WRTH (FM)

WRTH (103.3 MHz) and WLTE (95.5 MHz) are commercial FM radio stations licensed to Greer and Powdersville, South Carolina, respectively. They are owned by the Salem Media Group and they simulcast a classic hits format known as "95.5/103.3 Earth FM". They serve the Greenville-Spartanburg radio market in Upstate South Carolina.

WRTH
Broadcast areaGreenville - Spartanburg - Upstate South Carolina
FrequencyWRTH: 103.3 MHz
WLTE: 95.5 MHz (HD Radio)
Branding95.5/103.3 Earth FM WRTH
Programming
FormatClassic hits
AffiliationsWeather Channel Radio
Premiere Networks
United Stations Radio Networks
Ownership
Owner
WGTK-FM
History
First air date
WRTH: January 1993 (as WLYZ)
WLTE: March 2015
Former call signs
WRTH:
WRDQ (1991–1992)
WLYZ (1992–1995)
WXWZ (1995–1996)
WOLT (1996–2014)[1]
WLTE:
WTCO (2008)
WESL (2008-2009)
WEZG (2009)
WVGC (2009-2012)
Former frequencies
WLTE: 95.9 MHz (2008-2023)
Call sign meaning
WRTH: EaRTH
WLTE: Light (former format)
Technical information
Facility IDWRTH: 73241
WLTE: 170949
ClassWRTH and WLTE: A
ERPWRTH: 2,700 watts
WLTE: 6,000 watts
HAATWRTH: 151 meters (495 ft)
WLTE: 89 meters (292 ft)
Transmitter coordinates
WRTH:
34°59′54″N 82°08′17″W
WLTE:
34°41′19″N 82°36′16″W
Links
WebcastListen Live
Websiteearthfmwrth.com

The stations are licensed by the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) to broadcast with an effective radiated power (ERP) of 2,700 watts and 6,000 watts respectively. WRTH's transmitter is in Wellford off State Route S-42.[2] WLTE's transmitter is off Fire Tower Road in Piedmont.[3] The WLTE facility serves Anderson, Pickens, and Greenville counties, while the WRTH facility serves eastern Greenville County as well as Spartanburg County. The studios are on Wade Hampton Boulevard in Greenville.

Programming

Most of Earth FM's playlist is hits from the 1980s and 1990s, with a few titles from the early 2000s. On weekdays, local DJs host most of the shows. On weekends, nationally syndicated shows are heard, including The Classic Hits Show with Dick Bartley, Totally 80s with Nina Blackwood and Classic American Top 40 with Casey Kasem.

History

WLYZ, WXWZ

The 103.3 facility signed on the air in January 1993 as WLYZ, a simulcast of WLWZ (103.9 FM)'s urban contemporary formatas "Double Z". WLYZ was intended to cover the Spartanburg part of the market.

In late 1994, the station's owner, Emerald City Broadcasting, purchased WWMM (107.3 FM) and moved the urban format to the new station since it had a much stronger signal than the 103.3/103.9 simulcast. WWMM was relaunched as WJMZ "107.3 Jamz", while the 103 simulcast became alternative rock "103-X" with 103.3 picking up the WXWZ call sign and 103.9 picking up the WXWX call sign in early 1995. 103-X was the first alternative rock station in the market, but the same signal problems that the station(s) had remained.

WOLT and Howard Stern

On January 1, 1996, 103-X added The Howard Stern Show for morning drive time; the station was faced with a backlash from both radio listeners and advertisers. During that time Emerald City decided to sell the stations to Entercom. 103-X changed formats to oldies in February 1996. A few months later, 103.9 became WOLI and 103.3 became WOLT. The stations took their programming from a satellite-delivered oldies service for the next few years with no local DJs. In late 1999, a local airstaff was finally added.

In November 2000 the station jumped on the 1980s hits bandwagon that was going on at the time.[4] The moniker became "Star 103", but the stations retained the same call letters. The syndicated Bob and Sheri radio show based in Charlotte was added.[4] A new airstaff was also hired. Over time, the station slowly evolved toward classic hits, but kept the Star 103 handle. In late 2003, WOLT and WOLI changed their format to a contemporary Christian/country hybrid as "The Walk".

