WXCL
City | Pekin, Illinois |
---|---|
Broadcast area | Peoria, Illinois |
Branding | 104.9 The Wolf |
Slogan | Peoria's New Country |
Frequency | 104.9 MHz |
First air date | 1970 |
Format | Country |
Audience share | (Sp'08, R&R[1]) |
ERP | 6,000 watts |
HAAT | 100 meters (330 ft) |
Class | A |
Facility ID | 33879 |
Transmitter coordinates | 40°43′22.1″N 89°30′40.3″W / 40.722806°N 89.511194°WCoordinates: 40°43′22.1″N 89°30′40.3″W / 40.722806°N 89.511194°W (NAD83) |
Callsign meaning | EXCeLlence (from its AM sister station)[2] |
Former callsigns |
WZRO (1970-80) WKQA (1980-89) |
Owner |
Alpha Media (Alpha Media Licensee LLC) |
Sister stations | WIRL (traditional and current); WMBD, WPBG, WNGY, and WSWT (current) |
Webcast | Listen Live |
Website | Official website |
WXCL (FM 104.9) is a country music radio station licensed to Pekin, Illinois and owned by Alpha Media. They are one of three outlets in Peoria that program a Country format, the other two being WFYR and WCDD.
History
104.9 signed on the air in the early-1970s as WZRO with an oldies format. This format was not successful and the station adopted an automated country music format from Drake-Chenault called Great American Country.
During the summer of 1980 WZRO went off the air for several days. When it returned to the air it became known as WKQA with a format of top 40. At this time it was owned by a company called Manship Corp. out of Baton Rouge, Louisiana, co-owned with sister station WFMF. Then, during March 1982 it changed its moniker to Q-104 WKQA, and competed directly against AM station WIRL with an adult contemporary format. It used the monikers "Q-104" and WKQA interchangeably until early-1987. Then it became known as "Q-105" programming a hot adult contemporary format. At that time it had the morning show of "Bruce Jones and the Morning Zoo." Bruce Jones was supposedly from KHTR in St. Louis. Meanwhile, WXCL was formerly on AM 1350. In October 1989 WKQA changed its format and this station on 104.9 FM became known as WXCL-FM. WXCL simulcast on AM and FM for several years in the 1990s as WXCL (AM) and WXCL-FM. WXCL was later replaced on AM by WOAM, leaving WXCL only on FM. WXCL was sold by Kelly Communications the AAA Entertainment in 2002, and sold again by AAA Entertainment to Triad Broadcasting in 2006. Since being bought by Triad, WXCL has used the on-air nickname 104.9 The Wolf.
Effective May 1, 2013, L&L Broadcasting purchased WXCL and 29 other stations from Triad Broadcasting (JMP Media) at a purchase price of $21 million.
Personalities
Notable former air talent on WXCL: Dan Dermody, Bob Grayson, Dale Van Horn, Kimber Bennett, Sue Parker, Dave Murphy, Joe Bob Cameron, Buck Stevens, Jack Shell, BJ Stone, Jerry Barr, Nancy Shelton, Doc Watson, Jamie Markley, Brad Bensman, Jeanie Plackett, Steve Young, Paul Jackson, Tweed Scott, Bob Look, Rick McKay, Michael Cruise, Mario Impemba, Joe Jackson, Robb Rose, Carolyn Mungo, Jim Crowley, Don Elliot, Marc Truelove, Denise Henley, PJ McKay, Maria Gilmore, Jay Curtis, Mort Cantor, Lee Malcolm, Chuck Collins (currently with WMBD-TV), Mike Pesto, "Danger" Dan Belk, Bob "The Bullet" Davis, Brett Erickson, Cody West, Loren Wassell, Chuck Urban, Lee Ranson, Cindy Austin, Andy Corbin, and Bill Bro.
Current air talent: John Young, Jaymie Curtis, Dr. Chris Michaels, Joe Greenwood
References
- ↑ "Peoria Market Ratings". Radio & Records.
- ↑ "Call Letter Origins". Radio History on the Web.
External links
- 104.9 The Wolf — new official site
- Query the FCC's FM station database for WXCL
- Radio-Locator information on WXCL
- Query Nielsen Audio's FM station database for WXCL