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WQLK

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Radio station in Richmond, Indiana
WQLK
Broadcast areaRichmond, Indiana
Frequency96.1 MHz (HD Radio)
BrandingKicks 96
Programming
FormatCountry
SubchannelsHD1: WQLK analog
HD2: Classic hits "101.7 The Point"
HD3: Classic country "95.3 The Legend"
Ownership
OwnerBrewer Broadcasting Corp.
History
First air date1960s (as WGLM)
Former call signsWGLM (1960s-1973)
Technical information
Licensing authorityFCC
Facility ID6749
ClassB
ERP50,000 watts
HAAT150 meters (490 ft)
Transmitter coordinates39°53′33″N 84°56′09″W / 39.89250°N 84.93583°W / 39.89250; -84.93583
Translator(s)95.3 W237AT (Richmond, relays HD3)
101.7 W269BP (Richmond, relays HD2)
Links
Public license information
WebcastListen live
HD2: Listen live
Websitekicks96.com
1017thepoint.com (HD2)

WQLK (96.1 FM) is a radio station licensed to Richmond, Indiana, located at 96.1 MHz on the FM dial. WQLK broadcasts at an effective radiated power of 50,000 Watts with its studios, offices, and tower located east of US 35 on Tingler Road just north of Richmond.

Programming

WQLK plays country music, mainly from the 1990s and today. It is also broadcasts Indiana University men's basketball

Current On Air Staff:

The Kicks Morning Crew Sean & Dave Sean Lamb/Dave Patrick M-F 5am-10am

Middays Dave Paxton M-F 10am-2pm

Afternoon Drive Jim Callahan M-F 2pm-7pm

The station previously broadcast Richmond High School football and boys basketball broadcasts until 2000. Those broadcasts are now on sister station, 1017 The Point. WHON AM-FM

History

WQLK is Richmond's oldest FM radio signal. The station signed on as WGLM, featuring a Jazz format. This format continued until 1970 when the station adopted a country music format. Jazz remained a fixture on the station, however. WQLK continued to broadcast a Sunday morning jazz program until 1992 when the station became "Kicks 96". By 1974, the station changed its call sign to WQLK and adopted an Easy listening format, and briefly returned to country before flip-flopping formats with its AM sister station, WHON in 1979 to become Top 40 as K-96.

Since its start in 1979, WQLK saw quite a bit of success as a Top 40. The station was mainstream from songs and surveys throughout the 1980s which had at the time become a contemporary hit radio station for the area, but what made K-96 stand out from stations in nearby Dayton, Indianapolis, and Cincinnati was that it wobbled a bit toward the Rock side of the genre for a very short period of time during the spring of 1983, despite the station mostly playing mainstream titles by surveys. The tweak gave artists such as The Police, Duran Duran, and Def Leppard more exposure than a conventional Top 40 station. However, K-96 played some Rhythmic music, but mainly those from bands or artists that were considered to be new wave music sometimes (as by today's standards, "Rock 40" would be termed as a Modern Rock format). The Rock tweak shortly died out a couple of months later, as it brought back into its CHR formula in mid-1983.

When 1989 rolled along, K-96 dropped CHR and became a classic hits station featuring mainly 1970s rock. The format quickly morphed into classic rock by 1990 and then album oriented rock by the early 1990s. The station retained the "K-96" moniker and the koala mascot throughout these format tweaks. In the spring of 1992, and with rumors of a format change in the air, their playlist began to shift slightly incorporating songs by Mary Chapin Carpenter (Passionate Kisses), Restless Heart (When She Cries) and even country crooner Vince Gill (I Still Believe In You) into their playlists right alongside format regulars Led Zeppelin, Boston and John Mellencamp. Popular air personalities from this time period include The Captain, Jim Rhodes, The Buddha, and Mike Fox.

Finally, in July 1992, the "K-96" era of the station ended. At 5 p.m. on the Friday before the format change, the radio station began stunting with a loop of the song "Kicks" by Paul Revere & the Raiders continuously all weekend. The following Monday at 5am, morning show hosts J.R. & The Buddha premiered the radio station's new contemporary Country format as Kicks 96.

J.R. & The Buddha remained as the radio station's morning show until J.R. was replaced by Buzz Cannon in 1995. At this time Buzz Aldrin also took over as the station's Program Director. The Buzz & Buddha morning show remained an integral part of the station's success until Buzz's departure in 1999 . Upon Buzz's departure from the station, Buddha took over as Program Director and evening air personality Angie Fox was promoted to mornings. Buddha was replaced as Program Director in 2001 by afternoon air-personality Steve Baker who remained the station's P.D. until October 31, 2008. Baker was replaced by Phil O'Reilly on November 1, 2008. The radio station's General Manager Dave Strycker has remained the station's G.M. since 1978. Angie & The Buddha have won numerous awards from The Indiana Broadcasters Association as have Steve Baker, News Director Jeff Lane and Production Director Joe Winters.

Though the station has tweaked itself slightly over the years to include older songs and has changed their positioning statement from Hot Country Kicks 96 to The Best Country & The Most Fun, Kicks 96, their country format remains relatively the same to this day. Key air-personalities since 1993 include: Mark Brim, Buzz Cannon, The Buddha, Angie Fox, Allen Rantz, Paul Partezana, Dave McKay, Steve Baker, and Randy Klemme/Big R.

HD Radio

On December 26, 2018, WQLK's HD3 subchannel changed their format from contemporary Christian to classic country, branded as "95.3 The Legend".

References

  1. "Facility Technical Data for WQLK". Licensing and Management System. Federal Communications Commission.
  2. Legend Lands in Richmond, IN Radioinsight - December 26, 2018

External links

Radio stations in the Muncie, Indiana area
This template also includes Richmond and Marion.
By AM frequency
By FM frequency
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By call sign
Defunct
Nearby regions
Dayton
Fort Wayne
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See also
List of radio stations in Indiana
Country radio stations in the state of Indiana
By AM frequency
By FM frequency
By callsign
See also
adult contemporary
classic hits
college
country
news/talk
NPR
oldies
religious
rock
sports
top 40
urban
other radio stations in Indiana
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