WNFN

WNFN
City of license Millersville, Tennessee
Broadcast area Nashville, Tennessee
Branding i106
Slogan "Nashville's Hit Music Station"
Frequency 106.7 MHz(also on HD Radio)
First air date September 22, 1995
Format Top 40 (CHR)
ERP 2,950 watts
HAAT 294.3 meters
Class C3
Facility ID 29862
Callsign meaning We're Nashville's FaN! (from previous sports format)
Owner Volt Radio, LLC (currently operated by former owner Cumulus Media)
Webcast Listen Live
Website i106hits.com

WNFN (106.7 FM, "i106") is a Top 40 (CHR) formatted radio station in the Nashville, Tennessee market, broadcasting a Top 40 format. Its transmitter site is in Whites Creek, Tennessee and its studios are in Nashville's Music Row district.

Previously licensed to the affluent Nashville suburb of Belle Meade, and recently obtaining a permit for an increased signal, with a new license based in nearby Millersville, WNFN was formerly operated under the callsign of WNPL. The station's original construction permit listed Mt. Juliet, Tennessee as the city of license, but this was changed amid concerns of interference with radio communications at Nashville International Airport.

On September 16, 2011, WNFN and then sister station WRQQ (Now WLVU) were placed into an independent trust (Volt Radio, LLC) while Cumulus seeks a buyer. The move was forced by FCC ownership limits following Cumulus' acquisition of Citadel Broadcasting, which resulted locally in WKDF and WGFX joining the Cumulus cluster. The FCC, as of 2011, allows a single company to own a maximum of five FM stations and two AM stations in any given market. To meet these guidelines in Nashville, Cumulus was forced to spin off two of its seven FM stations, and the company chose WRQQ and WNFN, traditionally its two lowest-performing stations.

On November 14, 2011, Cumulus announced it was removing WRQQ from the Volt Radio trust, replacing it with WQQK.[1] WQQK was removed from the trust on April 30, 2013 leaving only WNFN to still be under a Trust Agreement to Volt Radio.

WNFN broadcasts one channel (HD 1) in the HD format.[2]

Previous formats

As WNPL

As WNFN

The former all-sports format was adopted on December 23, 2004, in part as a way of splitting the sports shows then broadcast on WWTN away from the political talk shows that it otherwise broadcasts on the premise that the overlap in listenership between the two formats is minimal, and the callsign change soon followed. The station had marketed itself as "Nashville's only all-sports FM" and "Nashville's Sports Leader", until the sports format was dropped on July 29, 2009.

The once-popular SportsNight afternoon drive-time talk show was briefly simulcast on both WWTN and WNPL/WNFN before being relegated to WNPL/WNFN alone in early 2005. Due in part to the lower power of WNFN and in part to the previous departure of popular host George Plaster to competitor WGFX, SportsNight (hosted by Blake Fulton, Joe Biddle and, for around two years, Pete Weber) fell into a precipitous ratings decline. Both it and the mid-day local talk show Sports Brunch (hosted by John Dwyer and Bryan Mullen) were discontinued in March 2006. SportsNight would eventually be replaced by The Sports Guys (which began in July 2006) featuring longtime Nashville sportscaster Bob Bell, former Middle Tennessee State University head football coach Boots Donnelly and Nashville newcomer Jonathan Shaffer. Donnelly left the show in February 2007, and was replaced by former Tennessee Titans President Jeff Diamond. Bell left in July 2007 and was replaced by Thom Abraham out of Cumulus sister station WUMP/Huntsville.[3] The Abraham show was discontinued after February 6, 2009, leaving no local content, except for MTSU games and coaches' shows. Otherwise, the station broadcast almost exclusively programming from ESPN Radio and selected major sporting events. ESPN Radio was formerly featured on AM 560 WNSR (Nashville Sports Radio) in Nashville. According to a story in Billboard's Radio Monitor and other publications, Cumulus Media, WNFN's owner and ABC Radio, then ESPN's parent company, were both sued in Federal Court in Nashville over tortious interference with a contract (between ESPN and WNSR) due to the move of ESPN programming from WNSR to WNFN. According to the article, this was in violation of antitrust laws. Settlement was apparently made out of court after Cumulus and ABC tried unsuccessfully to move the suit to New York. After the sports format was dropped at WNFN, ESPN Radio was picked up by former rival WGFX.

In 2006, WNFN became the flagship station of the Middle Tennessee State University athletic department, and remained such until the sports format was dropped, at which time this function was reverted to the university's own station, WMOT.

Reformat to Top 40

On July 29, 2009, WNFN went "under construction", airing construction sounds and saying that a new station in Nashville was being built and to check back at 1:06pm. There had been rumors that the station would flip to a religious format as "Praise 106" and a man in a deep voice would occasionally quickly say "Praise 106", after a female announcer would say "A new station for Nashville is coming soon!"; however no "Praise 106" ever launched, and this was thought to only a publicity stunt. On July 30, 2009 at 1:06pm CST the station launched a Top 40 (CHR) format as i106, and immediately after the launch, the old 106.7 The Fan website redirected to the new i106 website. "Boom Boom Pow" by The Black Eyed Peas was the first song. This was Cumulus's second Top 40 station launched during the same month, cloned after sister station WRWM in Indianapolis.

See also

References

  1. http://www.allaccess.com/net-news/archive/story/98937/cumulus-takes-two-out-of-trusts-puts-one-in
  2. http://www.hdradio.com/station_guides/widget.php?id=33
  3. "Sports host Abraham leaving, but show staying". The Huntsville Times (Huntsville, Alabama). 2007-06-24. WUMP to also introduce new morning program WUMP-AM 730 sports personality Thom Abraham is moving to Nashville, but his show will remain on the air in Huntsville. Abraham hosts the daily "Thom Abraham Show" from 3 to 6 p.m. That show will continue at the same time but originate from Nashville's ESPN-FM 106.7 The Fan.

External links

Coordinates: 36°15′50″N 86°47′38″W / 36.264°N 86.794°W