WKRP-LP

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WKRP
250px
City of license Raleigh, North Carolina
Broadcast area Raleigh
Branding 101.9 WKRP
Slogan "This is... 101.9 WKRP."
Frequency 101.9 MHz
First air date November 30, 2015
Format Community Radio
ERP 100 watts
HAAT 8 meters
Class L1
Facility ID 191806
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Owner Oak City Media, Inc.
Website http://www.WKRPFM.com

WKRP-LP, or 101.9 WKRP is a community low power FM ("LPFM") radio station operating in Raleigh, North Carolina.

History

Organization

Capital Area Team Sports, Inc., a non-profit organization which had operated for nearly two decades as an operator of amateur sports programs and competitions, was granted a construction permit by the Federal Communications Commission to build an LPFM on March 18, 2014.[1] The permit was the first LPFM construction permit granted in Raleigh since WRLY-LP over a decade earlier.

The organization changed its corporate name to "Oak City Media" to reflect its new and broader mission on June 15, 2014. Fundraising for the station progressed slowly over an 18-month period, concluding in October 2015 with the organization's long-time executive director, D.P. McIntire, donating the final $10,000 toward the project to ensure its completion.

Call sign and branding

Upon learning of the construction permit grant, McIntire contacted the FCC with intent to secure use of either "WNQQ" or "WASP" as the station's call sign. During the conversation, he jokingly expressed a wish that WKRP were an available call sign, never expecting it to be due to its popularity and use on WKRP in Cincinnati. The representative advised that the WKRP call sign was, in fact, available; at which point the organization immediately chose it over its intended selections as an homage to the series. On the day the station's antenna mast was erected, Oak City Media president Patrick Weiss would hoist an American flag from its top, jokingly proclaiming that the call letters henceforth would stand for "We Keep Raleigh Patriotic." So as to avoid potential trademark issues however, the station is branded as 101 9 WKRP.

Construction and sign-on

Station studio construction was completed in September 2015, with its transmitter, antenna and related equipment installed in November.[2] The station's license was formally granted on November 30, 2015, and after a week of signal testing it went on the air at noon on December 5, 2015, playing "Babe" by Styx.

The station's current broadcast radius encompasses an area described on-air as "Between the 40s," a reference to Beltline and I-540 in northeast Raleigh. Plans exist to accompany its 100 watt terrestrial signal with a live internet stream of its programming via www.wkrpfm.com "when we raise enough money to pay for it."[3]

"We Keep Replacing Parts"

On December 23, 2015, just weeks after going on air, the station's transmitter suffered a failure requiring that the station temporarily shut down. After nearly two weeks of examination by the manufacturer, the cause was found to be what the manufacturer described a "five-cent capacitor."

The station resumed broadcasting January 25, 2016, whereupon Oak City Media president Patrick Weiss recanted the joke he'd expressed when the station was launched, joking that WKRP's call sign should henceforth stand for "We Keep Replacing Parts." Just three months later however, the station's Technalogix transmitter would fail again, though this time causing just a brief period off the air.

Format

Currently 101.9 WKRP airs a Variety programming format, slowly building a lineup of specialty programming. Weekdays at 4 the station airs an hour of novelty songs as "The 'KRP Kids Hour," which on Fridays is immediately followed by "The Weekend Salute," a half-hour of weekend and party-themed music. Saturday evenings feature "That Thing with Rich Appel," and the station offers eight hours of specialty programming from 1-9 on Sundays with "A Way with Words," "Celtic Connections," "Jazz Odyssey," the "Rockabilly N' Blues Hour with Jammin' James Riley," and "Greatest Hits U.S.A. with Chuck Taylor."

Over time, the station intends to augment these programs with others, gradually evolving into a full service format encompassing news, sports, comedy, educational programs and talk.

References

External links


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