April 6 - Survivor Radio stunt ends, and WJMO flips to
CHR as Hot 99.5 (
WIHT). "
Survivor", by
Destiny's Child, was the first song played on Hot 99.5.
May 7 -
CHUM Radio's "The Team" syndicated sports service debuts in Canada at 3 PM. With this, it brought an end to the
oldies format on
1050 CHUM/
Toronto after 11 years, and 44 years as a music station.
May 26 - Essex-based pirate station 'Premier FM' begins broadcasting on 88.3FM from Southend-on-Sea, Essex, UK.
May 28 - KRBV (100.3) in
Dallas, TX changes its branding from "Hot 100" to "Wild 100" while maintaining its
Top 40 format.
June 15 -
Bruce Williams leaves
Westwood One to join the
IDT-owned Talk America Radio Network; his departure effectively ended what was originally the
NBC Talknet service.
June 18 - KFME 105.1 in Kansas City signs on with an 80's intensive hot AC format as "E-1051.fm." The license-to-cover was accepted for filing quickly, but not granted for several years because a competitor raised concerns that the station didn't cover its city of license, Garden City, MO.
July 3 - In
Northeast Ohio, a complex exchange involving seven radio stations in
Greater Cleveland and the
Akron and the
Canton metropolitan areas occurs between
Clear Channel Communications,
Salem Communications and
WCLV (95.5FM) owner Radio Seaway. Although generally reported as a "frequency swap", in reality these seven radio stations mostly trade callsigns along with their respective formats and staffs, all to facilitate the transfers of ownership of four of the seven stations:[1]
WCLV (95.5FM), licensed to
Cleveland, Ohio, aired a classical music format. WCLV was sold by Radio Seaway to Salem, the callsign changed to
WFHM-FM and the format changed to
Christian contemporary.
WHK (1420AM), licensed to Cleveland, Ohio, aired a
religious format. WHK was sold by Salem to Radio Seaway, the callsign changed to
WCLV and format the changed to
adult standards assuming the
intellectual property of
WRMR, which Radio Seaway purchased in a separate transaction.[2]
WHK-FM (98.1FM), licensed to
Canton, Ohio, fully simulcast WHK's religious format. WHK-FM was sold by Salem to Clear Channel, the callsign changed to
WKDD and the format changed to
adult contemporary.
WKDD (96.5FM), licensed to
Akron, Ohio, aired an adult contemporary format. WKDD was retained by Clear Channel, the callsign changed to
WAKS and the format changed to contemporary hit radio.
WKNR (1220AM), licensed to Cleveland, Ohio, aired a
sports format. WKNR was retained by Salem, the callsign changed to
WHK and the format changed to religious.
WRMR (850AM), licensed to Cleveland, Ohio, aired an adult standards format. WRMR was retained by Salem, the callsign changed to
WKNR and the format changed to sports.
July 27 -
Energy FM starts broadcasting in the
Isle of Man, it is only the second radio station ever to be legally broadcast on the Island. Other illegal stations known to have operated have been Radio Caroline and Toxic 103FM.
August 9 - Saying that "the rusty pipes are being renewed... I’m so eager to return,"
Paul Harvey returned to the air for one day after suffering a severe case of
laryngitis; he had been sidelined since May while undergoing treatment at the
Mayo Clinic.
Gil Gross and
Sam Donaldson were the chief fill-in hosts used during this time. Harvey returned to full-time duty on August 19.
September - Classic rock-formatted WZUU/Kalamazoo flips to active rock
September 11 - In addition to the 2,754 fatalities in
New York City, the
September 11 attacks resulted the destruction of
the transmission mast atop
One World Trade Center, killing six engineers and silencing
WKCR,
WPAT-FM,
WNYC-FM and
WKTU, in addition to all nine major television stations, and the
studio-transmitter link for
WNYC (AM).
WKTU had a backup transmitter atop the
Conde Nast Building at
Four Times Square that was immediately activated. Later that morning, all of New York's radio outlets (including the music outlets) preempt programming for nonstop coverage of the September 11 attacks until the end of the month. WNYC Radio's studio buildings in the
Municipal Building were evacuated and relocated to
NPR's Manhattan facilities, with
WNYE arranging to carry WNYC-FM's programming on a full-time basis. While WNYC (AM)'s transmitter was on the whole time, programming would return later that afternoon with a backup
STL dish sent to their transmitter site, which would relay an
ISDN feed of WNYC sent via satellite from NPR's Washington facility. WPAT returned to the air that Thursday on the
Empire State Building's transmission mast, and WKCR was reactivated from their
Columbia University campus. (All of the TV stations would utilize the historic
Armstrong Tower - a landmark in the history of
FM broadcasting - as early as that Wednesday.)[3][4]
December 31 -
Cox Communications flips the format and call letters of Classical radio station WTMI/
Miami, Florida to Dance Music as
WPYM ("Party 93.1, South Florida's Pure Dance Channel"). The news would make headlines in the trades and in the Dance Music community. The station would last three years and three months.
^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.
