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WZRH

Coordinates:29°57′11″N90°43′26″W / 29.953°N 90.724°W /29.953; -90.724
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Alternative rock radio station in LaPlace, Louisiana, United States
For the Picayune, Mississippi radio station that held the call sign WZRH at 106.1 FM from 2015 to 2017, seeWRKN (FM).

WZRH
Broadcast areaNew Orleans metropolitan area
Frequency92.3MHz (HD Radio) (HD not yet in operation)
BrandingAlt 92-3
Programming
FormatAlternative Rock
SubchannelsHD2:Variety Hits (not yet operational)
Ownership
Owner
KKND,KMEZ,WRKN
History
First air date
January 10, 1966; 59 years ago (1966-01-10) (as WCKW)
Former call signs
WCKW-FM (1966–2004)
WDVW (2004–2010)
WRKN (2010–2017)
Call sign meaning
ZepHyR (former branding of the currentWRKN)
Technical information[1]
Licensing authority
FCC
Facility ID117
ClassC1
ERP100,000watts
HAAT130 meters (430 ft)
Links
Public license information
WebcastListen live
Websitealt923.com

WZRH (92.3FM) is acommercialradio stationlicensed toLaPlace, Louisiana, and serving the greaterNew Orleans metropolitan area. It airs analternative rockradio format and is owned byCumulus Media. In morningdrive time, it carriesThe Woody Show,syndicated fromKYSRLos Angeles. The studios are on the campus ofDelgado Community College inNew Orleans.

WZRH is aClass C1 station. It has aneffective radiated power of 100,000watts, the maximum for most stations. The maintransmitter is on East Airline Highway (U.S. Route 61) in LaPlace.[2] WZRH is authorized to broadcast usingHD Radio technology. There are plans to air avariety hits format on its HD2subchannel.

History

[edit]

1966-2004: WCKW

[edit]

The stationsigned on the air on January 10, 1966; 59 years ago (1966-01-10).[3] The originalcall sign was WCKW. It was a stand-alone FM station, not attached to an AM or TV station. In its early years, it was anaffiliate of theABC Information Network.

During the first 29 years of its existence, it tried several formats includingcountry,classic rock,active rock,all-1980s hits andadult Top 40. There were two attempts atadult contemporary music, including a rebrand from "The Point" to "Lite 92.3" on November 4, 2003.[4]

2004-2007: Diva WDVW

[edit]

On November 18, 2004, WCKW unveiled the "Diva" format and changed its call letters to WDVW. The new format consisted of mostlyrhythmic pop, classicDisco andDance music from the 1970s, 1980s, and 1990s. From 2005 to 2007, WDVW was also a reporter to theBillboard magazineDance/Mix Show Airplay panel.

When it debuted with the format, its slogan was "Music For The Diva In You". "Diva" was a reference to the female audience it targeted and the high number of female artists on itsplaylist, but despite the name and slogan, it attracted some male listeners as well. In September 2005, WDVW shortly rebranded its slogan to "New Orleans' New #1 Feel Good Station!” in an attempt to bring music and normality back to the area followingHurricane Katrina. WDVW was also the first radio station in the market to resume playing music after emergency information programming had ended.

WDVW was one of two "Divas" inLouisiana along with itssister station in Baton Rouge, WCDV-FM, which returned to an adult contemporary sound on September 18, 2006, therefore making WDVW the last station with a "Diva" format operating within the state.

former "Mix 92.3" logo

2007-2010: Adult top 40

[edit]

On December 20, 2007, WDVW switched directions toadult top 40 and rebranded as "Mix 92.3." The station dropped most of the Dance music on its playlist in favor of Hot AC music, and also featured recurrents from the 1980s and 1990s along with its modern-leaning playlist. However, the station struggled to find an audience, alike numerous other Hot AC stations that had once attempted to reach into the New Orleans radio market.

2010-2014: Rock

[edit]

On July 23, 2010, at 2:50 p.m., after playing "Need You Now" byLady Antebellum, the station beganstunting by playingMardi Gras-themed music. At 4:00 p.m., the station became "Rock 92-3," using the slogan "New Orleans' Rock Station" and switched its call sign to WRKN. The first song on "Rock 92-3" was "Check My Brain" byAlice in Chains. The move to a rock format was driven by the recent format change ofKOBW-FM, which had aired a similar format.[5][6] However, like its previous format as WDVW, it struggled in the ratings, given New Orleans' negative history with rock formats.

2014-2016: Country

[edit]

On January 3, 2014, at 9 a.m., after playing "No Sleep till Brooklyn" byThe Beastie Boys, WRKN began stunting a "Wheel of Formats" as a tease to its audience. On January 6 at around 9:23 AM, a new country format branded "Nash FM 92-3" was unveiled.[7] The first song on "Nash" was "Radio" byDarius Rucker.

On April 21, 2016, WRKN altered its format, expanding its presence to target the adjacent Baton Rouge market while tweaking its format towards a mix of 1990s and current country songs. The new shift came with a positioning change to “The Gulf South’s Country Giant”. With the change,Scott Innes joined the station to host middays. Innes had spent fifteen years at 101.5WYNK in Baton Rouge prior to his exit in 2011, and was a cartoon voice actor known for portraying the voices of manyHanna Barbera characters, includingNorville "Shaggy" Rogers,Scooby-Doo andScrappy-Doo.[8]

2017-present: Alternative

[edit]

On June 19, 2017, at noon, WRKN swapped formats and call signs with 106.1WZRH. WRKN flipped toalternative rock as "Alt 92-3". Both stations inherited the other’s format and call letters during the switch.[9]

During the impact ofHurricane Ida in August 2021, WZRH's main tower inVacherie, shared withKVDU, toppled when it was hit by powerful winds.[10] The old tower, which was 1,946 feet (596 meters) tall, has been substit with a new transmitter atop an oldAT&T tower in LaPlace that stands at 427 feet (130 meters) inheight above average terrain (HAAT). While it is still powered at 100,000 watts, the shorter tower restricts WZRH's signal toward Baton Rouge, and the station now mostly covers theNew Orleans metropolitan area.

References

[edit]
  1. ^"Facility Technical Data for WZRH".Licensing and Management System.Federal Communications Commission.
  2. ^Radio-Locator.com/WZRH
  3. ^Broadcasting Yearbook 1977 page C-90. Retrieved Sept. 11, 2024.
  4. ^"Formats You'll Flip Over"(PDF). The Industry's Newspaper. November 7, 2003. p. 22.
  5. ^"New Orleans has an alternative rocker again – Hot AC "Mix" is now "Rock 92.3"".Radio-Info.com. July 23, 2010. Archived fromthe original on August 1, 2010. RetrievedJuly 24, 2010.
  6. ^New Orleans to Rock Again
  7. ^Cumulus Stunting In New Orleans from Radio Insight (January 3, 2014)
  8. ^WRKN Expands Focus To Baton Rouge; Moves To Gold Based Country
  9. ^Cumulus Moves Alternative & Country in New Orleans from Radio Insight (June 19, 2017)
  10. ^"WZRH/KVDU Tower Destroyed By Hurricane Ida".RadioInsight. August 31, 2021. RetrievedSeptember 1, 2021.

External links

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29°57′11″N90°43′26″W / 29.953°N 90.724°W /29.953; -90.724

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