WHHL

WHHL, known as "HOT 104.1", is an urban contemporary radio station serving the St. Louis area. The station is owned by Urban One; Entercom operates the station under a local marketing agreement (a full acquisition of the station is pending). WHHL broadcasts at 104.1 MHz with an ERP of 50 kW and is licensed to Hazelwood, Missouri. Its transmitter is located in St. Louis, just outside Forest Park, and operates from studios in Olivette (with a St. Louis address).

WHHL
CityHazelwood, Missouri
Broadcast areaGreater St. Louis
Frequency104.1 MHz FM (HD Radio)
BrandingHot 104.1 FM
SloganSt. Louis’ Source For Hip-Hop and R&B
Programming
FormatUrban contemporary
Ownership
OwnerUrban One (sale to Entercom pending)
(Radio One Licenses, LLC)
OperatorEntercom
KXBS, KEZK-FM, KYKY, KFTK-FM, KMOX, WFUN-FM
History
First air date
1978
Former call signs
WJBM-FM (1978-1985)
WKKX (1985-1994)
WKBQ-FM (1994-1997)
WALC (1997-1998)
WXTM-FM (1998-2000)
WMLL (2000-2004)
WRDA (2004-2005)
Call sign meaning
Where Hip-Hop Lives!
Technical information
ClassC2
ERP50,000 watts
HAAT140 meters (460 ft)
Translator(s)101.5 K268CT (St. Peters)
Links
WebsiteHOT 104.1's website

History

The station signed on in 1978 as WJBM-FM, airing a full service country format targeting the more Northern areas of the St. Louis metropolitan area, as well as the Metro East area, with its city of license being Jerseyville. The station's transmitter at the time was located north of the city (near Jerseyville), which was a partial hindrance to any chance for success in the market for the next 212 decades, despite later moving to a tower on Douglas Road in Florissant. They began targeting St. Louis in September 1985 as country music station WKKX ("Kix 104 FM"), and owned by Shelly Davis' Gateway Radio Partners. Zimmer Broadcasting bought the station out of bankruptcy in July 1991.[1] On January 20, 1994, WKKX would swap frequencies with Top 40/CHR-formatted WKBQ-FM, with WKKX moving to 106.5 FM, and WKBQ-FM moving to 104.1 FM, and rebranding as "Q104". (WKBQ's simulcast on 1380 AM would continue with the swap.)[2][3]

WKBQ-FM was also the FM home for St. Louis morning team “Steve & DC” after one of the most significant stories/controversies in St. Louis radio history in the summer of 1993. The popular duo announced on January 6, 1994 that they would return on January 20 to “Q104” at a downtown press conference carried live on Channels 2, 4, 5 and 30 (the Fox, CBS, NBC and ABC affiliates, respectively) with reporters from all major newspapers and magazines present as well.[4][5] Emmis Communications bought the station in November 1996, for $42.5 million.

WHHL transmitting tower

On January 24, 1997, the Top 40/CHR format was dropped for Modern AC as WALC, "Alice 104.1".[6][7][8] On June 25, 1998, at 3 p.m., WALC flipped to active rock as "Extreme Radio 104.1" and the WXTM-FM call letters (which were adopted July 15, 1998).[9] WXTM was the original St. Louis affiliate of The Howard Stern Show. On September 24, 2000, at 2 p.m., after playing "Fade to Black" by Metallica, and after Emmis purchased KPNT (and moved Stern to that station), WXTM flipped to All-80s Hits as WMLL ("104.1 The Mall").[10][11][12] The format would later evolve into a 80s/90s hits format, and would be the home of popular morning DJ's Steve & DC. On November 20, 2003, at Midnight, WMLL began stunting with Christmas music; on December 25, the stunting changed to a "wheel of formats" by playing music from any given genre, as well as old airchecks from past formats on the frequency.[13][14]

At noon on January 8, 2004, the stunting stopped and the station flipped to an Adult Standards format as WRDA, "Red @ 104.1". The first songs on "Red" were "My Kind of Town" and "The Lady is a Tramp", both by Frank Sinatra.[15][16][17][18][19] The station specialized in "Music with Class" as they called it, playing classic standards singers such as Frank Sinatra, Dean Martin and Bobby Darin, along with more modern 'crooners' such as Rod Stewart and Michael Bublé. In September 2005, after 18 months of subpar ratings and low advertising revenues, Emmis announced they would sell WRDA to Radio One, for $20 million. The station flipped to its current urban contemporary format as "Hot 104.1" on October 1, 2005 at Midnight. The first song on "Hot" was "Play" by David Banner.[20][21] The call letters would change to WHHL on November 24, 2005. Radio One would take full possession of the station in 2006 after running it under a local marketing agreement from Emmis. The station's signal problems were finally solved in 2008, when it changed its city of license to Hazelwood and relocated its transmitter to a site on DeBaliviere Avenue in the city of St. Louis, giving the station full market coverage.

WHHL transmitter building


On November 5, 2020, Urban One announced that it would swap WHHL, the intellectual property of WFUN-FM, and two other stations in Philadelphia and Washington, D.C. to Entercom, in exchange for its Charlotte, North Carolina stations. Entercom took over the station under a local marketing agreement on November 23.[22]

References

  • "1". Retrieved 2008-02-27.

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