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WWZY

Coordinates: 40°18′18″N 73°59′06″W / 40.305°N 73.985°W / 40.305; -73.985
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WWZY
Broadcast areaMonmouth-Ocean-Atlantic-Middlesex County, New Jersey
Frequency107.1 MHz
BrandingFun 107.1
Programming
FormatHot AC
Ownership
OwnerPress Communications, LLC
WJLP-DT, KJWP-DT, WHTG, WKMK / WTHJ, WBBO
History
First air date
1960 (as WRLB)
Former call signs
WRLB (1960-1981)
WWUU (1981-1982)
WMJY (1982-1989)
WZVU (1989-1997)
Call sign meaning
onetime member of the regional WYNY "Y-107" quadcast
Technical information
Facility ID32983
ClassA
ERP5,000 watts
HAAT110 meters
Links
WebcastListen Live
Websitefun1071.com

WWZY is a hot adult contemporary music formatted radio station in Long Branch, New Jersey, referred to as "Fun 107.1".

"107.1 FM" simulcasted on 99.7 WBHX/Tuckerton from June 30, 2003 to November 1, 2015.

WWZY Simulcast

"107.1 FM" was simulcast to Southern Ocean County New Jersey on 99.7 WBHX in Tuckerton, New Jersey from June 30, 2003 to November 1, 2015. The WBHX transmitter is located on Long Beach Island in the town of Beach Haven, NJ. The station is also played throughout most of the day in southern Ocean County on WCAT-TV, the public-access television cable TV channel serving Pinelands Regional High School.

107.1 History

107.1 was founded in 1960 as WRLB. At the time, the station's owner was afforded the possibility of broadcasting with 50,000 watts, but he declined, thinking that FM radio had limited potential. Therefore, the station signed on with 3,000-watts from a tower located in Long Branch, NJ. The studios were located adjacent to the tower. WWZY still uses the same tower location (with actually the third different tower on the site), although the studios are now in Neptune, NJ. When the Long Branch 107.1 did not utilize 50,000 watts, the Federal Communications Commission subsequently assigned 107.1s to Briarcliff Manor, NY (north of New York City), Belvidere, NJ (near Stroudsburg, PA) and Patchogue, NY (Long Island). These area 107.1s would later haunt the Long Branch allocation with interference in fringe areas.

Throughout the 1960s and 1970s, WRLB was a "full-service" station, broadcasting big-band music, high school sports and local news. An Italian program aired on Sunday. Competition was mainly from the Asbury Park Press' radio station, WJLK-AM-FM, which aired similar full-service programming.

In 1969, WRLB revamped its programming continuing with adult "middle of the road" music from 6 a.m. until midnight when it switched to rock/top40 music hosted and pioneered by Charlie Roberts who was the first disk jockey in New Jersey to play rock on a commercial FM radio station . . . the program was called The Subway (an homage to Dick Summer at WBZ in Boston who was Charlie's mentor when he was at Boston University). His first song selection was "Road Runner" by Junior Walker and the All Stars. On occasion, he would have live in-studio guests including the progressive rock band Vanilla Fudge.

In 1981, WRLB was sold to Monmouth Broadcasting and became contemporary hit radio, WWUU (known on air as "U 107"). The station was programmed as contemporary hit radio, but without a strong local presence due to automation. The station was sold again to Jonathan and Elizabeth Hoffman (under the similar name "Mammoth Broadcasting"), and in 1982 became WMJY (Y-107), featuring live local talent playing the hits. Liners for the rechristened station highlighted the station's local presence by touting "The New Live Y-107". Legendary radio personality Sean "Hollywood" Hamilton spent a short time doing afternoon drive at Y-107 in early 1982 before moving onto WKTU in New York City.

At first, Y-107 maintained You 107's CHR format, but within a few years, Y-107 was a rock station, using the slogan "Rock Hits Home", with special programming on Sundays spotlighting new-age music, blues, psychedelic music, and The Beatles. Disc jockeys at Y-107 in its rock days included John Ford, Linda Jordan, T.J. Brustowicz, Bobbi Stewart, Garrick Hart, Willobee (now Program Director at WFUZ, Nanticoke, PA), Lauren Pressley and Thom Morrera. Ian Case hosted a morning show that combined music and comedy bits. Newscasters included Doug Doyle, Rhonda Schaffler (later of CNN) and Matt Ward.

