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WCHD

Coordinates: 39°43′19″N 84°12′36″W / 39.722°N 84.210°W / 39.722; -84.210
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WCHD
Broadcast areaDayton, Ohio
Frequency99.9 MHz (HD Radio)
BrandingChannel 999
Programming
FormatTop 40 (CHR)
AffiliationsPremium Choice
iHeartRadio
Ownership
Owner
WRZX, WYDB, WMMX, WONE, WTUE, WZDA
History
First air date
1962 (as WKET)
Former call signs
WKET (1962-1964)
WVUD-FM (1964-1992)
WLQT (1992-2011)
WDKF (2011-2012)
Call sign meaning
We're CHannel 99.9 Dayton
Technical information
Facility ID55500
ClassB
ERP28,000 watts
HAAT200 meters
Links
WebcastListen Live
WebsiteChannel 99.9

WCHD (99.9 FM, "Channel 9-9-9") is a Top 40 Mainstream station serving the Dayton area. WCHD, whose community of license is Kettering, Ohio, broadcasts on 99.9 MHz with an ERP of 28,000 watts, and is owned by iHeartMedia, Inc.. Its studios are located just outside downtown Dayton and its transmitter is in south Dayton off Interstate 75.

History

The station began their history on December 16, 1993 as alternative rock WZJX (94-5 X-Rock), Dayton's first-ever alternative station. George Wymer was General Manager; Randy Scovil was Program Director as well as the afternoon drive host. Steve Stone and Christy Chatman were the morning show, Andy Sims did mid-days, and Greg Johns hosted the evening shift. During the six months as an alternative station, X-Rock brought two sell-out shows to Hara Arena: The Breeders & Afghan Whigs, and later The Smashing Pumpkins. In the station's first ratings period (Jan–March 1994), X-Rock's ratings in the 18–34 demographic had already grown to half of longtime Dayton rock station WTUE.

In early May 1994, the station was sold to Terry Jacobs (formerly of Jacor) who decided to flip the frequency to be Dayton's third oldies station, to compete with similar formats at 95.3 FM and 103.9 FM. On 3 May, the X-Rock staff was fired; the station began playing 20 different versions of "Louie Louie" and calling itself "Louie 95" in an effort to entice listeners by playing different versions of the mid-1960s hit "Louie, Louie", a Richard Berry-penned college ditty popularized by The Kingsmen, and Paul Revere and The Raiders among many others. During that time it was known as "The Chicken" in reference to its mascot, a giant whole broiled chicken dressed in seasonal clothing. It became WDOL, an oldies outlet, until 1996 when consistently minuscule ratings led to a switch to Rhythmic as WBTT, "94.5 The Beat". By 1999 they shifted to Top 40 Mainstream and began a serious challenge to take on the area's longtime rival, WGTZ. They would also drop "The Beat" branding to become WDKF, "94.5 KISS-FM", in 2000, after Clear Channel expanded the brand to other markets. Despite the move, they maintained a Rhythmic lean during that tenure.

In March 2005, WDKF stunned listeners[citation needed] by holding a "funeral" for "KISS-FM", and briefly stunted as "94.5 FM-Playing Whatever We Want, Whenever We Want". On March 30, 2005, at 3 PM, the all-new Channel 9-4-5 launched. Despite the changes however, the station continues to lean Rhythmic as they battle Main Line Broadcasting of Dayton's Rhythmic contemporary rival WDHT for listeners. Main Line's other station, WGTZ, dropped their Top 40 format in November 2007 and flipped to "Fly 92.9", a "We Play Everything"-type Adult hits format, making WDKF the only CHR station in Dayton. The "Channel" branding was used previously in the late 1960s by sister station WONE (AM) "Channel 98" for its then-Top 40 format when it competed with WGTZ's AM sister WING.

In May 2009, Clear Channel Communications removed all local jocks from this station, and its website. Channel picked up Clear Channel's new programming initiative known as Premium Choice 24 hours. The playlist is generated and used nationally in addition to voice tracks and liners.

WDKF previously broadcast "Dayton's New Joints" on its HD-2 subchannel before going silent. Currently, on their HD-2 channel, is the IHeartRadio Hits Live format.

On May 24, 2011, Clear Channel announced that WDKF would swap signals with sister station WLQT, thus giving the former more signal coverage in the Dayton area.[1]

On May 27, 2011 at 12:00 pm EDT, Channel 9-4-5 became Channel 9-9-9, continuing scheduled programming with On Air with Ryan Seacrest (radio)'s American Top 5 at noon.

On September 17, 2012, WDKF changed their call letters to WCHD to go with the "Channel 9-9-9" branding.

Channel 9-9-9 broadcasts mainstream top 40 while being programmed by local program director, Steven Lewis from 6am - 10pm. This gives Channel 9-9-9 more of a local flavor compared to most Premium Choice [Clear Channel] stations.

WCHD was the original call sign of what is now WDMK 105.9 FM in Detroit, Michigan.

On-air DJs

Weekdays

6am-10am: Elvis Duran and The Channel 9-9-9 Morning Show (syndicated from WHTZ).

10am-2pm: On-Air with Ryan Seacrest (syndicated from KIIS-FM)

2pm-7pm: Steven Lewis [Live & Local]

7pm-12am: Billy The Kidd (KHKS-FM)

12am-6am: Sisanie (KIIS-FM)

On Saturday, Channel 9-9-9 has local DJ 'E' from 2pm-7pm on the air. E has been with channel since 2005. From 7pm-Midnight, Saturday Night Online with Romeo (syndicated from WIOQ).

On Sunday, Channel 9-9-9 runs American Top 40 with Ryan Seacrest, and Club Kane (syndicated from WIHT).

Channel 9-9-9 broadcasts in HD and streams in high quality at channeldayton.com

References

  1. ^ Frequency swap in Dayton from Radioinsight.com (May 24, 2011)

39°43′19″N 84°12′36″W / 39.722°N 84.210°W / 39.722; -84.210