WPUR

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WPUR
City of license Atlantic City, New Jersey
Branding Cat Country 107.3
Slogan Continuous Country Favorites
Frequency 107.3 (MHz)
First air date February 1998
Format Country
ERP 25,000 Watts
HAAT 94 meters
Class B1
Callsign meaning WPURrrrr (cat purr)
Owner Millennium Radio Group
Webcast Listen Live
Website http://www.catcountry1073.com

WPUR (107.3 FM) is a country music formatted radio station in Atlantic City, New Jersey. WPUR is more commonly known as "Cat Country 107.3".

Contents

[edit] History

107.3 in Atlantic City, New Jersey, was granted the random WZZP call sign on March 17, 1997, and went on the air in February, 1998, with a variety of stunt formats. On February 28, 1998, WZZP signed on with a mix of classic rock, oldies, and newer songs. This test broadcast was erratic and mostly heard on weekends through March 17, 1998.

Chief engineer Tom McNally was the first voice heard on the station, as a "conducting equipment tests" message aired between the music. On April 9 and 10, 1998, WZZP broadcast a mix of country songs. Later on April 10 and into April 11, area listeners were inundated with the song "Tubthumping" by Chumbawumba over and over. April 12 to April 14 brought yet another stunt, this time all classic rock songs as "ZZ-107." From April 14 to April 17, CHR was featured with ID's only saying "107.3." This was expanded upon from April 17 to April 25, when more CHR songs were added to the playlist and ID's were now "ZZ-107 The Zipper!"

Then, on April 25, 1998, "Fun 107" debuted with a Rhythmic CHR format, which was easy to do since WZZP's sister station in New Bedford, Massachusetts, was "Fun 107." Most people thought this was going to be the final format, but it was just another long drawn-out stunt that ultimately lasted for a little over two months. On June 29, 1998, the real format and name finally debuted: "Cat Country 107.3". The call letters officially changed to WPUR on July 20, 1998.

"Cat Country 107.3" is currently Arbitron rated #5 (12+) in the Atlantic City Metro and the Atlantic City TSA.[citation needed]

[edit] Ownership

Spring Broadcasting, LLC, purchased the construction permit for 107.3 in Atlantic City from Radio-Vision II in the late 1990s. In November, 1999, Citadel Communications entered the Atlantic City market as it purchased Spring Broadcasting. In July, 2001, Citadel Communications sold WPUR and its Atlantic City sister stations to newly formed Millennium Radio Group for $19.4 million.

[edit] Positioning

WPUR positions itself as "Cat Country 107.3," playing "continuous country favorites." Originally, WPUR was positioned as "South Jersey's Hot New Country."

[edit] Technical

WPUR is a class-B1 FM radio station, operating with 25,000 Watts ERP from an antenna 94 meters (308 ft) high (HAAT) on the WFPG tower in Atlantic City. Up until early 2008, WPUR's antenna was located on the roof of the Trump Taj Mahal casino on the Atlantic City boardwalk.

WPUR had a severe null in its signal over land until WSNJ-FM 107.7/Bridgeton, NJ, went off the air in February, 2004. When WSNJ-FM went off the air, WPUR was able to bring a full 25,000 Watt ERP signal over land.

[edit] Charity Work

WPUR supports local non-profit organizations throughout Southern New Jersey. In addition, since 2000, WPUR has held annual two-day radiothons for St. Jude Children's Research Hospital, raising over $1,000,000, and also holds a yearly quest for One Million Pennies for St. Jude Children's Research Hospital.

[edit] Programming

Notable weekday on-air personalities include Joe Kelly in mornings, Lexi Carter in afternoon drive, and "The Big Time" with Whitney Allen in the evening. Notable weekend personnel include Chris Coleman and John Reed. Joe Kelly also serves as the station's program director.

Some notable former air staff members include Andy Harris (now at WDSD-FM/Dover, DE), Elaine Everett (most recently at WIL-FM/St. Louis, MO), David Allen Pratt (now at WTKU/Ocean City, NJ), Tina Owen, Josie Blaine, and Lyndsay Harris.

Specialty weekend programming on WPUR includes Country Countdown USA with Lon Helton, The Big Time Saturday Night with Whitney Allen, Cat Classics, and Country Top 40 with Bob Kingsley.

[edit] External links