WBZ-FM

Coordinates: 42°18′27.3″N 71°13′25.1″W / 42.307583°N 71.223639°W / 42.307583; -71.223639 (WBZ-FM)
Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

WBZ-FM
MHz (HD Radio)
Branding98-5 The Sports Hub
Programming
FormatSports radio
SubchannelsHD2: "Hubcast" (Sports radio)
NetworkFox Sports Radio
Affiliations
Ownership
Owner
WBOS, WBQT, WKLB-FM, WRCA, WROR-FM
History
First air date
October 1948; 75 years ago (1948-10)
Former call signs
  • WNAC-FM (1948–57)
  • WRKO-FM (1957–68)
  • WROR (1968–91)
  • WBMX (1991–2009)
Call sign meaning
from former sister station WBZ (AM)
Technical information[1]
Licensing authority
FCC
Facility ID1901
ClassB
ERP9,000 watts
HAAT349 meters (1,145 ft)
Transmitter coordinates
42°18′27.3″N 71°13′25.1″W / 42.307583°N 71.223639°W / 42.307583; -71.223639 (WBZ-FM)
Links
Public license information
Webcast
Website985thesportshub.com

WBZ-FM (98.5

Mike Felger, Tony Massarotti, and Bob Socci. The WBZ-FM studios are located in Waltham, while the station transmitter resides in the Boston suburb of Newton. In addition to a standard analog transmission, WBZ-FM broadcasts over two HD Radio
channels, and is available online.

Despite the call sign, WBZ-FM has no connection to either WBZ-TV or WBZ: WBZ-TV owner Paramount Global holds the trademark for "WBZ"[2] and has licensed the rights to the WBZ call letters to Beasley under a long-term agreement that followed CBS Corporation's divestiture of CBS Radio, WBZ-FM's previous owner, to Audacy.[3]

History

WNAC-FM (1948–1957)

The station signed on in October 1948 as WNAC-FM

Mount Washington (which was originally considered a Boston station, but was eventually refocused to Portland, Maine), which operated from December 18, 1940, to September 1948 (when it signed off due to increasing costs and a lack of listener interest).[4] As at most FM stations, WNAC-FM initially served as a full-time simulcast of WNAC.[5]

The station, along with General Tire's other broadcast holdings, came under the General Teleradio banner in 1952; the division became RKO Teleradio Pictures in 1955 and RKO General by December 1959.[6][7]

In May 1953, General Teleradio bought WLAW (680 AM) and WLAW-FM (93.7 FM) from Hildreth and Rogers, publishers of the Lawrence Daily Eagle and Evening Tribune, for $475,000.[8] The deal was made to facilitate a "move" of the WNAC call letters and programming onto WLAW's signal as WNAC (680 AM); to comply with existing FCC ownership regulations, WNAC was spun off to Vic Diehm and Associates and became WVDA.[9][10] WLAW-FM had its license surrendered in the transaction, as WNAC-FM was retained.[8]

WRKO-FM (1957–1968)

On May 10, 1957, the call sign was changed to WRKO-FM,[11] even though the station was still simulcasting WNAC, as RKO Teleradio sought to keep the WRKO call letters out of the hands of its competitors.[5] While separate programming was inaugurated for half of the broadcast day in 1963 due to then-upcoming Federal Communications Commission (FCC) regulations prohibiting AM and FM stations from simulcasting for more than half of the day, this programming was initially a middle-of-the-road format identical to that of WNAC.[5] A year later, WRKO-FM, along with WNAC-TV, moved to a new tower in Newton.[5]

On October 12, 1966, WRKO-FM dropped its simulcast of WNAC (by then predominantly a talk station) and introduced a top 40 format reliant on automation.[5][12] Playing the top hits of the day (including the number-one song in Boston every hour on the hour) and using recorded announcing altered to sound like a robot (since the station was positioned as "R-KO [pronounced "arko"], The Shy But Friendly Robot"), WRKO-FM quickly became the most popular FM radio station in the Boston area.[5] As a result of this success, when WNAC dropped its talk format in favor of a live top 40 format on March 13, 1967, RKO General changed its call letters to WRKO.[5][13] Its programming was then simulcast on WRKO-FM from 6:00 a.m. to 6:00 p.m., with the "R-KO" programming continuing for the rest of the day.[5]

WROR (1968–1991)

WRKO-FM's top 40 programming came to an end in November 1968, when it joined sister stations KHJ-FM in Los Angeles and KFRC-FM in San Francisco in airing an automated soft rock format from Drake-Chenault Enterprises, "Hit Parade '68",[14] which incorporated both current music and oldies.[5] A month earlier, on October 4, the station changed its call sign to WROR,[11] as part an effort by RKO General to give their FM stations a distinct identity from their AM sister stations.[14] WROR switched to another Drake-Chenault format, "Solid Gold Rock and Roll", on November 1, 1970, evenly splitting the oldies and current music.

