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{{Infobox radio station| |
{{Infobox radio station| |
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name = WNSH| |
name = WNSH| |
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website = [http://www.nashfm947.com/ Nash FM 94.7]| |
website = [http://www.nashfm947.com/ Nash FM 94.7]| |
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'''WNSH''' (94.7 [[FM broadcasting|FM]]) is a radio station licensed to [[Newark, New Jersey]] and serves the [[New York City]] metropolitan area. The station is owned by [[Cumulus Media]], and airs a [[country music]] format. Its studio is co-located with sister stations [[WABC (AM)|WABC]] (770 AM) and [[WPLJ]] (95.5 FM) in [[New York City]], and transmits from a tower located in [[West Orange, New Jersey]]. Cumulus purchased the station in January 2013 from its previous owner, [[Family Radio|Family Stations, Inc.]], which aired religious programming on the station as WFME.<ref>"Done deal: Cumulus closes on WFME." ''Allaccess.com'', January 10, 2013. Retrieved January 10, 2013. [http://www.allaccess.com/net-news/archive/story/114116/done-deal-cumulus-closes-on-wfme]</ref><ref>"Cumulus closes on WFME in New York City." ''Radioink.com'', January 10, 2013. Retrieved January 10, 2013.[http://www.radioink.com/Article.asp?id=2602813&spid=24698]</ref> |
'''WNSH''' (94.7 [[FM broadcasting|FM]]) is a radio station licensed to [[Newark, New Jersey]] and serves the [[New York City]] metropolitan area. The station is owned by [[Cumulus Media]], and airs a [[country music]] format. Its studio is co-located with sister stations [[WABC (AM)|WABC]] (770 AM) and [[WPLJ]] (95.5 FM) in [[New York City]], and transmits from a tower located in [[West Orange, New Jersey]]. Cumulus purchased the station in January 2013 from its previous owner, [[Family Radio|Family Stations, Inc.]], which aired religious programming on the station as WFME.<ref>"Done deal: Cumulus closes on WFME." ''Allaccess.com'', January 10, 2013. Retrieved January 10, 2013. [http://www.allaccess.com/net-news/archive/story/114116/done-deal-cumulus-closes-on-wfme]</ref><ref>"Cumulus closes on WFME in New York City." ''Radioink.com'', January 10, 2013. Retrieved January 10, 2013.[http://www.radioink.com/Article.asp?id=2602813&spid=24698]</ref> |
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Revision as of 20:19, 29 January 2013
| File:Nash FM 94.7 Logo.svg | |
| Broadcast area | New York metropolitan area |
|---|---|
| Frequency | 94.7 MHz |
| Branding | 94.7 Nash FM |
| Programming | |
| Format | Country |
| Ownership | |
| Owner |
|
| WABC, WPLJ | |
| History | |
First air date | 1947 (as WAAT-FM) |
Former call signs | WAAT-FM (1947–1958) WNTA-FM (1958–1962) WJRZ-FM (1962–1964) WFME (1964–2013) WRXP (January 15 to 28, 2013) |
Call sign meaning | NSH is the abreviation of the slogan the station is using, Nash FM |
| Technical information | |
| Facility ID | 28204 |
| Class | B |
| ERP | 50,000 watts effective - (transmits at actual 23,000 watts) |
| HAAT | 207 meters |
Transmitter coordinates | 40°47′17″N 74°15′19″W / 40.78806°N 74.25528°W |
| Links | |
| Webcast | Listen Live |
| Website | Nash FM 94.7 |
WNSH (94.7 FM) is a radio station licensed to Newark, New Jersey and serves the New York City metropolitan area. The station is owned by Cumulus Media, and airs a country music format. Its studio is co-located with sister stations WABC (770 AM) and WPLJ (95.5 FM) in New York City, and transmits from a tower located in West Orange, New Jersey. Cumulus purchased the station in January 2013 from its previous owner, Family Stations, Inc., which aired religious programming on the station as WFME.[1][2]
Station history

The 94.7 FM frequency signed on in 1947 as WAAT-FM, and was owned by the Bremer Broadcasting Company along with sister station WAAT (970 AM, now WNYM). The following year Bremer launched a television station, WATV on channel 13, New Jersey's first TV outlet. In 1957 the three stations were sold by Bremer to National Telefilm Associates, who changed the operation's call letters to WNTA-FM.[3][4] During this period the station had diversified programming such as jazz, classical music, and easy listening music.
National Telefilm split up its holdings in 1961, with WNTA-TV (now WNET) being sold to a New York City-based nonprofit educational group, and the WNTA radio stations going to Communications Industries Broadcasting.[5] The new owners changed the calls to WJRZ-FM[6] and initially retained the station's previous format, but in 1963 began leasing airtime to Family Radio.[7] In 1964 the station was renamed WFME, and on March 10, 1966, Family Radio bought 94.7 FM outright and began airing its religious programming around-the-clock.[8]
WFME's local programming consisted of community announcements, weekend public affairs, and weather and traffic inserts during Family Radio's Rise and Rejoice morning show. WFME originated a portion of the network's overnight program Nightwatch, hosted by station manager/chief engineer Charlie Menut. The rest of the station's schedule originated from Family Radio headquarters in Oakland, California.[9]
WFME's programming was also heard on two translator stations: W213AC (90.5 FM) in Hyde Park, New York; and W247AE (97.3 FM) in East Stroudsburg, Pennsylvania. As a result of WFME's license status change (see below), the translators could no longer legally rebroadcast WFME's broadcast signal; as a result, both translator stations went silent as of February 2012.
