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WYPR

Coordinates:39°19′53″N76°39′28″W / 39.33139°N 76.65778°W /39.33139; -76.65778
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
(Redirected fromWYPF)
Public radio station in Baltimore, Maryland
This article is about the Baltimore radio station. For the Danville, Virginia that previously had these call letters from 1959-1981, seeWMPW.

WYPR
Broadcast areaBaltimore, Maryland
Frequency88.1MHz (HD Radio)
Branding88.1 WYPR
Programming
LanguageEnglish
FormatPublic radio (News/Talk/Jazz)
SubchannelsHD2:BBC World Service
HD3:Classical
Ownership
OwnerBaltimore Public Media
WTMD
History
First air date
1979 (46 years ago) (1979) (originallycarrier current 1945–1979) (as WJHU)
Former call signs
WJHU (1979–2002)
Call sign meaning
We're Your Public Radio
Technical information
Facility ID65753
ClassB1
ERP15,500watts
HAAT129.6 meters
Repeaters88.1 WYPF (Frederick)
106.9 WYPO (Ocean City)
Links
WebcastListen Live
Listen Live (HD2)
Listen Live (HD3)
Websitewypr.org

WYPR (88.1FM) is apublic radio station serving theBaltimore, Maryland metropolitan area. Its studio is in theCharles Village neighborhood of northern Baltimore, while its transmitter is inPark Heights. The station issimulcast in theFrederick andHagerstown area on WYPF (88.1 FM) and in theOcean City area on WYPO (106.9 FM).

WYPR is Baltimore's flagshipNational Public Radio member station, carrying content from NPR,American Public Media (the distribution arm ofMinnesota Public Radio),Public Radio Exchange and theBBC World Service (on HD2). WYPR also providesClassical 24 on its HD3 subchannel. In addition, WYPR produces several of its own shows, including the public affairs-focused programs Midday and On The Record, the award-winning, sonic-storytelling series Out of the Blocks as well as local news coverage and special newsroom series.

Starting in 2015, theBaltimore Magazine Reader's Poll has named WYPR the Best Radio Station in Baltimore three years in a row. The station also won Best Radio Show Host, and Best News Website in 2017.

History

[edit]
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The station signed on in 1979, asWJHU, a 10-watt student-run station owned byJohns Hopkins University. It took over from acarrier current station that had operated under the same calls on AM 830 since 1945. Originally a typical freeformcollege radio station, it boosted its power to 25,000 watts in 1985, allowing it at least secondary coverage of the entire Baltimore/Washington corridor. Soon after the power increase, Johns Hopkins converted the station into a full-time professional operation, allowing it to become Baltimore's NPR member station.[1] It originally aired a mix ofclassical music and NPR programming, but on June 23, 1995, switched to a primarily news/talk format.

Johns Hopkins put the station up for sale in 2000, due to the expense of maintaining it, as well as a change in focus that no longer included radio.[1][2] In 2002, Your Public Radio Corp., a community group, bought the station and changed its calls to WYPR. In 2004, Your Public Radio Corp. bought religious broadcaster WJTM in Frederick, which became a relay of WYPR with the call letters of WYPF. WYPF's signal also covers Hagerstown. On July 30, 2007, Your Public Radio Corp. boughtOcean City, Maryland alternative rock station 106.9 WRXS, which began simulcasting WYPR starting September 10, 2007. That station was renamed WYPO on October 3, 2007. The three stations provide at least distant-grade coverage to almost two-thirds of Maryland.

