg John Zacherle Alex Bennett Bob Marrone and Dave Charity Berger himself hosted a Sunday night call in show in which he discussed seemingly any topic with listeners except the specifics of the playlist During these call in segments some callers suggested that the station sped up or pitched up the music so that they could fit in more commercials while still being able to claim that they played a large number of songs per hour Berger repeatedly denied that this practice was in use at WPLJ In the September 20 1999 episode of Crap from the Past host Ron Boogiemonster Gerber suggested that music was sped up on WPLJ to make the same music sound less dynamic on other stations Another Sunday night show began in 1973 then Father Bill Ayres long running show at first called On This Rock and later after Ayres left the priesthood in the 1980s titled The Bill Ayres Show 14 Known on air as Father Bill Ayres the show mixed spirituality and social consciousness together with the music of Harry Chapin Bob Seger and others The show also aired on its sister station WABC on Sunday mornings within the last years of its top 40 music format Ayres continued to host the show until the transfer of control of WPLJ to Educational Media Foundation in May 2019 By the late 1970s WPLJ tended to emphasize harder rock artists such as Led Zeppelin there was a nightly Get the Led Out segment Kansas Boston and Queen which all happened to get less airplay than on competing station WNEW FM At this point the station reduced its play of softer pop songs and their ratings remained competitive Mark Goodman came to WPLJ from Philadelphia in 1980 and was on the air as word broke out of John Lennon s murder the evening of December 8 Goodman departed the station a few months later to become one of the original VJs for the MTV cable channel citation needed In 1981 Berger hired Marc Coppola a rock oriented disc jockey from suburban rival WBAB on Long Island to do the 10 p m 2 a m shift Monday through Saturday During its AOR phase the station was noted for its promotional montages consisting of snippets of classic rock songs spliced together by St John emphasizing a subject or theme such as gasoline during the gas shortages of the 1970s From the time of Berger s arrival WPLJ beat main rock rival WNEW FM in virtually every Arbitron ratings period citation needed In 1982 WPLJ received a direct competitor in WAPP which adopted a near identical AOR format to WPLJ WAPP launched its rock format commercial free and remained so for the summer of 1982 WAPP beat WPLJ in the ratings in the fall of 1982 and WPLJ reacted by adding more new wave such as A Flock of Seagulls Dexy s Midnight Runners The Go Go s Elvis Costello Men at Work and Soft Cell mixed in with the usual AOR fare WPLJ s ratings ended up besting those of WAPP after the latter started playing commercials in the fall of 1982 In early 1983 the station added Billie Jean by Michael Jackson playing it several times a day many AOR stations including WNEW FM added that song and it charted on the rock tracks chart In March 1983 WPLJ added Jackson s other hit Beat It which received very positive reaction While Jackson was not a typical AOR artist that cut was played by many AOR stations due to Eddie Van Halen s role in the song The station also dropped most 1960s songs by May and was cutting back on AOR artists while playing more contemporary rockers Top 40 era 1983 1992 Edit This section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed May 2019 Learn how and when to remove this template message In early 1983 the station began a transition from AOR to top 40 CHR With word that a top 40 format was coming to WVNJ FM 100 3 FM WPLJ moved further in a CHR direction Though the station began playing artists like Lionel Richie and Michael Jackson Larry Berger stated that he did not make the decision to move to a CHR format until the last week of June WPLJ adopted a rock leaning CHR format on June 30 1983 At that point the station played predominantly AOR and new wave rock cuts and mixed in two or three rhythmic pop cuts like Flashdance What a Feeling by Irene Cara Time Clock of the Heart by Culture Club She Works Hard for the Money by Donna Summer and others The station maintained its New York s Best Rock slogan even though the station moved away from playing predominantly rock songs Berger discussed the changes on his call in show in July 1983 to the disapproving reaction from the rock audience 15 Competitor WNBC had been a de facto AM top 40 station while WYNY had been the de facto FM hits station throughout the early 1980s playing many current songs as part of its hot adult contemporary format WPLJ s airstaff which stayed on during the early transition months gradually changed as WNEW FM picked up some of