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This article is about the current WNNX (Rock 100.5). For the former WNNX (99X), see 99X (Atlanta).
WNNX (100.5 FM, "Rock 100.5") is an Atlanta radio station that is owned and operated by Cumulus Media. It broadcasts from the same studio building as its other Atlanta sister stations WWWQ FM 99.7 ("Q100") and 99X. WNNX's main transmitter is located in downtown Atlanta atop the Westin Peachtree Plaza Hotel, the skyscraper well-known for its reflective glass cylinder shape. On Monday, January 28, 2008, at 6:00 a.m., The Regular Guys announced the debut of Rock 100.5, carrying a radio format similar to their previous station WKLS FM 96.1 (formerly "96 Rock"), which itself changed formats as "Project 9-6-1". They lean adult album alternative to compete up against CBS Radio's WZGC FM 92.9 ("92-9 Dave FM"). In 2010 Rock 100.5 will become the FM flagship station of the Atlanta Braves along with WCNN 680 The Fan.[1]
[edit] History
The 100.5 frequency has been in metro Atlanta, licensed to College Park, since early 2001. Before then, the station was licensed to Anniston, Alabama as WHMA-FM, broadcasting as country music station "Alabama 100". (After the move, that callsign shifted to another existing station in that area becoming WHMA-FM "The Big 95", 95.5 MHz) Interested in moving the station to Atlanta, owner Robert Gammon proposed that it be re-licensed to Sandy Springs, and remain at 100,000 watts ERP (class C). An agreement had already been made with the nearest co-channel station, WSSL-FM in upstate South Carolina for it to move further away, however that station was sold to Clear Channel Communications in the interim and the agreement was negated. Additionally, the FCC ruled that Sandy Springs was "not a community", citing its unincorporated status and letters of support from local organizations in Sandy Springs that had "Atlanta" as the address. This was despite the fact that it was (and still is) one of the largest cities in the state, and was only unincorporated (after more than two decades of community drives for cityhood) for political reasons. Additionally, the addresses were listed as "Atlanta" because prior to its incorporation in late 2005, the USPS failed to allow "Sandy Springs" as acceptable, even for mail delivered from the post office there. After exhausting his funds in pursuit of the reallocation, Gammon sold the station to Susquehanna Radio.[2] In a revised application before the FCC, Susquehanna proposed a different city of license, College Park. The FCC approved the application, mostly because the new application changed the class of the station from C (up to 100 kW at 600 meters or 1968 feet) down to C3 (up to 25 kW at 100 meters or 328 feet) to protect the licensed broadcast range of WSSL. Susquehanna was also forced to slightly null the station's signal in the direction of WSSL to stay in compliance with spacing rules. The move created spectrum space for two new radio stations in Alabama, but forced Southern Polytechnic State University low-power station WGHR and Georgia Public Broadcasting repeater W264AE (both 100.7 MHz FM) off the air in the Atlanta area. Ironically, the station now has its own low-power station relaying itself entirely within its own broadcast range. W250BC FM 97.9 is a broadcast translator licensed to Riverdale, although its original 6 watts reached only Morrow, Lake City, most of Jonesboro, and part of Forest Park, skimming only the eastern edge of Riverdale. In early February 2009 it was issued a construction permit to move to the "Richland" site in North Druid Hills and go up to 250 watts (but still not reach Riverdale within its official service contour). In November 2007, the FCC approved the sale of the station by Clark Atlanta University (WCLK FM 90.1) to Extreme Media Group LLC of Woodstock, Virginia. It was then transferred via asset exchange to Cumulus Licensing LLC in mid-February 2009, in return for WZBN FM 105.5 in Camilla, Georgia. In January 2009 it requested special temporary authority (STA) to remain "silent" (off-air) for 60 days due to technical issues. On April 17, the "translator" station began to broadcast 99X, using an FCC loophole which allows analog broadcast translators to ignore the prohibition on originating programming, so long as they are carrying an HD Radio channel from the parent station. [edit] Q100Main article: WWWQ 100.5's first format in Atlanta was top-40 station WWWQ, "Q100", which made its debut in early 2001. Despite its more limited signal, Q100 grew to the point that it often received higher Arbitron listenership ratings than several of its 100,000-watt competitors, including sister station 99X. Susquehanna continued to pursue a larger signal for the station, eventually earning approval from the FCC to upgrade from class C3 to class C2. The upgrade occurred on October 24, 2005 at 5:00 PM, and is also when the station moved from the Turner tower to the Westin building. In 2006, Cumulus acquired Susquehanna, including both 99X and Q100. On January 11, 2008, Cumulus announced that Q100 would move to the 100,000-watt signal at 99.7 MHz. Q100 was finally moved off of the 100.5 signal on Friday, January 25, 2008 at 5:45 AM. The two stations swapped callsigns, and the 99X format moved to digital-only HD Radio channel 99.7-2. [edit] Disc jockeys[edit] The Regular GuysRock 100.5 is the flagship station for The Regular Guys morning show, featuring Larry Wachs and Eric Von Haessler. The show also features "Southside" Steve Rickman and producer Tim Andrews, with Mark Owens on traffic. The Regular Guys had a successful run at cross-town rival 96 Rock before being fired from for accidentally airing audio of a discussion with pornographic film actress Devin Lane over a commercial. That audio was intended be played backwards in a bit when they returned from the break, mocking the FCC indecency crackdown at the time. Wachs and Von Hasessler were rehired at sister station news-talk WGST before moving back to 96Rock for a second stint, but were fired again for secretly taping co-workers' conversation in the restroom (a legal act in the state of Georgia). Before doing traffic for The Regular Guys, Owens served as producer for 99X's New Morning X with Sean, Leslie, and Jenners. Before that, Owens was on sister station Q100 as "Phil Terrana", acting as The Bert Show's assistant producer and "man on the street". ("Phil Terrana" is the real name of former Star 94 morning show host Steve McCoy.) Owens got his start at 99X working Saturday overnights and working in the 99X Free-Loader Dept. [edit] Regular staff
[edit] Former staff
[edit] Rock 100.5 shows
[edit] Promotions and concerts
[edit] Former DJs (pre-2008)[edit] Q100.5
[edit] References
[edit] External links
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