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{{redirect|WRQE|the former WRQE at 99.7 FM in Door County|WZDR}}
{{redirect|WRQE|the former WRQE at 99.7 FM in Door County|WZDR}}

WAPL is way better, WRQE sucks in comparison.


'''WRQE''' (93.5 [[FM broadcasting|FM]]) is "93 Rock," a [[mainstream rock|mainstream rock-formatted]] [[radio broadcasting|radio station]] owned and operated by [[Midwest Communications]], licensed to [[New London, Wisconsin]], and serving the Northeast [[Wisconsin]] area, including [[Appleton, Wisconsin|Appleton]], [[Oshkosh, Wisconsin]], and [[Green Bay, Wisconsin|Green Bay]] (the latter city through a repeater at 93.1 FM, '''W226BD'''). WRQE's main [[transmitter]] is located in [[Maine, Outagamie County, Wisconsin|Maine Township]] in [[Outagamie County, Wisconsin]].
'''WRQE''' (93.5 [[FM broadcasting|FM]]) is "93 Rock," a [[mainstream rock|mainstream rock-formatted]] [[radio broadcasting|radio station]] owned and operated by [[Midwest Communications]], licensed to [[New London, Wisconsin]], and serving the Northeast [[Wisconsin]] area, including [[Appleton, Wisconsin|Appleton]], [[Oshkosh, Wisconsin]], and [[Green Bay, Wisconsin|Green Bay]] (the latter city through a repeater at 93.1 FM, '''W226BD'''). WRQE's main [[transmitter]] is located in [[Maine, Outagamie County, Wisconsin|Maine Township]] in [[Outagamie County, Wisconsin]].

Revision as of 21:49, 11 November 2010

WRQE
WRQE "93 Rock"
Broadcast area Appleton, Oshkosh, and Green Bay, Wisconsin
Frequency93.5 MHz
Branding"93 Rock"
Programming
Format Mainstream Rock
Ownership
Owner Midwest Communications
WIXX, WNCY-FM, WNFL, WYDR/WZDR, WTAQ
History
Former call signs
WLIH-FM (11/1980-7/1981); WNBK (7/1981-1/1989); WOZZ (1/1989-9/2010)
Call sign meaning
RQ represents the phonetic sound of "rock" (also reflects the call sign's former home at 99.7 FM, which simulcast sister station WROE)
Technical information
Facility ID42089
ClassC2
ERP50,000 watts
HAAT150 meters
Translator(s)93.1 W226BD (Green Bay, WI)
Links
Webcast Listen Live
Website 93RockOn.com

WAPL is way better, WRQE sucks in comparison.

WRQE (93.5 FM) is "93 Rock," a mainstream rock-formatted radio station owned and operated by Midwest Communications, licensed to New London, Wisconsin, and serving the Northeast Wisconsin area, including Appleton, Oshkosh, Wisconsin, and Green Bay (the latter city through a repeater at 93.1 FM, W226BD). WRQE's main transmitter is located in Maine Township in Outagamie County, Wisconsin.

Former logo as WOZZ, c. 2008
Former location of WOZZ studios, c. 2006

The station was previously under the WOZZ call sign; under those calls, the station started out with an adult contemporary format (using branding and imaging that alluded to The Wizard of Oz) before moving to a long-running classic rock format in the early 1990s ("93.5 WOZZ, The Classic Rock Station") that featured songs from the 1960s, 70s, and 80s. WOZZ previously had studios in the former Fidelity Bank building in Appleton until 2008, when Midwest Communications moved all its Green Bay and Appleton-area stations under one roof in new facilities in Bellevue, Wisconsin, a Green Bay suburb; however, WOZZ (and later WRQE) continue to maintain a control room and sales office in Appleton to meet Federal Communications Commission requirements.

Classic rock would continue on WOZZ until the the week of September 3, 2010; during that week, WOZZ ran an online stunt on Facebook under the user name "What Does It All Mean?" The profile page (see 'External Links' below) included short videos featuring WOZZ personality David Burns and painted rocks counting down days ("5 days," "4 days," etc.). Speculation was of a format flip to a more current form of mainstream rock, which is what occurred at 5PM on September 3, after REO Speedwagon's "Time for Me to Fly" concluded; at that time, a brief audio montage introduced "93 Rock", promising a mix of rock music from the 1970s, 80s, and 90s in a less-sedate on-air presentation. [1] ( Sammy Hagar's "There's Only One Way to Rock" was the first song played on "93 Rock.") With the format flip, the station adopted the WRQE call sign formerly found on its sister station at 99.7 FM in Door County (which adopted a classic hits format at the same time and day 93.5 FM adopted its new format). The Bob and Tom Show, a holdover from WOZZ, continues to air during 93 Rock's morning drive time (5-9AM).