April 6 - Survivor Radio stunt ends, and WJMO flips to
CHR as Hot 99.5 (
WIHT). "
Survivor", by
Destiny's Child, was the first song played on Hot 99.5.
May 7 -
CHUM Radio's "The Team" syndicated sports service debuts in Canada at 3 PM. With this, it brought an end to the
oldies format on
1050 CHUM/
Toronto after 11 years, and 44 years as a music station.
May 26 - Essex-based pirate station 'Premier FM' begins broadcasting on 88.3FM from Southend-on-Sea, Essex, UK.
May 28 - KRBV (100.3) in
Dallas, TX changes its branding from "Hot 100" to "Wild 100" while maintaining its
Top 40 format.
June 15 -
Bruce Williams leaves
Westwood One to join the
IDT-owned Talk America Radio Network; his departure effectively ended what was originally the
NBC Talknet service.
June 18 - KFME 105.1 in Kansas City signs on with an 80's intensive hot AC format as "E-1051.fm." The license-to-cover was accepted for filing quickly, but not granted for several years because a competitor raised concerns that the station didn't cover its city of license, Garden City, MO.
July 3 - In
Northeast Ohio, a complex exchange involving seven radio stations in
Greater Cleveland and the
Akron and the
Canton metropolitan areas occurs between
Clear Channel Communications,
Salem Communications and
WCLV (95.5FM) owner Radio Seaway. Although generally reported as a "frequency swap", in reality these seven radio stations mostly trade callsigns along with their respective formats and staffs, all to facilitate the transfers of ownership of four of the seven stations:[1]
WCLV (95.5FM), licensed to
Cleveland, Ohio, aired a classical music format. WCLV was sold by Radio Seaway to Salem, the callsign changed to
WFHM-FM and the format changed to
Christian contemporary.
WHK (1420AM), licensed to Cleveland, Ohio, aired a
religious format. WHK was sold by Salem to Radio Seaway, the callsign changed to
WCLV and format the changed to
adult standards assuming the
intellectual property of
WRMR, which Radio Seaway purchased in a separate transaction.[2]
WHK-FM (98.1FM), licensed to
Canton, Ohio, fully simulcast WHK's religious format. WHK-FM was sold by Salem to Clear Channel, the callsign changed to
WKDD and the format changed to
adult contemporary.
WKDD (96.5FM), licensed to
Akron, Ohio, aired an adult contemporary format. WKDD was retained by Clear Channel, the callsign changed to
WAKS and the format changed to contemporary hit radio.
WKNR (1220AM), licensed to Cleveland, Ohio, aired a
sports format. WKNR was retained by Salem, the callsign changed to
WHK and the format changed to religious.
WRMR (850AM), licensed to Cleveland, Ohio, aired an adult standards format. WRMR was retained by Salem, the callsign changed to
WKNR and the format changed to sports.
July 27 -
Energy FM starts broadcasting in the
Isle of Man, it is only the second radio station ever to be legally broadcast on the Island. Other illegal stations known to have operated have been Radio Caroline and Toxic 103FM.
August 9 - Saying that "the rusty pipes are being renewed... I’m so eager to return,"
Paul Harvey returned to the air for one day after suffering a severe case of
laryngitis; he had been sidelined since May while undergoing treatment at the
Mayo Clinic.
Gil Gross and
Sam Donaldson were the chief fill-in hosts used during this time. Harvey returned to full-time duty on August 19.
September - Classic rock-formatted WZUU/Kalamazoo flips to active rock
September 11 - In addition to the 2,754 fatalities in
New York City, the
September 11 attacks resulted the destruction of
the transmission mast atop
One World Trade Center, killing six engineers and silencing
WKCR,
WPAT-FM,
WNYC-FM and
WKTU, in addition to all nine major television stations, and the
studio-transmitter link for
WNYC (AM).
WKTU had a backup transmitter atop the
Conde Nast Building at
Four Times Square that was immediately activated. Later that morning, all of New York's radio outlets (including the music outlets) preempt programming for nonstop coverage of the September 11 attacks until the end of the month. WNYC Radio's studio buildings in the
Municipal Building were evacuated and relocated to
NPR's Manhattan facilities, with
WNYE arranging to carry WNYC-FM's programming on a full-time basis. While WNYC (AM)'s transmitter was on the whole time, programming would return later that afternoon with a backup
STL dish sent to their transmitter site, which would relay an
ISDN feed of WNYC sent via satellite from NPR's Washington facility. WPAT returned to the air that Thursday on the
Empire State Building's transmission mast, and WKCR was reactivated from their
Columbia University campus. (All of the TV stations would utilize the historic
Armstrong Tower - a landmark in the history of
FM broadcasting - as early as that Wednesday.)[3][4]
December 31 -
Cox Communications flips the format and call letters of Classical radio station WTMI/
Miami, Florida to Dance Music as
WPYM ("Party 93.1, South Florida's Pure Dance Channel"). The news would make headlines in the trades and in the Dance Music community. The station would last three years and three months.
^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.