Davidson Media

In 2005, Entercom sold WOLT, WOLI, and WSPA (910 AM, now WOLI) to Davidson Media Group, while retaining "The Walk" and placing it on its newly acquired 106.3 (WGVC) signal.[5] Davidson Media Group, a company that specializes in Latino music but offered other formats, time-brokered the entire station. WOLT's morning airtime went to Spartanburg legend Bill Drake, and the rest of the airtime went to a company that carried an urban gospel format, branding the station as "Praize 103.3" (this started in October 2005).

In 2006, following differences between Davidson Media Group and the company managing "Praize 103.3", the urban contemporary gospel format was abruptly dropped on August 10, 2006. The following morning, after Bill Drake's program, WOLT debuted an oldies format, programmed by Davidson. The station was known, when not airing brokered programming, as "103.3 WOLT - The Best of the 60s and 70s". WOLT subsequently brokered a large part of its airtime out to various other music/local affairs programming, and also became the flagship station for Furman University football, basketball, baseball, and coaches shows until 2013. Classic hits was the underlying 'format' of the station outside of brokered time, as an attempt to give the station an identity that tied in with all of the other classic based programs during brokered times.

In January 2012, WOLT began running CHR mix programming in certain dayparts, using syndicated programming from Chicago-based company Jamtraxx, billing their dayparted hours as "103-3 SPIN FM". During all other hours, they broadcast and identified simply as "103-3 WOLT".[6]

Earth FM

On March 1, 2013, the Earth FM oldies format on WOLI (910 AM, and later an accompanying FM translator on 105.7), which had been launched by Davidson Media in 2012, moved to 103.3, and all brokered programming was removed. [7] The station continued to focus on oldies and classic hits from the mid-1960s through early 1980s.

In February 2014, Davidson Media Group sold WOLT to Earth Radio Broadcasting LLC.[8] The purchase was consummated on February 24, 2014 at a price of $1 million. On March 12, 2014, Salem Communications, through licensee Caron Broadcasting, Inc., purchased WOLT from Earth Radio Broadcasting.[9] The purchase was consummated on May 6, 2014 at a price of $1.125 million. On April 24, 2014, WOLT changed its call letters to WRTH. On March 15, 2015, WRTH began simulcasting on WLTE (95.9 FM) in Pendleton, South Carolina.

Previous logo

Throughout 2015 and 2016, the station's playlist was adjusted, removing most 1960s titles, emphasizing on 1980s music with music from the 1970s reduced and 1990s added. In 2022, the playlist was adjusted further, with the station focusing on rock hits from the 1980s, 90s, and early 2000s with some newer music being played. The station occasionally plays a song from the late 1970s.

On July 14, 2023, WLTE competed a move to 95.5 at its new transmitter site in Powdersville which gave the station more complete coverage of the Greenville portion of the market while still serving Anderson and Pickens counties. WRTH's 103.3 signal continues to serve eastern Greenville and Spartanburg county, giving the simulcast almost full market coverage. The stations' positioner was changed to "95.5 and 103.3 Earth FM, 80s and 90s Throwbacks".[10]

On August 23, 2023, an FCC filing disclosed that Salem would sell WRTH and WLTE, along with WGTK-FM, to the Educational Media Foundation for $6.775 million. EMF will take over operations before the sale's closure by a local marketing agreement, at which time the station will flip to EMF's Air 1 network.[11][12]

References

  1. "Call Sign History (WOLT)". Retrieved 2010-04-21.
  2. Radio-Locator.com/WRTH
  3. Radio-Locator.com/WLTE
  4. Hudson, Eileen Davis (March 17, 2003). "Market Profile: Greenville-Spartanburg, S.C.". Mediaweek. Vol. 13, no. 11. p. 18.
  5. "Need2Know". Spartanburg Herald-Journal. June 26, 2005. p. B3.
  6. "WOLT/Greenville, SC Debuts Spin-FM Format" from All Access (January 15, 2012)
  7. "WOLT/Greenville,SC Debuts Earth FM" Oldies from Radio Insight (March 1, 2013)
  8. "WOLT-FM FCC LIC"
  9. "Salem Communications"
  10. https://radioinsight.com/headlines/254704/earth-fm-completes-greenville-upgrade/
  11. "EMF Enters Greenville-Spartanburg, SC As Salem Downsizes Its Holdings". Inside Radio. August 23, 2023. Retrieved August 23, 2023.
  12. Salem Sells Greenville/Spartanburg Trio to Educational Media Foundation
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