WTBU (FM)

WTBU

City York Center, Maine
Broadcast area York County, Maine
Seacoast Region
Branding 95.3 The Bull
HD2: Classic Country 1380
Slogan Seacoast's New Hit Country
Frequency 95.3 MHz (also on HD Radio)
First air date June 1987 (1987-06) (as WQMI)[1]
Format Country
HD2: WMYF/Classic Country
(Former format of WMGE)
ERP 1,450 watts
HAAT 206 meters (676 ft)
Class A
Facility ID 35218
Transmitter coordinates 43°13′25″N 70°41′35″W / 43.22361°N 70.69306°W / 43.22361; -70.69306 (WTBU)
Callsign meaning W The BUll
Former callsigns WQMI (1987)
WQMI-FM (1987–1989)
WCQL-FM (1989–1996)
WXHT (1996–1999)
WUBB (1999–2008)
WSKX (2008–2014)
Owner iHeartMedia, Inc.
(Capstar TX LLC)
Sister stations WERZ, WHEB, WMGE, WPKX, WQSO
Webcast Listen Live
HD2: Listen Live
Website 953fmthebull.com
HD2: wmyf.com

WTBU (95.3 FM, "The Bull") is a radio station licensed to York Center, Maine, United States. Established in 1987, WTBU is owned by iHeartMedia, Inc. and serves the Portsmouth, New Hampshire area. The station broadcasts a country music format.

History

The station went on the air in June 1987[1] as WQMI with a middle of the road format. In 1989, it became WCQL-FM as "Cool 95.3" with an oldies format. That was dropped in August 1996 in favor of a contemporary hit radio format, WXHT ("Heat 95.3"), which placed a heavy emphasis on 1980s new wave hits. That lasted until May 1998, when it went modern rock as "95-3 The Heat" via Radio One Networks.

In March 1999, the station changed to a country format, becoming WUBB ("B95.3"). However, WUBB was faced with strong competition from country leader WOKQ, which also had a much stronger signal. WUBB also had a limited local presence when compared to WOKQ. As a result, WUBB never became a big ratings success.

On January 10, 2008, the station dropped its country format and began simulcasting sister station WQSO; WUBB's website stated "Coming Soon! Sports Radio" with a link to MSN's Fox Sports page, implying that the new format would be Fox Sports Radio. However, this never happened, and this was thought to be put on the website only to throw people off. The following day, the stunt shifted to TV theme songs; in between the songs, there was a message saying "We are building a new station just for you," promoting a new format that would be launched at 6 a.m. on the 14th. At the announced time, the station relaunched as "Kiss 95.3", initially simulcasting WXKS-FM from Boston. Soon after, the call letters changed to WSKX. By August of the following year, WSKX ended the simulcast and ran its own CHR format.

On October 4, 2012, sister station WERZ adopted 95.3's old format, and the station began stunting with sounds of ocean waves and occasional bells, along with voiceover Chad Erickson (as well as its website) redirecting Kiss listeners to WERZ, and advising them to tune in the following Tuesday, October 9th, at Noon. At that time, the station flipped to adult hits as "95.3 The Coast", launching with Journey's Don't Stop Believin'. In November 2013, WSKX flipped to Christmas music for the holiday season, letting listeners choose online the music to be played; this feature was also used for the station's regular variety hits programming.

On August 29th, 2014, at 1 PM, the station flipped back to country as 95.3 The Bull. The last song on "The Coast" was Closing Time by Semisonic, while the first song on "The Bull" was This Is How We Roll by Florida Georgia Line. It shares a common coverage area with WOKQ and WBQQ, as well as, to a lesser extent, WPKQ, WTHT, and sister station WBWL. On September 16, 2014, WSKX changed its call letters to WTBU to go with "The Bull" branding.

HD Radio

On September 16, 2016, co-owned station WMYF "Classic Country 1380" changed their call letters to WMGE, later going silent (on December 8, 2016[2] after losing its transmitter site[3]); however, the former classic country format[4] of WMGE (as WMYF) lives on as an HD2 sub-channel of WTBU (FM) and can only be listened to with an HD Radio receiver or through their webcast[5] (via iHeartRadio).

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 11/10/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.