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WIBC (FM)

Coordinates: 39°46′03″N 86°00′12″W / 39.7675°N 86.0033°W / 39.7675; -86.0033
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WIBC
Broadcast areaIndianapolis metropolitan area
Frequency93.1 MHz (HD Radio)
Branding93 WIBC
Programming
FormatFM/HD1: Talk
HD2: Sports (WFNI simulcast)
HD3: Sports "ESPN Radio"
AffiliationsPremiere Networks
Westwood One Network
Fox News Radio
Ownership
Owner
WFNI, WLHK, WYXB
History
First air date
December 5, 1960[1]
Former call signs
WIBC-FM (1960–1968)
WNAP (1968–1986)
WEAG (1986–1987)
WKLR (1987–1994)
WNAP (1994–2000)
WNOU (2000–2007)
WEXM (10/2007–12/2007)
Call sign meaning
Indianapolis Broadcasting Company
Technical information
Facility ID19524
ClassB
ERP13,500 watts
HAAT302 meters (991 ft)
Translator(s)107.5 W298BB (Indianapolis, relays HD2)
Links
WebcastListen Live
Websitewibc.com

WIBC (93.1 MHz) is a commercial FM radio station in Indianapolis. It is owned by Emmis Communications and broadcasts a talk radio format. The studios are located at 40 Monument Circle in downtown Indianapolis. The transmitter and antenna are located near South Post Road and Burk Road on the far east side of Indianapolis. The station airs mostly local conservative talk shows on weekdays, with several nationally syndicated programs, including Dana Loesch, Chad Benson, Coast to Coast AM with George Noory and on weekends Kim Komando and Bill Cunningham. Weekends also feature shows on money, health, gardening, computers and guns. Some weekend hours are paid brokered programming. Some hours begin with world and national news from Fox News Radio.

For nearly seven decades, WIBC broadcast on the AM radio frequency of 1070 kHz. On December 26, 2007, WIBC's call letters and talk programming moved to the FM dial at co-owned 93.1 MHz. Also on that date, the 1070 kHz frequency took the call sign WFNI and began an all-sports format as "1070 The Fan".[2]

WIBC broadcasts in HD, using its HD-2 signal for WFNI's local sports format, also heard on translator 107.5 W298BB. WIBC's HD-3 signal carries the national ESPN Radio Network.

History

Early years and heyday as WNAP

Offices of WIBC

93.1 FM in Indianapolis first signed on as WIBC-FM on December 5, 1960.[1] It aired an automated classical music format.

On July 22, 1968, the station was re-launched as WNAP.[3] It was the first FM station in the Indianapolis market to broadcast a mix of album-oriented rock and Top 40 hits, better known as "Rock 40"—an ancestor of the CHR format, and was in direct competition with Top 40 leader 1310 WIFE. In 1970, WNAP began broadcasting in stereo. According to the documentary film Naptown Rock Radio Wars,[4] station and program managers from across the United States came to Indianapolis to listen to WNAP in order to figure out the unique style of "The Buzzard" so they could emulate its success at their own stations. The classic top of the hour station identification from this era featured the sound of two thunderbolts and the distinctive voice of WIBC's Chuck Riley, brother of WNAP's DJ Michael D. "Buster Bodine" Hanks, intoning the phrase, "The wrath of The Buzzard! WNAP, Indianapolis".[5] Later in the 1970s and early 1980s, the station was rebranded as "WNAP Stereo 93 FM, The Buzzard".

Demise of The Buzzard

On March 4, 1986, suffering from a fall in ratings due to competition from WFBQ (Q-95), the format of 93.1 was changed to a rock-driven hot adult contemporary format, and the call letters became WEAG with branding as "Eagle 93." The format was later changed to classic hits with the call letters WKLR on August 14, 1987. On April 1, 1988, WKLR changed from classic hits to oldies. Among WKLR's disc jockeys was WIBC newsman Steve Simpson.

WNAP returned at 5:00 p.m. on September 9, 1994, when WKLR was changed back to a classic hits station with a strong focus on the "greatest hits of the 70s."[6] This incarnation of WNAP later moved in a more classic rock direction playing "classic rock that really rocks", with the syndicated Howard Stern Show carried in the morning in what was a futile attempt to compete with WFBQ's locally-dominant Bob and Tom Show. Despite on-air boasts that WNAP was going to "kick Q-95's ass", the classic rock format was a failure.

Radio Now 93.1

After weeks of stunting, WNAP changed to contemporary hits on March 28, 2000, at 6:00 a.m., with new call letters WNOU and the name "Radio Now."[7] Radio Now's first song was "The Rockafeller Skank" by Fatboy Slim. The station received some national notice in November 2004, when its morning show conducted the first interview with Indiana Pacers player Ron Artest following the Pacers–Pistons brawl.[8][9]

Orbital 93.1

In 2006, WNOU launched an HD-2 subchannel, dubbed "Orbital 93.1", which offered a rhythmic contemporary format with emphasis on current and classic dance music. On October 9, 2007, Orbital was discontinued, being replaced with the Radio NOW format for one day after the format ended on 93.1, and before it moved to 100.9, serving as a buffer for the format.[10]

WIBC moves to FM

On October 8, 2007, at Noon, after playing "When You're Gone" by Avril Lavigne, 93.1 began stunting with Christmas music under new temporary call sign WEXM, being promoted as "The 93 Days of Christmas." The Christmas format was a place holder as part of the transition to moving the talk programming from 1070 AM to 93.1 FM. Initially planned to last 93 days, from October 8 to January 8, the change-over was moved up to December 26. The switch came after Emmis acquired local radio rights to the Indianapolis Colts football team. To prevent frequent preemption of programming and tedious shufflings of games on its stations, it was decided to move WIBC to the FM frequency immediately after Christmas, and make 1070 AM a sports station as "AM 1070 The Fan", with its call sign changing to WFNI. This time the "-FM" suffix was not required on 93.1's call sign, since there would no longer be a WIBC on the AM band.

