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WPOW

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Broadcast area
  
South Florida

HAAT
  
307 meters

Facility ID
  
73893

City of license
  
Miami

Owner
  
CBS Radio

Branding
  
Power 96

ERP
  
100,000 watts

Class
  
C

Frequency
  
96.5 MHz

Format
  
Rhythmic contemporary

Area
  
South Florida

Slogan
  
Miami's Party Station

WPOW httpscbspower96fileswordpresscom201606pow

First air date
  
June 15, 1985 (as WCJX)

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WPOW is a Top 40/CHR station serving the Miami-Ft. Lauderdale area. CBS Radio owns the station, which operates at 96.5 MHz with an effective radiated power of 100,000 watts and is licensed in Miami, Florida. Its studios and transmitter are located separately in Miami Gardens.

Contents

WPOW is licensed by the FCC to broadcast in the HD Radio (hybrid) format.

96.3 before 1985

WGBS-FM was on 96.3 by 1948.

In the early 1970s, the 96.3 signal was home to a Top 40 CHR station, known as 96 WMYQ (the successor to WGBS-FM, then WJHR), which became 96X (and a call letter change to WMJX) on October 1, 1975. The station briefly changed to an all-disco format in February 1979 (Disco 96), but returned to its prior Top 40 format in November 1980.

The station's license was revoked by the Federal Communications Commission due to the station presenting a series of fraudulent contests during its days as WMYQ and then-owners Charter Broadcasting signed off the station on February 15, 1981. After a statement by vice-president and general manager Bob Allen, WMJX signed off with "The Long And Winding Road" by the Beatles. After the song, the last DJ on 96X, Stuart Elliott, could audibly be heard trying to hold back his tears as he spoke the final words: "96X is WMJX Miami." The station was then taken off the air.

A new license and a power station is born (1985-present)

On June 15, 1985, 96.3 MHz was reactivated by Wodlinger Broadcasting as a non-stop Top 40 countdown station (The Super 16) under the same 96X name, this time with the call letters WCJX. The Program Director was Jon Holiday, who evolved the station to a more CHUrban format. However, after the station was sold in May 1986 to Beasley-Reed Broadcasting, they would change format on August 4, 1986 at 7 a.m., when the station flipped to a Dance Top 40 format under the name "Power 96, Miami's Fresh New Music Mix" (with a change in call letters to WPOW), playing mostly dance, freestyle, new jack swing, and early hip hop. The first song on "Power" was "Rumors" by Timex Social Club. Power 96 embraced the regionally blossoming Miami bass sound as well, mixing it into their playlist. The name Power 96 was the idea of new owner/General Manager Gregory Reed, because he felt that 96.5 has so much energy, so much music, and so much fun, that it somehow unleashes the true but raw pure energenic hit music power within the city of Miami, henceforth he christened it the official nickname of this new station and a new format as Power 96.

By Winter 1987, WPOW had become the top station for its format in Miami, a position that WPOW continues to hold.

The founding general manager, Greg Reed, was originally a part-owner of Beasley-Reed Broadcasting. Later Reed sold his share of the station to Beasley Broadcast Group, but remained as Vice-President and General manager. The original programming team - Program Director Bill Tanner, Music Director Colleen Cassidy and consultant Jerry Clifton, continued to consult Power 96 until the CBS Radio acquisition of the station in December 2014.

Today, Power Jocks broadcasting on Power 96 include The Power 96 Morning Show hosted by JP and Lucy Lopez with producer Cato K. After that, WPOW presents midday host Will Calder, afternoon hostess Afrika Perry, and evening hostess Ya Chica Ivy.

Past Power Jocks broadcasting throughout the 1980s, the 1990s, & the 2000s on Power 96 were Bonita "Bo The Party Animal" Griffin, as well as Donnie "Cox On The Radio" Cox, Cramer Haas, Mindy Frumkes, Bill "Tanner In The Morning" Tanner, Mark Moseley, Eddie Mix (who later became Music Director, and served as Assistant Program Director, as well as on-air mixer), Dimas Martinez (who would go on to work at WKTU New York in 1998), Dennis Reese, Kim "The Kid" Curry, Tony The Tiger (who became PD after Kid Curry), Joe Nasty (who would go to KPWR, another "Power"-branded station in Los Angeles, a year later), Robert W. Walker, Gino Latino, E.Z Street, Billy "DJ Ballistic" Miller, Alonzo "DJ Little Laz" Prieto, Eric Ward, Baby Bree, The Big Lip, and in the early days, former I-95/WINZ-FM music director Marcus "Mark In The Dark" Shands, who also served as Power 96's assistant program director.

In an era where several of its competitors carry mostly syndicated programming, WPOW continues broadcasting live from its studios with a mix of Dance, urban, hip-hop and pop rhythmic music. Spanish-language content was later added to cater to the station's Latin and Spanish audience. This stemmed from Ivy Queen's 2003 hit "Quiero Bailar" (I Want To Dance) becoming the first fully Spanish-language song to reach #1 on a Rhythmic Top 40 station. WPOW's audience continues to strive to cater to all elements of its Miami audience - Hispanic, Caucasian and African-American. However, after the ownership change, the station began shifting to a Top 40/CHR direction with the increasing amount of Pop product, resulting in Mediabase moving the station to its Top 40/CHR panel in November 2015. The station continued to report to Nielsen BDS' Rhythmic chart until they were moved to the Mainstream Top 40/CHR panel in June 2016.

On October 2, 2014, Beasley Broadcast Group announced that it would trade 5 radio stations located in Miami (including WPOW) and Philadelphia to CBS Radio in exchange for 14 stations located in Tampa, Charlotte and Philadelphia. The swap was completed on December 1, 2014.

WPOW is currently managed by CBS Radio's Miami market manager Steve Carver along with Rob Morris, VP of Programming for Miami and Will Calder, Assistant Program Director. Previous program directors included Kim "The Kid" Curry, Frank Walsh, Tony The Tiger, Tom Calococci, Jill Strada and Pio Ferro.

References

WPOW Wikipedia


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