the station s best known disc jockeys such as Carol Miller and Pat St John Jim Kerr and sidekick Shelli Sonstein remained with the station through the end of the decade Jimmy Fink Tony Pigg and Marc Coppola eventually moved to Infinity Broadcasting s WXRK when it debuted a couple of years later In August 1983 at the same time WVNJ had been re christened as WHTZ Z100 WPLJ became known as The Home of the Hits and in October added top 40 style jingles In a way it was New York s Hit Music Station just before WHTZ went on the air The following spring WPLJ identified itself very briefly as The New Musicradio PLJ before segueing to Hitradio 95 just a short time later In early 1985 the station became known on air as Power 95 16 Ratings went up after switching to CHR though they were still just behind Z100 most of the time On December 17 1987 the station changed its call letters to WWPR to complement its Power 95 branding Rival WHTZ joked that the PR in the calls stood for Puerto Rican and that the station planned to flip to a Spanish language format The WPLJ call sign returned the following year on December 21 1988 when research indicated that listeners still identified the station as WPLJ 17 Berger departed in 1988 replaced immediately by his music director Jessica Ettinger who was named acting program director In 1989 general manager Dana Horner hired Gary Bryan from KUBE in Seattle as program director Bryan also served as morning show host beginning that July ousting 15 year WPLJ morning host veteran Jim Kerr and creating an audience outcry 18 WPLJ continued to be successful until 1990 when ratings started to decline With significant pop competition WQHT Hot 97 playing dance and urban pop songs and WHTZ playing mainstream pop music WPLJ dropped the Power 95 branding and returned to identify by its call letters musically the station began leaning toward more pop rock hits In May Bryan left the station to host rival WHTZ s morning zoo program beginning that August 19 ABC brass then replaced Horner with Mitch Dolan as general manager and president of programming while Tom Cuddy was named vice president of programming 20 and Rocky Allen was named as the station s new morning host in August 21 22 WPLJ began to regain some momentum however in early 1991 Cuddy and Dolan hired Scott Shannon who had just left his rock hits project KQLZ Pirate Radio in Los Angeles Shannon who was responsible for WHTZ s early success and served as that station s first morning zoo host took over as WPLJ s program director and morning show host replacing Rocky Allen in April 1991 The station then immediately rebranded as Mojo Radio on April 2 Shannon s first show was on April 11 and the station began playing mainstream pop music with ratings improving slightly 23 24 25 26 After Shannon had a series of morning show co hosts over the summer Todd Pettengill joined as his permanent co host on August 19 1991 forming Scott amp Todd in the Morning Also WPLJ began dayparting its programming by leaning towards adult top 40 with more gold and recurrents being played during the daytime hours while still playing some rhythmic leaning material during the evening hours 27 28 29 30 Hot AC era 1992 2019 Edit By February 1992 the station shifted to what was becoming a popular format hot adult contemporary hot AC at about the same time a slightly different version was being pioneered in Houston at KHMX In an attempt to differentiate itself from its competitors WPLJ adopted the slogan No Rap No Hard Stuff No Sleepy Elevator Music Just the Best Songs on the Radio In addition the Mojo Radio moniker was dropped and the station began using the moniker 95 5 PLJ with the W typically omitted except for legal station identification 31 The station playlist featured many songs familiar only to New Yorkers and obscure oldies that would not have been typical for the format in other markets In a bit of irony WPLJ may have helped pioneer many of the concepts made popular by the diverse playlist music intensive adult hits format of 2005 Initially WPLJ leaned towards 1970s hits as well as mixing in liberal doses of disco and did regular theme weekends featuring one hit wonders and number one songs among others Eventually it also dedicated Monday Saturday nights to playing nothing but 1970s music hosted by former WKTU disc jockey Al Bandiero a practice that continued for the next few years In January 1993 Rocky Allen returned to WPLJ this time to do afternoon drive for several years until moving to WABC for the morning drive slot in January 1999 Allen returned again to WPLJ in late 2005 In 1995 WPLJ signed an agreement with Usen Group of Tokyo a 500 channel audio cable system to carry the station live in real time throughout Japan Also from August 7 to 13 of that year