WNCX

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

WNCX
WNCX Logo
City of license Cleveland, Ohio
Broadcast area Greater Cleveland
Branding Cleveland's Classic Rock
First air date October 22, 1986 as WNCX
August 15, 1972 as WGCL
1948 as WERE-FM
Frequency 98.5 (MHz) Also Available on HD Radio
98.5 HD-2 for Spanish CHR
Format Classic Rock
ERP 16,000 watts
Class B
Callsign meaning North Coast eXpress
Owner CBS Radio
Website www.wncx.com

WNCX is Cleveland's only classic rock radio station. It is located at 98.5 on the FM band, and sometimes referred to as "NCX". Its current studios are located in Cleveland’s historic Halle Building, in the Playhouse Square District. Its transmitter is located in nearby North Royalton, Ohio.

The station is currently owned and operated by CBS Radio, a division of CBS Corporation It was among the first stations in Cleveland broadcasting in high definition using HD Radio.

Contents

[edit] History

[edit] WERE-FM

The station first went on the air in 1948 as WERE-FM and was the FM outlet for WERE (AM), where it primarily simulcast the programming of its more popular AM sister station over the next 24 years. A little known historical fact is that WERE-FM actually signed on one year prior to its AM counterpart.

[edit] WGCL

"WGCL" logo
"WGCL" logo

The stations were purchased by General Cinema Corporation in 1972, which would go on to change the call letters of the FM station to WGCL on August 15, 1972, while it flipped the station from its fully automated format to Top 40 as “G-98.” Famed programmer Lee Abrams helmed the station, George Jay, was its news director.

One of "G-98"'s most recognized air personalities was "Dancin' Danny Wright", who later had a long stretch in afternoon drive at country WGAR. He later became nationally syndicated with his current show, Jones Radio Network's Danny Wright All Night.

During the next 14 years the station would go on to enjoy moderate success in the face of significant competition from crosstown rock juggernaut, WMMS. Their best year was 1982 when they actually beat WMMS in the ratings, but after WMMS re-tooled and recaptured first place a short time later, WGCL slowly lost ground. The station was sold in 1986.

The call letters WGCL are now in use at the CBS television affiliate in Atlanta, Georgia.

[edit] WNCX

[edit] The start of new era

With the station being sold to Detroit-based Metropolis Broadcasting, it ushered in a change. For only the second time its 38-year history, the station would change its call letters to WNCX (which stood for North Coast X-press) and format on October 22, 1986, when it adopted an eclectic rock/top 40 mixed format. To signal a sign of the changes to come, the station aired Beatles records non-stop for 72-hours after the last day of the old WGCL format, just before the launch of the new WNCX format. This was one of the earliest examples of "stunting" in between formats, a practice which became common some years later.

While it was considered a new radio station, the staff was anything but new as it featured a well-seasoned lineup of Cleveland radio veterans—eight of whom were stolen directly from its heated rival, WMMS. Headed by the latter’s former Program Director, John Gorman (as WNCX Operations Manager) and 15-year WMMS veteran Denny Sanders (as WNCX Program Director), the pair promised “a much different sound than other stations,” and that they would “play a wide variety of music, 360 degrees of rock ‘n roll, from old to new to R&B.” WNCX's sizeable playlist emphasized new music, local records, and included a Saturday night dance club music show. The format became a pioneering effort in what, just a short time later, would be a successful approach for many stations throughout the country, the "rock-CHR" format.

Its DJ lineup included former WGAR-AM personality Paul Tapie in the morning, former WHK Program Director and DJ Bernie Kimble in middays, Sanders in afternoons, former WMMS DJ Spaceman Scott in evenings, and Nancy Alden in late nights.

At the time, the station was one of the first radio stations in Cleveland to have a complete on-air library made up of compact discs, having spent thousands of dollars on what was considered a fairly new and advanced form of media, as well as on CD players.

However, whether the new and reportedly underfinanced owners grew frightened of a potential long battle with the powerful WMMS, or that the “Rock-CHR” approach was so new at the time that the owners got nervous, they used the excuse of “disappointing initial ratings”—after only four months on the air—to bring the eclectic rock format to an abrupt end on February 9, 1987. Had they waited to receive the final ratings on the last days of the format, they would have found that the station shot to the number two position in the key 25-54 demographic in the important afternoon-drive shift, along with major gains in other time periods.

The station was immediately placed back up for sale at this time.

