WZUN

WZUN
City of license Phoenix, New York
Broadcast area Syracuse, New York
Branding Classic Hits Sunny 102
Slogan Classic Hits
Frequency 102.1 MHz
Translator(s) 106.1 W291BU (Fulton)
First air date 25 January 1994 (as WRDS)
Format Classic Hits (Jan-Oct)
Christmas music (Nov-Dec)
ERP 6,000 watts
HAAT 81 meters
Class A
Facility ID 60253
Transmitter coordinates 43°6′4.00″N 76°16′58.00″W / 43.1011111°N 76.2827778°W / 43.1011111; -76.2827778
Callsign meaning SUN (with the Z as a reversed S)
Former callsigns WRDS (1994-2000)
Owner Wayne Mack
(WZUN Communications LLC)
Webcast Listen Live
Website thesunnyspot.com

WZUN (102.1 FM) is a radio station broadcasting a classic hits format. Licensed to Phoenix, New York, USA, the station serves the Syracuse area. The station is currently owned by Wayne Mack through licensee WZUN Communications LLC.[1]

Personalities

The station features "Big Mike" Fiss as the morning personality from 5:30am to 10 a.m.. Rick Gary, formerly the morning host at rival WYYY and longtime TV host on ABC affiliate WSYR, hosts afternoons from 3pm to 7pm. Other personalities include Steve Kelley, Keith Kobland and Cindy Humble. The station has a "no repeat workday" that stretches from 6 a.m. to 7 p.m., during which no songs air twice in that time span.

Special programs

The station is one of a select few stations that regularly changes its format to Christmas music in the beginning of November, as opposed to the week before Thanksgiving as its competitors do. The station did not do so in 2013 because WNDR-FM had already begun stunting with Christmas music in October.

History

The station went on the air as WRDS on 25 January 1994.

The format was The Touch and Tom Joyner did the morning show.[2]

On 26 December 2000, the station changed its call sign to the current WZUN.[3]

On September 12, 2009, WZUN changed their format from adult contemporary to classic hits.

Effective October 1, 2013, previous owner Galaxy Communications sold the station to Wayne Mack's WZUN Communications LLC for $1 million. The move was made primarily to address ownership caps in the market (because the Oswego and Syracuse markets are treated as one in terms of FCC regulations, each of Galaxy's two signals for each of its two other FM formats, TK Classic Rock and K-Rock, resulted in them having five FM stations in the market, one more than allowed; the move was allowed under a grandfather clause, but a restructuring of Galaxy's corporate structure resulted in the station cluster losing its grandfathered status).

References

  1. "WZUN Facility Record". United States Federal Communications Commission, audio division.
  2. Stark, Phyllis (June 3, 1995). "Vox Jox". Billboard 107 (22): 104.
  3. "WZUN Call Sign History". United States Federal Communications Commission, audio division.

External links


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