WKPS

WKPS
City of license University Park, Pennsylvania
Broadcast area State College, Pennsylvania
Branding The LION 90.7 FM
Slogan "The Soundtrack to Penn State"
Frequency 90.7 MHz
First air date October 31, 1995
Format College Radio
ERP 100 watts
HAAT 14 meters
Class A
Facility ID 65471
Callsign meaning WK Penn State
Owner Pennsylvania State University
Webcast Listen Live
Website thelion.fm

WKPS (known as "The Lion 90.7 FM") is a college radio station owned by Penn State University. The station runs on a full-time, multi-format schedule featuring a wide variety of programming. "The Lion 90.7 FM" transmits to a potential audience of over 125,000 from its studio in the HUB-Robeson Center. The station also has a live webcast, which is capable of streaming live to hundreds of listeners. WKPS is licensed by the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) with the primary goal being to serve the campus and local community and secondary goals being the training, education and instruction of students in broadcast radio and station management. The station is run entirely by Penn State students and volunteer members, without any affiliation with Pennsylvania State University administrators.

Contents

History

Origins of Penn State Student Radio

Penn State's original student station, WDFM, went on the air December 6, 1953, was Penn State's original student radio station. It was first conceived by the Class of 1951 and given to the University as a class gift.[1] It changed its call letters to WPSU-FM in 1985.

From the 1980s onward, student programming was progressively cut back. Later in the decade, more NPR programming was added to the schedule. By 1992, WPSU was a full-fledged NPR affiliate with very few student ties and very little student programming.[2] Despite the fact that the "new" radio station's mission and goals were dissimlar to those of early WDFM, the university allowed WPSU to exist in spite of its changes.

WEHR (1972-2005)

On the AM dial, there also existed WEHR, a radio station in Penn State's East Residence Halls ("EHR" stands for "East Halls Radio"). At one time, each of Penn State's five residence areas had a radio station, however, only WEHR in East Halls survived, and only to an extent.[3] WEHR's format was undefined, varying depending on the deejay.

WEHR originally broadcast from 10 Geary Hall, moving to 104 Johnston Commons sometime in the early 1980s. The station was set up to broadcast through the electric system in the dormitories of East Halls, via a carrier current, a system that failed miserably, so the station's main broadcast was through speakers into Johnston and Findlay commons. At some point, the station lost its ability to transmit over the radio dial and was forced to accept being heard infrequently on Penn State University's House and Food Services (HFS) Channel 21 on the on-campus cable television system.

The last broadcast schedule was posted on the station's website in 2005. Since that time, with limited resources, finances and student interest, WEHR has ceased to function. The last staff to operate East Halls radio was Evan Raffel as General Manager, Alex Kozak and Programming Director, Jack Greening as deejay, Michael Boyson as Treasurer and James Peters as Business Manager. East Halls radio facility is said to house potentially the largest student archive of vinyl on-campus. From 1995 until 2005, Penn State had two student-run radio stations. By 2005, only WKPS remained.

Re-emergence and creation of WKPS

A growing number of students, becoming aware of the situation and disillusioned with their options, decided to give student radio another try. A small group of students, led by Jeff Ecker, asked the university to provide funding to begin a brand-new radio station in the tradition of WDFM (insofar as its student-oriented focus), but one distinct from WPSU. The new station would seek to serve the listening community by providing alternative and cultural programming not found in local commercial radio. WKPS went on the air on Halloween - Tuesday, October 31, 1995.[4] The first song ever played on its airwaves was "Please Play This Song on the Radio" by NOFX.

WKPS was chartered as a student club under Penn State's office of Student Affairs to avoid a fate similar to that of WDFM. Though this move would prove problematic for the radio station in the future, it was ultimately heralded as the decision which would keep the station firmly within the students' grasp. Lacking in any professional oversight, the early radio station relied heavily on the staff of WPSU-FM 91.5 FM, with whom they shared the University-rented James building (also shared by The Daily Collegian). Any oversight and support were extremely short-lived, however: WPSU relocated in May 1998.

As per its FCC licensure, WKPS tweaked the original goals of WDFM, citing primarily the need to provide for the State College community and Penn State students with public service; secondarily, the need to provide a hands-on, co-curricular learning environment for students interested in broadcast media; and finally, to provide a recreational extracurricular activity for students. Therefore, WKPS was open to students of all majors, not specifically those in the College of Communications for broadcast media. The station offered opportunities that the previous student radio stations hadn't seen - in 1999, students of the university began broadcasting Penn State football.

