WWWL
City | New Orleans, Louisiana |
---|---|
Broadcast area | New Orleans metropolitan area |
Branding | Hot 92.9 |
Slogan | New Orleans Classic R&B |
Frequency | 1350 kHz (also on HD Radio) |
Translator(s) | 92.9 W225CZ (New Orleans) |
Repeater(s) | 97.1 WEZB-HD2 |
First air date | April 1, 1925 (as WSMB) |
Format | Urban oldies |
Power | 5,000 watts |
Class | B |
Facility ID | 72959 |
Callsign meaning | W WWL (sister station) |
Former callsigns | WSMB (1925–2006) |
Owner | Entercom (Entercom License, LLC) |
Sister stations | WWL, WWL-FM, WEZB, WKBU, WLMG |
Webcast | Listen Live |
Website | www |
WWWL (1350 AM, "Hot 92.9") is a commercial AM radio station in New Orleans, Louisiana. Owned by Entercom, it broadcasts an urban oldies format. The station's studios are located at the 400 Poydras Tower in Downtown New Orleans. The transmitter site is in Algiers, near the city limits of Gretna and Terrytown. The station operates at 5,000 watts around the clock, although after sunset, it switches to a directional antenna.[1]
The station is simulcast on FM translator station W225CZ (92.9 FM), from which its on-air branding originates. It is also heard on an HD Radio subchannel of co-owned 97.1 WEZB.
Contents
History[edit]
Early Years[edit]
This station carried the call sign WSMB from its founding until 2006. It signed on the airwaves April 1, 1925, as New Orleans' first professional radio station, a joint commercial venture by the local Saenger Theatre and the Maison Blanche department store. Programming was provided by the Saenger, allowing Maison Blanche to sell radio sets in the store so customers could hear the station's programming. For most of its early history, the studios were located on the thirteenth floor of the Maison Blanche Building on Canal Street, a few blocks from the theater. By the 1930s, WSMB was an affiliate of the NBC Red Network, carrying its schedule of dramas, comedies, news, sports, soap operas, game shows and big band broadcasts during the Golden Age of Radio.[2]
Switch to MOR and Talk[edit]
As network programming shifted to TV in the 1960s, WSMB moved to a full service format of middle of the road music (MOR), news and talk. WSMB found success in the ratings, primarily on the strength of morning drive time personalities Roy Roberts and Jeff Hugg, known as "Nut and Jeff," and midday political talk show host, Keith Rush. Musically, the station in the 1960s was a mix of pop standards and the softer sounds of rock and roll. In the 1970s, WSMB moved to a more adult contemporary music sound. The station played moderate amounts of music during morning and afternoon drive times while being music intensive and leaning toward oldies overnights and weekends.
By 1980, as music listening shifted to FM, WSMB's ratings had dropped. The station gradually cut back on music through the early 1980s. By 1985, WSMB was strictly news and talk, using the ABC Radio Information Network and its Talk Radio service.[3] Moving to all talk still did not bring ratings up. In 1988, WSMB was sold to Winton Communications, which kept the talk format in place but could not improve the ratings.
Move to All-Talk and Sports[edit]
In 1996, WSMB was bought by the Sinclair Broadcast Group, which also owned the news-talk powerhouse 870 WWL. Sinclair turned WSMB into a sister station of WWL, running talk programs that weren't available on AM 870, and adding WWL's newsgathering expertise. In 1999, Sinclair sold its New Orleans radio stations to Entercom. WWWL began broadcasting sporting events that were bumped from WWL due to scheduling conflicts, including basketball and football from LSU and Tulane University. The station was the radio home of the New Orleans Brass minor league hockey team from 1997 to 2002 and has sometimes been a local radio outlet for national broadcasts of NFL football.
With all the sporting events on WSMB's schedule, it became an all-sports station between 1999 and 2001. Programming at that time included syndicated shows from ESPN Radio and an afternoon show hosted by local sports commentator Kaare Johnson. Other local personalities heard on the station included sports trainer Mackie Shilstone. There was a period where most programming consisted of psychological call-in shows, featuring hosts such as Dr. Laura and Dr. Joy Browne. From 2005 until November 2006, the station carried a progressive talk radio format as an affiliate of Air America Radio. The Food Show with Tom Fitzmorris remained on the air through all these format changes. It is the longest-running talk show of any kind in New Orleans, airing weekdays since July 18, 1988, and now heard on WWL on Sundays.
Hurricane Katrina[edit]
The station's previous studios adjacent to the Louisiana Superdome were destroyed in August 2005 by Hurricane Katrina. Its frequency, as well as all other operational Entercom and Clear Channel frequencies, was used to simulcast the programming produced by the United Radio Broadcasters of New Orleans with the staff of sister station WWL. Normal programming was resumed on December 19, 2005.
Change to WWWL[edit]
The WSMB call letters were relinquished in November 2006, when the programming was switched to repeats of shows originated on WWL, becoming "WWWL - WWL On Demand." The WSMB call sign was picked up by another Entercom station located in Memphis (which became WMFS in 2009).
On June 30, 2008, ESPN Radio returned to AM 1350, as WWWL became a full-time affiliate.[4] On October 14, 2013, WWWL re-branded as 3WL: Sports, Food & Fun; the format would continue to primarily feature sports programming, switching to NBC Sports Radio and featuring a morning show with T-Bob Hebert and Kristian Garic, but with an afternoon lineup featuring lifestyle programming such as Tom Fitzmorris' The Food Show, and John "Spud" McConnell moving from WWL midday to host afternoon drive.[5]
On February 9, 2017, WWWL began running announcements redirecting 3WL listeners to WWL-FM-HD2, where the format would be moving full-time. The next day at Noon, WWWL flipped to Urban AC as "Hot 103.7," utilizing new FM translator W279DF to enable its signal to be heard with FM quality. The first song on "Hot" was "Rude Boy" by Rihanna. The new sound competes with market-leading 98.5 WYLD-FM and 106.7 KMEZ with a younger skewing take on the format, focusing solely on R&B hits from the 1990s through today, as opposed to the playlists of its two competitors, who include songs from the 1970s and 1980s.[6][7]
On February 14, 2018, WWWL flipped to an urban oldies format, but maintained the Hot branding and on-air staff. The station now focuses primarily on classic R&B from the 1970s and 1980s.[8] On April 11, 2018, WWWL's FM translator W279DF was replaced by W225CZ, which operates from a taller antenna at 92.9 FM. At this time, the station re-branded accordingly as Hot 92.9.[9]
References[edit]
- ^ Radio-Locator.com/WWWL
- ^ Broadcasting Yearbook 1935 page 32
- ^ Broadcasting Yearbook 1988 page B-124
- ^ "WWWL in New Orleans (1350) announces its new sports daytime lineup". Radio-Info.com. June 25, 2008.
- ^ "Entercom Launches 3WL New Orleans". RadioInsight. 2013-10-14. Retrieved 2018-04-13.
- ^ Hot 103.7 New Orleans Debuts As Younger Skewing Urban AC
- ^ 3WL Becomes Hot 103.7
- ^ "Hot 103.7 New Orleans Shifts To Classic R&B". RadioInsight. 2018-02-16. Retrieved 2018-02-18.
- ^ "Hot 103.7 New Orleans Moves To 92.9". RadioInsight. 11 April 2018.
External links[edit]
- Official website
- Article on WWWL's format flip
- Query the FCC's AM station database for WWWL
- Radio-Locator Information on WWWL
- Query Nielsen Audio's AM station database for WWWL
Coordinates: 29°55′27″N 90°02′04″W / 29.92417°N 90.03444°W