For much of the time from the late 1990s to 2008, it operated at only 10,000 watts. While this provided a decent signal to Baltimore itself and most of its close-in suburbs, many of Baltimore's outer suburbs, includingAnnapolis, only got a grade B signal. In 2008, it increased its power to 15,500 watts, giving it a coverage area roughly comparable to the other major Baltimore stations. Two years earlier,University of Maryland student stationWMUC inCollege Park, which at the time also broadcast at88.1MHz, raised concerns aboutco-channel interference due to its class D license that does not protect it from interference, in contrast to WYPR's class A license.[3][4]

In May 2021, WYPR announced plans to acquireTowson-basedWTMD, anadult album alternative station owned byTowson University. The $3 million deal is contingent onFederal Communications Commission approval.[5] WTMD will retain its format and programming. The sale was closed on November 10, 2021, officially making WTMD a sister station to WYPR.[6]

In 2024, the stations' parent changed its name to Baltimore Public Media and introduced new sonic identities for both WYPR and WTMD.[7]

Repeaters

[edit]
Call signFrequency
(MHz)
City of licenseERP
W
ClassFCCFirst airdateFormer callsigns
WYPF88.1Frederick, Maryland1,000B1FCC (WYPF)May 1991WFXM (1984–1986)
WJTM (1986–2004)
WYPO106.9Ocean City, Maryland4,500AFCC (WYPO)1994WLGE (1993)
WRXS (1993–2007)

Programs

[edit]
  • "A Blue View," hosted byNational Aquarium (Baltimore) CEO John Racanelli
  • "All Things Considered," hosted byAudie Cornish,Ari Shapiro,Mary Louise Kelly, andAilsa Chang
  • "Cellar Notes" with Al Spoler and Hugh Sisson
  • "ClearPath - Your Roadmap to Health & Wealth" with Greg Tucker
  • Election Coverage
  • "Foreman and Wolf on Food and Wine" with Tony Foreman and Cindy Wolf
  • "Fresh Air" withTerry Gross
  • "Future City" with Wes Moore
  • "Gil Sandler's Baltimore Stories"
  • "Here and Now" with Robin Young and Jeremy Hobson
  • "Humanities Connection" with Dr. Phoebe Stein
  • "In theBromo" with Tom Hall
  • "Inspiring Moments," in partnership withKennedy Krieger Institute
  • "Midday" with Tom Hall, formerly hosted byDan Rodricks
  • "More Than Words," hosted by Jonna McKone and Jamyla Krempel
  • "Morning Edition" hosted bySteve Inskeep,Rachel Martin,Noel King, and local host Nathan Sterner
  • "On Being with Krista Tippet"
  • "On Point" withMeghna Chakrabarti
  • "On the Record" with Sheilah Kast
  • "Out of the Blocks" with Aaron Henkin and Wendel Patrick
  • "Radio Kitchen" with Al Spoler and Jerry Pelligrino
  • "Sports at Large" with Milton Kent
  • "The Checkup: How Health Care Is Changing In Maryland" with Sheilah Kast
  • "The Environment in Focus" with Tom Felton
  • "The First Five Years" withLinnea Anderson[8]
  • "The Morning Economic Report" with Anirban Basu
  • "The Nature of Things" with W. Brooks Paternotte
  • "The New Yorker Radio Hour" withDavid Remnick
  • "The Signal," hosted by Aaron Henkin, Lisa Morgan, and Andy Bienstock (currently on hiatus)
  • "The Weekly Reader," hosted by Lisa Morgan and Marion Winik
  • "University of Maryland Medical Center Commentaries"
  • "What Are You Reading?" with Tom Hall
  • "Why Baltimore" with Shannon C. Landwehr
  • "Your Maryland" with Ric Cottom
  • "Your Retirement" with Anirban Basu[9]

Newsroom Series

[edit]
  • "On Pills and Needles: Maryland's Opioid Crisis" with Rachel Baye (2017)
  • "Eight and Out: Transgender in the Second Grade" with Mary Rose Madden (2017)
  • "Chesapeake Bay Collaborative" (2015-7)
  • "On The Watch: Fixing the Fractured Relationship Between Baltimore's Police and Its Communities," by Mary Rose Madden (2015-6)
  • "Up With Neighborhoods: A Southwest Baltimore Partnership" with Frasier Smith (2015-6)
  • "Rockets' Red Glare: the War, the Song, and their Legacies" (2013-4)
  • "Deconstructing Vacants" with P. Kenneth Burns (2014)
  • "Sparrows Point: The Plan, The Cleanup, and The Promise" with Paul Lee (2015)
  • "Common Core: A Work in Progress" with Gwendolyn Glenn (2014)