Incidentally, "WKPS" was the fictitious student radio station featured in the 1990 film "Pump Up The Volume" starring Christian Slater.

Problems with communication

The 2000-2001 academic year was busy for WKPS. Officers of the station, including Michael D. Walsh, began restructuring the station's image and unveiled the "new" station as "The LION 90.7fm." This academic year, however, would prove to be a difficult one for the radio station. Members on the original Student Organization Budgeting Committee (SOBC) had graduated and, though WKPS had been given generous funding in the past, the funding began to decrease in amount each year as student board members began to graduate. By 2000, students in the University Park Allocations Committee (which replaced the SOBC) were not so inclined to give the station money. UPAC cut funding for The Lion 90.7FM by 80 percent during the 2000-2001 academic year, a decrease which nearly crippled the station.[5] Student General Manager Mike Walsh secured funding from the office of Student Affairs, with its Vice President Bill Asbury allegedly promising to provide funding support for an additional five years. The exact terms of this verbal contract are contested—when Vicky Triponey became the Vice President of Student Affairs, the University claimed Asbury only promised three years.

In order to secure more professional oversight for the station, The LION 90.7fm attempted the following year to create a mutually beneficial partnership with Penn State's College of Communications. The University agreed to create such a relationship, and the office of Student Affairs and the College of Communications each offered to pay half of the salary for a faculty adviser, which the new station had lacked since its inception.[6] The relationship deteriorated rapidly. Jeff Brown, the faculty adviser, quickly moved to promote the agenda of the College of Communications - to create an exclusively co-curricular experience - without regard to the station's stated goals or charter as an extracurricular club in Student Affairs.[7] The rocky relationship continued until College wired its student news studio into the station's sound board without warning or permission.

The Lion Riot incident

In an incident now known as the "Lion Riot" (audio accessible on The Lion 90.7FM's web archive), faculty members of the College of Communications stormed into the radio station and berated deejays while on-air. Audio of the incident begins with DJs on air at the time - including President and General Manager Michael Walsh - trying to make smalltalk before the Comm students' news report was scheduled to be fed into the broadcast. When the broadcast didn't work, the DJs jokingly questioned its quality and necessity. Faculty members then broke through the airlock and began yelling at the DJs, who were still stationed at the microphones. They left their microphones on intentionally.

While one staffer explained how to patch the broadcast through, another staffer in the background continued to yell at the on-air DJs. The latter allegedly knocked into Walsh (disputably by accident or intentionally, but resulting in an audible "pop" over the microphone) prompting Walsh to ask her if she'd like to hit him. Because the incident was recorded,[8] and because the faculty members' actions were illegal by state and federal laws, the Lion Riot created much controversy among students and administrators. The LION 90.7fm still references the LION Riot from time to time, particularly the "do you want to hit me? Come on, hit me" Walsh quote, which airs regularly in audio imaging for the station. An article and partial transcript of the incident was published by a local independent newspaper. [9]

Aftermath of the LION Riot

By the summer of 2002, the relationship with the College of Communications had dissolved entirely, and Student Affairs were no longer willing to pay half of the adviser's salary. Recent graduate and former WKPS officer Christopher Buchignani was hired for substantially less to replace Jeff Brown for one year. In the summer of 2003, the College of Communications, who leased the space in the James Building, forced The LION 90.7fm to evict. Dr. Stanley Latta, Director of Unions & Student Activities under Penn State's office of Student Affairs, authorized the station's move to the Hetzel Union Building. Room 9, right next to the HUB's large aquarium, was designated the main studio, with additional offices (one of which would become The Lion's production room) allotted to the station on floor three. On October 1, 2003, the station went live from room nine.

Though the new station was smaller than the station to which the staff had become accustomed, it allowed for The Lion 90.7FM to be physically independent. Live webcasts, added to the station's website the previous year, were a hit with a growing student and community audience of both State College residents and distant alumni. The webcasts continue to be popular today, nearly reaching their listener capacity limit each time The LION 90.7fm broadcasts a Penn State football game.

WKPS funding controversy

Student staffers had only begun to get settled, however, when in 2004, newly installed Vice President of Student Affairs Vicky Triponey cut all funding to the radio station. Though she allegedly cited WKPS's flagship talk show Radio Free Penn State as the cause,[10] she denied that its administratively-critical tack led to her decision. Instead, she claimed that The Lion 90.7FM was only promised three years of support by Asbury, a charge Asbury himself did not contest. The station managed to stay afloat, and with charitable contributions from listeners and alumni and help from UPAC, The Lion 90.7FM maintained its position in the Penn State Community.

