翻訳と辞書
Words near each other
・ WZRV
・ WZRX
・ WZRX (AM)
・ WZRX-FM
・ WZSK
・ WZSN
・ WZSP
・ WZSR
・ WZST
・ WZT
・ WZTA
・ WZTC
・ WZTD-LD
・ WZTF
・ WZTH
WZTI
・ WZTK
・ WZTQ
・ WZTR
・ WZTV
・ WZU
・ WZUM
・ WZUM (defunct)
・ WZUN
・ WZUP
・ WZUS
・ WZUU
・ WZVA
・ WZVK
・ WZVL


Dictionary Lists
翻訳と辞書 辞書検索 [ 開発暫定版 ]
スポンサード リンク

WZTI : ウィキペディア英語版
WZTI

''This article is about the radio station formerly known as WMCS. For the school, see West Memphis Christian School''
WZTI (1290 AM) is a radio station in Milwaukee, Wisconsin that currently airs an oldies format. The station is owned by the Milwaukee Radio Alliance, a partnership between Times-Shamrock Communications and All-Pro Broadcasting, along with sister stations WLUM-FM and WLDB. Its studios are located in Menomonee Falls and the transmitter site is in Franklin.
For many years, the station aired various African-American-oriented talk and music formats.
==History==
The station launched in 1947 with the WMLO call sign. WMLO was an affiliate of the ABC Radio Network. They later became WMIL. A sister FM station, WMIL-FM, was added in 1961. WMIL was affiliated with the CBS Radio Network from June 26, 1961 〔Advertisement: "NEW WMIL LINE-UP", ''Milwaukee Sentinel'', Monday, June 26, 1961, Page 8, Part 1.〕 until December, 1963.
The stations were owned from 1968 to 1988 by Malrite Broadcasting. As WMIL, they aired a country music format. The station called itself "Big M Country." WMIL also simulcast the country format on 95.7 FM until that signal switched to beautiful music as "WMVM, Stereo Radio 95.7" around 1971. Both stations switched to Top 40 as WZUU and WZUU-FM in 1972. In 1981, they flipped to oldies first as "Solid Gold 13Z", then with a move to make it more distinguished from WZUU-FM as WLZZ ("Solid Gold Wheels") in late 1982. WLZZ also ran a short lived country format and returned to simulcasting WZUU-FM and the WZUU calls after that. The station later split away from the FM to run a syndicated urban gold format as WMVP, prior to the station's sale to All-Pro Broadcasting in 1988.
1290 was originally a daytime-only station licensed to Milwaukee until 1980, when they were granted a power increase from 1,000 watts to 5,000 watts day and night and a city of license change to Greenfield, Wisconsin.
The station had been playing R&B oldies or urban adult contemporary music, with some local talk shows, since 1985. The changeover to an all-talk format happened in 2004. The station's call letters were WMVP for many years ("MVP" referred to owner Willie Davis' pro football years with the Green Bay Packers). ESPN Radio 1000 in Chicago purchased the call letters from Davis for their sports format, and 1290 AM became WMCS in December 1993. The WMCS call sign stood for "Milwaukee's Community Station", to emphasize the station's heavy community involvement.
In December 2004, WMCS began airing the syndicated ESPN Radio broadcast after sunset, in partnership with daytime-only sports station WAUK (then at 1510 AM) as "Milwaukee's ESPN Radio...1510 days, 1290 nights."〔(Broadcasting News-January 2005 )〕 The sports format later became home to play-by-play broadcasts for Marquette University men's college basketball and the AHL's Milwaukee Admirals via WAUK.〔(JS Online: WAUK-AM adds MU to marketing mix )〕
On January 22, 2008, Good Karma Broadcasting, owner of WAUK, purchased Jackson-based religious station WRRD (540) from Salem Communications, and moved WAUK's sports talk format to the full-time signal on February 12, casting doubt on the nighttime simulcast agreement with WMCS.〔(JS Online: Pack prepares, just in case )〕
On June 30, 2008, WMCS began airing their own content, consisting of blues and gospel music programming, in addition to Al Sharpton's daily talk show.〔(JS Online: WMCS-AM radio ends ESPN feed, goes talk and music )〕
On February 26, 2013, WMCS began stunting with Elvis Presley songs in preparation of a format flip.〔(【引用サイトリンク】title=Format Changes )〕 At 3 p.m. on March 1, the station debuted its new adult standards format as "1290 Martini Radio", with the new WZTI call sign.〔(【引用サイトリンク】title=Format Changes )〕 The format is similar to that of co-owned KZTI in Reno, Nevada, which launched in November 2012.
On July 27, 2014, WZTI began to also air on the FM band on 100.3 FM, using translator station W262CJ, which broadcasts from the Shorewood tower farm on Milwaukee's northwest side and mainly covers the inner north portion of the Milwaukee metro area.
On November 1, 2014, WZTI dropped the Adult Standards format and began stunting with Christmas music, billing themselves as "100.3 The Elf." On December 25, 2014, at 5 PM, after playing "Rockin' Around the Christmas Tree" by LeAnn Rimes, the station flipped to rhythmic oldies, branded as "The Party 100.3 FM & 1290 AM." 〔("1290/100.3 Milwaukee To Debut New Format" ) from Radio Insight (December 24, 2014)〕 The first song on "The Party" was "1999" by Prince.〔(WZTI Becomes The Party ) from Format Change Archive December 29, 2014〕
On August 25, 2015, at Noon, after playing "Miss You Much" by Janet Jackson, "It's a Shame" by The Spinners and "The Party's Over" by Journey, WZTI shifted to oldies, branded as "Milwaukee's True Oldies 100.3 FM & 1290 AM." The first song on "True Oldies" was "Old Time Rock and Roll" by Bob Seger.〔https://twitter.com/NowOnMKEOldies〕 The station is utilizing a local feed of Scott Shannon's True Oldies Channel.〔https://radioinsight.com/blog/headlines/94240/partys-over-in-milwaukee-as-true-oldies-debuts/〕

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
ウィキペディアで「WZTI」の詳細全文を読む



スポンサード リンク
翻訳と辞書 : 翻訳のためのインターネットリソース

Copyright(C) kotoba.ne.jp 1997-2016. All Rights Reserved.