Events

[edit]

WYPR is a media sponsor of the localPatterson Park Concert Series throughout the summer months.[10] In addition, the radio station is also a media partner ofStevenson University's Baltimore Speakers Series at theMeyerhoff Symphony Hall in Baltimore.[11]

Awards

[edit]
  • In 2014, WYPR's production The Lines Between Us earned a DuPont-Columbia Award for outstanding journalism, one of the highest awards in American journalism.
  • WYPR was honored by the Chesapeake Associated Press in 2016 for a series on pedestrian safety inOcean City, as well as reporting on the April 2015 rioting in Baltimore, and a commentary entitled “A Shattered City and a Search for Justice.”
  • Also in 2016, the Chesapeake Associated Press and the Public Radio News Directors, Inc. selected On the Watch, a year-long series by reporter Mary Rose Madden on police reform in Baltimore after the death of Freddie Gray, for an award of excellence.[12]
  • WYPR's series Out of the Blocks was honored with a 2016 regionalEdward R. Murrow Award for outstanding documentary. Out of the Blocks brings real stories of struggle, survival, and celebration in Baltimore City to listeners in a format that includes an original musical score for each episode by Baker-award-winning composer Wendel Patrick. Out of the Blocks was also named “Best Radio Series” by Baltimore's City Paper in 2016.[13]
  • Best of Baltimore Readers' Poll named WYPR "Best Radio Station" in 2017, in addition to naming WYPR's Tom Hall "Best Radio Show Host" (runners up being Nathan Sterner and Sheilah Kast, also of WYPR) and naming wypr.org "Best Website (News)." The radio station was also runner-up for both "Best Instagram Account" and "Best Twitter Account."[14]

References

[edit]
  1. ^abRienzi, Greg (May 5, 2003)."On the Air Again: Radio station WJHU is reborn as a student-run Internet radio offering".The Gazette. Johns Hopkins University.Archived from the original on March 19, 2004. RetrievedMay 3, 2019.
  2. ^Folkenflik, David (July 14, 2001)."Steiner group moves closer to owning WJHU".Baltimore Sun. Archived fromthe original on July 24, 2001. RetrievedMay 3, 2019.
  3. ^Madigan, Nick (February 24, 2006)."UM radio station threatened".Baltimore Sun. Archived fromthe original on March 3, 2006. RetrievedMay 3, 2019.
  4. ^Fisher, Marc (March 3, 2006)."College Station's Faint Voice Could Soon Be Drowned Out".The Washington Post. RetrievedMay 3, 2019.
  5. ^"WYPR To Acquire WTMD".WYPR. May 28, 2021. RetrievedMay 28, 2021.
  6. ^"WYPR Acquisition of WTMD Finalized on Public Radio Music Day".WYPR. November 10, 2021. RetrievedNovember 10, 2021.
  7. ^"Two stations combine as Baltimore Public Media to serve the city and beyond".WYPR. RetrievedFebruary 26, 2024.
  8. ^"Archive recordings, The First Five Years".wypr.org. RetrievedJune 6, 2024.
  9. ^"Programs".wypr.org. RetrievedJuly 14, 2017.
  10. ^"Concerts in Patterson Park".wypr.org. RetrievedJuly 14, 2017.
  11. ^"Home".Baltimore Speakers Series. RetrievedJuly 14, 2017.
  12. ^"2016 Chesapeake Associated Press Broadcasters Association Contest Winners"(PDF). Archived from the original on October 26, 2016. RetrievedJuly 14, 2017.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link)
  13. ^"RTDNA - Radio Television Digital News Association".www.rtdna.org. RetrievedJuly 14, 2017.
  14. ^"Best of Baltimore Readers' Poll Results 2017".Baltimore magazine. August 3, 2017. RetrievedAugust 3, 2017.

External links

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39°19′53″N76°39′28″W / 39.33139°N 76.65778°W /39.33139; -76.65778

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