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WJLT

Coordinates: 38°04′44″N 87°36′36″W / 38.079°N 87.610°W / 38.079; -87.610
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This is an old revision of this page, as edited by Mlaffs (talk | contribs) at 02:20, 5 December 2016 (changed call sign from WVHI to WBGW 23 Nov 16). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

WJLT
Broadcast areaEvansville, Indiana
Frequency105.3 MHz
BrandingESPN 105.3 Evansville
Programming
FormatSports Talk
Ownership
Owner
History
First air date
1964 (as WVHI-FM)
Former call signs
WVHI-FM (1964-1982)
WYNG (1982-2003)
Technical information
Facility ID36946
ClassB
ERP50,000 watts
HAAT150 meters
Links
WebcastListen Live
Websiteespnevansville.com

WJLT is a radio station licensed to broadcast at 105.3 FM in Evansville, Indiana.

History

The station started as WVHI-FM, a religious station.

In 1982, the owners decided to compete with WBKR and changed to a country music format. The station became WYNG (Wing 105).

WYNG was successful through the 1980s, but then things began to sour. The first blow came when WBKR started to target Evansville, IN a little more (it was primarily targeting Owensboro, Kentucky, but had a 100 kW signal that was received in Evansville). The second blow came in 1992 when WKDQ dumped its Adult Contemporary/Oldies hybrid format in favor of country, immediately taking numbers from WYNG. A third blow came when, in a desperate move, WYNG dumped its Wing 105 moniker and started calling itself Y105 and trying to target younger listeners.

WYNG was later acquired by Cumulus Media (along with WGBF-FM/AM, WDKS, and WTRI) and later spun to Clear Channel Communications (now known as iHeartMedia). Clear Channel elected to move WYNG to the 94.9 frequency which was a 50 kW facility, but the transmitter was further north in Mount Carmel, Illinois. and ratings plummented. Eventually the 94.9 frequency was sold to W. Russ Withers, Jr..

Meanwhile, Clear Channel decided to compete with Evansville's adult contemporary powerhouse and consistent ratings leader WIKY-FM. With a callsign change to WJLT, Lite 105.3 took to the air, but the ratings plummeted for 105.3 in the new AC format. When Clear Channel spun off its Evansville cluster to Regent Communications (now Townsquare Media), Regent flipped WJLT to oldies.

WJLT saw much success with that format, with respectable ratings among the top five or six stations in Evansville.[1]

A large part of that success was credited by listeners to the fact that Regent was able to lure Joe Blair, a popular local morning DJ who had previously built up a loyal audience at WIKY and later at WJPS-FM (now WLFW, to take on the station's morning show.

As an oldies station, WJLT branded itself as "Superhits 105.3" and aired numerous television commercials. The station also simulcasted audio of local television station WEHT when severe weather was in the area and WEHT carried wall-to-wall weather coverage.

On May 27th, 2014, WJLT announced it would flip to sports talk on July 9th; with the announcement, WJLT would release their entire airstaff, running jockless until the flip took place. WJLT took the ESPN Radio affiliation, then heard on rimshot WYFX, with the change. The change took place at 3PM that day; the last song on Superhits 105.3 WJLT was It's the End of the World as We Know It (and I Feel Fine) by R.E.M, and ESPN 105.3 launched with the premiere of "Ford & O'Bryan", the only local show on 105.3. WJLT became an affiliate of the Chicago Cubs Radio Network starting with the 2015 season.

WJLT call letters

In the mid-1980s, the WJLT calls were assigned to a station in Crozet-Charlottesville, VA on 102.3 FM. The station was known as Light 102.3 FM and featured an AC satellite format. The station was co-owned with WPED/810, which had a contemporary country format. Both were owned at the time by Elting Enterprises. The stations were later sold.

References

38°04′44″N 87°36′36″W / 38.079°N 87.610°W / 38.079; -87.610