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WMXC

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WMXC
Broadcast areaMobile, Alabama
Pensacola, Florida
Frequency99.9 MHz (HD Radio)
BrandingMix 99.9
Programming
FormatHot adult contemporary
HD2: Urban gospel "Hallelujah 100.3"
Ownership
Owner
WKSJ-FM, WNTM, WRKH, WTKX-FM, WRGV
History
First air date
October 16, 1947 (as WKRG-FM)
Former call signs
WKRG-FM (1947–1994)
WKRD (1994)[1]
Call sign meaning
W MiX C
Technical information
Facility ID8696
ClassC
ERP94,000 watts, 100,000 watts (w/beam tilt)
HAAT535 meters (1755 feet)
Transmitter coordinates
30°41′20″N 87°49′49″W / 30.68889°N 87.83028°W / 30.68889; -87.83028
Translator(s)100.3 W262BL (Mobile, relays HD2)
Links
WebcastListen Live
Listen Live (HD2)
Websitemixgulfcoast.iheart.com
1003hallelujahfm.iheart.com (HD2)

WMXC (99.9 FM, "Mix 99.9") is a radio station licensed to serve Mobile, Alabama, United States. The station is owned by iHeartMedia, Inc. and the broadcast license is held by iHM Licenses, LLC. Its studios are located inside the building of former sister television station WKRG-TV on Broadcast Drive in Mobile, and the transmitter is near Robertsdale, Alabama.

Founded in 1947 as WKRG-FM, the station currently broadcasts to the greater Mobile, Alabama, and Pensacola, Florida, area.[2]

History

WMXC can trace its history back to October 16, 1947, when it signed on as WKRG-FM.[3] The original call letters represented the initials of Kenneth R. Giddens, a movie theatre owner, broadcast pioneer, and architect. Giddens owned the WKRG radio stations and WKRG-TV, the latter of which continues to broadcast with the same call letters.[4][5] Giddens would go on to head the Voice of America from 1969 to 1977 and served as acting director of Radio Marti in 1985.[4]

WMXC was originally a simulcast of AM sister WKRG — today's WNTM — but adopted a beautiful music format in 1965. During the 1970s, WKRG-FM became the area's first FM Top-40 station and was known as "G-100". The station has offered some form of pop contemporary format ever since.

For a time in the 1960s, WKRG-TV, Inc., which was the license holder for WKRG, WKRG-FM, and WKRG-TV, was 50%-owned by the Mobile Press-Register. In 1966, when S. I. Newhouse acquired the Mobile newspaper company he also acquired that 50% ownership stake.[6] Newhouse, who also owned radio stations associated with his other two Alabama-based newspapers, would later sell all of these stations to focus on the print side of his media empire.

Station founder Kenneth Giddens, a former board member of the National Association of Broadcasters, died in May 1993.[4] After nearly five decades of operation by the Giddens family, WKRG-TV, Inc., reached an agreement in April 1994 to sell WKRG-FM to Coast Radio, LLC. The deal was approved by the FCC on July 21, 1994.[7] In September 1994, Coast Radio, LLC, flipped the station to Capitol Broadcasting Company, LLC. The deal was approved by the FCC on December 15, 1994, and the transaction was consummated the same day.[8]

The station was assigned the call letters WKRD by the Federal Communications Commission on September 12, 1994.[1] This change would prove short-lived as the station was assigned the current WMXC callsign on October 3, 1994.[1]

In April 1997, Capitol Broadcasting Company, LLC, made a deal to sell this station to Clear Channel Communications through their Clear Channel Radio License, Inc, subsidiary.[9] The deal, part of the $24 million complete acquisition of Capital Broadcasting, was approved by the FCC on November 21, 1997, and the transaction was consummated on December 31, 1997.[10][11]

File:WMXC Small Logo.jpg
Logo as Lite Mix 99.9, 1998-2015

Hurricane Ivan struck the Gulf Coast in 2004, and Hurricane Katrina followed in 2005. On both occasions, the station dropped all regular programming, and along with WKSJ, broadcast local hurricane and recovery information. It was the market's only radio-specific storm coverage. During Katrina, WMXC's continuous local coverage ran for 122 consecutive hours.

In 2006, WMXC began streaming on the Internet but with a different commercial schedule than its over-the-air signal. During 2007, the station started broadcasting in HD. A secondary HD-2 channel is also operating with a full-time Smooth Jazz format, a complement to the primary station's Smooth Jazz Sunday Brunch.

WMXC-HD2

WMXC aired an urban contemporary format on its HD2 subchannel, branded as "100.3 The Beat" (simulcast on FM translator W262BL 100.3 FM Mobile). On January 29, 2018, W262BL/WMXC-HD2 changed their format from urban contemporary (now heard on WRGV 107.3 FM Pensacola) to urban gospel, branded as "Hallelujah 100.3".[12]

File:W262BL 1003TheBeat.png (WMXC's previous HD2 format)

References

  1. ^ a b c "Call Sign History". FCC Media Bureau CDBS Public Access Database.
  2. ^ "Station Information Profile". Arbitron.
  3. ^ "Directory of the AM and FM stations of the United States". 1952 Broadcasting Yearbook. Washington, D.C.: Broadcasting Publications, Inc. 1952. p. 68.
  4. ^ a b c Lambert, Bruce (May 9, 1993). "Kenneth Giddens, a Former Chief Of Voice of America, Dies at 84". The New York Times.
  5. ^ "The Facilities of Radio". Broadcasting Yearbook 1969. Washington, D.C.: Broadcasting Publications, Inc. 1969. p. B-5.
  6. ^ "Sam Hits 21". Time. July 15, 1966.
  7. ^ "Application Search Details (BALH-19940429GP)". FCC Media Bureau. July 21, 1994.
  8. ^ "Application Search Details (BALH-19940923GH)". FCC Media Bureau. December 15, 1994.
  9. ^ Brantley, Mike (April 10, 1997). "More Changes on Tap for Mobile, Ala., Radio Lineup". The Mobile Register.
  10. ^ "Application Search Details (BAL-19970408GO)". FCC Media Bureau. December 31, 1997.
  11. ^ "Clear Channel Communications has agreed to purchase WKSF-AM-FM, WDWG(FM), WRKH(FM), WMXC(FM) and WNSP(FM)". Broadcasting & Cable. April 14, 1997. Archived from the original on October 22, 2012.
  12. ^ Hallelujah Launches in Mobile Radioinsight - January 29, 2018