WPLJ was simulcast on Heart 106 2 in London as part of testing transmissions before it signed on September 5 with a hot AC format 32 In mid 1996 WPLJ began syndicating Scott amp Todd to WMTX in Tampa Florida where Scott had launched the morning zoo concept into nationwide success and WKLI FM in Albany New York where Todd would get his first big market break with a nationwide syndication deal launching in May 1997 33 34 The syndication attempt ended October 16 1998 as management desired to refocus the show to a local audience 35 On February 5 1999 WPLJ abruptly moved to a modern adult contemporary format a variation of the hot AC format The station eliminated all 1970s music from the playlist and changed its slogan to New York s Hit Music Station Without the Rap in an attempt to distance itself from competitors that played rap music In addition many on air personalities exited including Kristie McIntyre Danny amp Onions and WPLJ veteran Fast Jimi Roberts 36 However modern AC had peaked in 1997 98 and the station transitioned back to a hot AC format with its playlist consisting of songs from the 1980s 1990s and the present 2000s Edit In 2005 with ratings in decline WPLJ once again started to play more music from the 1970s and 1980s Given its heritage as both a rock station in the 1970s and a pioneering hot AC in the early and mid 1990s many people in the radio business saw this move as a precursor to the station switching to an adult hits format by whom However they were beaten by WCBS FM which abruptly switched from oldies to the Jack FM format on June 3 2005 WCBS FM would return to the oldies classic hits format two years later WPLJ returned to playing music of the late 1980s 1990s and 2000s citation needed While not an overall ratings success WPLJ had for years been among the more financially successful stations in the New York City market billing in excess of 40 million per year WPLJ did extremely well with adult women in the lucrative nine northern New Jersey counties adjacent to New York City citation needed During its top 40 years WPLJ used jingles from JAM Creative Productions some of which were packages previously used on sister station WABC during its top 40 days since becoming a hot AC station WPLJ had used jingles from TM Studios citation needed WPLJ and WABC were included in the sale of ABC Radio and the ABC Radio Networks by The Walt Disney Company to Citadel announced in February 2006 and finalized on June 12 2007 In late February 2008 the Rocky Allen Showgram featuring Rocky Allen and Blain Ensley was dropped as part of a company wide series of staff cutbacks at Citadel 37 On February 16 2009 WPLJ started airing the syndicated program The Billy Bush Show in the evenings 38 He was later replaced by local host Ralphie Aversa In April 2009 WPLJ adopted a new slogan Scott and Todd in the Morning and Today s Best Music A new logo was introduced that July citation needed 2010s Edit On July 25 2011 Scott and Todd with the new addition of Cooper Lawrence were part of a six week summer test of 20th Television s nightly entertainment news magazine Dish Nation 39 In January 2012 20th announced the return of Dish Nation for a full 52 week season with Scott and Todd as members of its four city roundtable 40 Citadel merged with Cumulus Media on September 16 2011 41 By October 2011 adult contemporary rival WWFS owned by CBS Radio shifted to hot AC this gave New York City two hot adult contemporary stations for the first time since 1998 when WBIX dropped it for a rhythmic oldies format On February 7 2014 Scott Shannon announced his retirement from WPLJ after 22 years Co host Todd Pettengill immediately took control of the morning show which re branded as The Todd Show on February 24 42 On January 5 2015 The Todd Show was re branded to Todd amp Jayde in the Morning with Jayde Donovan Patricia Sweet joining Pettengill as a co host 43 With the change co hosts Cooper Lawrence Fitz and Meatballs Richard Deaver Jr were all released Monk Joe Pardavila Annie Anne Marie Leamy and Johnny on the Street John Mingione formerly John Online of WBLI on Long Island were the other cast members of Todd amp Jayde in the Morning During this time due to increased competition WPLJ re added 1980s and 1990s songs to its playlist as well as adding more rhythmic material By November 2015 the station removed most of the 1980s music from its playlist Sale and transition to K Love Edit May the 48 year run of this radio station prove to be a testament to the power and the love of terrestrial radio And may the mere thought of the letters P L J bring a smile to your face a warmth to your heart and a tingle to your ears Here s to those who have walked these halls and breathed life into these microphones It is with peace love and joy that