January 21 –
WNSR/
New York relaunches as "Big 105", WBIX. The station evolves to
Hot AC by the late spring.
February
After switching formats from "Pure Rock" to
Spanish music format on 105.5FM in
Long Beach three years earlier,
KNAC is resurrected as the internet-based radio station knac.com.
March –
Davenport, Iowa stations
WLLR-FM (101.3 FM, a country station) and
KUUL (103.7 FM, an oldies station) swap dial positions.
March 9 – Washington, D.C. stations
WTEM 570-AM and
WWRC 980-AM swap dial positions. Two weeks prior, WWRC, a former NBC Radio owned-and-operated station, switched to a business news format, and the 980-AM facility was upgraded to a 50,000 watt day/5,000 watt night signal.
March 28 – "
American Top 40" returns to the airwaves, once again with
Casey Kasem as the host. The show is actually the renamed "Casey's Top 40", which Kasem had hosted since its premiere in 1989. Kasem will remain with the program until December 2003.
May 29 – SFX's merger with Capstar officially closes.[3]
May 31 –
Nick Digilio broadcast his first program as part of The Nick D. & Garry Lee Show on
WGN Radio. He had been reviewing movies with WGN Radio host
Roy Leonard since 1985.
August 27 – Chancellor Media announces it would merge with Capstar for $4.1 billion, making Chancellor the owner of 463 stations in 105 markets.
September 4 –
KGLQ/Phoenix drops its
classic hits format and begins stunting with a ticking clock. At 3PM this day, "Mix 96.9" debuts with a
Hot AC format.
WMMS in Cleveland engages in "The Death of the Buzzard", a month-long event celebrating the station's legendary past, with a plethora of vintage airchecks, interviews and sounders. Rumors had the station retiring the WMMS call letters, rock format and Buzzard mascot in favor of the
KISS-FM Top 40 format. This turns out in the end to be merely a stunt; only the airstaff is replaced, but the call letters, format and mascot remain.
October 8 –
Clear Channel Communications announces a $4.4 billion merger with
Jacor Communications; the deal is approved the following May, giving Clear Channel about 450 radio stations in 101 markets.
October 12 – Groove 103.1 KBCD and KACD sign off and become a simulcast of
KIIS-FM in Los Angeles.
November 2 – After a goodbye weekend,
WRCX/
Chicago drops its 7-year old rock format for
urban oldies, branded as "The Beat." New call letters WUBT were implemented on December 21.
December 4
After nearly 11 months with
Hot AC, WBIX/New York flips to
Rhythmic Oldies as "Jammin' 105", WTJM.
1560
WQEW New York City announces it will drop its
Adult Standards format of just over 6 years and also shut down the intellectual unit of WQEW to carry
Radio Disney full-time.
Debuts
January 10 — "Retro Country USA", a two-hour weekly program featuring country music hits of the past. The core group of songs comes from the 1980s, with 1970s and early 1990s songs also included. The show was conceived and created by radio programmer Dale O'Brian, who at the time was programming WWZZ-FM in Washington, DC. The show was originally hosted by radio personality Ken Cooper. In 2012, Cooper retired and was replaced by "Big" Steve Kelly. The show is syndicated both nationally and internationally by Superadio in Boston, Ma.
February 17 —
WMIB-Marco Island, Florida begins broadcasting on the expanded band frequency of 1660 kHz.
Closings
August 31 —
Westwood One's news facility in Arlington closed, which housed staffers for
NBC Radio and
Mutual. CBS Radio staff were now directly responsible for the production of "Mutual" and "NBC"-branded newscasts from CBS' New York facilities.
^Cox, Jim (2008). This Day in Network Radio: A Daily Calendar of Births, Debuts, Cancellations and Other Events in Broadcasting History. McFarland & Company, Inc.
ISBN978-0-7864-3848-8.
January 21 –
WNSR/
New York relaunches as "Big 105", WBIX. The station evolves to
Hot AC by the late spring.
February
After switching formats from "Pure Rock" to
Spanish music format on 105.5FM in
Long Beach three years earlier,
KNAC is resurrected as the internet-based radio station knac.com.
March –
Davenport, Iowa stations
WLLR-FM (101.3 FM, a country station) and
KUUL (103.7 FM, an oldies station) swap dial positions.
March 9 – Washington, D.C. stations
WTEM 570-AM and
WWRC 980-AM swap dial positions. Two weeks prior, WWRC, a former NBC Radio owned-and-operated station, switched to a business news format, and the 980-AM facility was upgraded to a 50,000 watt day/5,000 watt night signal.
March 28 – "
American Top 40" returns to the airwaves, once again with
Casey Kasem as the host. The show is actually the renamed "Casey's Top 40", which Kasem had hosted since its premiere in 1989. Kasem will remain with the program until December 2003.
May 29 – SFX's merger with Capstar officially closes.[3]
May 31 –
Nick Digilio broadcast his first program as part of The Nick D. & Garry Lee Show on
WGN Radio. He had been reviewing movies with WGN Radio host
Roy Leonard since 1985.
August 27 – Chancellor Media announces it would merge with Capstar for $4.1 billion, making Chancellor the owner of 463 stations in 105 markets.
September 4 –
KGLQ/Phoenix drops its
classic hits format and begins stunting with a ticking clock. At 3PM this day, "Mix 96.9" debuts with a
Hot AC format.
WMMS in Cleveland engages in "The Death of the Buzzard", a month-long event celebrating the station's legendary past, with a plethora of vintage airchecks, interviews and sounders. Rumors had the station retiring the WMMS call letters, rock format and Buzzard mascot in favor of the
KISS-FM Top 40 format. This turns out in the end to be merely a stunt; only the airstaff is replaced, but the call letters, format and mascot remain.
October 8 –
Clear Channel Communications announces a $4.4 billion merger with
Jacor Communications; the deal is approved the following May, giving Clear Channel about 450 radio stations in 101 markets.
October 12 – Groove 103.1 KBCD and KACD sign off and become a simulcast of
KIIS-FM in Los Angeles.
November 2 – After a goodbye weekend,
WRCX/
Chicago drops its 7-year old rock format for
urban oldies, branded as "The Beat." New call letters WUBT were implemented on December 21.
December 4
After nearly 11 months with
Hot AC, WBIX/New York flips to
Rhythmic Oldies as "Jammin' 105", WTJM.
1560
WQEW New York City announces it will drop its
Adult Standards format of just over 6 years and also shut down the intellectual unit of WQEW to carry
Radio Disney full-time.
Debuts
January 10 — "Retro Country USA", a two-hour weekly program featuring country music hits of the past. The core group of songs comes from the 1980s, with 1970s and early 1990s songs also included. The show was conceived and created by radio programmer Dale O'Brian, who at the time was programming WWZZ-FM in Washington, DC. The show was originally hosted by radio personality Ken Cooper. In 2012, Cooper retired and was replaced by "Big" Steve Kelly. The show is syndicated both nationally and internationally by Superadio in Boston, Ma.
February 17 —
WMIB-Marco Island, Florida begins broadcasting on the expanded band frequency of 1660 kHz.
Closings
August 31 —
Westwood One's news facility in Arlington closed, which housed staffers for
NBC Radio and
Mutual. CBS Radio staff were now directly responsible for the production of "Mutual" and "NBC"-branded newscasts from CBS' New York facilities.
^Cox, Jim (2008). This Day in Network Radio: A Daily Calendar of Births, Debuts, Cancellations and Other Events in Broadcasting History. McFarland & Company, Inc.
ISBN978-0-7864-3848-8.