WPTY

For the television station in Memphis, Tennessee formerly known as WPTY-TV, see WATN-TV.
WPTY
City Calverton-Roanoke, New York
Broadcast area Long Island
Branding Party 105.3
Slogan Long Island's Party Station
Frequency 105.3 MHz (also on HD Radio)
Translator(s) 98.1 W251BY (Patchogue, relays HD2)[1]
First air date May 27, 1998 (1998-05-27) (as WXXP)
Format FM/HD1: Rhythmic/Dance Hits
HD2: Oldies "Oldies 98"
HD3: Alternative WLIR "The World Famous 'LIR"
ERP 660 watts
HAAT 185 meters (607 ft)
Class A
Facility ID 31754
Transmitter coordinates 40°51′18.00″N 72°46′12.00″W / 40.8550000°N 72.7700000°W / 40.8550000; -72.7700000
Callsign meaning W ParTY
Former callsigns WXXP (1998-2004)
WDRE (2004-2009)[2]
Owner JVC Media LLC
Sister stations WBON, WJVC, WRCN-FM
Webcast Listen Live
Website party105.com
oldies98li.com (HD2)
wlirfm.com (HD3)

WPTY (105.3 FM, "Party 105") is a Rhythmic/Dance Hits station serving the Long Island market, mostly throughout Eastern Suffolk County. The JVC Media LLC outlet broadcasts at 105.3 MHz with their antenna based in Manorville, New York at an effective radiated power of 660W and is licensed to Calverton-Roanoke, New York. Its studios are located in Ronkonkoma. Until March 25, 2011, WPTY simulcast its signal via a 10 watt translator at 101.5 MHz based in Plainview. (The 101.5 translator had simulcast sister station WBON "La Nueva Fiesta" during the period when Party FM was relayed on WNYZ-LP TV channel 6 and 87.7 FM in New York City.)

On November 2, 2009 at 6 AM, "Party 105.3" began a simulcast broadcast on 87.7 FM New York, and was reimaged as "PartyFM - Your Party Music Leader". JVC Media LLC replaced Mega Media Group, whose lease from Island Broadcasting on the former "Pulse 87" WNYZ-LP was terminated on October 30 due to Mega Media Group's financial difficulties, but officially ended on January 21, 2010.

History

The station signed on the air on March 27, 1998 as WXXP under the leadership of Skyy.[3] Their studio was based in the same building as WLIR in Garden City, New York. At first, the station sounded similar to New York's rhythmic AC WKTU in format as they were playing older dance material. However, as time went on, Party 105's playlist began to add on newer, cutting-edge dance music (house music, trance, freestyle), at times being ahead, and began serving the area with a cutting-edge dance direction, which would prove popular with listeners and gave them an alternative to similarly formatted WKTU, which is also heard in the area. Despite being a Dance station it also ventured into the Rhythmic Top 40 arena as well but kept the Dance product intact.

At one time, as alternative rock station WLIR was experimenting with dance music sounds, a grass roots campaign was created by dance music fans to have Party 105 simulcast on WLIR. Both stations were owned by Jarad, and those that lived west of the 105.3 signal in New York City could then hear WPTY and its format. However, on January 9, 2004, Univision brought WLIR to create WZAA, which simulcasts New York station WCAA. Interestingly, in early February 2008, WNYZ-LP of New York City reformatted, becoming "Pulse 87". WNYZ-LP, a low-power TV station at 87.7 using the frequency's audio to act as an FM station, was, at the time, the only "FM" station in New York City carrying a Rhythmic/Dance format. It played some of the newer, cutting-edge dance music not heard on WKTU.

On January 12, 2004 the station picked up the call letters of the former WDRE, but kept the Dance format.

In late 2004, when WBEA changed format to become "Blaze 101.7", Long Island's first hip-hop station, Party 105.3 added more hip-hop, R&B and reggaeton to the format while removing the majority of dance music, which infuriated the dance music fan base that relied heavily on the station for dance music since the New York City stations weren't cutting edge. In May 2005, Party 105.3 reversed this trend and began playing more dance music than in the past. In 2008 WBEA returned to a Top 40/CHR direction, leaving WDRE as Long Island's lone Rhythmic/Dance outlet.

On September 15, 2005, owners The Morey Organization (TMO) changed the format of its stations (along with 107.1 WLIR and 98.5 WBON). 105.3 became Top 40 "FM Channel 105, Party Hits". The on-air staff was fired and the new format ran with limited commercials, with each programming hour sponsored by an individual advertiser.[4] But the switch did not generate adequate revenue and by December 19, 2005 TMO returned to the Dance format and the "Party 105.3" moniker.

