WCBN-FM

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
WCBN-FM
Freeform
Ownership
OwnerUniversity of Michigan
History
First air date
January 23, 1972
(originally carrier current 1952-1972)
Former call signs
none
Call sign meaning
Campus Broadcasting Network
Technical information
Facility ID66316
ClassA
Power1,400 watts
HAAT54 meters
Transmitter coordinates
42°16′37″N 83°44′7″W / 42.27694°N 83.73528°W / 42.27694; -83.73528
Links
Webcast[2]
Websitewcbn.org

WCBN-FM is the student-run

freeform. It broadcasts at 88.3 MHz FM in Ann Arbor, Michigan
.

History

WCBN is one of the longest-standing continuous practitioners of primarily

It's My Party
(and I'll Cry if I Want To)" continuously for hours when President Ronald Reagan was first elected. Other DJs joined in and the protest ended up lasting for a number of days.

WCBN was created in 1952 when three existing

college radio
could be tuned to in University buildings at 640 kHz. Programming was coordinated between the existing broadcast facilities.

In 1956 WCBN hosted the first meeting of the National Association of College Broadcasters.

Until 1958, South, East and West Quad had separate transmitters, each on a different frequency, as well as one on the Hill, with a loop connecting the three studios. In 1958 John Maurer built a limiter and switching device so that sound was constant and could be switched by any studio to feed all transmitters and was wired by Cliff Vander Yacht. Dave Mills had constructed the Hill transmitter the year before and tested it at National Music Camp during the summer. Some years before, the Federal Communications Commission FCC had allocated the call sign even though the carrier current transmitters were not licensed. (CVY)

In 1965, the WCBN operations were consolidated in the newly completed Student Activities Building.

In early 1971, the U-M Board of Regents approved a proposal to seek a full license for WCBN on the FM band. On January 23, 1972 WCBN-FM went on the air at 89.5 MHz with a 10-watt transmitter. At this time the carrier current station adopted the new callsign WRCN, and programming was divided.

In October 1977, neighboring station WEMU at Eastern Michigan University in Ypsilanti, Michigan upgraded its studios and changed its FCC broadcast frequency from 88.1 MHz to 89.1 MHz. With WCBN broadcasting at 89.5 MHz, there was a danger of station overlap. Accordingly, WCBN received a stipend from Eastern Michigan University to change its operating frequency to 88.3 MHz, where it remains today.

Beginning in 1980, the station began holding regular annual on-air fundraisers to supplement its University support. The first fundraiser was organized by then-General Manager Ann Rebentisch and lasted for 88.3 hours, with a goal of raising $8,830, nearly doubling the station's funding. The event culminated on Valentine's Day with a free concert of local bands for all who had pledged to donate.

WCBN's transmitter was upgraded to 200 watts in 1987, an FCC action that was delayed for several years after some disgruntled former station volunteers filed an extensive complaint letter which turned out to contain mostly erroneous information. The power increase had been deemed necessary after the FCC began threatening to reassign frequency positions of 10-watt Class D (Educational) stations like WCBN.

In addition to on-air studio productions, WCBN also has a rich history of local concert sponsorship, recently hosting performances by Jad Fair, Sunburned Hand of the Man, Mount Eerie, The Books, and Jandek. They sponsored an outdoor concert featuring bouncy houses called "Bouncevember" with bands Luna Pier, Atomic Sauce, and Joe and the Ruckus.

Currently, WCBN is in the process of installing a new 3,000-watt transmitter. It is expected to be operational at the end of December 2017, at which time the station will switch over to the new transmitter and antenna and utilize an extended broadcast range. Nearly all of the money used to pay for the upgrade came from fundraiser donations raised over the previous years.

Lobby of WCBN

WCBN's programming format is one primarily of

punk and metal
.

In addition to musical specialty shows, WCBN features programming for the public good, including weekly talk shows It's Hot In Here, which covers environmental news, Living Writers, Grey Matters, Civics Party, and Interactive Technologies.[1] Freeform radio show Baby Blue featured an interview with Pulitzer-Prize winning author Michael Chabon.[2]

WCBN also features a sports department. WCBN Sports covers all Michigan athletics, local and national professional teams, and national and international sporting events. WCBN broadcasts Michigan football, basketball, hockey, baseball, softball, volleyball, soccer, field hockey, and lacrosse. The sports department runs a daily sports report at 6pm Monday through Thursday and regularly broadcasts Michigan sporting events on their YouTube channel. WCBN Sports has also helped produce podcasts hosted by student-athletes on the basketball team.

Other information

References

  1. ^ "WCBN-FM Schedule". Retrieved 22 June 2019.
  2. ^ Michael Chabon Interview - WCBN FM Ann Arbor, retrieved 2022-09-22
  3. ^ "CBN History". Retrieved February 16, 2012.
  4. ^ BlackBox Radio

[1]

Sources

External links

  1. ^ "WCBN-FM Website". Retrieved 22 June 2019.