The WKRP call letters are for sale. Will they live on the air in Cincinnati?
A small, low-power FM station in Raleigh, N.C., is auctioning off its iconic WKRP call letters to TV, AM and FM stations.
He's not giving them up in Raleigh... As that LPFM is the only current licensee with the WKRP calls (any suffix), they control the destiny of the call letters. He's not selling the call letters, he's simply using their equity to raise money by more or less auctioning off the right for a station on any other service (AM, FM, TV, LPTV) to get his permission to apply to use those call letters.If 101.9 in Raleigh doesn't want to be WKRP anymore, they could just change to something else and the call letters would be open to anyone else that wants to use them. The article doesn't say how they acquired the name WKRP or if they had to buy it. If they had to pay for it, it's understandable that they would want to get their money back. It doesn't seem that the price could be that high as hardly anyone would recognize WKRP as it's been over 40 years since the show was on.
The article doesn't say how they acquired the name WKRP or if they had to buy it.
How about a rebranding of "The Oasis" to WKRP, with the WKRP calls landing on 97.7 or 106.7. Maybe WDJO might be taking the calls.Kiesewetter says a deal has been made with a local station for the WKRP calls. Will it be one of the LP stations looking for publicity or would an actual money-making station try it? My guess is an LP. Your thoughts?
True, but according to Kiesewetter's story, the Raleigh station plans to shut down after the transfer.You can't have 2 stations of the same class (LPFM) with the same call letters.
And if you TRULY want to be WKRP in Cincinnati and use that jingle, the two LPs with Cincinnati as city of license are 95.7 WVQC and 105.5 WCXX. But then you have to drop an "LP" between calls and COL
I didn't miss it and the article states that the Raleigh LP will cease operations. And, I already said this above.I am guessing that you missed the fact that the WKRP calls are already on a LPFM, and therefore cannot be on another in the same service.
In fact, to make your point clearer to all, the station auctioning off the cross-service rights to the calls is WKRP-LP:
If the Raleigh station were to cease operations and surrender the license before they agree to share the call sign, wouldn't the WKRP call sign then be available for any station to request, regardless of service? If the Raleigh station remains licensed for now and agrees to share the call sign, seems as though there wouldn't be a way to assign WKRP-LP to another LPFM as it would still be an active call sign for that service..unless there is some means the calls could be transferred to another LPFM in the process (without the WKRP call sign being returned to the "vat" where any station could request it).I didn't miss it and the article states that the Raleigh LP will cease operations. And, I already said this above.
KM,I am guessing that you missed the fact that the WKRP calls are already on a LPFM, and therefore cannot be on another in the same service.
In fact, to make your point clearer to all, the station auctioning off the cross-service rights to the calls is WKRP-LP: