

WMNI (after founder William R MNIch) is an Adult Standards station in Columbus, Ohio. They went on the air in 1958 and carried a Country format for many years.
A daily look into one of the world's largest collections of radio station bumper stickers and memorabilia.
I watched the movie "Pirate Radio" this afternoon. It's directed by Richard Curtis who also wrote "Four Weddings and a Funeral" and "Notting Hill." British radio in the 1960s was completely controlled by the government which refused to air rock music. This spawned a group of illegal ship-based broadcasters programming popular music from international waters, the most famous of which was Radio Caroline (generically named Radio Rock in the movie.) The ensemble cast was underwhelming even with Philip Seymour Hoffman playing the lone American DJ called The Count. Kenneth Branaugh's performance as a government suit bent on outlawing pirate radio is absurdly over-the-top and a subplot about a character named Carl finding his father is just lame. Sometimes it seemed like Curtis wrote the screenplay based on songs used on the soundtrack (Leonard Cohen's "So Long Marianne" fit just a little too perfectly into the script.) Given the subject matter I really wanted to like this film but didn't. Apparently "Pirate Radio" came out in Britain last spring under the title "The Boat That Rocked" and totally bombed at the box office. They trimmed 20 minutes for the American release but no amount of cutting can save this turkey.
KQLZ "Pirate Radio 100.3 FM" was a "Rock 40" station in Los Angeles, California from 1989 to 1993. They aired a mix of pop hits and rock songs claiming to play everything from Madonna to Metallica to Milli Vanilli. The station was masterminded by Scott Shannon who found great success in the 1980s with Z100 WHTZ in New York City. Unfortunately, the ratings never materialized, Shannon was fired in 1991 and KQLZ is now known as one of the most high profile failures in the history of radio.
WLUX was an Adult Standards station licensed to Islip, New York. This format ran from 1995 until 2002 and they were an affiliate of the satellite-fed Music Of Your Life service. 540 AM is currently WLIE, a brokered Ethnic station.
95.9 WATD is an Adult Contemporary/Classic Hits station licensed to Marshfield, Massachusetts. Their full-service, community-centered programming includes local and regional news, live high school sports and their own weatherman. WATD's transmitter site is located next to a landfill (the only place where local officials would allow the towers to be built.) The owner then asked for and received the WATD call letters which stand for We're At The Dump.

RTL Radio is a Contemporary Hit radio station in Berlin, Germany.
WYYY was a 1970s-era Rock station licensed to Kalamazoo, Michigan. Looking at an old playlist, it's interesting to see what was played at WYYY--Roberta Flack, Seals & Crofts and Lobo might be considered too light even for today's Soft Rock stations let alone "Kalamazoo's Solid Rocker!!!"


KF 105.4 is a Contemporary Hit Music station from Kaunas, Lithuania. Listening live while making this post I heard Bon Jovi "We Weren't Born To Follow,"
WOXY was an Alternative/Modern Rock station from Oxford, Ohio. They existed from 1983 until 2004 at which point they switched to an online-only radio station. 97X never had a great signal and could be a difficult catch in Dayton--even parts of their main market in Cincinnati had a tough time getting clear reception. Along with their weak signal, WOXY's playlist was huge which is probably why they continually suffered weak ratings. Back when I had access to radio trade magazines, I was always amazed at the size of their playlist which was easily 3 or 4 times larger than a traditional, commercial alternative station. Even though they broadcast from the home of Miami University, 97X wasn't a college station although their song choices mirrored what many university radio stations played. The first (and last, terrestrially) song they ever spun was "Sunday Bloody Sunday" by U2.




On this date in 1920, Pittsburgh Pennsylvania's KDKA began broadcasting as the first commercial radio station in the United States. The first announcement heard were the returns from the 1920 presidential race between Warren G. Harding and James M. Cox. (Cox would later build a large newspaper and radio enterprise and died here in Dayton in 1957.)
KGSG was a Gospel music station licensed to Pasco, Washington. Sometime in the past 10 months they switched to a Rhythmic Adult Contemporary format as "Groove 93.7." A third KGSG sticker can be seen here.