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WYTS

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Radio station in Columbus, Ohio

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(November 2007) (Learn how and when to remove this message)
WYTS
Broadcast areaColumbus, Ohio
Frequency1230kHz
BrandingColumbus' BIN 1230
Programming
FormatBlack-oriented news
AffiliationsBlack Information Network
Ownership
Owner
WCOL-FM,WNCI,WODC,WTVN,WXZX,WZCB
History
First air date
September 24, 1922
(103 years ago)
 (1922-09-24)
Former call signs
  • WMAN (1922–1930)
  • WSEN (1930–1934)
  • WCOL (1934–1997)
  • WFII (1997–2001)
  • WZNW (2001–2003)
  • WCOL (2003–2004)
  • WTPG (2004–2007)
Call sign meaning
"Your Talk Station" (previous format)
Technical information[1]
Licensing authority
FCC
Facility ID25038
ClassC
Power1,000watts
Transmitter coordinates
39°56′31″N83°01′20″W / 39.94194°N 83.02222°W /39.94194; -83.02222
Links
Public license information
WebcastListen live (viaiHeartRadio)
Websiteohio.binnews.com

WYTS (1230AM) is a commercialblack-oriented newsradio station licensed toColumbus, Ohio. Owned byiHeartMedia, the station serves theColumbus metro area. Besides a standardanalog transmission, the station is available online viaiHeartRadio. The WYTS studios are located along inDowntown Columbus, while the station transmitter resides southwest of the city's downtown area.

WYTS is the sixth-oldest continuously running radio station in the state of Ohio,[2] and is best known for its Top 40 format in the 1960s and 1970s under the heritage WCOL calls. In the time period between 1998 and today, the station has undergone five different format changes with as many different call signs.

History

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Early years

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WMAN / WSEN

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WYTS was first licensed, as WMAN, to the Broad Street Baptist Church in downtown Columbus on October 5, 1922.[3] The original call letters were randomly assigned from a sequential roster of available call signs. Studios and transmitter were located within the church, and its initial schedule was only a few hours of church services each Sunday. Church member W. E. Heskett became the license holder of WMAN in conjunction with the church in December 1924, and had purchased the station outright by 1927. Hours of operation expanded gradually beyond Sunday services, and WMAN's studios were relocated to the Seneca Hotel.

Heskett leased airtime on WMAN to the Columbus Broadcasting Corporation in late 1929, with a buyout following months later. In order to distance the station from its original religious image, its call sign was changed to WSEN on September 9, 1930,[4] reflecting the Seneca Hotel. By 1932, the station operated on a daily basis from 8:00 a.m. until midnight.

WCOL

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The station became WCOL on September 11, 1934,[5] upon its sale toThe Columbus Dispatch Publishing Company, headed by Edgar andRobert F. Wolfe, whose family also ownedWBNS (AM) andWBNS-FM Radio. WCOL and WBNS shared studios and offices, with WCOL eventually affiliating with both theNBC Red andBlue networks by 1937 (retaining the Blue affiliation in 1943). In 1941, implementation of theNorth American Regional Broadcasting Agreement moved WCOL to 1230kHz, where it has remained ever since.

The August 1941 adoption of theFederal Communications Commission's "duopoly" rule restricted licensees from operating more than one radio station in a given market.[6] WCOL was spun off by the Wolfe family to a partnership headed by several members of The Pixleys Incorporated, headed by family membersLloyd Pixley, Martha Pixley and Grace Pixley. Lloyd was the son of former WBAV operator Milton Pixley (today known asWTVN), and became president of WCOL with the sale. The station soon received both a new transmitter, and an FM sister station at 92.3MHz, which also took the WCOL calls.

The Pixleys sold WCOL AM and FM to Air Trails, Inc. in January 1952. Air Trails, and its successor Great Trails Broadcasting would be the primary owners of WCOL for over 52 years. Operating power for the station was increased to 1,000 watts during the daytime by July 1960, along with broadcasting 24-hours a day. By then an independent station, it changed its format to Top-40 that July 1, dubbing itself "The New WCOL".

Beginning in 1960, the station's slogan was "The New WCOL".[7]

WCOL was best known to Columbus area residents throughout the 1960s during this era, and was the primary Top-40 format station in the Columbus market when its jingle "twelve thirty the new W-C-O-L" was part of the local audio landscape. It held this distinction from 1960 to the early 1970s, until the rise in popularity of FM broadcasting and competition fromWNCI.

WCOL, in its Top-40 heyday was heralded as the station which "premiered" the hits. Bryan McIntyre gained national award recognition for his uncanny ability to pick hit music, in advance of other radio markets. The WCOL calls were also used in tribute as the backdrop for the 1996Tom Hanks movie "That Thing You Do."

Air Trails was renamed Great Trails Broadcasting in 1969 after a corporate reorganization, but still retaining much of the management and personnel. Great Trails also would own regional stationsWING inDayton,WIZE inSpringfield,WGTZ (née WJAI) inEaton, andWKLO (now WKJK) andWKLO-FM (now WDJX-FM) inLouisville during this time. WCOL-FM would also see changes, splitting away from the AM station to highlight a progressive rock format before becoming "92X" WXGT (for "X-Great Trails") where the top 40 format was moved to.

As the 1970s faded, the station changed format to a more adult-contemporary focus. WCOL was still successful in this format until a series of management and airstaff changeovers followed in the early 1980s, including a brief switch tomiddle of the road-styledadult standards and the brief return of Columbus broadcast legend Spook Beckman. The station began broadcasting at 1,000 watts 24-hours a day, along with a format change to news/talk. After that format failed to show in the ratings, WCOL flipped back to "Top-40 Oldies" with the WXGT calls dropped reverting to WCOL-FM.

