City of license | Smyrna, Georgia |
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Broadcast area | Atlanta metropolitan area |
Branding | Atlanta's Star 94 |
Slogan | Your Life and Your Music |
Frequency | 94.1 MHz (also on HD Radio) |
First air date | 1967 (as WKXI) |
Format | Hot adult contemporary |
ERP | 100,000 watts |
HAAT | 310.4 meters |
Class | C0 |
Facility ID | 30822 |
Callsign meaning | W STaR 94 |
Former callsigns | WKXI (1967-1977) WQXI-FM (1977-1989) |
Owner | Lincoln Financial Media |
Webcast | Listen Live |
Website | star94.com |
WSTR FM 94.1 MHz ("Star 94") is an Atlanta FM radio station airing an hot adult contemporary format during the week, and a 1990s pop music format on weekends. It is owned by Lincoln Financial Media, and has Smyrna, Georgia as its city of license.
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94.1 was once WGST-FM and was given away in the 1950s as FM did not take off. In the 1960s, WDJK appeared to occupy 94.1 as a brand new station, associated with WYNX (AM-1550) in Smyrna. Within two years, the station was sold to the owners of WQXI (AM-790), which was Atlanta's leading Top 40 Rock station. FM-94.1 then became easy listening WKXI. By 1969 the station had adopted WQXI-FM as its call letters, and in mid-1977 the station was officially rechristened 94Q. It became one of Atlanta's dominant FM stations and remained so until 1987, when its audience share began to dwindle. Various tweaks were made to the music mix, followed by an outright change of direction in early 1989 that competed head-to-head with then-dominant CHR WAPW/Power 99 (now WWWQ). 94Q was soundly beaten, and the station began to purge most of its management and on-air talent.
94Q also featured a smooth jazz music program called Jazz Flavors, which eventually served as the genesis for WJZF "Jazz Flavors 104.1", Atlanta's first smooth-jazz radio station (now WALR-FM), and later on, "WJZZ 107.5" (now WAMJ).
At midnight on November 16, 1989, its name was changed to "Star 94" after obtaining the broadcast callsign WSTR from a Sturgis, Michigan radio station (now WBET-FM). The station's format bordered between hot AC and top 40 (CHR), best described as "Adult Top 40" (a hybrid of Hot AC and Top 40). The station avoided most hip hop and rhythmic-oriented music hitting the Top 40 charts. Between 2007 and 2009, WSTR began to incorporate more hip hop songs in its playlist but remained more pop and rock oriented than most top-40-style stations. In September 2010, the station began shifting towards a Hot AC format, therefore Nielsen BDS moved WSTR from the CHR (top 40) to the Adult Top 40 (Hot AC) panel, as the station became more identified with a Hot AC playlist.[1] It also changed its on air slogan to "Your Life...Your Music," to emphasize its acknowledged shift to Hot AC. In February 2011, Star 94 began programming an all 1990's weekend called the "Big 90's Weekend" in response to the all-1980's weekends on WSB-FM.
Several influential air personalities have worked at the Atlanta station, including American Idol's Ryan Seacrest. Seacrest interned on the night show with Tom Sullivan, who trained him in all areas of broadcasting then gave him his first "on air" shift of his career, before moving to weekends. He did this while attending Dunwoody High School in nearby Dunwoody.
WSTR FM shares a tower with WPBA TV 30, and in fact shares the same antenna with WSB-FM 98.5 and WVEE FM 103.3. The three radio stations' transmitters are diplexed together, so that they all feed to the radio antenna instead of into each other.
WSTR broadcasts HD Radio. It carried a simulcast of WQXI's sports talk format on HD-3. As of May 2012[update] however, WSTR HD-3 is given in the hourly station ID of W233BF FM 94.5, licensed to serve the eastern exurb of Social Circle. Although that station is licensed a "broadcast translator" (a service intended to retransmit analog FM stations to distant areas), it is operating independently as "The Spirit 94.5", under an FCC legal fiction that allows such stations to transmit original programming if it is also simulcast on another station's HD Radio digital subchannel. The situation may be temporary however, since like other stations in metro Atlanta (WGST/W222AF and WCNN/W229AG), the "translator" may be reassigned to a co-owned AM station — in this case, WQXI. Since legitimately licensed noncommercial LPFM stations cannot do any of these things (have multiple stations, operate commercially, use higher powers and unlimited heights, or afford to rent an "HD" channel or AM station) despite being in the same FCC class D, no community radio stations have gone on-air in or immediately around the city since the 1980s, and two have been forced off-air in the 2000s.
W233BF is owned by Edgewater Broadcasting, which has been highly involved in the "flipping" of translator stations and licenses for profit. Originally applied-for in 2003 (in what was called the "Great Translator Invasion" by some), the station finally went on the air in July 2007, and immediately requested permission to change to 105.3, becoming W287BI. Due to RF interference from full-power WBZY FM 105.3, it requested to go back to 94.5 in July 2010, regaining its old frequency (and therefore callsign) by December that year. In November however, it had already applied to move closer to Atlanta, where it is currently located north of Conyers, transmitting 122 watts at 313 meters (1,027 ft) HAAT. In late March 2012, it applied to move to the WHSG-TV 63.x (originally WUPA TV 69) tower in the Inman Park neighborhood east of downtown Atlanta, transmitting 250 watts at 325 meters (1,066 ft), except to the north and northwest, where is has a broad and flat null to protect the new WIPK FM 94.5 in northwest Georgia.
The current staff includes:
Additional staff:
Former staff:
The station's general manager, Mark Kanov, has worked at the station since the late 1960s announced his retirement for late July 2008.
Captain Herb Emory currently doing morning and afternoon traffic at WSB-AM and also host the Bellamy Strictland 120 NASCAR show on weekends. John Willyard, former imaging/commercial voice and weekend personalty. Now voice of TV, cable, country radio stations and the CMA Awards on ABC-TV since 1996.
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