we toast the white port lemon juice Here s to PLJ And for one final time from high above Madison Square Garden this is the world famous WPLJ New York Race Taylor from his farewell toast to WPLJ On February 13 2019 WPLJ and five other Cumulus Media stations were sold to the Rocklin California based nonprofit broadcaster Educational Media Foundation EMF for 103 5 million This transaction would allow Cumulus to generate substantial cash for debt repayment and investment in other business opportunities according to its President and CEO Mary Berner 44 After the sale received final approval by the FCC EMF announced that WPLJ and the other Cumulus stations acquired would all begin broadcasting its primary programming service K Love on June 1 at midnight local time 45 46 this was later moved up to May 31 at 7 00 p m five hours earlier than originally planned 47 48 Current and surviving former WPLJ air personalities and staffers gathered together for a farewell celebration held at The Cutting Room on May 23 It was the first event in what would be a week long celebration of the station s 48 year run which continued through the Memorial Day weekend with the station clearing out the library by playing songs from each year between 1971 and the present along with vintage jingles and sweepers The penultimate broadcast day on May 30 was filled with guest appearances from WPLJ alumni including an on air reunion of Todd Pettengill and his former morning co host Scott Shannon The current airstaff began their goodbyes as well and that continued into May 31 with the final air shift handled by afternoon personality Race Taylor 47 48 49 The last songs heard on WPLJ were Imagine by John Lennon the final song played by WABC before their format switch from Top 40 to talk in May 1982 followed by a cover version of W P L J by Hall amp Oates recorded live during a visit by the group to the station several years earlier Taylor then played the closing lyrics of The End by the Beatles before offering WPLJ a final toast completing the closedown at 7 02 p m 50 Following just over a minute of silence EMF began operating WPLJ as the new New York City outlet of K Love K Love programming had previously been heard in the New York area since May 2011 over Port Chester New York licensed WKLV FM 96 7 FM EMF changed WKLV FM s call letters to WARW and its format to secondary service Air1 on July 19 2019 In addition to converting the 95 5 FM license to noncommercial educational status EMF also acquired the WPLJ call letters from Cumulus 51 HD Radio EditWPLJ signed on digital operations in late 2005 WPLJ HD1 carries a digital simulcast of the analog signal The WPLJ HD2 subchannel originally broadcast all 70s hits 52 and then programming from Scott Shannon s True Oldies Channel that was distributed by ABC Radio 53 On July 4 2014 WPLJ HD2 flipped to an adult contemporary format known as FAS referring to former sister station WFAS FM which flipped from AC to urban AC due to the discontinuation of The True Oldies Channel s distribution The FAS programming was also relayed on translator W232AL 94 3 FM located in White Plains New York The FAS programming moved to WPLJ HD3 which had previously aired a simulcast of WABC in autumn 2017 with the Russian language Russkaya Reklama programming moving from WNEW FM HD4 to WPLJ HD2 On May 1 2019 the FAS programming on WPLJ HD3 and W232AL ceased operations 54 After EMF acquired the station on May 31 2019 WPLJ HD2 adopted a simulcast of the Christian formatted Bridge Radio fed by WRDR in Freehold Township New Jersey this would later be moved to WPLJ HD4 with the K Love Classics service being installed on the HD2 Also in 2019 WPLJ HD3 adopted a simulcast of the Christian formatted Air1 Logo history Edit WPLJ logo used from 2005 to 2009 WPLJ logo used from February 24 2014 to October 30 2014 WPLJ logo from October 30 2014 to May 31 2019 References Edit WJZ FM in New York operating at 95 5 mc Broadcasting Telecasting May 10 1948 pg 80 Ambitious ABC planning initiated under new merged ownership Broadcasting Telecasting February 16 1953 pp 27 29 It s now WABC AM FM TV ABC also changes slides Broadcasting Telecasting March 2 1953 pg 70 WABC AM FM TV advertisement Broadcasting Telecasting March 2 1953 pg 37 Strikebound N Y depends on air news Broadcasting December 17 1962 pg 44 WABC FM advertisement Broadcasting December 24 1962 pp 38 39 Baseball tops 31 million Broadcasting February 19 1968 pp 40 49 600 stations set for new ABC Broadcasting January 1 1968 pp 42 44 ABC Radio sends its Love to FM Broadcasting February 17 1969 pg 77 ABC puts a new emphasis on FM Broadcasting August 10 1970 pg 45 ABC asks FCC for ok to change FM calls Broadcasting September 14 1970 pg 48 For the record Broadcasting March 8 1971 pg 59 