WJMN (FM)

Not to be confused with WJMN-TV, a CBS affiliate licensed to Escanaba, Michigan.
WJMN
City Boston, Massachusetts
Broadcast area Greater Boston
Branding "Jam'n 94.5"
Slogan Boston's New #1 For Hip Hop
Frequency 94.5 MHz (also on HD Radio)
94.5 HD2: Bloomberg Radio (WXKS simulcast)
First air date March 31, 1948[1]
Format Rhythmic contemporary
ERP 9,200 watts
HAAT 353 meters
Class B
Facility ID 53972
Transmitter coordinates 42°18′27.00″N 71°13′27.00″W / 42.3075000°N 71.2241667°W / 42.3075000; -71.2241667 (WJMN)
Callsign meaning JaM'N
Former callsigns WHDH-FM (1948–1972)
WCOZ (1972–1984)
WZOU (1984–1993)
Owner iHeartMedia, Inc.
(AMFM Radio Licenses, L.L.C.)
Sister stations WBWL, WKOX, WXKS, WXKS-FM
Webcast Listen Live
Website www.jamn945.com

WJMN (94.5 FM; "Jam'n 94.5") is a Rhythmic Contemporary radio station licensed to Boston, Massachusetts, USA, under the ownership of iHeartMedia, Inc.. Its current slogan is "Boston's New #1 For Hip Hop", and can be heard as far north as the White Mountains under good conditions, and in portions of Maine, Rhode Island, eastern Connecticut and southeastern Vermont. The station's studios are located in Medford and the transmitter site is in Newton, Massachusetts.

History

WJMN was originally WHDH-FM: a sister station to, and simulcast of, WHDH (AM). In 1965, to comply with a Federal Communications Commission regulation limiting simulcasting between commonly owned AM and FM stations in the same city, WHDH-FM began separate programming with an automated middle-of-the-road format in Stereo. In late 1967, WHDH-FM changed its format to automated Progressive Rock (predating future FM rocker 104.1/WBCN by several months), but by late 1969, the station returned to automated "beautiful music" after a little "intervention", allegedly from WHDH Inc.'s Chief Executive Officer, Harold J. Clancy (who did not particularly approve of putting rock and roll on "MY FM station!"). Although this format remained until 1975, it was not particularly successful, despite a 1972 attempt to establish a separate identity by changing the call letters to WCOZ (as in "Cozy").

WCOZ

Originally owned by Herald-Traveler Corp., parent of the Boston Herald-Traveler newspaper, the station was sold to Blair Radio in 1972, and in the 1980s to Sconnix. Several ownership changes followed which eventually resulted in Clear Channel Communications (now iHeartMedia) acquiring 94.5 FM.

In the summer of 1975, WCOZ announced that it would change its format to an album-oriented rock station under their new name "WCOZ 94 & A 1/2 FM", which it did on August 15 of that year. Although automated at first, a team of live announcers was hired, led by Kenny Shelton and program director Clark Smidt. By the end of 1975, WCOZ had live announcers around the clock that also included George Taylor Morris, Leslie Palmiter, Lisa Karlin, Mark Parenteau and Robert Desiderio. WCOZ's format was tightened significantly in 1978, when new Program Director Tommy Hadges arrived from arch rival WBCN. Parenteau simultaneously defected to WBCN at that point.

In 1980, another new program director, John Sebastian, arrived and made some changes. WCOZ was still a rock station, but its focus was tightened to loud, hard rock (or "Kickass Rock 'N' Roll!", according to the station's slogan) with minimal announcer talk and short play list. It was extremely successful, peaking with a phenomenal 13.1 in the ratings, in 1982, but with the changes in rock music during the 1980s, the station's success did not last; its rival WBCN moved past it in the ratings. By late 1983, WCOZ had changed formats to a short lived Adult Contemporary format.