The curiously swift abortion of the format and the sudden firing of most of the seasoned staff (many replaced by inexpensive beginners) so soon after launch and the immediate offering of the station for re-sale, leads most observers to conclude that Metropolis Broadcasting was poorly organized and financed right from the start. Their sole other station (in Detroit) was put up for sale at this time as well and, within just a few months, Metropolis Broadcasting had gone out of business completely.

[edit] The evolution to classic rock

During the time WNCX was offered again for sale, Metropolis Broadcasting employed the use of Cleveland-based radio consultant, Mike McVay, a one-time program director and general manager at another Cleveland station, WMJI. McVay immediately relaunched WNCX as a 100% Classic Hits station, featuring a pop-rock mix of Classic artists like Elton John, Paul McCartney and Cat Stevens, with little promotion and dramatically reduced expenses. However, over the next several months after the departure of McVay and Metropolis Broadcasting selling the station which they so recently acquired, WNCX would eventually continue the evolution into pure classic rock.

[edit] Personality radio

Not too long after the evolution to classic rock, WNCX and its AM sister station found themselves being sold once again, but this time to locally based Metroplex Communications. Metroplex was headed by two Cleveland radio architects, Norman Wain and Bob Weiss, the former owners of the legendary Cleveland Top 40 station WIXY 1260 during the 1960s.

Wain and Weiss set out to accomplish once again what they had done in 1965, and that was to build a radio station with personality, particularly Cleveland personality. Over the next few years they did just that.

[edit] Bill Louis

Cleveland native Bill Louis was brought in to do middays in 1987—an airshift he still does to date In 1996 Louis added the program director duties of WNCX, while he named Cleveland native and WNCX morning show producer Dave Jockers as his assistant program director and music director. As of January 2006, both are still actively in those roles.

[edit] Michael Stanley

In 1990 Wain and then program director Doug Podell hired local rock musician Michael Stanley to host a one-hour radio program entitled “In the Heartland”; the show would eventually lead to Stanley taking over the afternoon shift on WNCX—an airshift he still does to date.

[edit] Morning Shows

1988: Paul Tapie, the lone holdover from the original staff, carried on in morning drive until his dismissal in 1989. The station posted several full-page ads adversting their morning-drive job opening as a result.

1989-1990 Those Guys in the Morning, with Rick Rydell and Todd Brandt, with sportscaster Mike Trivisonno. Hired by then-PD Paul Ingalls (at the suggestion of programming guru Andy Bloom) from KMJK in Portland, Oregon. Despite heavy promotion and several stunts (including their debut show that lasted 12 hours), "Those Guys" had only marginal success in Cleveland, and were regularly critizied by the local paper, often speculating on their departure date from WNCX. As it turned out, they lasted less than two years. Ingalls himself was also fired and replaced by Doug Podell from Detroit.

Interestingly, Rick Rydell is now the morning-drive host at talk station KENI in Anchorage, Alaska (and simulcast on KFBX in Fairbanks), Todd Brandt is part of the highly successful 'T&T Morning Show' at KEZO in Omaha, Nebraska, and Mike Trivisonno is now the afternoon-drive host on WTAM.

1990-1992: Mad Dogs and Englishmen, headlined by former Humble Pie frontman Jerry Shirley with sportscaster Mike Trivisonno - the sole holdover from the "Those Guys" show. Tapie himself even returned as a sidekick for the show within a few months of the shows' debut.

1992-2005: The Howard Stern Show. But even with the debut of Shirley in morning drive, Podell had convinced Wain and Weiss that it was time to consider a radical option - pick up New York-based Howard Stern. Podell had worked with Stern once in his hometown of Detroit, Michigan at former rock station WWWW in the early 1980s, until it switched to all country, an historical event that was forever immortalized in Stern’s autobiographical film Private Parts. After little convincing, Wain and Weiss agreed to take the chance with the show.

It would take until August of 1992 for WNCX and Stern to actually sign a deal and begin. The existing morning show was disbanded, except for Shirley, who moved to overnights and became the stations' public affairs director. WNCX was a longtime home for the Howard Stern morning show, having run it from August 31, 1992 to December 31, 2005. At the time, they were the sixth station to sign on to what would become a network of over 50 radio stations for Stern.

Among the most notorious Howard Stern programs/broadcasts occurred in Cleveland on June 10, 1994. Having taken his radio show from Arbitron ranked #13 to #1 among all radio listeners in less than two years, Stern promised to have a street party and to broadcast a "funeral" for his competition live from the streets of Cleveland.