Upon the demise of "Radio Now", Radio One purchased the intellectual property of the station from Emmis Communications. Two days later, on October 10, the "Radio Now" branding, format and logo were installed on the new 100.9 WNOU (formerly WYJZ, now WNOW-FM).[11] Local Radio One management said that they would offer the displaced staffers of 93.1 WNOU the first chance of joining the new station's lineup, and would use the same imaging as the former WNOU at 93.1. Emmis also stated that they would release displaced RadioNow staffers from their "non-compete" contracts.[12]

The WNAP call letters are now used at a gospel-formatted AM station licensed in Norristown, Pennsylvania, serving the Philadelphia market.

Programming

Local news and talk

As of 2017, WIBC broadcasts four daily local programs: "The Morning News with Tony Katz", "Chicks on the Right", "Tony Katz Today" and "The Hammer and Nigel Show."

Joe Staysniak appears from time to time. He had moved to the morning show in October 2008. He replaced Jake Query, who in turn replaced longtime WIBC fixture Jeff Pigeon (referred to as "Pidge" by the staff and listeners), who left the station October 1, 2007. Pigeon had been WIBC's morning host since taking over for Gary Todd in 1988, and prior to that had hosted the 7:00 p.m.-midnight shift when WIBC was still a full-service/music station. (Pigeon later resurfaced at oldies station WKLU.)

Staysniak previously co-hosted in the afternoon with Dave "the King" Wilson, whose show launched in the mid-1990s but ended in March 2009 due to budgetary cutbacks. At that time, Simpson's show moved from 6:00–8:00 p/m/ to 3:00–7:00 p.m.

WIBC previously had a media partnership with local ABC affiliate WRTV, but as of October 1, 2018, has since been replaced with WISH-TV as the media partner, with WISH providing news reports as well as hourly weather updates on the top of the hour. In addition, a radio simulcast of WISH-TV's morning newscast, News 8 Daybreak, is heard from 5:00 to 6:00 a.m. [13]

Local sports

WIBC was the AM flagship station of the NFL's Indianapolis Colts, simulcasting the games with sister station WLHK. In addition, WIBC was the flagship for the NBA's Indiana Pacers and the WNBA's Indiana Fever, and for the Indianapolis Motor Speedway Radio Network, carrying the Indianapolis 500 since the network's creation in 1952, and the NASCAR Brickyard 400 since that race's 1994 debut. WIBC also aired Indiana University football.

Most of WIBC (AM)'s sports properties remained at 1070 WFNI when WIBC moved to FM (with WLHK remaining the FM outlet for the Colts and for IndyCar). However, on June 22, 2010, the Pacers announced an extension of their broadcast agreement with Emmis Communications which included their games moving to FM and back to WIBC, beginning in the 2010–11 season.

Beginning with the 2011–12 basketball season, WIBC replaced WLHK as the Indianapolis broadcast home of Indiana University basketball. In case of a conflict, Pacers games move to WFNI for the night.

Additionally, WIBC aired Butler University basketball, IndyCar races and high school championship events that are bumped from WFNI due to conflicts.

Syndicated talk

On April 13, 2015, WIBC announced the station was dropping Rush Limbaugh. Charlie Morgan, an executive for Emmis, indicated that the decision to drop Limbaugh was about the "long-term direction of the station", but also acknowledged that there was a "business element to the decision".[14] Limbaugh's weekday show moved to 1260 WNDE, which is owned by iHeartMedia, the parent company of Limbaugh's syndicator Premiere Networks. WIBC continues to carry syndicated talk shows from Dana Loesch, Chad Benson, George Noory (Coast to Coast AM), Kim Komando, and Bill Cunningham.

References

  1. ^ a b "Broadcasting by Station WIBC-FM to Start Monday". Indianapolis News. December 1, 1960. p. 61. Retrieved June 16, 2020.
  2. ^ "Local News".
  3. ^ Inman, Julia (July 26, 1968). "Revamped FM Radio Outlet Promises a 'Young Sound'". Indianapolis Star. p. 17.
  4. ^ http://www.naptownrockradiowars.com/
  5. ^ "Trivia". www.naptownrockradiowars.com.
  6. ^ http://www.americanradiohistory.com/Archive-RandR/1990s/1994/RR-1994-09-16.pdf
  7. ^ http://www.americanradiohistory.com/Archive-RandR/2000s/2000/RR-2000-03-31.pdf
  8. ^ Montieth, Mark (November 24, 2004). "Artest sidelined? No way". Indianapolis Star. Retrieved June 2, 2013.
  9. ^ "Artest mixes regret with CD self-promotion". espn.com. Associated Press. November 24, 2004. Retrieved June 2, 2013.
  10. ^ http://www.hdradio.com/station_guides/widget.php?id=41 HD Radio Guide for Indianapolis
  11. ^ Smith, Erika D. (October 11, 2007). "WNOU revived; Radio One buys site". Indianapolis Star. Archived from the original on October 12, 2007.
  12. ^ "RadioNow Returns To Indianapolis : RadioInsight".
  13. ^ "WISH-TV, WIBC launch partnership". WISH-TV. 2018-10-01. Retrieved 2018-12-24.
  14. ^ Emmis And Premiere Networks End Partnership In Indianapolis WMBF News 13 April 2015

39°46′03″N 86°00′12″W / 39.7675°N 86.0033°W / 39.7675; -86.0033