| |
|---|---|
| Broadcast area | Washington, D.C. metropolitan area |
| Frequency | 101.1MHz (HD Radio) |
| Branding | DC101 |
| Programming | |
| Language | English |
| Format | Alternative rock |
| Subchannels | HD2:WTSD simulcast (Sports) |
| Affiliations | |
| Ownership | |
| Owner |
|
| WASH,WBIG-FM,WIHT,WMZQ-FM,WUST | |
| History | |
First air date | February 17, 1949; 76 years ago (1949-02-17) |
Former call signs |
|
Former frequencies | |
Call sign meaning | Washington, D.C. |
| Technical information[2] | |
Licensing authority | FCC |
| Facility ID | 8682 |
| Class | B |
| ERP | |
| HAAT | 232 meters (761 ft) |
Transmitter coordinates | 38°59′59.4″N77°3′25.9″W / 38.999833°N 77.057194°W /38.999833; -77.057194 (WWDC) |
| Links | |
Public license information | |
| Webcast | Listen Live |
| Website | dc101 |
WWDC (101.1MHz) is acommercialFMradio station inRockville, Maryland, nearWashington, D.C. The station is owned byiHeartMedia through licensee iHM Licenses, LLC, and broadcasts analternative rockradio format. WWDC serves as theflagship station for thesyndicated radio showElliot in the Morning and as the localaffiliate forSkratch 'N Sniff.
Thetransmitter is on Brookville Road inSilver Spring, Maryland, at (39°0′0″N77°3′25″W / 39.00000°N 77.05694°W /39.00000; -77.05694).[4] WWDC broadcasts usingHD Radio technology and simulcasts thesports talk andsports betting programming ofWTSD "1190 iHeart Sports DC" on its HD2digital subchannel.[5]
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On October 5, 1945, Cowles Broadcasting Company applied to theFederal Communications Commission (FCC) for aconstruction permit for a new FM station on 97.5 MHz. The FCC granted the permit on June 9, 1946. The permit was modified several times, with the station's frequency changing to 94.5 MHz, then 100.5 MHz, and finally 98.7 MHz. The station was originally given thecall sign WOL-FM, as the FM counterpart toWOL (1260 AM). The FCC granted the station its first license on February 17, 1949.[1]
Cowles Broadcasting sold WOL-AM-FM to the Capital Broadcasting Company on October 3, 1949. At the time, Capital Broadcasting ownedWWDC (1450 AM) andWWDC-FM (101.1 FM). The FCC approved the sale on the condition that WWDC's 250-watt signal on 1450 AM would not be upgraded.[6]
Capital Broadcasting decided to swap the licenses, call signs and facilities of the two AM stations and the two FM stations. WOL-FM's call sign would be changed to WWDC-FM while its frequency would be changed to 101.1 MHz. Simultaneously, WWDC-FM's call sign would be changed to WOL-FM while its frequency would be changed to 98.7 MHz. To prepare for these changes, Capital Broadcasting applied to the FCC for a construction permit on January 26, 1950, to change WOL-FM's frequency to 101.1 MHz. The call signs were swapped on the effective date of the sale, February 20, 1950. The FCC granted Capital Broadcasting a new license for the station, with the new call sign, for operation on the new frequency on August 26, 1952.[1]
Also on February 20, 1950, the call sign swap for the AM stations took place, with the WWDC call sign now on the more powerful 5-kilowatt 1260 AM facility. Capital Broadcasting then sold WOL to Peoples Broadcasting. Unlike the AM stations, the FM stations were near each other and on equal footing at 20 kilowatts of power.[7][1]
In the late 1960s and early 1970s, it simulcasted the programming of itsmiddle of the road (MOR) AM sister station on weekdays, and playedoldies at night and on weekends. Early on,pop-oriented acts includingElton John,Billy Joel,Fleetwood Mac,Hall & Oates andRod Stewart were core artists.
In the mid-1970s, it playedprogressive rock at night for a few months, and then switched full-time to analbum rock music format. Its AM counterpart, WWDC, was the first American radio station to play theBeatles' song "I Want to Hold Your Hand" when it aired in December 1963; this led to the song's planned American release being pushed up by a few weeks, launching Beatlemania in the United States.[8]
WWDC-FM enjoyed success with the rock format in the 1980s. The station was #1 in men (Arbitron) and was quite profitable. One of the premier album rock stations in the country, thedisc jockey staff featuredGreaseman in the morning, Dusty Scott in midday, Steveski in afternoons and Kirk McEwen in the evening. With this lineup and format, WWDC-FM consistently ran in the 6s, dominating men in the nation's 7th largest market. The format was a combination of current rock releases along with rock tracks from the 1960s and 1970s. Other DJs ("Boss Jocks") during the 1980s included Adam "Smash" Smasher, Ernie Kyger (Ernie D'Kaye), Cerphe, Sandy Edwards, Buddy Rizer, Rich Levinson, Tim Shamble, YDB (Young Dave Brown), Sean Donohue (Rusty Brainpan), and Vinnie Brewster.
In the 90s and early aughts, WWDC'splaylist was typically currenthard rock, playing acts likeFoo Fighters andMetallica. During the 1990s, the station began adding moremodern and alternative rock acts includingSmashing Pumpkins andStone Temple Pilots to compete with its chief rival,WHFS-FM. WWDC changed to its current alternative rock format by2005 after WHFS-FM's genre change totropical music asWLZL.