During this now infamous broadcast, an engineer from WMMS snipped a broadcast wire that was used to feed the satellite uplink for the program. The engineer was subsequently caught, arrested and prosecuted. Stern continued on with the program over a phone line as engineers quickly patched the broadcast wire back together.

[edit] Corporate radio

In 1994, after seven more years of Cleveland radio ownership, Wain and Weiss retired by merging Metroplex Communications into the fast growing, Texas-based Clear Channel Communications. This spelled the exit for those two from Cleveland radio.

Following passage of the Telecom Act of 1996, Clear Channel continued its fast growth and announced a merger with Jacor Communications in 1998, the then-owner of a large group of radio stations in Cleveland. To comply with federal ownership guidelines, Clear Channel was forced to sell off numerous radio stations around the country.

In Cleveland, Clear Channel decided to divest its current properties before the merger. Sold to Radio One were sister stations WENZ and WERE-AM, while WNCX was sold to CBS/Infinity Radio. This marked the first time in the 50-year history of the two, that WNCX and WERE-AM were no longer affiliated.

[edit] Howard Stern, post-script

In October 2004, Stern announced that he would be moving his radio program to satellite radio, a subscription radio service where he could avoid the content restrictions being forced on to him by the Federal Communications Commission. His final live broadcast aired on WNCX on December 16, 2005.

With Stern's move to subscription radio, WNCX ended up carring a morning show hosted by musician David Lee Roth, which began on January 3, 2006 and originated from Howard Stern's former flagship, WFNY-FM in New York, the former WXRK "K-Rock." Ironically, David Lee Roth was among the featured performers at Stern's Cleveland funeral 12 years earlier. (Coincidentally, both the WXRK calls and "92.3 K-Rock" nickname landed on the former WXTM in Cleveland, WNCX's sister station that also broadcasts at 92.3-FM.)

However, due to very low ratings and a critical drubbings in the press, Roth's show was cancelled by syndicator CBS Radio on April 21, 2006. Roth's replacement in New York, Opie and Anthony - ironically fired by CBS Radio three years earlier - now air tape-delayed in afternoon drive on WXRK as of April 26, 2006.

Shortly thereafter, WNCX aired a locally-produced classic rock morning show with no regular host, and also used the slot for tributes to past Cleveland radio stations and personalities, with many of those personalities filling in during the slot. On July 27, 2006, the station announced that Wynn Richards, aka "Mud" would become the primary host of the new morning show, joined by Kim Mihalik (former sidekick to WTAM's Mike Trivisonno) and newscaster Mike Olszewski. Wynn previously worked at WWWM "M105" and at WGAR-AM back in the early 1980's.

[edit] Programming

[edit] Weekdays

WNCX has enjoyed the success of having one of the longest running airstaffs currently in Cleveland radio. The airstaff (as of 2006) has been a part of the station for over a decade.

  • 12:00 a.m. to 5:30 a.m.: Rick Allen
  • 5:30 a.m. to 10:00 a.m.: Mud, Mihalik, and Mike
  • 10:00 a.m. to 3:00 p.m.: Bill Louis
  • 3:00 p.m. to 7:00 p.m.: Michael Stanley
  • 7:00 p.m. to 12:00 a.m.: Paula Balish

[edit] References

[edit] External links

FM Radio Stations in the Cleveland, Ohio Market (Arbitron #26)

By Frequency: 88.3 | 88.7 | 89.1 | 89.3 | 89.7 | 90.3 | 91.1 | 91.5 | 92.3 | 93.1 | 95.5 | 96.1 | 96.5 | 97.1 | 98.5 | 99.5 | 100.7 | 102.1 | 103.3 | 104.1 | 104.7 | 104.9 | 105.7 | 106.5 | 107.3 | 107.9

By Callsign: WAKS | WBWC | WCLV | WCPN | WCRF | WCSB | WDOK | WENZ | WFHM | WGAR | WJCU | WKFM | WKHR | WKKY | WKSU/WKSV | WMJI | WMMS | WMVX | WNCX | WNWV | WNZN | WQAL | WREO | WRUW | WXRK | WZAK

See also: Cleveland (FM) (AM)

Ohio Radio Markets

Akron (FM) (AM) | Cincinnati (FM) (AM) | Cleveland (FM) (AM) | Columbus (FM) (AM) | Dayton (FM) (AM) | Canton (FM) (AM) | Lima | Marietta | Sandusky (FM) (AM) | Toledo | Youngstown (FM) (AM)

See also: List of radio stations in Ohio and List of United States radio markets