RKO General reached a tentative deal to sell off WROR to Cecil Heftel and his wife, Joyce Heftel, for $2 million in August 1972.[15][16] While approved by the FCC, the agency concurrently rejected a secondary agreement between Heftel and the Boston Community Media Committee, whereupon Heftel would make programming and minority-employment commitments for WROR, in exchange for an annual payment to the BCMC of $1,000, or 1% of WROR's before-tax profits, whichever was greater.[17] The BCMC and another Boston citizens-group opposed to the transaction subsequently filed challenges that led to a lengthy delay, resulting in RKO and Heftel mutually agreeing to terminate the sale.[18]

In early 1973, WROR went to a full-time oldies format (still playing a new song per hour and a couple recent hits an hour), eventually parting ways with Drake-Chenault later that year

adult contemporary station rather than oldies,[20] and by September 1978 was more of a gold based adult contemporary station, leading to its branding changing to "The Great 98"[21] and then "98-and-a-half".[5] Station management felt that there was a hole in the market for an FM AC station to compete against WBZ and WHDH (now WEEI).[22]
Still, the station was mostly oldies from the 1960s, playing a couple currents and a couple recent hits an hour plus a couple of pre-1964 oldies as well.

After RKO General lost its license to operate WNAC-TV in 1982, WROR was forced to move to another tower in Newton, as the new owners of channel 7 (renamed WNEV-TV) did not lease space on its tower.

Gencorp initially appealed the ruling,[27] the company was advised by the FCC that any appeal would be denied, and that to avoid the indignity of further license forfeitures without compensation, their stations should be divested instead.[28] In 1988, the station, along with WRKO, was acquired by Atlantic Ventures for $27.7 million,[29] split between Gencorp and the challengers for the licenses.[30]

During the 1980s, WROR continued as a gold-based AC station throughout the week. The station played one to two currents an hour that were huge hits. They played several 1980s songs an hour, and several 1970s songs an hour. Nearly half the songs played were from the 1960s along with a pre-1964 oldie an hour. On weekends, the station played strictly oldies mostly from the 1960s with a couple of early 1970s songs an hour, plus several pre-1964 oldies as well. For a few months late in 1987 and early in 1988, WROR ran a smooth jazz/new-age music show in the evening. In 1989, WROR modified its oldies/AC format to "bright adult contemporary" and changed its on-air identity to "ROR-FM". The station discontinued the oldies weekends, began playing more currents, eliminated nearly all pre-1964 oldies, and focused on 1970s and 1980s music; despite these changes, WROR continued to air its Saturday night oldies show. However, after finding that listeners continued to perceive WROR as an oldies station, Atlantic Ventures decided to relaunch the station under a new identity.[31]

WBMX (1991-2009)

At noon on February 8, 1991, after playing

hot adult contemporary format heavy on Motown oldies and hot AC currents.[23][33] A few weeks later, on February 26, 1991, the station took the WBMX call letters from an AM station in Zeeland, Michigan, which had been using them since signing on the previous year; this AM station received the WROR calls in return.[34] Barry Scott and The Lost 45s retro radio show was a Sunday night staple, before moving to WODS. (The WROR-FM call letters are now used on a classic hits station in Boston at 105.7 FM, owned by Beasley Broadcast Group
).

Atlantic Ventures merged with two other radio groups, Stoner Broadcasting Systems and Multi Market Communications, on June 5, 1993, to form

modern adult contemporary stations in the country.[5]

American Radio Systems announced a merger with

CBS Corporation),[37] a transaction completed on February 21, 2001 (though Viacom, and CBS before the merger, had always held a majority stake in Infinity).[38] When Viacom split into two companies on December 31, 2005, Infinity became part of the new CBS Corporation and reverted to the CBS Radio name.[39]

WBZ-FM (2009–present)

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