WLXC

      WLXC
      City of license Columbia, South Carolina
      Broadcast area Columbia, South Carolina
      Branding 103.1 Kiss FM
      Slogan "The Best Variety Of R&B Hits And Classic Soul"
      Frequency 103.1 MHz
      First air date 1982
      Format Urban Adult Contemporary
      ERP 6,000 watts
      HAAT 94 meters (309 feet)
      Class A
      Facility ID 54794
      Transmitter coordinates 34° 03' 05" N, 81° 00' 07" W
      Callsign meaning Lexington (previous city of license)
      Former callsigns WPDN (1982-1986), WMMC (1986-1988), WPRH (1988-1989), WOMG (1989-2008)
      Owner Cumulus Media
      Sister stations WISW, WOMG, WNKT, WTCB
      Webcast Listen Live
      Website kiss985fm.com

      WLXC is an Urban Adult Contemporary station licensed to Columbia, South Carolina and serves the Columbia, South Carolina market. The Cumulus Media outlet is licensed by the FCC to broadcast at 103.1 MHz with an ERP of 6 kW. The station goes by the name 103.1 Kiss FM and its current slogan is "The Best Variety of R&B and Classic Soul."

      History

      103.1 FM was allocated to Columbia beginning in 1976. The construction permit for the 3 kW. station was awarded in June of that year to MIDCOM Corporation, a group made up of Rev. I. DeQuincey Newman, J.E. Dickson, Bob Parnell, & Bob Cook. Construction for the station was held up for several years by appeals filed by Nuance Corp, the owners of crosstown AM Urban Contemporary outlet WOIC and one of the dismissed applicants for the proposed FM.[1]

      Eventually, the FCC sided with a lower court, approving the station to be licensed to MIDCOM in October 1981.[1] Finally in 1982, the station hit the air as WDPN with an Urban Contemporary and Jazz music format with its studios and tower located in the Columbia suburb of Dentsville.

      Ratings for the new outlet were at a 4.2 in its first Arbitron ratings period.[2] However, the station was overshadowed not only by the well-established WOIC, but competition from Sumter-based FM Urban Contemporary outlet WWDM, which became the dominant Urban outlet in the market. By 1985, WDPN was acquired by WOIC's parent company, Nuance Corporation and WDPN's studios were moved into WOIC's facility at 910 Comanche Trail in West Columbia. Ratings for both stations began to decline.

      In early 1986, both WPDN and WOIC were acquired by Alpha Communications. a group headed up by legendary air personality Chuck Dunaway (of WABC and KLIF fame). WOIC was left Urban, while WDPM changed to Top 40/Crossover as "C-103" under the new call letters of WMMC. Almost overnight, the station's ratings increased. By early 1987, the station had evolved more toward a mainstream CHR format.

      By early 1988, what gains that C-103 had made were slowly being eroded by rival CHRs WNOK and new upstart WYYS (now WLTY). The station was sold to Price Broadcasting, which changed the station's call letters to WPRH and the handle to "Power 103" on May 2, but kept the previous Top 40 format. This move did not work as the station's ratings spiraled downward within a year's time.

      On April 15, 1989, after a week where the station experimented with a brief Album Rock format, Magic 103.1 was born, taking the new call letters of WOMG. This was the market's first FM Oldies station since WWGO's (now WMFX) attempt 3 years prior (WODE, now known as WOIC, was doing Oldies on AM during this time, but would change formats by the end of the year). At the start, Magic 103.1 was more focused on music from 1956 through 1968, but as time moved on, music from the 1970s were added into the format as well.

      In February 1991, after the station had experienced a significant dip in the ratings, the station reimaged itself as Oldies 103, focusing on the music from 1964 to 1973. The basic format has remained ever since, although in recent years, music from the late 70s was re-added into the format.

      In 1997, after years of planning and delays, the station was finally able to increase its power from 3 kW. to 6 kW.. This move solidified its signal coverage in the Columbia metro area. However, even with its new wattage, and Gamecock Basketball and Baseball rights, the station's power makes it inaccessible to western Lexington County, into Calhoun and Orangeburg; WQKI-FM in Rowesville, South Carolina blocks its signals. Those complaints led to Citadel Broadcasting moving the WNKT tower from St. George to Eastover, changing its market, and flipping that station to a sports station in order to carry Gamecock sports to a more accessbile area.

      On April 1, 2008, Citadel Broadcasting moved the urban contemporary format from 98.5 FM to 103.1 FM. The Oldies format then heard on 103.1 FM moved to 98.5 FM, along with the WOMG calls. The WLXC calls were moved to 98.5 FM.[3]

      Citadel merged with Cumulus Media on September 16, 2011.[4]

      History of the Urban Contemporary format

      On March 4, at 3 p.m., WLXC signed back on with its present Urban Adult Contemporary format at 98.5 FM under the "98.5 Kiss FM" handle.[5] The station ran commercial-free in its first two weeks on the air using a mixture of local and Dallas-based ABC Radio Network "The Touch" Urban AC format air talent, including morning man Carlton Booth.[6] Several week later, Carlton Booth morning show was dropped for the syndicated Tom Joyner Morning Show.

      With the addition of Joyner and local afternoon host Kevin Holiday, WLXC's ratings jumped to fourth place in its first book (Summer, 1999), one of the strongest debuts in Columbia radio history for a new station.[7]

      In 2005, WLXC achieved success when it went to #1 12+ in the summer Arbitron ratings with a 7.5 share, its highest to date.[8] However, ratings slipped to 11th place in the next book as WWDM reclaimed the top spot.[9]

      ↑Jump back a section

      References

      1. ^ a b "New FM Radio Station Gets Approval For Construction", Columbia Record, October 5, 1981.
      2. ^ "WCOS Top In Radio Ratings, Newcomer WPDN Scores Well", The State, January 25, 1983.
      3. ^ Otis R. Taylor, Jr., "Radio Station Switcheroo," The State, April 1, 2008.
      4. ^ "Cumulus now owns Citadel Broadcasting". Atlanta Business Journal. September 16, 2011. Retrieved September 16, 2011. 
      5. ^ "'Breeze' Now Adult, Urban 'Kiss-FM' WLXC-FM Returns With New Format", "The State" newspaper, March 5, 1999
      6. ^ "New R&B Station Promises Local Urban Flavor", The State, March 19, 1999.
      7. ^ "Rivals Challenge The Big DM, New Radio Stations Specialize In Reaching Segments Of African-American Community", The State, September 9, 1999.
      8. ^ "Ratings Sealed With A Kiss", The State, August 19, 2005.
      9. ^ "A Bigger 'Kiss' For 'The Big DM'", The State, November 4, 2005.
      ↑Jump back a section

      External links

      Coordinates: 34°3′5″N 81°0′7″W / 34.05139°N 81.00194°W / 34.05139; -81.00194

      ↑Jump back a section
      Last modified on 8 April 2013, at 21:01