Sale to Cumulus Media
On January 6, 2012, Family Radio applied to the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) to change the license of WFME from noncommercial to commercial. This move followed the sales by Family Radio of stations in the Philadelphia (WKDN-FM, now WWIQ) and Washington-Baltimore (WFSI, now WLZL) markets, and quickly prompted conjecture from radio industry monitors that WFME would be sold next.[10][11][12] The application was approved on February 7, 2012.[13]
The sale rumors were confirmed on October 16, 2012, when Family Radio announced that it would sell WFME to Atlanta-based Cumulus Media; the price, originally undisclosed, was confirmed a few days later to be $40 million, which will be incremented should Cumulus relocate the station's transmitter to New York City. In addition, Family Radio acquired Cumulus' WDVY (106.3 FM), a station located in Mount Kisco, New York that covers Northern Westchester and Putnam Counties.[14] The FCC approved the sale January 4, 2013, making 94.7 FM a sister station to Cumulus' two existing New York market stations, WABC and WPLJ. Four days later, on January 8, 2013, Cumulus completed the purchase of WFME. Family Radio programming on 94.7 FM ended at 3:50PM on January 11, 2013; prior to signing off of the frequency, station manager Charlie Menut stated that the network's programming would be transferred to 106.3 FM, which became the new WFME on January 15, and that efforts to acquire an AM frequency that would cover the New York City area were being made.[15][16]
"Nash FM" Launch
On January 11, 2013, under Cumulus's new ownership, 94.7 FM began a simulcast of Hot AC-formatted WPLJ. The WFME call-sign was dropped at midnight on January 14 in favor of WRXP. The WRXP call-sign was used on New York's 101.9 FM (the present WFAN-FM) under two different owners and two different stints as an alternative rock station. The WPLJ simulcast ended on January 18 in favor of stunting with a self-described "Wheel of Formats." The stunting continued until 9:47 AM the following Monday (January 21), when WRXP adopted a new country music format branded as "94.7 Nash FM," leading off the new format with Randy Houser's "How Country Feels" and Alan Jackson's "Gone Country."[17] The launch of "94.7 Nash FM" gave the New York City radio market its first full-time country station since February 5, 1996, when WYNY flipped to Rhythmic AC.[18]
The launch is also Cumulus' first step in establishing "Nash FM" (the name alludes to the country music mecca of Nashville) as a national "multi-platform entertainment brand based on the Country music lifestyle," with the brand eventually appearing on other Cumulus-owned stations as well as syndicated and online content, social media, print, concert events, and possibly cable television programming.[19][20]
Cumulus transferred the WNSH call-sign from its station in Cambridge, Minnesota to replace WRXP at midnight on January 29, 2013..[21]
References
- ^ "Done deal: Cumulus closes on WFME." Allaccess.com, January 10, 2013. Retrieved January 10, 2013. [1]
- ^ "Cumulus closes on WFME in New York City." Radioink.com, January 10, 2013. Retrieved January 10, 2013.[2]
- ^ "WAAT, WATV (TV) sold to NTA for $3.5 million." Broadcasting - Telecasting, October 7, 1957, pg. 9. [3]
- ^ "NTA Newark purchase gets FCC's approval." Broadcasting - Telecasting, April 7, 1958, pg. 64. [4]
- ^ "Changing Hands." Broadcasting, November 6, 1961, pg. 78. [5]
- ^ "For the record." Broadcasting, April 2, 1962, pg. 129. [6]
- ^ "Family Stations sign to program on WJRZ-FM." Broadcasting, April 8, 1963, pg. 53. [7]
- ^ "For the record." Broadcasting, January 31, 1966, pg. 37. [8]
- ^ WFME Program Guide
- ^ Taylor, Tom (9 January 2012). "New York scramble?: Is New York-market WFME (94.7) for sale? Family Radio applies to change its crown jewel to commercial operation". TRI: Taylor on Radio-Info. Retrieved 10 January 2012.
- ^ Taylor, Tom (10 January 2012). "Gotham guessing game: Yes, Family Radio's New York-market WFME (94.7) will be for sale. But not just yet". TRI: Taylor on Radio-Info. Retrieved 10 January 2012.
- ^ Venta, Lance (7 January 2012). "WFME Applies to Go Commercial, Prepares for Sale". Radio Insight. Retrieved 10 January 2012.
- ^ http://licensing.fcc.gov/cgi-bin/ws.exe/prod/cdbs/pubacc/prod/app_det.pl?Application_id=1434672
- ^ "BALH - 20121019ACU". Federal Communications Commission. Retrieved 7 December 2012.
- ^ Menut, Charles. Aircheck of Family Radio sign-off on WFME (FM), January 11, 2013. Formatchange.com. Retrieved January 12, 2013. [9]
- ^ Camping, Harold E. "What is happening with Family Radio?" Familyradio.com. Retrieved January 11, 2013. [10]
- ^ "94.7 NashFM New York Debuts," from RadioInsight, 1/21/2013
- ^ "New York Radio Gets a New Country Station," from The New York Times, 1/21/2013
- ^ "Is Cumulus Planning A National Country Brand?" from RadioInsight, originally reported 11/19/2012 and updated 1/21/2013
- ^ "New York Gets a Little Country," from Wall Street Journal, 1/21/2013
- ^ "Cumulus Announces National "Nash" Brand For Country Entertainment," from FMQB, 1/22/2013
External links
- Official website
- Cumulus Media corporate website
- Nash FM 94.7 on Facebook
- Nash FM 94.7 on Twitter
- Facility details for Facility ID WRXP ({{{2}}}) in the FCC Licensing and Management System
- {{{2}}} in Nielsen Audio's FM station database