WIYY

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WIYY
File:WIYY.jpg

WBAL (AM) logo.png
City of license Baltimore, Maryland
Branding HD1: "98 Rock"
HD2: "NewsRadio 1090 WBAL"
Frequency 97.9 MHz
(also on HD Radio)
First air date December 7, 1958[1]
Format HD1: Active Rock
HD2: WBAL simulcast
ERP 13,500 watts
HAAT 288 meters
Class B
Facility ID 65693
Former callsigns WFDS-FM (1958–1960)
WBAL-FM (1960–1977)
Owner Hearst Corporation
Sister stations WBAL, WBAL-TV
Webcast 98 Rock Webstream
WBAL AM Webstream (HD2)
Website 98online.com
wbal.com (HD2)

WIYY (97.9 FM, "98 Rock") is an active rock radio station in Baltimore, Maryland, USA, owned by the Hearst Corporation. WIYY shares a facility with sister stations WBAL (1090 AM) and WBAL-TV (channel 11) on Television Hill in the Woodberry section of Baltimore, near the transmission tower it shares with WBAL-TV. WIYY and WBAL are the only two radio stations owned by the Hearst Corporation.

History

File:Stationlogo wiyyhd2.png
Logo for the station's former HD2 format which ended in late August, 2014.
File:Stationlogo wiyyhd3.png
Logo for the station's former HD3 format which ended in late August, 2014.

The 97.9 frequency in Baltimore began in January 1948 as WMAR-FM,[2] owned by the A.S. Abell Company, publishers of the Baltimore Sun and founders of WMAR-TV, Baltimore's first television station. The first station to use those call letters (and not related to the second WMAR-FM at 106.5, now WWMX), WMAR-FM was a collaborative partner of Transit Rides Inc., developer of a music format designed for public transportation and owned by the Cincinnati-based Taft family.[3] After two years on the air, Abell shut down the radio station in June 1950 and turned in its license to the Federal Communications Commission.[4]

The station remained silent until December 1958 when it was reborn as WFDS-FM,[5] a classical music outlet under the ownership of William S. Cook, a Baltimore native and professional engineer.[6] Cook created WFDS-FM as one of the first radio stations in the United States to experiment with stereo.[7] The Hearst Corporation purchased the station in April 1960 and retained classical music while renaming it WBAL-FM.[8][9]

In June 1975 WBAL-FM joined NBC Radio Network's 24-hour national "News and Information Service" (NIS), and was the largest affiliate of NIS not to be an NBC Radio owned-and-operated station.[10] After two years of all-news and low ratings, NBC closed down NIS in late May 1977. But WBAL-FM bailed on the service early, adopting its present elements—the call letters WIYY,[11] rock music format and the "98 Rock" brand—on March 28, 1977.

WIYY (along with WBAL) is the co-flagship station of the Baltimore Ravens and during the NFL Season the station broadcasts every Ravens game; whenever the Ravens and Baltimore Orioles played at the same time (while the Orioles were on WBAL), WIYY aired the Ravens game alone. Joe Robinson hosts the "Ravens' Last Call" Sunday post-game show.

On their website, 98Rock offers podcasts of portions of its talk shows as well as their weekly special interest shows: Spiegel's News Countdown, The Rough House Podcast, Dork Dynasty, and Geekin' Madness. 98Rock has also added a simulcast of News/Talk 1090 WBAL on HD2.

Awards

In 2007, the station was nominated for the Radio & Records magazine Active Rock station of the year in a top 25 market award . Other nominees included WAAF in Boston, KBPI in Denver, WRIF in Detroit, WMMR in Philadelphia, and KISW in Seattle.[12] WIYY was a nominee for the 2012 "Major Market Radio Station of the Year" RadioContraband Rock Radio Award.

References

  1. 1960 Broadcasting Yearbook, page A-163
  2. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  3. "Bus rides to music: Multi-million FM advertising potential." Broadcasting - Telecasting, February 23, 1948, pg. 17.
  4. "WMAR-FM quits; WAAM (TV) also drops FM." Broadcasting - Telecasting, May 29, 1950, pg. 28.
  5. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  6. "For the Record: New FM stations." Broadcasting, October 28, 1957, pg. 114.
  7. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  8. "For the Record: Existing FM stations-New call letters assigned." Broadcasting, March 21, 1960, pg. 104.
  9. "Pleased beginning." Broadcasting, April 25, 1960, pg. 49.
  10. "NBC news radio goes to O&Os in major cities." Broadcasting, April 21, 1975, pp. 46-47. [1][2]
  11. "For the Record: Call letters-Grants-Existing FMs." Broadcasting, April 4, 1977, pg. 92.
  12. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.

External links