Supriya Ghosh (Editor)

WMNF

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Broadcast area
  
Tampa, Florida

ERP
  
7,000 watts

Class
  
C1

Frequency
  
88.5 MHz

Format
  
Eclectic

First air date
  
1979

HAAT
  
469 meters

Facility ID
  
47459

City of license
  
Tampa

Area
  
Tampa

WMNF httpss3amazonawscomwmnfwpcontentuploads2

Owner
  
Nathan B_ Stubblefield Foundation

Branding
  
WMNF Listener-Sponsored Community Radio

Call sign meaning
  
Member-sponsored Non-commercial FM

Wmnf the hip radio station


WMNF is a non-commercial, community radio station operating in the city of Tampa in the U.S. state of Florida that broadcasts at the FM frequency of 88.5 MHz and streaming live. The station has been on the air since 1979, and has an Effective Radiated Power of 7,000 watts from antenna 1,539 feet height above average terrain.

Contents

The radio station is listener sponsored, relying on some 11,200 (as of June 2007) supporters for a majority of required funding which is raised in two or three semiannual pledge drives. The station has paid operations staff, but the daily programmers and pledge drive workers are volunteers. The station is licensed to the Nathan B. Stubblefield Foundation, a non-profit organization established solely for this purpose. The Board of Directors comprises programmers, volunteers, staff, and community members.

WMNF hosts many concerts, speeches, films, and festivals, most notably the annual.

Waterfall at wmnf community radio station


Facilities

In 2005, WMNF moved into a new state of the art broadcast facility. The facility is located adjacent to the old studio which was demolished and now serves as a parking lot. The new facility is over 12,000 square feet (1,100 m2) with three broadcast studios, two production studios and a live performance studio named in memory of Mike Eisenstadt, longtime host of the Sunday Simcha, a Jewish music and public affairs show that still airs on Sundays at noon. The music library is capable of storing approximately 100,000 CDs. The landscape is made up of native Florida plants.

In 2007, WMNF moved to a higher antenna tower and started to broadcast a Hybrid Digital signal.

Programs and personnel

WMNF has from the beginning aired a wide variety of programming, including special interest music shows including bluegrass, polka, gospel, Celtic, Latin and experimental. In 2007 the major music styles on WMNF are rock, folk and blues. WMNF's progressive news and public affairs programs have steadily increased since the nineties and are now amongst their most popular programming. While the schedule has constantly changed, the station has a number of long-running programs including the Sixties Show and community affairs programs such as The Women's Show, a show touching on feminist issues that first started running in the 1980s, and Out in the Open, a show dealing with gay and lesbian community issues that has aired since 1993. Many of the programs, including Out in the Open, are available via podcast at the station's web site and most shows are archived there as well. In February 2013 WMNF also introduced to Tampa-area listeners the weekly music, arts and culture program "Life Elsewhere" hosted by veteran radio personality Norman B. (Batley), a venerable brand that dates back to the 1970s in the Pacific Northwest.

HD channels

WMNF broadcasts four HD Radio channels:

  • HD-1 simulcasts the main WMNF signal.
  • HD-2 carries new Indie music.
  • HD-3 carries The Source, which airs news, public affairs, and arts programming.
  • HD-4 carries Hawk Radio, the student radio station at Hillsborough Community College from 8am to 2pm, and a mix of music and select HCC sports broadcasts the rest of the time.
  • Controversies

    While providing extensive public affairs programming to the greater Tampa Bay area, and perhaps because of it, WMNF has at times become the focus of controversy.

    In 1997, Florida state Senator John Grant zeroed out $104,000 in state funding from the annual budget, citing his displeasure at the lyrics of a song he had heard broadcast (Iris DeMent's "Wasteland of the Free"). In response to the shortfall, the station staged an emergency fund-raiser that took in $122,000 in a day and a half. Programming Director, Randy Wynne indicated his belief that such difficulties arose after WMNF aired several criticisms against State Senator Grant's opposition to Olympic gold medalist diver, and outspoken LGBTQ activist Greg Louganis attending a speaking engagement at the University of South Florida.

    References

    WMNF Wikipedia