WYRD-FM

WYRD-FM
City of license Simpsonville, South Carolina
Broadcast area Greenville-Spartanburg, South Carolina
Branding News Radio WORD
Frequency 106.3 MHz
First air date July 10, 1989
Format News/Talk
ERP 25,000 watts
HAAT 100 meters
Class C3
Facility ID 53623
Callsign meaning derived from sister station WYRD
Former callsigns WNMX (1988-1995)
WDXZ (1995-1999)
WGVC (1999-2008)
Owner Entercom Communications
Webcast Listen Live
Website newsradioword.com

See also: WYRD-AM, WORD-AM

WYRD-FM, known on-air as News Radio WORD, is a news/talk-formatted radio station in the Greenville-Spartanburg area of Upstate South Carolina. The Entercom Communications outlet is licensed by the FCC to Simpsonville, SC, and broadcasts at 106.3 MHz with an ERP of 25 kW. It simulcasts with WYRD and WORD.

News Radio WORD carries Russ and Lisa, Mike Gallagher, Coast to Coast AM, Rush Limbaugh, Kim Komando, Lars Larson, Bill O'Reilly, Sean Hannity and Bob McLain.

Contents

Schedule

Weekdays

Saturday

Sunday

History

106.3 originally signed on July 10, 1989 as WNMX in Newberry with a 6,000 watt signal. The station featured an adult contemporary format under the name "Mix 106". Over time, the station adjusted itself toward CHR under the name "Hot Mix 106.3", with a light dose of Alternative rock music. It was the intent to move the station into the Columbia radio market, but the plans to do so never materialized. Ratings for the station during this time were extremely poor. By the end of 1993, WNMX had changed to Urban Contemporary and had boosted the signal to its present 25,000 watts, with little change in audience or advertising revenue.

In 1994, WNMX's format was changed again to country (with a musical lean toward classic country) under the handle "Big Bubba 106.3". For a time, the station actually did very well, but listenership started to drop as the audience started to drift back to the area's other country stations. In early 1995, WNMX was issued a cease and desist letter from WBUB, another country station in Charleston that was using the "Bubba" moniker and had trademarked the name in South Carolina. WNMX then changed its name to "Dixie 106.3" under the WDXZ callsign, but kept the format.

By 1996, WDXZ was in serious trouble as the ratings had bottomed out as well as problems with advertising support from the community. The station went off the air for a few months, which during that time was reorganized. It returned to the air in early September, but with a bare-bones staff. Eventually, it entered into a LMA with a church group that took the station to a southern gospel format. Although it had a small, but loyal audience, the station suffered through several major setbacks and after two years, the station shut down.

In late 1999, the station signed back on the air under new ownership as WGVC, adopting a satellite-fed Jammin' Oldies format under the name "Groovin' 106.3".

In 2002, WGVC's city of license was changed to Simpsonville which paved the way for the station to be moved into the Greenville-Spartanburg radio market. WGVC was then sold to Barnstable Broadcasting, which at the time also owned rock stations WROQ and WTPT in the market. The format was changed to traditional oldies under the name "Oldies 106-3" and slogan "Motown, Soul, and Great Rock 'n Roll."

In 2005, Barnstable sold its Greenville-Spartanburg radio properties to Entercom Communications. In order to comply with FCC ownership rules, Entercom sold the WOLI/WOLT simulcast to separate owners and moved the Contemporary Christian/country hybrid format that both stations over to WGVC, relaunching it as "106.3 The Walk". Despite the station's decent ratings with the Oldies format, the decision was made in advance to drop it and replace it with that of the Walk, which never managed to garner the ratings the oldies format did.

In late November 2006, a computerized "countdown" was broadcast on 106.3. The countdown lasted about a week. Its purpose was to countdown until a new station would emerge. During the countdown, some various phrases/quotes from many sources (like movies, music) were played every 30 seconds for the duration. The new format was Greenstone Media's female-oriented talk, known only as "106.3 WGVC."

On August 6, 2007, it was confirmed that Greenstone Media, the main provider for WGVC's programming, would cease operations on August 17, 2007. Then on August 18, the station started playing a satellite feed of various genres of music, including rock from the 1970s and 1980s ("106.3 The Big Hair"), boy band music ("Backstreet 106.3"), a mix of rap and hip-hop, leaning towards old school rap ("Booty 106.3"), country music ("Cryin' Country 106.3"), and even Christmas music ("Santa 106.3").

On August 20, 2007, at 12:00 noon ET, a new radio station emerged. It was now called "Charlie FM" with an adult hits format. The first song played was "What I Like About You" by The Romantics. The station played music commercial free for the first week. Since the format change to "Charlie", the station localized the sound with a variety of drop-ins that reference landmarks, roads, quirks, folk-lore for the region.

On June 13, 2008, Charlie FM's programming was abruptly dropped, replaced with that of WORD News Radio, which had previously only broadcast on AM. No reasoning was ever officially announced, but it is believed that Entercom was worried that the adult hits format would hurt its sister stations, especially WSPA-FM and WROQ. The switch also makes up for the poor signals generated by WYRD-AM and WORD-AM at night, when the stations have to cut their power and go directional. It is notable that the format switch happened on 6-13, and when re-arranged 6-13 is similar to 106.3.

After the sale by Barnstable, 106.3, never managed to garner the ratings or success it did prior to Entercom Communications' decision to drop its Oldies format, until it became simulcasting the talk format. The addition of 106.3 to WYRD and WORD has helped the franchise to finish in the top 3 12+ in fall 2008.

External links