After the return to Dance, the station became more dance music intensive often playing material that New York City Station WKTU did not play or added later. After WKTU changed their format to Rhythmic Adult Contemporary on September 9, 2006, Party 105.3 changed their promos stating that they were "New York's ONLY Dance Music Station", but by September 2007 they decided to cut back on the heavy amount of Dance product by balancing the current music mix with Rhythmic Hip-Hop fare under new operations manager Vic Latino, an alumnus of WKTU and BPM.

On December 26, 2006 BusinessTalkRadio.net President and Chief Executive Officer Michael Metter announced the purchases of WLIR, WBON, and WDRE for an undisclosed price[5] but the transaction was never completed.[6]

On January 1, 2008, a simulcast was added via a translator at 101.5 FM in Plainview, New York. This simulcast covered parts of Nassau and Western Suffolk counties not reached by the 105.3 signal.

On March 9, 2009 WDRE was added to the R&R Rhythmic Airplay Panel, which made them the only reporter on the Dance/Mix Show Airplay panel to be a dual reporter. This status ended after WPTY returned to BDS as a full-time Dance reporter in 2012.

On October 7, 2009, WDRE was sold to JVC Media LLC by the Morey Organization. The station adopted the WPTY callsign shortly afterward on October 28, 2009. On October 30, 2009, it was revealed that JVC took over the audio programming lease of low power TV channel 6, WNYZ-LP, after Mega Media's contract with WNYZ owner Island Broadcasting was terminated due to financial differences between Mega and WNYZ. This resulted in the end of WNYZ's Dance music format. WPTY began simulcasting the 105.3 signal over WNYZ-LP TV channel 6 and its 87.7 FM audio frequency on November 2, 2009 and adopted the new slogan "Party FM - Your Party Music Leader."[7] Five years after dance music fans had campaigned for the relaying of Party 105 for New York City via the 92.7 frequency, the simulcast of the station finally became a reality, albeit on a different frequency. On January 21, 2010, JVC terminated the WNYZ-LP simulcast arrangement due to the fact that JVC media was negotiating a purchase of two new FM signals in the market and the LMA with WNYZ would place the group above the FCC ownership limits. On March 25, 2011, the 101.5 signal was dropped in Nassau and was replaced by a broadcast signal owned by WLTW.

On October 18, 2011 WPTY changed their format to gold based rhythmic adult contemporary, reverting to the "Party 105.3" branding.[8] However, after nearly seven months into the format WPTY began returning to a Dance Top 40 direction (moving away from freestyle music) in late April 2012 with less Rhythmic and Dance gold and recurrents. In October 2013, DJs Goumba Johnny and DJ Miss Stacy both left the station.

Staff

On-air

Mixshow DJs

Former DJs

  • Abel Sanchez
  • AG
  • Andre "The Dre Dog" Ferro
  • Astra
  • Babblin' Bill Plax
  • Ballistic Bob
  • Bernardo
  • Catherine
  • Cat
  • Chris Cruise
  • Chris X.
  • Christina Kay
  • Dana Parisi
  • DJ Deuce
  • DJ Dimitri
  • DJ Excel
  • DJ Lil G.
  • DJ Mike Sarkus
  • DJ Serg
  • DJ Spanky
  • DJ Theo
  • DJ Uch
  • Eutopia
  • Frankie Vasquez
  • Froggy
  • Glenn Friscia
  • Goldapper
  • "Goumba" Johnny Sialiano
  • Humpty
  • J. Martinez
  • Jae Boogz
  • Jason G.
  • Jump Smokers
  • Leeana
  • Miss Stacy
  • Murph Dawg
  • Lynda Lopez
  • Natalia
  • Nikki
  • Phat Head
  • Perez Hilton
  • Pulido
  • Razor N' Guido
  • Ruby Tuesday
  • Seff Jones
  • Syke
  • The B-Man

Management

References

  1. Venta, Lance (November 22, 2016). "Oldies 98 Debuts On Long Island". RadioInsight. Retrieved November 27, 2016.
  2. "Call Sign History". CDBS Public Access Database. FCC Media Bureau. Retrieved April 30, 2013.
  3. http://www.americanradiohistory.com/Archive-RandR/1990s/1998/RR-1998-06-05.pdf
  4. Hinckley, David (September 28, 2005). "PARTY'S OVER FOR DANCE MUSIC BUFFS". New York Daily News. Retrieved May 14, 2013.
  5. "WLIR, WBON, WDRE Sold To BusinessTalkRadio.net". Allaccess.com. December 26, 2006. Retrieved April 30, 2013.
  6. Fybsuh, Scott (September 17, 2007). "Rock Returns to Philly's WYSP". NorthEast Radio Watch. Retrieved April 30, 2013.
  7. from www.fmqbproductions.com/dance (posted October 30, 2009)
  8. Venta, Lance (October 18, 2011). "An Older Party On Long Island". RadioInsight. Retrieved May 14, 2013.

External links

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