• 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

WTRB Ripley Tennessee

WTRB 1570 Am in Ripley Tennessee, to under go changes in it's country programming starting a week from Monday. It will start with a new morning show live and it is someone who was in the Memphis market years ago when Rick Dees was at WMPS 680. Do you know who? if not listen a week from Monday thats May 21st 6am-10am and see!!!!!
 
I went and checked the signal at Radio-Locator, and I would have to drive north a few miles just to get into their extended range....
 
I know we are waiting with baited breath to find out who the new morning guy in major metro Ripley is gonna be!
Is that not just going to make your day?
 
Hey, I don't care where somebody's working. It could be Ripley, Tennessee, Ripley, Mississippi, or Timbuktu. I admire anybody that can land a radio gig these days. Good luck to whomever starts in Ripley next week!
 
I talked to a friend of mine that used to work there. Seems the station sold to an employee a couple years ago. It appears that in fact a former WMPS staffer from the '70s will be starting a morning show. It is a struggling local stand alone hometown AM radio station that probably wont exist for another year.
 
"Broadcasting live from the Tomato Capital of Lauderdale County..."
 
Didn't they have an FM sister station at one time? (WTRB-FM?) Whatever happened to it, did it become a Memphis "move-in"?

Fairly certain that the "former WMPS staffer" WON'T be Rick Dees, unless it's syndicated or something. ;D
 
firepoint525 said:
Didn't they have an FM sister station at one time? (WTRB-FM?) Whatever happened to it, did it become a Memphis "move-in"?

WTRB-FM was on 94.9. EMF bought it in 2001 and it became WKVZ, the first K-LOVE station in West TN outside of Memphis. In the last few years after EMF buying 90.7 in Dyersburg and technical changes to improve 94.9 in Memphis it was moved to Hayti, MO. The call letters were changed to WGCQ and the frequency was eventually moved to 98.7, where it became God's Country (Christian Country), and eventually Air 1 (Christian CHR). They're temporarily off the air and looking for a new tower, hopefully closer to Dyersburg.
 
I just learned that an EMF engineer owns WTRB-AM. Whats up with that?
 
I hear the morning show guy will be Clint Spidle, who used to be Mike Day n WMPS back in Dees days. Thks, RB.
 
I remember listening to that station from time to time whenever I was driving through that area (I like all kinds of music). For a small town station it was actually entertaining for a while. They had a really good program director named Don Paris and some good local talent. If I recall correctly most of their deejays were just people who lived in the area and it had a real charm to it. Then, and this is strictly from memory passing through towns, I believe their format changed and they started playing just modern country. To me, that isn't what little town radio should be. Your audience has a lot of older people listening. I am talking about people who grew up in Ripley, many older who sit at home and would much rather hear a local person they go to church with than some big market professional deejay. They want a local swap shop and a station that actually plays requests. They also wanted to probably hear a lot of the older country artists thrown in as well.

When WTRB got away from that format it lost a lot of charm. Small town radio doesn't have the signal power or listenership to reinvent the wheel because you are never going to draw a big auidence. Those are the types of stations that instead of letting a computer decide the songs and having a satellite fed deejay, you need to have local people who have some input on song selections. Even small town radio got away from that and I always thought that was a mistake.
 
Unfortunately, small-town radio apparently could no longer make enough money to remain profitable by programming that way, and that is why many of these stations no longer exist.

Two problems with such stations: (both of these coming from personal experience)

1) They treat their announcers like crap, so you always have high turnover, and 19-year-old announcers who actually still think that they have a future in broadcasting. ::)

2) They couldn't take requests because they owed money to ASCAP, thus couldn't play anything published, or even co-published, by ASCAP.

Not saying that either of these were true of WTRB; I wouldn't know, since I never worked there.

The switch to "modern country" may have been out of necessity. The "classic country" was probably all on reel-to-reel tapes, LPs, or 45s, and would have needed someone to "dump it all" into the computer in order to continue playing it. And with an aging audience, that might not have been feasible.
 
Status
This thread has been closed due to inactivity. You can create a new thread to discuss this topic.


Back
Top Bottom