• Get involved.
    We want your input!
    Apply for Membership and join the conversations about everything related to broadcasting.

    After we receive your registration, a moderator will review it. After your registration is approved, you will be permitted to post.
    If you use a disposable or false email address, your registration will be rejected.

    After your membership is approved, please take a minute to tell us a little bit about yourself.
    https://www.radiodiscussions.com/forums/introduce-yourself.1088/

    Thanks in advance and have fun!
    RadioDiscussions Administrators

Look What They Did! WHUM in Columbus

Look what ELSE WHUM did!

Namely, adopt a call sign that once graced C&W 1240 am in Reading, PA (in 1981 when I was attending Kutztown University 15 miles away). Reading's 1240 is IIRC now a sports talk station that carries minor league baseball's Reading Phillies and minor league hockey's Reading Royals. When did Columbus's WHUM adopt that call?

ixnay
 
I have read most of the messages in this topic on WHUM. My only comment is that
the station is unique and Indianapolis would be a better place if it were on the air here.
Keep up the good work, WHUM!!! Yarrrrrrrrrrrrrr!
 
WHUM in Columbus has had the call letters since 2003. Thanks for the comments!
Some of them have lit a fire under my butt! One has to believe we can do even better!
There have been no Quinn's on this thread untill now. If you want to discuss this topic
with a Quinn, I do have a phone. The number is 812 379 9985 at WHUM in Columbus.
 
I'm not familiar with or care about the Columbus Indiana market. However, this paragraph is easy to explain. That's the way radio is. It doesn't pay very much. People work in it for awhile because it's fun but then real life starts taking over and they have to get a real job in order to pay the bills, raise a family, etc. There'll always be LOTS of people ready to take that person's place in hopes of eventually ending up in a bigger, better-paying market.

mobiledjin said:
Pot-up-the-bird. Wow what an observation. Let's see, you have one post under this handle, must be someone that follows Columbus radio close and needed to use another name. You obviously have not paid attention to the other group in Columbus. They have had several openings in the last few years as well. For example, they have been thru 3 morning shows on Y106 in the last 4 years and they are working on their 3d morning show in the same amount of time on WKKG. That seems to be quite a few openings in a short amount of time, especially on the morning shows. And speaking of voice tracking, they do entirely too much of it as well. Let's get the whole truth out there.
 
Ur-A-Dawg said:
Bruce and Mitzi Quinn's little station in Columbus made national news over the weekend.

Must have been a slow news day in Toledo.
 
Ur-A-Dawg said:
Indy Dan, You may well be right. Did I see on another thread that you are part of the
Low Power FM movement?

No, I am not a part of it, although I was involved with a group that applied for a LPFM in Danville a few years back. Our app was denied after the FCC/Congress changed the channel spacing rules. We're just waiting it out like everyone else.
As for my remark, It just struck me funny that it would make the news in Toledo, like anyone there really cares. I am glad Bruce and Mitzi were able to pull this off. I worked for Bruce and his family briefly when 101.9 first went on the air. He is a pretty good guy and is sharp at figuring out where to find new channels.
 
The FCC wil open another filing window with restrictions removed. You will have another
chance to bring local radio to Hendricks County. Good Luck Indy Dan.
 
Will these only be filings for low power FMs? I'd really like to see Love 98 return to the airwaves in Hendricks county since the station was licensed to Plainfield.

Flying-Dutchman said:
The FCC wil open another filing window with restrictions removed. You will have another chance to bring local radio to Hendricks County. Good Luck Indy Dan.
 
here's a thought -- how 'bout if someone does get another local in hendricks county - they actually use if FOR hendricks county instead of just their personal record collection. I think the COMMUNITY might appreciate that. That was the biggest complaint about wklu - it was licensed in brownsburg - and the only local was high priced football games, and that old lady on saturday mornings that sounded/talked like Ronald Reagan.

Indy doesn't need another low power "wannabe" station trying to work it's way into the bottom of the metro ratings.

