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WAMU

Coordinates:38°56′10″N77°05′31″W / 38.936°N 77.092°W /38.936; -77.092
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Public radio station in Washington, D.C.
This article is about the radio station. For the defunct bank, seeWashington Mutual.

WAMU
WAMU 88.5FM logo
Broadcast areaWashington metropolitan area
Frequency88.5MHz (HD Radio)
BrandingWAMU 88.5
Programming
FormatPublic News–Talk
SubchannelsHD2: Bluegrass Country (BluegrassAmericana)
AffiliationsNational Public Radio
Ownership
Owner
History
FoundedJuly 28, 1951; 73 years ago (1951-07-28) (carrier current)
First air date
October 23, 1961; 63 years ago (1961-10-23) (FM)
Former call signs
WAMU-FM (1961–1981)[1]
Call sign meaning
AMerican University
Technical information[2]
Licensing authority
FCC
Facility ID65399
ClassB
ERP47,000watts
HAAT156 meters (512 ft)
Transmitter coordinates
38°56′10.2″N77°5′33″W / 38.936167°N 77.09250°W /38.936167; -77.09250
Links
Public license information
WebcastListen live
Websitewww.wamu.org

WAMU (88.5 FM) is apublicnewstalk station that services the greaterWashington, DC metropolitan area. It is owned byAmerican University, and its studios are located near the campus in northwest Washington. WAMU has been the primaryNational Public Radio member station for Washington since 2007.

History

[edit]

WAMU began as an AMcarrier-current student radio station, signing on July 28, 1951, on1200kHz,[3] before shifting to590kHz in March 1952[4] and610kHz in November 1952.[5] Although carrier-current stations are not granted a license or call sign by the FCC, it used "WAMU" as a familiar form of identification.[6] The station aired a wide range of student-produced programming including music, news, sports, radio dramas, and debates. The station was heralded as a rebirth of the university's prior radio station, WAMC, which operated on590kHz for about two years starting on January 15, 1947,[3][7] broadcasting with a 50-watt transmitter as part of a plan to offer a full range of radio and television courses at American University.[8][9] WAMC's operations were sporadic and the station suffered interference from a 50,000-watt station broadcasting from Mexico on the same frequency,[10][11] but it finally went off the air after station equipment was stolen in 1950.[12]

Throughout the late 1950s, students and faculty involved with WAMU-AM pushed to create an FM station that could reach beyond campus and serve Washington, D.C., as a whole.[13] In late 1960, the university received a non-commercial FM broadcasting license, and WAMU made its first FM broadcast on October 23, 1961, on88.5MHz using a 4,000-watt second-hand transmitter acquired fromWGBH in Boston.[14][15][16] Although it was not strictly necessary as the AM carrier-current station's call sign was not official, the FM station took the suffixed call sign "WAMU-FM" to differentiate itself. The station dropped the -FM suffix in 1981.[1]

WAMU-FM station was established as an "education station" operated by the university, not as a student-run station.[17] Despite this about 75 AU students, many of whom also worked at the carrier-current station, produced local programming for WAMU-FM.[18][19] In its first year of operation, WAMU simulcast the same programming, which included educational programs, dramas, and classical music, on AM and FM for three hours each evening.[20]

From its inception as a student-run station, WAMU provided public affairs and educational programming. With the launch of its FM service in 1961, WAMU joined the nascentNational Educational Radio Network, a predecessor to NPR. In 1971, the station was a founding member ofNational Public Radio.[15][16]

In 1967, WAMU-FM began programming bluegrass music which, in its heyday on the main channel, included theLee Michael Demsey Show and theRay Davis Show and weekends includedStained Glass Bluegrass andWest Virginia Public Radio'sMountain Stage. The station hosted an annual bluegrass concert atFairfax High School, as well as the yearly "Pickin' in the Glen" concert, featuring performers such asAlison Krauss, Tony Rice, the Gibson Brothers, the Lewis Family, Hot Rize, and Red Knuckles and the Trailblazers.[16][21] However, starting in the late 1990s, the station began paring back its on-air bluegrass programming in favor of news/talk programming.[16] In summer 2001, the station fully transitioned its weekday programming to all news and public affairs from various providers includingNPR,PRI,APM and theBBC World Service,[15] and in September 2007 the station removed the last of its bluegrass programming from its main channel, shifting it all to the HD2 subchannel.[22]

