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WSFZ

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(Redirected fromW251DB)

Radio station in Jackson, Mississippi
WSFZ
Broadcast areaJackson, Mississippi
Frequency930kHz
BrandingJackson's BIN 98.1
Programming
FormatBlack-oriented news
AffiliationsBlack Information Network
Ownership
Owner
WJDX,WJDX-FM,WSTZ-FM,WMSI-FM,WHLH
History
First air date
1938
Former call signs
WSLI (1938–2003)[1]
Former frequencies
1420 kHz (1938–1941)
1450 kHz (1941–1946)[2]
Technical information[3]
Licensing authority
FCC
Facility ID62049
ClassD
Power3,700watts day
60 watts night
Transmitter coordinates
32°23′42″N90°09′14″W / 32.39500°N 90.15389°W /32.39500; -90.15389
Translator(s)98.1 W251DB (Jackson)
Links
Public license information
WebcastListen live (viaiHeartRadio)
Websitejackson.binnews.com

WSFZ (930AM) is aradio station licensed to serveJackson, Mississippi. The station is owned byiHeartMedia.[4] As of December 1, 2020, WSFZ is broadcasting an African-American orientedall-news format.[5]

History

[edit]

WSLI signed on in September 1938, becoming Jackson's second radio station. It was owned by, and named for, the Standard Life Insurance Company. It began broadcasting from studios located in the Robert E. Lee Hotel. The transmitter was located on High Street, near the Pearl River. WSLI was affiliated with NBC's Blue Network. L.M. Sepaugh was named the first manager. WSLI had the distinction of employing Mississippi's first female announcers, Nancy Chambers and Virginia Metz.The station was originally located at 1420 kHz, moving to 1450 kHz in 1941 uponNARBA reallocation and then to 930 kHz in 1946.

WSLI expanded into television in 1954 when it started WSLI-TV channel 12. The station was merged withWJTV, then on channel 25, the next year, and the two stations merged as WJTV on channel 12.

Thereafter the callsign WSLI solely identified the radio station until the early 2000s. In this time, the studios of the radio station were located next door to WJTV off Robinson Road in southwest Jackson. Its transmitter, however, was relocated to a site north of the Jackson city limits accessible from North State Street (formerly,Highway 51). The four-tower array and transmitter building remained in that location up until 1995 when the site was developed into a shopping center facing Interstate 55.

For most of its history, WSLI featured the morning show of "Farmer" Jim Neal and the Feist Dog, which was the top rated radio program in Jackson for over 40 years. Hank Williams performed live on WSLI's Farm Jim Show on February 21, 1950. Bob Rall was credited for founding one of the first "talk shows" in Jackson in 1953. In most of the 1970s and early 1980s, WSLI was the home of the duo of Bob Rall and Alan Simmons in the highest-radio program in the afternoons. Simmons' son Scott is now an anchor/reporter for Jackson TV stationWAPT.

In the 1990s, the station was sold to Mississippi College as a sister station to then MC-owned WHJT. In 1998, Russ Robinson secured a deal to buy the station and moved WSLI off-campus. Finding office space in Clinton, Robinson said a large majority of the equipment was obsolete and the station pretty much started from scratch.

WSFZ programs previously broadcast includedTheRick and Bubba Show,The Dan Patrick Show,The Young Guns, and programming fromNBC Sports Radio. WSFZ also broadcastJackson Academy athletics.

The station has been assigned these call letters by theFederal Communications Commission since November 26, 2003.[1]

In May 2016, SportsRad, Inc. sold WSFZ to New South Radio for only $1.[6] On October 10, 2016, WSFZ returned to the air with a simulcast of classic country-formattedWJXN-FM, branded as "100.9 The Legend".

On July 31, 2017, WSFZ switched its simulcast fromWJXN-FM toWHJT.[7]

In late December 2017, WSFZ dropped its simulcast with WHJT and began stunting with a repeatNeil Diamond's "Cherry, Cherry".[8] In January 2018, the station dropped "Cherry, Cherry" replacing it with an loop ofRobin Thicke's "Blurred Lines."

On July 24, 2020, New South Radio announced plans to sell WSFZ to SSR Communications.[9] On August 12, WSFZ flipped to oldies, but this was only a temporary format. During the few days as an oldies station, WSFZ was brandedB93, which was the same brandingWYAB had when it was an oldies station.

On August 18, 2020, WSFZ officially begansimulcasting WYAB.[10] As of September 23, 2020, SSR Communications officially owns WSFZ, as well as its translator, W296DD.[4]

On December 1, 2020, iHeartMedia acquired WSFZ and flipped it fromtalk to anall-news format with programming from theBlack Information Network.[5] The acquisition was consummated on March 9, 2021.

Previous logos

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ab"Call Sign History".FCC Media Bureau CDBS Public Access Database.
  2. ^"History Cards for WSFZ".Federal Communications Commission. (Guide to reading History Cards)
  3. ^"Facility Technical Data for WSFZ".Licensing and Management System.Federal Communications Commission.
  4. ^ab"CDBS Print".
  5. ^ab"IHeartMedia Acquires WSFZ for Black Information Network".
  6. ^"Station Sales Week of 2/5".
  7. ^Legend on the Move in Jackson, MS Radio Insight – July 25, 2017
  8. ^Blues and Cherries in Jackson MS Radioinsight – January 10, 2018
  9. ^"Station Sales Week of 7/24: EMF Expands in Central Kentucky".
  10. ^"Forum post". RetrievedSeptember 17, 2023.[user-generated source]

External links

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