Neer Richard 2001 FM The Rise and Fall of Rock Radio Random House Publishing p 85 ISBN 9781588360731 Konig Susan Q amp A Bill Ayres In Forefront of Fighting World Hunger The New York Times March 29 1998 Larry Berger explains change from rock to top 40 July 1983 Street Talk PDF Radio amp Records April 19 1985 p 26 Retrieved July 4 2019 WWPR Power 95 NY PDF Radio amp Records December 23 1988 p 25 Retrieved April 19 2019 Major Market Morning Men Move On Out PDF Radio amp Records July 7 1989 p 1 Retrieved May 26 2019 Bryan Joins Z100 Zoo PDF Radio amp Records July 27 1990 p 1 Retrieved May 26 2019 WPLJ Names Cuddy VP Programming PDF Radio amp Records March 30 1990 p 3 Retrieved May 26 2019 Allen Wins WPLJ Morning Position PDF Radio amp Records August 3 1990 p 1 Retrieved April 19 2019 WPLJ Banks On Mornings PDF Radio amp Records August 24 1990 p 42 Retrieved April 19 2019 Shannon Back To New York As WPLJ PD Morning Man PDF Radio amp Records April 5 1991 p 1 Retrieved May 9 2019 First Show Scott Shannon In The Morning 95 5 WPLJ New York April 11 1991 August 6 2016 Retrieved January 30 2017 Hoodoo That Voodoo PDF Radio amp Records April 12 1991 p 32 Retrieved May 9 2019 Can Shannon Get WPLJ s Mojo Working PDF Billboard April 13 1991 p 12 Retrieved May 9 2019 Less Rap In Mojo Mix PDF Billboard August 9 1991 Retrieved February 4 2020 Vox Jox PDF Billboard August 17 1991 p 13 Retrieved May 9 2019 WPLJ 25th Anniversary PDF Billboard December 21 1996 Retrieved May 9 2019 WPLJ New York Celebrates 30 Years On The Air PDF R amp R March 29 2002 p 1 Retrieved May 9 2019 No Mo Mojo PDF Radio amp Records February 7 1992 p 24 Retrieved May 9 2019 Nielsen Business Media Inc August 26 1995 Billboard Nielsen Business Media Inc pp 113 ISSN 0006 2510 At 25 WPLJ Finds Silver Lining in Pop New York Daily News Retrieved January 30 2017 1997 The Year Of CHR Resurgence PDF Radio amp Records December 19 1997 p 37 Retrieved May 9 2019 Morning Miscellany PDF Radio amp Records October 2 1998 p 28 Retrieved May 9 2019 WPLJ Embarks On Its Post Rocky Road PDF Radio amp Records February 12 1999 p 28 Retrieved May 9 2019 Fybush Scott March 3 2008 This Week s Bloodbath Citadel NorthEast Radio Watch Billy Bush Radio Stations February 16 2009 Archived from the original on July 8 2011 Retrieved February 16 2009 Hinckley David June 16 2011 Dish Nation launching on Fox TV radio hosts Scott and Todd to dish on gossip entertainment New York Daily News Archived from the original on May 23 2012 Retrieved June 16 2011 Downey Kevin Dish Nation Clearances Top 80 TV News Check Archived from the original on May 28 2014 Cumulus now owns Citadel Broadcasting Atlanta Business Journal subscription required September 16 2011 Retrieved September 16 2011 Venta Lance February 7 2014 Scott Shannon retires from WPLJ RadioInsight RadioBB Networks Retrieved May 9 2019 Jayde Donovan Joins WPLJ As Morning Co Host All Access All Access Music Group Retrieved January 30 2017 Venta Lance February 13 2019 Cumulus Sells Six To EMF amp Swaps With Entercom In New York amp Indianapolis RadioInsight Retrieved February 13 2019 This Is The End EMF To Take Over Iconic Cumulus Stations June 1 Inside Radio May 15 2019 Retrieved June 12 2019 Venta Lance May 15 2019 EMF To Begin Operating Its Six Cumulus Acquisitions On June 1 RadioInsight Retrieved June 12 2019 a b Niemietz Brian May 8 2019 Rock station 95 5 WPLJ will end nearly 50 years of broadcasting on May 31 New York Daily News Retrieved May 8 2019 a b Venta Lance May 8 2019 WPLJ Announces Sign Off Date RadioInsight Retrieved May 8 2019 WPLJ New York Sign Off Festivities Set For May 30th amp 31st All Access All Access Music Group May 28 2019 Retrieved May 29 2019 Aircheck of End of PLJ amp Launch of K Love Venta Lance May 27 2019 EMF Sets New Call Letters For Cumulus Aloha Acquisitions WRQX Moves To RadioInsight Retrieved May 27 2019 WPLJ 95 5 HD 2 New York All 70s March 23 2006 Radio Stations Scott Shannon s True Oldies Channel Archived from the original on July 28 2008 Retrieved December 19 2008 Venta Lance May 2 2019 94 3 WFAS Ceases Operations RadioInsight RadioBB Networks Further reading EditLarry Berger s Years At WPLJ Recollections of New York s Best Rock era by program director and air staff archived 2005 Brad Blanks WPLJ morning contributor interviewExternal links EditOfficial website WPLJ in the FCC FM station database WPLJ on Radio Locator WPLJ in Nielsen Audio s FM station database FCC History Cards for WPLJ W235BB in the FCC FM station database W235BB on Radio Locator W283BA in the FCC FM station database W283BA on Radio Locator Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title WPLJ amp oldid 1124417881, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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