In late 1988, Mammoth sold WMJY to K&K Broadcasting. At the time of its purchase, K&K operated two radio stations in Erie, PA. Word had gotten out that a format change was in the works. On January 19, 1989, mention had been made on the air of a rally to be held the following afternoon at the station's studios in downtown Long Branch to save Y-107's rock format. In the early morning hours of January 20, 1989, K&K sent a security guard to remove overnight announcer T.J. Brustowicz from the premises and padlock the doors. The entire staff was fired (many reading of their job loss in the paper that morning), though some announcers and support personnel were eventually hired back. K&K then temporarily instituted a satellite-driven hard rock format called "Z-Rock." Many of WMJY's listeners objected to the firing of the local DJs and the hard-rock format, and petitioned K&K to change it back to classic rock. The new owners refused.

In May 1989, WMJY changed to a local, soft-adult contemporary format called "SeaView 107 FM." The new format featured soft-rock artists with a heavy dose of 1960s and 1970s oldies. Call letters changed to WZVU in June 1989.

WZVU "SeaView 107" was a ratings success in the Monmouth-Ocean ratings, beating longtime rival WJLK-FM within the first year. The station began to lean heavily on oldies, first featuring "all-oldies weekends."

Unfortunately, WZVU's corporate parent, K&K Broadcasting began to encounter financial problems. In 1992, all of the local DJs were terminated, and the station switched to a satellite delivered oldies format. Curiously, this was the same satellite format that was aired on WJLK-AM 1310 in Asbury Park. By this time, the Asbury Park Press had sold WJLK-AM-FM to D&F Broadcasting.

In early 1994, GM Jim Davis (former Drake jock "Big Bob" Evans on WOR-FM) launched Oldies 107.1. Bob Steele was the second PD. Airstaff included, Rocky D, Jersey Judi Franco, Big Joe Henry, Tommy Dean, Bobby Ryan, Captain Jack Aponte and Mark Lee. Innovative specialty shows were on weekends such as All Request Radio and the Sunday Night Train with Tommy Dean and Bobby Ryan.

In mid-1996, Long Branch's 107.1 was sold to Big City Radio along with the 107.1's in Briarcliff Manor, NY and Hampton Bays, (Long Island) NY. The three stations began a simulcast of Country Music that December 5th, ironically known as "New Country Y-107."[1] Call letters of the Long Branch station were changed to WWZY. Later, the 107.1 in Belvidere, NJ was added to make Y-107 a four station "quadrocast."

On May 7, 2002, the "Y-107" quadrocast ended the country format, and after a day of stunting with construction sounds, the quadrocast flipped to a tropical music format as "Rumba 107".[2] The WWZY transmitter was moved to a tower in the Belford section of Atlantic Highlands NJ. The four stations were then sold when Big City announced they would file for bankruptcy. 107.1 in Long Branch retained the WWZY call letters; WWZY was then purchased by Press Communications LLC, moved back to the Long Branch tower, became The Breeze on June 30, 2003, and started simulcasting on 99.7 WBHX. WWZY kept the Breeze branding until the fall of 2013 when it rebranded as 107.1 FM A Music Radio Station, continuing with the simulcast of WBHX FM 99.7 in Tuckerton, NJ. On July 1, 2014, 107.1 and 99.7 rebranded as Fun 107.1, shifting to a hot AC format. The station features Pork Roll & Eggs, Chelsea, Tom Farinaro, and Ali as its personalities, and is another place on the dial to hear the same teen-friendly Top 40 acts that are played on other stations, such as Taylor Swift, Maroon 5, Meghan Trainor, Ariana Grande, and One Direction.

On-air personalities

  • Randy Davis
  • Erin Vogt
  • Lisa Anderson
  • Dan Turi
  • Shelli Cole
  • Matt Ward
  • Sue Linfante
  • Mike Harrison
  • Ted Efaw
  • Johnny Dark
  • Jason Watt
  • Dannie Schade

References


40°18′18″N 73°59′06″W / 40.305°N 73.985°W / 40.305; -73.985