Oh, I did forget the stellar performances of the lady at the hendricks county fairs --
 
Never heard the old station so I can't say for sure. I havent lived here that long. But I've heard lots of stories on here. Sounds like the guy just builds frequencies to sell. More power too him, but sounds like he abuses the "local radio" tag to get frequencies. I wish someone would have local football, basketball baseball on here in Indy. There are some great young players to keep track of.
 
At least WHUM is refreshing. That's unlike Bruce Quinn's old WKLU or the new WKLU.
I'd rather hear something unique like big bands mixed with Irish folk, oldies, and country.
That old classic rock on WKLU is stale, tired, and worn out.
http://whum985.org/ Try it. Not my favorite, but interesting.
 
radioho said:
here's a thought -- how 'bout if someone does get another local in hendricks county - they actually use if FOR hendricks county instead of just their personal record collection. I think the COMMUNITY might appreciate that. That was the biggest complaint about wklu - it was licensed in brownsburg - and the only local was high priced football games, and that old lady on saturday mornings that sounded/talked like Ronald Reagan.

Indy doesn't need another low power "wannabe" station trying to work it's way into the bottom of the metro ratings.

Oh, I did forget the stellar performances of the lady at the hendricks county fairs --

Being involved with both WGRT and WQFE (WKLU)... all I can say is that Hendricks county was a tough sell back then. Back in the late 70's through mid-80's, Danville's WGRT was very involved in Hendricks County. I did more than my share of remotes at fish frys and county fairs, and the station aired both football and basketball games every weekend when there was a local team playing. I froze my a** off in the dead cold of winter making sure the generator and marti was running in the back of a pickup truck with the antenna held on by a bungi cord in high schoool parking lots because the station didn't like paying for a phone loops. The basketball sectionals were the big money maker for the station every year. Otherwise, local businesses did not want to advertise on the station because they hated the GM after they got screwed on a sale (read trade-out) the music sucked, or they were just too damned cheap to buy a relatively low-priced package. It got to where the "old lady" who sold for them was dictating what we should play because a sponsor would bitch about a particular song they heard, or they didn't like the 6 hours of black gospel that aired on Sundays. The station went through many changes after that....becoming soul/r&B operating from downtown studios, country, big band (with the old WATI call), soft rock....they changed formats more than people changed underwear. It moved back to Indy and became classical, hard rock, smooth jazz, and now hispanic with that whopping 1800 watt signal from a cornfield 5 miles north of beautiful Danville.
WQFE was a *very* lame attempt to resurrect what WGRT once was...Q-102 as it was called until they got a phone call from Chris Wheat one day! People in Brownburg were excited to hear they were getting a new station...until they actually heard it. The station had the same GM and same "old lady" selling for them that were in Danville, and it was the same thing over once again. Sales people went through that place like crazy, except for the "old lady" who was still telling the GM what they should play. After the format changed from a very strange big band sound to oldies and the call changed to WKLU, it was actually sounding pretty decent and perhaps making some headway before Bruce decided to come to town to "fix" the station with his "free-form" format, because he and his brother did not believe the station was doing that well with oldies.
I can also remember back to when 98.3 was WJMK, operating from a guy's garage in the middle of Plainfield with the stick in his back yard. (The "old lady" worked there as well). It was a true Hendricks county station and did well for it's time before it got sold and evolved into what is now Radio Disney.
I honestly believe if done properly, a station in Hendricks County could do well if it did not try to become a rimshotter like the rest of them did. With the phenomenal growth rate the county has experienced over the past decade, an owner could make a decent living if the station was run like a real business, and not ruled by a comittee.
It was a real kick in the groin when our group's LPFM app for Danville was dismissed. Although it would not have been a money maker, it would have brought local radio and a breath of fresh air back to the area. As for Bruce, I honestly feel he did what was best at the time given his health concerns and the toll it was taking. I am sure he is perfectly content running WHUM as it is and can live the life he wants. I wish I were as lucky.
 
Status
This thread has been closed due to inactivity. You can create a new thread to discuss this topic.


Back
Top Bottom