WRTH (FM)
City |
WRTH: Greer, South Carolina WLTE: Pendleton, South Carolina |
---|---|
Broadcast area | Upstate South Carolina |
Branding | 103-3 & 95.9 Earth FM |
Slogan | The Greatest Hits on Earth |
Frequency |
WRTH: 103.3 MHz WLTE: 95.9 MHz |
First air date |
WRTH: January 1993 (as WLYZ) WLTE: March 2015 |
Format | Classic Hits |
ERP |
WRTH: 2,700 watts WLTE: 6,000 watts |
HAAT |
WRTH: 151 meters WLTE: 71 meters |
Class |
WRTH: A WLTE: A |
Facility ID |
WRTH: 73241 WLTE: 170949 |
Transmitter coordinates |
WRTH: 34°59′54.00″N 82°08′17.00″W / 34.9983333°N 82.1380556°W WLTE: 34°41′19.00″N 82°36′16.00″W / 34.6886111°N 82.6044444°W |
Callsign meaning | WRTH: EaRTH |
Former callsigns |
WRTH: WRDQ (1991–1992) WLYZ (1992–1995) WXWZ (1995–1996) WOLT (1996–2014)[1] |
Affiliations | Weather channel radio, Earth View Traffic |
Owner |
Salem Media Group (Caron Broadcasting, Inc.) |
Sister stations | WGTK-FM |
Webcast | Listen Live |
Website | earthfmwrth.com |
WRTH is a classic hits radio station broadcasting as "103-3 Earth FM" and located in Greenville/Spartanburg, South Carolina. The station is licensed by the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) to the town of Greer and broadcasts on 103.3 FM with an effective radiated power (ERP) of 2,700 watts.
History
103.3 signed on in January 1993 as WLYZ, simulcasting WLWZ (103.9 FM)'s urban contemporary format to the Spartanburg part of the market as "Double Z". For history of the urban contemporary format on 103.9 prior to the sign-on of 103.3, see WTOB.
In late 1994, the station's then-owner, Emerald City Broadcasting, purchased WWMM (107.3 FM) and moved the urban format to the new station since it had a much stronger signal than the 103.3/103.9 simulcast. WWMM was relaunched as WJMZ "107.3 Jamz", while the 103 simulcast became alternative rock "103-X" with 103.3 picking up the WXWZ call sign and 103.9 picking up the WXWX call sign in early 1995. 103-X was the first alternative rock station in the market, but the same signal problems that the station(s) had remained.
On January 1, 1996, 103-X added Howard Stern's radio show for mornings, but was faced with a backlash from both radio listeners and advertisers that lasted for weeks. During that time Emerald City decided to sell out to Entercom, so 103-X changed formats to oldies in February 1996; a few months later, 103.9 became WOLI and 103.3 became WOLT. The station(s) were on satellite for the next few years and in late 1999, a local airstaff was finally added.
In November 2000 the station jumped on the 1980s oldies bandwagon that was going on at the time, becoming "Star 103", but retained the call letters for both stations. The syndicated Bob and Sheri radio show was added as well as a new airstaff. Over time, the station slowly evolved toward Classic Hits, but kept the Star 103 handle. In late 2003, WOLT and WOLI changed its format to a Contemporary Christian/country hybrid as "The Walk."
In 2005, Entercom sold WOLT, WOLI, and WSPA (910 AM, now WOLI) to Davidson Media Group (a company that specializes in Latino formats; however, some other formats are carried), while retaining "The Walk" and placing it on its newly acquired 106.3 (WGVC) signal. Davidson Media Group time-brokered the entire station out, with Mon-Sat 5:00AM–10:00AM and Sunday mornings going to Spartanburg legend Bill Drake, and the rest of the airtime going to a company that carried an urban contemporary gospel format, branding the station as "Praize 103.3" (this all started in October 2005).
Following differences between Davidson Media Group and the company managing "Praize 103.3", the urban contemporary gospel format was abruptly dropped on August 10, 2006. The following morning, after Bill Drake's program, WOLT debuted an oldies format, programmed by Davidson, which is a rare case as the company generally brokers its programming out. The station was known, when not airing brokered programming, as "103.3 WOLT - The Best of the 60s and 70s." Longtime upstate South Carolina disc jckey "Brother Bill" Prather was the Operations Manager for WOLT and recorded many of the voice overs and was heard live on the air from time to time. WOLT subsequently brokered a large part of its airtime out to various other music/local affairs programming.
In November 2010, WOLT became known as "Carolina's Classic 103.3 WOLT." Classic hits is now the underlying 'format' of the station outside of brokered time. This is an attempt to give the station an identity that ties in with all the other classic based programs.
In January 2012, WOLT began running CHR mix programming in certain dayparts, using syndicated programming from Chicago-based company Jamtraxx, billing their dayparted hours as "103-3 SPIN FM." This is a nationwide debut of a potential new format that runs non-stop as music mixes targeting females 18-34. During all other hours, they broadcast and identify simply as "103-3 WOLT."[2]
On March 1, 2013 the Earth FM oldies format moved from WOLI and WOLI-FM to WOLT.[3]
As of September 2013 WOLT is no longer the flagship station for Furman football, basketball, baseball, and coaches shows (which moved to WGOG)[4] and no longer carries Clemson basketball,[5]
In February 2014, Davidson Media Group sold WOLT to Earth Radio Broadcasting LLC.[6] The purchase was consummated on February 24, 2014 at a price of $1 million. On March 12, 2014, Salem Communications, through licensee Caron Broadcasting, Inc., purchased WOLT from Earth Radio Broadcasting.[7] The purchase was consummated on May 6, 2014 at a price of $1.125 million. On April 24, 2014, WOLT changed its call letters to WRTH.
On March 15, 2015 WRTH-FM began simulacasting on WLTE 95.9 FM Pendleton, SC.
On December 1,2015 WRTH-FM dropped their affiliation with WSPA TV 24x7 Weather and began provide weather forecast from Weather channel Radio network
References
- ↑ "Call Sign History (WOLT)". Retrieved 2010-04-21.
- ↑ "WOLT/Greenville, SC Debuts Spin-FM Format" from All Access (January 15, 2012)
- ↑ "WOLT/Greenville,SC Debuts Earth FM" Oldies from Radio Insight (March 1, 2013)
- ↑ "WGOG FM"
- ↑ "Clemson Radio Networks"
- ↑ "WOLT-FM FCC LIC"
- ↑ "Salem Communications"
External links
- WRTH official website
- Query the FCC's FM station database for WRTH
- Radio-Locator information on WRTH
- Query Nielsen Audio's FM station database for WRTH
- Query the FCC's FM station database for WLTE
- Radio-Locator information on WLTE
- Query Nielsen Audio's FM station database for WLTE
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