WGER

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
WGER
City of license Saginaw, Michigan
Broadcast area Saginaw-Bay City-Midland
Branding Mix 106.3
Slogan Today's Best Hits
Frequency 106.3 MHz
First air date November 12, 1961 (at 102.5)
Format Adult Top 40
ERP 4,400 watts
HAAT 116 meters
Class A
Facility ID 20384
Transmitter coordinates 43°28′36″N 83°57′6″W / 43.47667°N 83.95167°W / 43.47667; -83.95167
Callsign meaning James Gerity (original owner)
Former callsigns WNEM-FM (11/12/61 - 2/19/69) (on 102.5)
Former frequencies 102.5 MHz (1961-1986)
Owner NextMedia Group
Sister stations WCEN-FM, WSGW, WSGW-FM, WTLZ
Webcast Listen Live
Website mix1063fm.com

WGER (106.3 FM, "Mix 106.3") is a radio station licensed to Saginaw, Michigan broadcasting an adult top 40 format.

History

Established by James Gerity, a professional violinist who acquired WNEM-TV in 1961, WGER began broadcasting later that year at 102.5 MHz under the WNEM-FM calls and featured a Beautiful Music format for the first several decades of its existence.[1] The call letters were changed to WGER after Gerity sold the TV station in 1969. WGER's beautiful music format, programmed by TM Programming, achieved high ratings in adult demographics in both the Tri-Cities and Flint markets thanks to its 86,000-watt signal licensed to Bay City. At one point, in 1971, Arbitron research showed that WGER was the second highest-rated radio station in the nation.[2] During this time, Gerity owned several other stations across Michigan, including WABJ and WQTE in Adrian and WPON in Pontiac.

"Magic 106.3" logo from 2008.

In 1986, Gerity's estate sold WGER to the owner of CHR-formatted WIOG, licensed to Saginaw at 106.3 which was sold to another company. The two stations swapped frequencies, with WGER moving its easy listening format to 106.3. WGER evolved from easy listening to mainstream AC on 106.3 and eventually took the name "Soft Rock 106.3" by the late 1980s before adopting the moniker "Magic 106.3".

By 2005, WGER had evolved from mainstream AC to its current Hot AC sound, although it would be several months before the station stopped reporting to Radio & Records/Mediabase 24/7's Adult Contemporary airplay panel and switched to the Hot AC panel. The station added songs like "Fergalicious" by Fergie and "Girl Next Door" by Saving Jane that did not fit the AC format and introduced a "Totally 80's Weekend" while continuing to feature the Soft AC sounds of Delilah at night.

That same year, Magic 106.3 got an AC competitor when MacDonald Broadcasting changed its adult standards WSAM-AM and oldies WSAG-FM to a Soft AC simulcast called "The Bay," a gold-based Soft AC simulcast meant to fill the void left when WGER migrated to Hot AC. In the summer of 2007, Delilah moved to "The Bay," and WGER became the new home of the John Tesh radio show in the Tri-Cities market. Increased competition from WSAM/WSAG and top-rated oldies/classic hits station WHNN (which has added more '80s music to its playlist), as well as listener perception that the sound of the station is inconsistent, has led to a decline in WGER's ratings over the past several years. The Fall 2007 Arbitron ratings book showed WGER in tenth place 12+ with a 3.3 share; however, by Spring 2008, the station had sunk to a 2.2 share 12+, falling behind Gladwin-based rimshot country station WGDN-FM.

WGER was the first station in the Tri-Cities market to play continuous Christmas music for the holiday season. In 2006, however, the station announced that it would not change to all-Christmas that year because of research that showed its listeners didn't want it, which left the door open for 96.1 WHNN to change to Christmas music, with which it was very successful. In 2007, both WGER and WHNN went all-Christmas shortly after Halloween.

WGER rebranded from "Magic 106.3" to "Mix 106.3" in February 2009. In the years since, the station has evolved its format from Hot AC to Adult CHR, with all 1980s music dropped from rotation, many 1990s songs eliminated as well, and a strong current/recurrent orientation, along with a small amount of hip-hop music added in.

References

Sources

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike; additional terms may apply for the media files.