In late 2005, student General Manager Brandon W. Peach assumed the responsibility for putting the station back on the right financial track. While the problems with the administration would continue to grow,[11] the radio station has been able to procure aid from alternate sources and continue to provide an outlet for multi-format student radio. In 2006, the Penn State Student Radio Alumni Interest Group (SRAIG) renewed the station's FCC License, held by the Penn State Board of Trustees, ensuring that the station would be around in some form until 2014.

Faculty adviser Robert Zimmerman died on Monday, January 15, 2007, due to an allergic reaction to medication. He was 73 years old.[12] The Lion 90.7FM continues to operate, but is financially jeopardized due to high operating expenses and limited income sources.[13].

Student Radio Alumni Interest Group

In 2008, then-President & General Manager Thomas A. Shakely began working with alumni to resuscitate the Penn State Student Radio Alumni Interest Group, or SRAIG, an affiliate non-profit organization of the Penn State Alumni Association. The SRAIG had been founded in 2005 by then-faculty adviser Robert K. Zimmerman, but had become inactive after his death in 2007.

Mike Gogel, a former President & General Manager of WKPS, became president of the SRAIG, and with the board, the SRAIG established The Robert K. Zimmerman Memorial Endowment[14] at Penn State University as a permanent investment vehicle for the financial needs of the students of The LION 90.7fm.

Shows

Weekday programming

Weekend programming

Previous shows

Technical information

See also

External links

Notes

  1. ^ "Special Collections Library: Senior Class Gifts". Penn State University Archives. May 4, 2005. http://www.libraries.psu.edu/speccolls/psua/psgeneralhistory/classgifts/clas1950.htm. 
  2. ^ CDT (February 22, 2005). "Penn State Radio". Centre Daily Times. http://www.centredaily.com/mld/centredaily/news/special_packages/150_years/10961654.htm. 
  3. ^ "WEHR - About East Halls Radio.". December 28, 2006. http://www.clubs.psu.edu/up/wehr/about.htm. 
  4. ^ David Schonfeld (October 31, 1995). "New station delivers student focus". The Daily Collegian. http://www.collegian.psu.edu/archive/1995/10/10-31-95tdc/10-31-95d05-001.htm. 
  5. ^ Board of Opinion (September 4, 2001). "Student radio station must serve students". The Daily Collegian. http://www.collegian.psu.edu/archive/2001/09/09-04-01tdc/09-04-01dops-edit.asp. 
  6. ^ Meghan Day (July 30, 2001). "College obtains station control". The Daily Collegian. http://www.collegian.psu.edu/archive/2001/07/07-30-01tdc/07-30-01dnews-1.asp. 
  7. ^ Sarah Rothman (August 24, 2001). "Radio station changes hands, names manager". The Daily Collegian. http://www.collegian.psu.edu/archive/2001/08/08-24-01tdc/08-24-01dnews-3.asp. 
  8. ^ Mike Walsh (April 26, 2003). "The Lion Riot". The Lion 90.7FM. http://www.thelion.fm/archives/audio/theLIONriot.mp3. 
  9. ^ Justin Leto (November, 2001). "Dust-Up at WKPS". Voices of Central Pennsylvania. http://voicesweb.org/archive/cu/wkps1101.html. 
  10. ^ Holly Rosene (April 26, 2004). "University cuts The Lion's funds". The Daily Collegian. http://www.collegian.psu.edu/archive/2004/04/04-26-04tdc/04-26-04dnews-12.asp. 
  11. ^ "Radio station funding: UPAC should support WKPS-FM radio". The Daily Collegian. December 5, 2006. http://www.collegian.psu.edu/archive/2006/12/12-05-06tdc/12-05-06dops-edit-01.asp. 
  12. ^ Billy Wellock (January 17, 2007). "Adviser dies from allergic reaction". The Daily Collegian. http://www.collegian.psu.edu/archive/2007/01/01-17-07tdc/01-17-07dnews-09.asp. 
  13. ^ Kevin Horan, Matthew Spolar (December 1, 2006). "WKPS-FM asks board for more funds". The Daily Collegian. http://www.collegian.psu.edu/archive/2006/12/12-01-06tdc/12-01-06dweb-01.asp. 
  14. ^ Thomas A. Shakely (September 13, 2009). "The SRAIG Endowment". Penn State Student Radio Alumni Interest Group. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IReA2qbA0ZA.