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WFEZ

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This is an old revision of this page, as edited by 70.91.112.121 (talk) at 18:11, 20 April 2016 (Current weekday and weekend lineup). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

WFEZ
Broadcast areaMiami metro area
Frequency93.1 MHz (HD Radio)
BrandingEasy 93.1
Programming
FormatAdult Contemporary
HD2: Dance
Ownership
Owner
  • Cox Media Group
  • (Cox Radio, Inc.)
History
First air date
November 1, 1960 (as WKAT-FM)
Former call signs
WKAT-FM (1960-1971)
WTMI (1971-2001)
WPYM (2002-2005)
WHDR (2005-2010)
Technical information
Facility ID40408
ClassC0
ERP100,000 watts
HAAT307 meters
Transmitter coordinates
25°58′2.00″N 80°12′34.00″W / 25.9672222°N 80.2094444°W / 25.9672222; -80.2094444
Links
WebcastListen Live - WFEZ
Listen Live - Party 93.1 HD2
Websiteeasy93.com
party931.com (HD2)

WFEZ (93.1 FM) is a radio station broadcasting a Adult Contemporary format on analog and HD1 and a Dance format on its HD2 channel. Licensed to Miami, Florida, USA, the stations serves Miami-Dade, Broward, and most of Palm Beach Counties. WFEZ is currently owned by Cox Media Group.[1] Its studios are in Hollywood and the transmitter site is in Miami Gardens.

History

Early years, classical era as WTMI & Dance era as Party 93.1 WPYM (1971-2005)

93.1 FM was originally WKAT-FM, which began broadcasting on a full-time basis December 29, 1947.[2]

Later, the station became classical WTMI, which ran from 1971 to noon, New Year's Eve 2001, when it flipped to a Pure Dance format and became WPYM, "Party 93.1, South Florida's Pure Dance Channel."[3] The station earned an "Innovators Award" from Billboard magazine in 2002 and a "Best Dance Radio Station Award" at the 2004 Dancestar USA honors.[4]

WHDR "93 ROCK" (2005-2010)

WPYM's demise came on February 14, 2005. With poor ratings, Cox Radio took advantage of the sudden departure of WZTA (when it flipped from Rock to Hispanic Rhythmic as WMGE) by picking up the Active Rock format and taking the call letters WHDR, calling itself "93 Rock".[5] It became a mainstream rock station per Mediabase & Nielsen BDS reports in 2008 after continued failure with the active rock format.

WFEZ "Easy 93.1" (2010-present)

On November 20, 2010, at 7 a.m., due to underwhelming ratings with their Mainstream Rock format, WHDR began stunting with Christmas music, with a new format to debut after the holidays. At midnight on December 26, 2010, under the direction of programming director Gary Williams, the station flipped to a Soft AC format and became "Easy 93.1". The first 5 songs to be played were "Easy" by The Commodores, "Something" by The Beatles, "You've Got a Friend" by James Taylor, "My Special Angel" by Bobby Helms, and "Greatest Love of All" by Whitney Houston.[6] Unlike WHDR and WPYM, the station has become a runaway success, more so then many analysts anticipated. In 2013, WFEZ was a Marconi finalist for AC station of the year.

Current weekday and weekend lineup

   Weekdays                              
  • 6AM-10AM: Giselle Andres
  • 10AM-3PM: Gary Williams
  • 3PM-7PM: Jeanne Ashley
  • 7PM-12AM: Delilah
   Saturdays
  • 6AM-9AM: Giselle Andres
  • 9AM-2PM: Denny Miller
  • 2PM-7PM: Ellen Jaffe
  • 7PM-12AM: Jeanne Ashley
   Sundays 

6:50AM– 7:20AM: Easy Community Focus with Ellen Jaffe 7:20AM–9:00AM: Ellen Jaffe 9AM-2PM: Denny Miller

  • 2PM-7PM: Ken James
  • 7PM-12AM: Delilah

WFEZ-HD2: Party 93.1 HD2

On March 24, 2008, Cox radio relaunched "Party 93.1" on its HD2 subcarrier. Like its predecessor, this one is also running jockless but the dance music being played this time around is broader, with more music from the Trance & House genre. In March 2011, the station, which had only been available on HD radio devices within the WFEZ South Florida listening area, began streaming on the internet again for the first time since 2005.

References

  1. ^ "WFEZ Facility Record". United States Federal Communications Commission, audio division.
  2. ^ "WKAT-FM Begins" (PDF). Broadcasting. January 12, 1948. Retrieved 31 October 2014.
  3. ^ http://formatchange.com/wtmi-becomes-party-93-1/
  4. ^ from dancemusic.about.com
  5. ^ http://www.americanradiohistory.com/Archive-RandR/2000s/2005/RR-2005-02-18.pdf
  6. ^ https://radioinsight.com/blog/headlines/netgnomes/27518/93-rocks-no-more-in-miami/