On May 7, 2004, WAMU-FM began digital broadcasting using theHD Radio standard and launched the Americana-music stationBluegrass Country on its HD2 subchannel.[23] The station also operated for several years an HD3 service, WAMU-3, broadcasting a mix of talk and music programming, including simulcast programming fromTowson University'sWTMD.[22][24][25]

Also in 2004, the prominent Washington journalist Ellen Wadley Roper left WAMU a $250,000bequest, the largest gift in the station's history.[26]

When fellow public radio stationWETA returned to an all-classical music format in 2007, WAMU becameWashington, D.C.'s only full-time public news station, ending two years of competition between the stations for D.C.'s NPR news audience.[27][28]

In December 2015, WAMU executives announced that long-time program hostDiane Rehm, who began working at WAMU in 1973, would be stepping down from her show following the 2016 Presidential election, representing a major shake-up in WAMU's programming lineup. Rehm, then 79, stated that she wanted a younger voice to take her place at WAMU. Also in 2015,Kojo Nnamdi lost the local public affairs programThe Kojo Nnamdi Show's second hour of broadcasting, showing a trend for easier-to-access media for younger consumers.[29] In 2021, Nnamdi retired his daily program although he continued to host the weekly "The Politics Hour" program with analyst Tom Sherwood.[30]

In February 2018, it was announced that WAMU,KPCC andWNYC had bought the archives ofGothamist, and WAMU would resume the publication of local Washington news siteDCist in Spring 2018.[31] WAMU relaunchedDCist on June 11, 2018.[32] WAMU shut downDCist and laid off all its journalists on February 23, 2024. Initially, WAMU added aredirect from theDCist website to the WAMU homepage which blocked access to allDCist articles.[33][34][35] However, following public criticism, WAMU restored access to theDCist website and stated they will continue to make it "available to the public for at least a year as it seeks a long-term home for the archive".[35]

Technical facilities

[edit]

In 2013, WAMU moved to a new studio facility at 4401 Connecticut Ave. NW in theForest Hills/Van Ness neighborhood of Washington, D.C.[36] The facility was constructed with three broadcast studios, two news studios with dedicated control rooms, multiple editing suites, and a 90-seatblack box theater capable of supporting broadcasts before a live studio audience.[37] In total the five-floor WAMU media center supports 21 broadcast and production studios and control rooms and a technical core, as well as 12 conference rooms and community spaces.[38] The IP-based studio infrastructure at the facility helped ensure WAMU staff could work remotely throughout theCOVID-19 pandemic.[39]

In October 2019, the station launched a major tower renovation and antenna replacement project for its tower on the American University campus. The improvents were designed to improve reception in Northern Virginia and parts of Maryland. During the project, WAMU broadcast from an auxiliary site in Arlington, Virginia.[40] The WAMU antenna also servesWTOP,WPFW, andWETA; the tower also hosts auxiliary antennas forWPGC andWMMJ.[41]

Prior to the station's move to Connecticut Avenue, WAMU operated for about two decades from two floors of an office building inTenleytown near the AU campus that at one point housed theEast German embassy.[42] Before that, the station was housed on the AU campus next to its tower.[43]

Programming

[edit]

WAMU's main channel carries content fromNPR,American Public Media,Public Radio International, andPublic Radio Exchange. The station's weekday schedule is largely made up of NPR staplesMorning Edition,All Things Considered,Here and Now,The Takeaway, andFresh Air. As of April 2021[update], WAMU produces one daily program,1A, which NPR distributes nationally.[44] The station also airsThis American Life. A relay of theBBC World Service is heard overnight and in the 9 a.m. slot on weekdays.

WAMU breaks from its general all-news and talk schedule only on weekend nights, which it devotes to entertainment programming; Sunday nights are given toThe Big Broadcast, which originated in 1964 asRecollections. This program, which airs for four hours, features rebroadcasts of drama, comedy, and variety shows from the "golden age of radio", includingThe Jack Benny Show,Dragnet,Gunsmoke,The Great Gildersleeve,Lux Radio Theater, andPhilco Radio Time withBing Crosby.Ed Walker, himself a storied Washington broadcaster, served as the program's host from 1990 to 2015. On Saturdays, the station broadcastsHot Jazz Saturday Night, which features popular music from theswing era and debuted in 1980. The show, which became a Saturday night staple with a loyal audience over the years, was first cancelled in 2018. Amid listener protests, WAMU management stated at that time that music was increasingly becoming out of place on the station's schedule, and cited listener surveys showing a desire for more news programming on weekends; after this change, a delayed broadcast ofLive from Here was the only remaining music program on WAMU's schedule.[45] After the cancellation ofLive From Here opened up two hours in the Saturday night schedule, WAMU returnedHot Jazz Saturday Night in September 2020.[46]