In 2007, the station was nominated byRadio & Records for top alternative station in a top-25 market.[9]
WWDC was among the last independently owned radio stations in the Washington market. In February 1998, parent company Capitol Broadcasting sold WWDC-FM and its AM sister station, WWDC (nowWQOF), for $72 million to Texas-basedChancellor Media, which later was renamed AMFM.[10] AMFM was acquired byClear Channel Communications, which now, as iHeartMedia, owns and operates six radio stations in Washington, D.C.
WWDC's facilities were once located on Connecticut Avenue betweenDupont Circle andFarragut Square indowntown Washington, D.C. The studios later moved toSilver Spring, Maryland, and are now located at 1801 Rockville Pike inRockville, Maryland. By2011, WWDC addedAerosmith,Led Zeppelin,Black Sabbath,Jimi Hendrix andPink Floyd back on the playlist, although they were played sparingly and the station was still not consideredactive rock. Within a few years, those artists were dropped from the playlist.
WWDC advanced the careers of several famous morning radio personalities, sometimes referred to as "shock jocks."Howard Stern was the morningdrive time host from March 1981 to June 1982. When Stern left the station on June 29, 1982, it was rumored that he was fired because of his on-air prank of pretending to callAir Florida airlines to book a flight to the 14th Street Bridge. That was one day after 78 people died, whenAir Florida Flight 90 crashed into thePotomac River at the bridge.[11] But nearly six months elapsed between the crash ofAir Florida 90 which occurred on January 13, 1982, and Stern's firing in late June. It is more likely[12] that Stern was released because he had already signed a contract withWNBC inNew York City before his WWDC-FM contract ended. It is at WWDC-FM that Stern was first paired with news anchorRobin Quivers. WWDC-FM is featured prominently in Stern's 1997bio-picPrivate Parts.
Stern was replaced byDoug Tracht, better known as theGreaseman, who spent over ten years at the station, from August 2, 1982, to January 22, 1993, and returned to the station in April 2008. Tracht was let go again in October 2008 so the station could focus solely on music on weekends without his comedy bits.
WWDC's current morning program isElliot In the Morning, led byElliot Segal. Since beginning his tenure at WWDC in 1999, Segal has been suspended and fined on several occasions for the show's sometimes controversial content; in October 2003, Clear Channel was fined $55,000 for the broadcast of reportedly indecent material during two episodes of the program in May 2002. In the first of the two broadcasts on May 7, 2002, a pair of sixteen-year-old students ofBishop Denis J. O'Connell High School had phoned the show to participate in a contest, whose winners would receive a chance to becomecage dancers at an upcomingKid Rock concert. The two students—who assumed false names and claimed to be 18—discussed allegations of sexual activity at the school, goaded on by host Segal, including "graphic and explicit references to the sexual activities of the school's students and administrators" (such as oral sex). The next day, after learning that the two students had been suspended for the remarks, Segal criticized the school and its staff on-air, and proceeded to take further calls from O'Connell students that contained similar content.[13][14][15][16]
WWDC-HD2 originally aired anactive rock format known as "104.7 Rock Nation". The programming was simulcast onFM translator W284CQ at 104.7 FM. The translator was originally located inChevy Chase, Maryland,[17] and later moved toArlington, Virginia.[18]

From January 9, 2019 to January 5, 2023, WWDC-FM's HD2 digital subchannel carried atalk radio format known as "104.7 Wonk FM." It aired populariHeartRadiopodcasts includingHowStuffWorks along with theReaction Zone, an afternoon show carrying highlights of shows from other iHeartMedia talk stations. Wonk-FM also airedSacramento-basedArmstrong & Getty as well as some local traffic and weather reports. In early 2022, WWDC-HD2/W284CQ dropped podcasts as part of iHeart's nationwide phaseout of the over-the-air format. It added twoprogressive talk shows,Stephanie Miller andThom Hartmann, on weekdays. Also heard wereJoe Pags,Michael Medved and "Coast to Coast AM withGeorge Noory." On weekends, the subchannel and translator carried the co-ownedBlack Information Network (BIN), which also airs onsister stationWUST (1120 AM).
WWDC-HD2 and W284CQ temporarily became the FM home of theWashington Capitals from January 23, 2017, through the end of the2016–17 season. The midseason deal came about aftersports radio stationWJFK-FM106.7 FM elected not to renew its deal with the Capitals before the 2016–17 season, limiting the team's local broadcasts toWFED (1500 AM) and Internet streaming. TheWashington Wizards share WFED as their home station and take precedence in conflicts; as a result, Capitals games were left without a home radio broadcast when both teams were playing, leading to complaints from fans and the media. WWDC-HD2 and W284CQ aired all Capitals games for the remainder of the2016–17 season. At the time the deal was struck, the active rock format was also inaugurated.[19] WWDC-HD2 ceased broadcasting the Capitals at the beginning of the 2017–18 season, as games returned to WJFK-FM.[20]
The two stations also addedBaltimore Ravens coverage for the2017 season, replacingWBIG-FM (100.3 FM) as the team's Washington outlet.[21] Ravens coverage later moved toWSBN (630 AM).[22]
On January 5, 2023, WWDC-HD2 and W284CQ changed their format to asimulcast ofWTSD (1190 AM) inLeesburg, Virginia.[23] The stations are known as "iHeart Sports DC."
The schedule features programming fromFox Sports Radio on weekdays, switching tosports betting shows at night. The Fox Sports programs includeThe Dan Patrick Show,The Herd with Colin Cowherd andThe Doug Gottlieb Show. In the evening, programs fromVegas Stats & Information Network orVSiN are heard.[23]
On July 10, 2023, W284CQ changed its programming source to the HD2 channel of co-ownedWMZQ-FM (98.7), which launched a conservative talk format branded as "Freedom 104.7". WWDC-HD2 continues to simulcast WTSD.[24]