WXRC

WXRC
City Hickory, North Carolina
Broadcast area Charlotte/Metrolina
Branding 95.7 The Ride
Slogan No Silly Morning Shows, No Stupid Contests, No Hype, The Greatest Music Ever Made
Frequency 95.7 MHz
First air date 1962
Format Classic Hits
ERP 100,000 watts
HAAT 311 meters
Class C0
Facility ID 51174
Callsign meaning W X RoCk (previous branding)
Owner Pacific Broadcasting Group
(David Lingafelt)
Webcast Listen Live
Website 957theride.com

WXRC (95.7 FM, "95.7 The Ride") is a commercial classic hits FM radio station serving the Charlotte, North Carolina market. Owned by David Lingafelt and his Pacific Broadcasting Group, the station is licensed to Hickory, North Carolina; with studios in nearby Studios are located in Newton.[1]Its broadcast tower is located east of Lincolnton, North Carolina at (35°27′18.0″N 81°3′49.0″W / 35.455000°N 81.063611°W / 35.455000; -81.063611).[2]

WXRC broadcasts a classic hits format. Acoustic Storm airs Sundays from 8-11AM and 9PM-midnight.[3] The station is the Charlotte affiliate for North Carolina State Wolfpack football and basketball.[4]

History

WXRC signed on in 1962 as the sister station to 630 AM WIRC (now WAIZ), with the FM antenna mounted on the WIRC tower in southeast Hickory.

The station was sold along with WIRC in 1977.

In 1980, WXRC installed a more powerful transmitter, raising its Effective Radiated Power to 100kW.

From the early 1980s to 1985, WXRC was "X-Rock", an adult contemporary format using the automated TM Stereo Rock programming service. In 1985, the station built a new transmitter site atop a mountain between Hickory and Morganton (relocated near Lincolnton in 1988), which allowed it to cover Charlotte. At the same time, it changed to live album-oriented rock.[5] Programmed in the first year by local native and Appalachian State Graduate Greg Mull (see K-Rock Fort Meyers and 98 Rock Tampa) and fellow ASU graduates Justin 'Jay' Phelps and Jon Austin, the station during the '80s placed in the top 10 of Charlotte Arbitron ratings during Fall 1985-December 1986. After Mull's departure in 1986, both Phelps and Austin served in music director roles, under various hired program directors in the 1980s including Bob Raleigh who later went on to launch classic rock WCKN (now WROQ)in Greenville, SC. Raleigh also went on to become a corporate programmer for many years at Cumulus Media and Westwood One Network. Over the years, WXRC has tried various rock formats, including Triple-A. At one point, the station emphasized hard rock and heavy metal, calling itself "The Panther", though the Charlotte football team was not entirely happy with this name.[6] The switch to the current format was made in 2002.[7]

WXRC was the Charlotte affiliate for Howard Stern from April 15, 1997[8] to 2001. It climbed as high as second in the Charlotte ratings until dropping Stern for Lex and Terry in 2001.[9] Throughout many changes musically, its playlist today consists mostly of artists from the "classic rock" era including the 1960s, 1970s, 1980s, and 1990s.

One of the few independently owned-and-operated stations in the Charlotte market, its sound is very similar to how most FM stations sounded in the 1970s. Lingafelt has gotten a number of offers to sell his station over the years. However, he told The Charlotte Observer that he was not willing to sell to anyone, claiming that his station's format would never be possible under a corporate owner. In the last Arbitron ratings on record for the station, in 2008, it was the 12th most popular station in Charlotte, but was second in the critical 25-49 demographic.[10]

References

  1. "Contact The Ride". 95.7FM - The Ride. Retrieved 2014-10-08.
  2. "FM Query Results for WXRC, Federal Communications Commission". Retrieved 2014-10-08.
  3. "Acoustic Storm :: Stations". Retrieved 2014-10-08.
  4. "Wolfpack Sports Network". NC State University Official Athletic Site. Retrieved 2014-10-08.
  5. Jeff Borden, "Hickory Album-Oriented Station Enters Charlotte Radio Wars", The Charlotte Observer, October 1, 1985.
  6. Sean Jamieson, "NFL Team Rocks Radio Station with Suit Over Panther Problem," The Charlotte Observer, June 16, 1995.
  7. Mark Washburn, "95.7 FM Has New `Ride' for Listeners - Progressive Hits from '60s And '70s Will Be Station's New Format", The Charlotte Observer, September 5, 2002.
  8. Spanberg, Erik (1997-04-14). "Charlotte radio tuning in big changes". Charlotte Business Journal. Retrieved 2014-10-08.
  9. Mark Washburn, "'Lex & Terry' Talk Sex, Sports and Eating," The Charlotte Observer, May 7, 2001.
  10. Washburn, Mark (2008-08-01). "'The Ride' roars in radio ratings". The Charlotte Observer.

Coordinates: 35°27′18″N 81°03′47″W / 35.455°N 81.063°W / 35.455; -81.063

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