External links

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Content deleted Content added
FrescoBot ( talk | contribs)
m Bot: links syntax
No edit summary
Line 32: Line 32:
}}
}}
{{redirect|WRQE|the former WRQE at 99.7 FM in Door County|WZDR}}
{{redirect|WRQE|the former WRQE at 99.7 FM in Door County|WZDR}}

WAPL is way better, WRQE sucks in comparison.


'''WRQE''' (93.5 [[FM broadcasting|FM]]) is "93 Rock," a [[mainstream rock|mainstream rock-formatted]] [[radio broadcasting|radio station]] owned and operated by [[Midwest Communications]], licensed to [[New London, Wisconsin]], and serving the Northeast [[Wisconsin]] area, including [[Appleton, Wisconsin|Appleton]], [[Oshkosh, Wisconsin]], and [[Green Bay, Wisconsin|Green Bay]] (the latter city through a repeater at 93.1 FM, '''W226BD'''). WRQE's main [[transmitter]] is located in [[Maine, Outagamie County, Wisconsin|Maine Township]] in [[Outagamie County, Wisconsin]].
'''WRQE''' (93.5 [[FM broadcasting|FM]]) is "93 Rock," a [[mainstream rock|mainstream rock-formatted]] [[radio broadcasting|radio station]] owned and operated by [[Midwest Communications]], licensed to [[New London, Wisconsin]], and serving the Northeast [[Wisconsin]] area, including [[Appleton, Wisconsin|Appleton]], [[Oshkosh, Wisconsin]], and [[Green Bay, Wisconsin|Green Bay]] (the latter city through a repeater at 93.1 FM, '''W226BD'''). WRQE's main [[transmitter]] is located in [[Maine, Outagamie County, Wisconsin|Maine Township]] in [[Outagamie County, Wisconsin]].

Revision as of 21:49, 11 November 2010

WRQE
WRQE "93 Rock"
Broadcast area Appleton, Oshkosh, and Green Bay, Wisconsin
Frequency93.5 MHz
Branding"93 Rock"
Programming
Format Mainstream Rock
Ownership
Owner Midwest Communications
WIXX, WNCY-FM, WNFL, WYDR/WZDR, WTAQ
History
Former call signs
WLIH-FM (11/1980-7/1981); WNBK (7/1981-1/1989); WOZZ (1/1989-9/2010)
Call sign meaning
RQ represents the phonetic sound of "rock" (also reflects the call sign's former home at 99.7 FM, which simulcast sister station WROE)
Technical information
Facility ID42089
ClassC2
ERP50,000 watts
HAAT150 meters
Translator(s)93.1 W226BD (Green Bay, WI)
Links
Webcast Listen Live
Website 93RockOn.com

WAPL is way better, WRQE sucks in comparison.

WRQE (93.5 FM) is "93 Rock," a mainstream rock-formatted radio station owned and operated by Midwest Communications, licensed to New London, Wisconsin, and serving the Northeast Wisconsin area, including Appleton, Oshkosh, Wisconsin, and Green Bay (the latter city through a repeater at 93.1 FM, W226BD). WRQE's main transmitter is located in Maine Township in Outagamie County, Wisconsin.

Former logo as WOZZ, c. 2008
Former location of WOZZ studios, c. 2006

The station was previously under the WOZZ call sign; under those calls, the station started out with an adult contemporary format (using branding and imaging that alluded to The Wizard of Oz) before moving to a long-running classic rock format in the early 1990s ("93.5 WOZZ, The Classic Rock Station") that featured songs from the 1960s, 70s, and 80s. WOZZ previously had studios in the former Fidelity Bank building in Appleton until 2008, when Midwest Communications moved all its Green Bay and Appleton-area stations under one roof in new facilities in Bellevue, Wisconsin, a Green Bay suburb; however, WOZZ (and later WRQE) continue to maintain a control room and sales office in Appleton to meet Federal Communications Commission requirements.

Classic rock would continue on WOZZ until the the week of September 3, 2010; during that week, WOZZ ran an online stunt on Facebook under the user name "What Does It All Mean?" The profile page (see 'External Links' below) included short videos featuring WOZZ personality David Burns and painted rocks counting down days ("5 days," "4 days," etc.). Speculation was of a format flip to a more current form of mainstream rock, which is what occurred at 5PM on September 3, after REO Speedwagon's "Time for Me to Fly" concluded; at that time, a brief audio montage introduced "93 Rock", promising a mix of rock music from the 1970s, 80s, and 90s in a less-sedate on-air presentation. [1] ( Sammy Hagar's "There's Only One Way to Rock" was the first song played on "93 Rock.") With the format flip, the station adopted the WRQE call sign formerly found on its sister station at 99.7 FM in Door County (which adopted a classic hits format at the same time and day 93.5 FM adopted its new format). The Bob and Tom Show, a holdover from WOZZ, continues to air during 93 Rock's morning drive time (5-9AM).

External links


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