Bluegrass Country

[edit]

WAMU's HD2 subchannel broadcastsbluegrass music under the brandingBluegrass Country. Bluegrass has a long history on WAMU, which included regular bluegrass programming on its main channel from 1967 to 2007.[47][48] In 2001, WAMU launched Bluegrass Country as an internet stream, and in 2007 it launched Bluegrass Country on WAMU-HD2 as an all-bluegrassHD Radio digital subchannel.[48]

In July 2016, WAMU announced it would shut down Bluegrass Country for financial reasons that December 31, unless it could find a buyer for the station and access to its HD2 channel.[49] At the time, WAMU was losing $250,000 per year on the station. Listeners created the nonprofit Bluegrass Country Foundation, and after an extension of negotiations, the foundation took over operations in January 2017. WAMU included access to its HD2 subchannel for at least two years.[50][51]

Bluegrass Country also aired on FM via independently owned translator W288BS (105.5MHz) fromReston, Virginia, until June 2017, when the owner elected not to renew his contract with the channel and replaced it withRadio Sputnik.[52]

Bluegrass Country Radio now airs on WAMU's HD2 subchannel and online, as well as via iOS and Android apps. Programming currently includesStained Glass Bluegrass, the Chris Teskey Show and theDick Spottswood Show.

Former repeaters

[edit]

From summer 2010 to June 2021, WAMU operated a 50,000-wattClass BEastern Shore relay service onWRAU88.3MHz licensed toOcean City, Maryland, with its transmission facilities inWhaleyville. WRAU carried local content, such as news, traffic, and weather, along with simulcasts of WAMU's main channel programming.[53] By 2017, WRAU was considered the primary NPR news source for listeners in central Delmarva.[54]

Citing a desire to focus on its core Washington-market, WAMU in 2020 began seeking to sell off WRAU/88.3; according to the station, WRAU makes up about 2 percent of WAMU's total weekly listenership.[55] In February 2020, WAMU reached an agreement withDelaware Public Media for the sale of WRAU;[56] however, the broadcasters unwound the deal in October 2020, citing economic changes due to the COVID-19 pandemic.[55]

In March 2021, WAMU announced the sale of the station to Atlantic Gateway Communications, owner ofTakoma Park, Maryland-basedWGTS.[57] WGTS plans to use WGTS as a repeater service for its contemporary Christian programming.[58] The station handover happened on June 24, 2021, with the station being reassigned as WGBZ.[59]

From 2014 to 2017, WAMU operated a second repeater, the 8,000-wattClass B1 WYAU on89.5MHz licensed toSpotsylvania Courthouse, Virginia, serving theFredericksburg area. The station was sold in December 2017 to theEducational Media Foundation, which relaunched it asWLJV.[60]

WVAU

[edit]

The student-run WAMU carrier-current station continued operating on AM and in 1979 attempted to convert to a licensed FM station.[61] To prepare for the move, the station rebranded asWVAU, "The Voice of American University." WVAU began testing operation on101.7MHz in 1985, using a series of experimental low-power FM transmitters designed to limit reception to residence halls.[62] While these plans were abandoned, it eventually started operation oncable FM, also on 101.7 and branded "Eagle 102", in 1988.[63] WVAU shut down in 1997, resurfacing as an internet-only station in 2001.[6][64][65]

WVAU is completely student run and is part of American University's Student Media Board.[66] The station operates from studios in the Mary Graydon Center on the AU campus with about 100 student DJs.[67] In 2014–15, the station produced a series of live, in-studio compilation albums, "Live in the Hive," featuring local and touring artists.[68] In 2014, WVAU was named best student-run, internet-only station byCMJ.[69]

References

[edit]
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  2. ^"Facility Technical Data for".Licensing and Management System.Federal Communications Commission.
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  59. ^@wgts919 (June 24, 2021)."We're just moments away from launching 88.3-FM in Ocean City, and more hope on the Eastern Shore! Help us count down to when we flip the switch. Watch the live event starting at 5:45pm here: #CrankUptheJoy #CrankUptheJoyontheEasternShore #WGBZ" (Tweet) – viaTwitter.
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