By 1991, WCOL-AM was simulcasting WCOL-FM's oldies programming, with the AM station soon breaking off to play 1950s oldies. In short order, WCOL went back to a news/talk format, only this time assuming a mostly-syndicated lineup.

Later years

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The station andWCOL-FM were sold toNationwide Communications in 1994, the parent company ofWNCI.

WCOL became WFII on March 24, 1997, airing a syndicated conservativetalk radio format as "1230 FYI," though this time it was oriented at younger listeners.WTVN ownerJacor Communications acquired WFII, WCOL and WNCI in August 1998, and ultimately merged with Clear Channel Communications (nowiHeartMedia) that next year.

WFII was not a ratings success, and in 2001 the station became WZNW, airing asports talk format as "1230 The Zone". However, WZNW was never able to compete effectively against the other full-time sports station in Columbus,WBNS, which held the rights to theOhio State Buckeyes.

WCOL returned to 1230 in 2003, playing pre-British Invasionpop/rock as "Real Oldies 1230". WCOL traded in on its heritage as aTop 40 station, and the "Real Oldies" format played much of the same music. They even used some of their vintagePAMS andTMjingles from that era. Despite some positive "buzz" from long-time radio listeners, many of whom remembered WCOL from itsTop 40 heyday, the format failed to capture a significant audience in the market. The station, mostly automated usingvoice-tracking, lacked the live personalities which made the original WCOL great.

At noon on September 7, 2004, WCOL became WTPG, as "Progressive Talk AM 1230." WTPG carried programming mostly from theAir America Radionetwork, as well as syndicated hostsEd Schulz,Springer on the Radio (via a 21-hour delay in morning drive) andStephanie Miller. WTPG saw mild ratings improvements, although (as was the case with WFII, WZNW and WCOL) ranked well behind counter-programmed sister stationWTVN.

On December 23, 2006, the Columbus Dispatch reported that WTPG would change again that January 8 over to a conservative-based talk format, under the WYTS calls. Bruce Collins, the local program director for WTVN and WYTS, said: "Whether it's politics or sports, financial information or general advice, central Ohio listeners will have the opportunity to talk about it on 'Talk 1230.'"

Shortly after the station announced the pending format change, a small group of people formedOhio Majority Radio, an eventually unsuccessful grassroots attempt to save the progressive radio format on 1230 AM. Competing stationWVKO (1580 AM) eventually changed formats, and picked up much of the former WTPG schedule for a brief time before switching to a religious format.

On January 26, 2009, WYTS dropped the conservative talk format and became the Columbus affiliate forFox Sports Radio. WYTS will carry the full FSR schedule (with the exception of 9 a.m. – noon, when a replay of theSteve Czaban Show will air instead ofThe Dan Patrick Show, which aired onWTDA) and will hold on toThe Jim Rome Show. After WTDA dropped its talk format and Patrick's show in late December 2009, WYTS picked Patrick's show live.

On February 21, 2017, WYTS and W287CP flipped to Urban AC as "Vibe 105.3". The change comes as the sports format was made irrelevant due to sister stationWXZX flipping to a similar format the previous November. Michael Eiland, assistant program director and middayer of sisterWODC, will host mornings on Vibe. The remainder of the day will feature Premium Choice hosts includingWVAZ afternoon host Joe Soto in middays andWSOL-FM midday host Jo-Jo in afternoons.[8]

On March 28, 2017, just over a month after the flip to "Vibe", WYTS and W287CP rebranded as "Kiss 105.3". The change was likely due to a conflict with similarly branded "Vibe Radio HD" onWCVO-HD2.[9]

On November 29, 2017, WYTS flipped to aclassic hip-hop format. The change occurred as former similarly formattedWBMO flipped to a simulcast ofWCKX the day prior.[10]

On October 2, 2020, WYTS flipped to all-news, joining iHeart's "Black Information Network". The classic hip hop format continues on the 105.3 translator, relayed by WZCB's HD2 sub-channel.[11]

Previous logo

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References

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  1. ^"Facility Technical Data for WYTS".Licensing and Management System.Federal Communications Commission.
  2. ^Five older continuously-Ohio radio stations are:WHK, Cleveland, (first licensed 2/21/1922);WLW, Cincinnati, (3/2/1922);WTVN, Columbus, (4/29/1922 as WBAV);WBNS, Columbus, (5/13/1922 as WCAH); andWVSG, Columbus, (6/3/1922 as WEAO).WTRC, Stockdale, (7/28/1922 as WJAK) later moved to Indiana.
  3. ^"New Stations",Radio Service Bulletin, October 2, 1922, page 3.
  4. ^"Alterations and Corrections",Radio Service Bulletin, September 30, 1930, page 10.
  5. ^"(2) Changes to List",Radio Service Bulletin, September 15, 1934, page 3.
  6. ^"Ban On Multiple Ownership in Same Area",Broadcasting, August 11, 1941, pages 6-7.
  7. ^"WCOL" (advertisement),Broadcasting, January 16, 1961, page 20.
  8. ^Urban AC "Vibe 105.3" Debuts In Columbus Radioinsight - February 21, 2017
  9. ^"Vibe Conflict Leads To WYTS Rebranding As Kiss 105.3".RadioInsight. March 28, 2017. RetrievedJanuary 19, 2020.
  10. ^"WYTS Brings Classic Hip-Hop Back To Columbus".RadioInsight. December 6, 2017. RetrievedJanuary 19, 2020.
  11. ^Black Information Network Launches In Columbus & Miami Radioinsight - October 2, 2020

External links

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News/talk radio stations in the state ofOhio
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