WILT (FM)

WILT
City Wrightsville Beach, North Carolina
Broadcast area Wilmington, North Carolina
Branding Sunny 103.7
Slogan More Music. More Variety.
Frequency 103.7 MHz
First air date 1977 (as WDZD at 93.5)
Format Adult Contemporary
ERP 22,000 watts
HAAT 150.9 meters
Class C2
Facility ID 52023
Transmitter coordinates 34°5′51.64″N 77°58′18.2″W / 34.0976778°N 77.971722°W / 34.0976778; -77.971722
Former callsigns WDZD (1977-1993)
WLTT (1993-2003)
WBNU (2003-2007)
WBNE (2007-2015)
Former frequencies 93.5 MHz (1977-1994)
Owner Capitol Broadcasting Company, Inc.
(Sunrise Broadcasting, LLC)
Website sunny1037.com

WILT (103.7 FM) "Sunny 103.7" is a radio station licensed to Wrightsville Beach, North Carolina, USA. The station serves the Wilmington area. The station is currently owned by Capitol Broadcasting Company, Inc., through licensee Sunrise Broadcasting, LLC.

History

93.7 FM

With the original call letters WFXZ-FM, "93.7 The Bone" signed on in November 2000. Owned and operated by Sea-Comm Media Inc., the station was located in the same Wilmington, North Carolina facilities as (modern rock) WSFM-FM "Surf 107" and (rhythmic oldies) WKXB "Jammin 99.9". The original lineup featured a jock-less, all-music morning show, Paul "Sully" Sullivan 10 am – 3 pm, Cameron Post 3–7 pm, and Steve "Knothead" Tighe 7 pm – 12 am. Chris Scharf served as the first program director, with Sully the station's first music director. Shortly after signing on, Sea-Comm brought aboard the syndicated Bob & Tom show (from Indianapolis). The station features included "Led For The Head" (a nightly Led Zeppelin feature), and a series of "Bonehead Parties" at local bars.

103.7 FM

Previous logo

WDZD, a country station licensed to Shallotte, North Carolina, was located at 93.5 FM. In 1994, the station increased from 3,000 to 25,000 watts and moved to 103.7 FM. At that time, the call letters were changed to WLTT. The station played soft adult contemporary music[1] for several years, using the names "Love 103.7" and later "Magic 103.7", before switching to modern rock [2] and then talk radio. The WLTT call letters later moved to the former WCCA at 106.3. The 103.7 frequency switched to the WBNU letters and classic rock format of WBNE, at 93.7 FM, which had used the "Bone" name and classic rock format for several years.[3] The WBNE letters went to WBNU when the 93.7 frequency began simulcasting WLTT. The 103.7 frequency got a signal boost to 35,000 watts and a tower closer to Wilmington, aided by a move by WWTB from 103.9 to 104.1 FM.

As of late, the station has broadened its format to include rock from the '90s and today in addition to classic rock.

On March 17, 2014, WBNE changed their format to news/talk, branded as "Port City Radio" (simulcast with WLTT 1180 AM Carolina Beach, NC).[4]

On January 31, 2015, at midnight WBNE switched to a simulcast of adult alternative-formatted WUIN 98.3 FM Oak Island, NC.[5]

On June 1, 2015, WBNE went silent.

On June 12, 2015, WBNE returned to the air, stunting with a loop of Twiggy Twiggy by Pizzicato Five.

On July 3, 2015, the station flipped to Variety Hits as "Big John FM".

On November 19, 2015, it was announced WILT's AC format and call sign would move to WBNE as "Sunny 103.7" on December 1, as WILT was sold to a new owner who changed the format on 104.5 to Christian radio.

References

  1. Toby Eddings, "Active rock finds an Asylum at 93.5," The Sun News, Jan. 31, 1999.
  2. Morgan Lee, "Station Jilts Country to Woo Female Listeners", Star-News, March 2, 1999.
  3. "Briefly Noted - Marriott at Beach Will Open Friday", Star-News, June 25, 2003.
  4. Wilmington's Bone Fades Away
  5. Port City Radio to sign Off
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 1/10/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.