WSMC-FM
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
WSMC-FM | |
City of license | Collegedale, Tennessee |
---|---|
Frequency | 90.5 (MHz) |
Format | Classical/ Public |
ERP | 100,000 Watts |
HAAT | 705 meters (2315 feet) |
Class | C Non-Commercial |
Transmitter Coordinates | |
Affiliations | National Public Radio |
Owner | Southern Adventist University |
Website | http://www.wsmc.org/ |
WSMC-FM (90.5 FM), is the Chattanooga, Tennessee, area's only radio station featuring classical music programming. It is licensed to Southern Adventist University (SAU), a four-year institution located in nearby Collegedale. Its signal reaches parts of the states of Tennessee, Georgia, Alabama and North Carolina. Its programming can be heard on low-powered repeater W217AW-FM 91.3 in Dalton, Georgia.
Founded in 1961, the station programs classical music (including opera and similar genres) during most of the broadcast day Sundays through Fridays. The station also airs news programs from the BBC, Public Radio International, National Public Radio, and American Public Media. WSMC has only three full-time employees: the general manager, development director, and secretary. The announcers and production staff consist entirely of SAU students.
The call sign, WSMC, came from an earlier name of Southern Adventist University, Southern Missionary College.
Contents |
[edit] Religious programming controversies
WSMC had been an early member of NPR. However, because of the religious doctrine of the licensee's church body, the General Conference of Seventh-day Adventists, WSMC can't air live news programming from sunset on Friday evening until sunset on Saturday evening. In the 1990s, this caused conflict with NPR, which objected to its signature newscast, All Things Considered, being interrupted in progress.
Coinciding with this dispute, several interest groups took exception to WSMC's continued affiliation with NPR, which is in turn funded largely by the Corporation for Public Broadcasting, itself subsidized by Federal appropriations. The upshot of their arguments was that WSMC aired more religious programming than could be considered a public service. Therefore, the groups complained, it was inappropriate for WSMC to receive federal funding (or programming provided therefrom) due to concerns about separation of church and state. Some individuals also alleged that the religious programming, mandated by the administration of what was then Southern College of Seventh-Day Adventists, amounted to a disregard of the larger public in the Tennessee Valley, in favor of catering to a religious minority. By June 1995, these complaints led NPR officials to inform WSMC that it would begin membership termination proceedings on the grounds that it preempted NPR programming too often and aired too much religious programming.
Instead of modifying its Friday and Saturday programming practices in response to those complaints, however, college officials and station management decided to discontinue most NPR programming, news included. This took effect on September 30, 1995. Replacing ATC were Public Radio International's The World and American Public Media's Marketplace, which could air on a delayed basis, instead of live, as ATC does. Talk of the Nation is the only regularly-scheduled NPR-produced program remaining on WSMC's schedule; most of the other programs moved to WUTC, which replaced WSMC as the Chattanooga market's flagship NPR station.
[edit] Miscellanea
Besides airing classical music, some religious programs on Saturdays, and news programs, WSMC also airs "Cowboy Jubilee," a nostalgic program of Western music. Generally speaking, WSMC attracts an educated but culturally conservative suburban audience.
[edit] See also
[edit] References
- 1995 report on listener dissastisfaction over religious programming on WSMC
- Report on WSMC's discontinuing full membership in NPR
[edit] External links
- WSMC-FM official website
- Query the FCC's FM station database for WSMC
- Radio Locator information on WSMC
|