| WBCT | |
| City of license | Grand Rapids, Michigan |
|---|---|
| Broadcast area | Grand Rapids-Kalamazoo |
| Branding | B-93 |
| Slogan | "New Country and Your All-Time Favorites" |
| Frequency | 93.7 MHz |
| First air date | June 25, 1951 |
| Format | Country |
| ERP | 320,000 watts |
| Class | C |
| Callsign meaning | World's Biggest Country Transmitter |
| Former callsigns | WJFM (7/24/63-7/21/92) WJEF-FM (6/25/51-7/24/63) |
| Owner | Clear Channel Communications |
| Sister stations | WBCT, WBFX, WMAX-FM, WOOD, WOOD-FM, WSNX-FM, WTKG |
| Website | http://www.b93.com/ |
WBCT (93.7 FM, "B-93") is a radio station in Grand Rapids, Michigan with a country music format.
The station has had a country music format since 1992. Prior to this, the station was known as WJFM and played classic rock. WBCT's transmitter is at the WWMT Tower in Gun Lake (Michigan). The antenna is approximately 800 feet (240 m) up the 1,100-foot (340 m) structure. The station's signal has an estimated range of 90 miles (140 km), providing a coverage area of 25,000 square miles (65,000 km2) over 20 counties in Michigan. This makes the transmitter one of the most powerful in North America.
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History
WJEF-FM/The Modern Sound
The station began operations in 1951 as WJEF-FM, simulcasting the programming of WJEF-AM 1230 (now WTKG). In 1960, the station broke away from the simulcast and went to playing classical music. That same year, the station increased its power to 500,000 watts. This was under the ownership of John Fetzer, who also previously owned WKZO-TV (now WWMT), WWTV-FM (now WJZQ) in Cadillac, Michigan, and the Detroit Tigers. WJEF also owned and operated a Muzak franchise on a subcarrier.
In the mid-1960s, the station, now known as WJFM, switched to a MOR/news/talk/sports format, and in 1967 became more music-intensive, adopting the moniker "The Modern Sound," which Fetzer reportedly soon did away with because he felt the station played too much "rock and roll." From then on and through much of the 1970s, apart from an automated country format in 1971-1972, WJFM was primarily a Beautiful Music station. Despite its strong signal, the station usually hovered near the bottom of the ratings during this time.
Mellow 93/Joy FM/Classic Rock
WJFM changed to an automated Top 40 format in 1977 and then adult contemporary the following year as "Mellow 93", which lasted until the station attempted a CHR format in 1984. However, the Grand Rapids area was flooded with CHR stations at the time, with WGRD, WSNX and WKLQ all playing Top 40 music, and WJFM's CHR format lasted only two years before the station went back to Soft AC as "The New Joy FM." The "Joy" format also proved a failure, and in 1988 WJFM became a Classic Hits station. Ratings for the Classic Hits format were initially very good but soon dropped off, and in 1990 the station evolved to Classic rock.
B-93
In 1992, John Fetzer finally sold the station, and 93.7 FM became WBCT, which it remains to this day. Despite recent competition in the format from Citadel's "Thunder Country" WTNR, B93 remains consistently one of the top-rated stations in West Michigan.
Summer 2009 Phase II Arbitron Rating: #3 (7.0)
Airstaff
The current lineup (as of November 2008) Starting out the day on the morning drive its Neal & Reese with Neal Dionne & Reese Rickards. Next is Britta on middays, Dave Conrad holds down the afternoon drive. Wrapping up the lineup is the Electric Barnyard with Bill "Broadway" Bertshiner & Crawl on nights, and John Canuck on overnights.
Weekend's/Fill-ins include Dan Beck, Bobby Bare, Buddha, Harley, Jordan, Buzz McCoy, Mellisa and Jeff Isaack
Sources
References
External links
- Query the FCC's FM station database for WBCT
- Radio Locator information on WBCT
- Query Arbitron's FM station database for WBCT
- List of "grandfathered" FM radio stations in the U.S.
- B 93.7 on MySpace
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