Jump to content

WHQG

Coordinates: 43°02′49″N 87°58′52″W / 43.047°N 87.981°W / 43.047; -87.981
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by PrimeBOT (talk | contribs) at 00:47, 13 August 2020 (top: Task 30 - update Template:Infobox radio station following a redesign (+genfixes)). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

WHQG
Broadcast areaMilwaukee, Wisconsin
Frequency102.9 FM MHz (HD Radio)
Branding102.9 The Hog
Programming
FormatActive Rock
HD2: WJYI (Christian/brokered)
Ownership
Owner
  • Milwaukee Radio Group
    (Saga Communications)
  • (Lakefront Communications, LLC)
WJMR-FM, WJYI, WKLH, WNRG-FM
History
First air date
April 22, 1962 (1962-04-22) (as WRIT-FM)
Former call signs
WRIT-FM (1962-1971)
WFWO (1971-1972)
WBCS-FM (1972-1987)
WLZR-FM (1987–2005)
Call sign meaning
HQG = HOG
Technical information
Facility ID36372
ClassB
ERP50,000 watts
HAAT130 meters (430 ft)
Links
WebcastListen Live
Website1029thehog.com

WHQG ("102.9 The Hog") is an active rock FM radio station licensed to and serving the Milwaukee, Wisconsin area. The station is owned by the Milwaukee Radio Group subsidiary of Saga Communications. Its studios (which are shared with the other four sister stations) and transmitter are located in Milwaukee's West Side.

History

The 102.9 frequency started out in 1962 as WRIT-FM, simulcasting its sister station's Top 40 format. In 1971, they became WFWO-FM (For Women Only),[1] and played light adult contemporary music.

The station flipped to country music on October 1, 1972 as WBCS.[2] WBCS found success with the format, since they were the only country station in the market at the time (WMIL had switched to Top 40 as WZUU the year before).

WLZR succeeded WBCS-FM with a hard rock format on February 16, 1987.[3][4] "Lazer 103" dominated the album-oriented rock market, such that competing station WQFM switched to smooth jazz in 1996. WLZR's longtime morning show of Bob and Brian debuted in July 1987. The station ran a simulcast on sister station 1340 AM beginning in the WBCS era, sporadically until 1997, when 1340 AM became the faith-based WJYI.

Even with Bob & Brian's success, during Lazer 103's last few years, the aging audience of Bob and Brian's show did not translate to listenership of the station's younger-skewing active rock format the rest of the day, as older listeners dispersed to the more work-appropriate offerings of sister station WKLH, or WKTI and other offerings after the show's end. Also in 2004, WLTQ suddenly dropped their light adult contemporary format and switched to 1980s-oriented classic rock as "97.3 The Brew", which also stripped listeners of WLZR post-Bob and Brian, along with WKLH. Management decided to rebuild the station around the demographic of their popular morning show, along with the general decline in the active rock format altogether at the time.

On August 15, 2005, WLZR started stunting with wide-ranging music and teasers. They even played songs with the word "Jack" in them (in reference to the rapidly growing Jack FM format). The next day, just after 10:00, Bob and Brian signed off their morning show by signing on a new radio station -- "102.9 The Hog". The station re-imaged itself, dropped much of the younger-skewing rock music from bands like Slipknot, Mudvayne and Linkin Park, added more rock from the 1960s, 1970s and 1980s, and widely expanded their playlist. The new slogan was "Everything That Rocks", and serves as a harder rocking counterpart to its classic rock sister, WKLH. Another slogan used to help change the station's image and to steal listeners from other stations included "Not Just the 80's, Everything That Rocks". The results of the image and playlist changes were immediate. "The Hog" soon eclipsed "The Brew" in the local ratings, eventually hastening their May 2010 conversion to Top 40 as WRNW.

The Hog's mascot hog was named "Dr. Squealgood" in a contest which is takeoff of a popular Mötley Crüe song: "Dr. Feelgood". The Hog branding's success has led to Janesville, Wisconsin station WWHG changing its branding to mirror WHQG's.

References

43°02′49″N 87°58′52″W / 43.047°N 87.981°W / 43.047; -87.981