WZOU

In 1984, the station's call letters were changed to WZOU, and flipped to a Top 40 format to compete against Kiss 108 as "The All New, All Hit Z-94". P.D. David Gariano had success with the top 40 format, including original 1984 personalities Mike Morin and Brad Krantz, Uncle Johnny, Jonny "Rock N Roll" Anthony, Marc Mitchell, and Scott Brunner. In 1985, Pat McKay and Karen "The Madam" Blake joined the morning team. WXKS successfully adapted to a mainstream Top 40 format in 1988 after being an urban contemporary for many years, which cut into Z-94's ratings. What also didn't help the station's ratings was the declining popularity of the Top 40 format in general in the very late 1980s–early 1990s.

WJMN

Since its inception on May 11, 1993, "Jam'n 94.5" has become one of Boston's most successful radio stations.[2] Even after its sale to Chancellor in 1996, station management decided not to tamper with the format as they see WJMN as part of a winning combination with Top 40/CHR sister station WXKS, a formula that continues to the present day. WJMN is also a sister station to country music outlet WBWL.

When "Jam'n" debuted, the station had a playlist of a balanced mix of R&B/Hip-Hop, Rhythmic Pop, and Dance product (ironically, this same approach was used at WXKS when it made the transition from Disco to Top 40 in 1982 up until their shift to their current mainstream direction in 1988). However, by the end of 1999, it began to play a variety of music that was along the lines of Urban Contemporary Hits, heavy on the hip-hop to the extent of not playing non-rap rhythmic tracks. This would last until the beginning of 2009, when WJMN began tweaking their musical selection to once again include Rhythmic/Pop-charting artists like Britney Spears, Justin Bieber, Kesha, Katy Perry, David Guetta, Edward Maya, Adele and Lady Gaga. This tweaking has sparked a lot of talk on radio message boards[3] and follows a pattern among Rhythmic-format stations that have scaled back on the heavy amount of Hip-Hop in favor of a more balanced approach. This continued until mid-2013, when, facing competition from Rhythmic AC-formatted WBQT (which features some of WJMN's former airstaff), WJMN has added more Hip Hop and R&B content, but still remains rhythmic. Because of this, several music trades (like Mediabase) and Nielsen Audio have listed WJMN as Rhythmic because the audience it targets is racially mixed and the region's African-American population is not that large.

WJMN's voiceover artist was, at first, Brian James. Since the late 1990s, the station's voiceover artist has been Eric Edwards.[4] "Jam'n" morning drive, for the first 2 years, was hosted by J.R. In January 1995, Baltazar, former night show host at WQHT in New York, took over mornings. Two months later, Pebbles, formerly of WILD, became morning co-host. The duo were very popular among Boston listeners, particularly with younger audiences. Baltazar left the show in October 2001, giving way to the "Ramiro and Pebbles Morning Show" when afternoon host Ramiro Torres moved to mornings. Pebbles was unexpectedly let go from the station in December 2012, with mornings then hosted by Ramiro, Santi "Krazy Kulo" DeOleo and Ashlee Feldman, under the name "The Ramiro's House Morning Show". Ramiro and Santi were let go in July 2015 due to their contracts not being renewed. Frankie V, formerly of station KHTS in San Diego (and also a native of the nearby suburb of Framingham), would join the morning show alongside Feldman, with the show now titled "The Jam'n Morning Show w/ Frankie & Ashlee."[5]

WJMN also has an HD2 sub-channel that simulcasts WXKS (AM); it previously broadcast old-school hip hop music from January 27, 2006, until March 1, 2013.

Boston is the largest market without an Urban radio formatted station on FM; heritage R&B AM daytimer WILD, which served the area's African-American community since 1967, began airing China Radio International programming in June 2011, and its one-time Hip Hop sister station WBOT (which later became Urban AC WILD-FM), which gave the market its first full-time Urban outlet on the FM band in 1999 despite having a weak signal, has been defunct since the summer of 2006, when Radio One (which owned both stations) sold it. However, in February 2016, AM station WZBR flipped from a simulcast of WSRO to urban.

WJMN is unrelated to WJMN-TV, a CBS affiliate in Escanaba, Michigan.

Current on-air staff

Mixshow DJs

Past on-air staff

Syndicated programming and features

References

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Monday, April 11, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.