WUKS

WUKS
City St. Pauls, North Carolina
Broadcast area Fayetteville, North Carolina
Branding 107.7 Jamz
Slogan Everything that Jamz
Frequency 107.7 MHz
First air date 1997
Format Urban adult hits
Power 5,200 watts
HAAT 200 meters
Class C3
Facility ID 39239
Transmitter coordinates 34°52′17″N 79°08′49″W / 34.87139°N 79.14694°W / 34.87139; -79.14694
Callsign meaning W U KiSs (previous branding)
Former callsigns WLRD (1994-1997)
Affiliations Tom Joyner Morning Show, Tunein Radio
Owner Beasley Broadcast Group, Inc.
(Beasley Media Group, LLC)
Sister stations WAZZ, WFLB, WKML, WYDU, WZFX
Webcast Listen Live
Website 1077jamz.com

WUKS (107.7 FM) is a radio station broadcasting an urban adult hits format.[1] Licensed to St. Pauls, North Carolina, USA, the station serves the Fayetteville area. The station is currently owned by Beasley Broadcast Group, Inc., through licensee Beasley Media Group, LLC, and features programing from ABC Radio.[2][3]

History

On October 14, 1994, Lumbee Regional Development Association, owner of gospel station WYRU in Red Springs, added a 6,500-watt FM station called WLRD. With 100,000-watt WZFX the only urban contemporary station in the Fayetteville market since 1990, "The Flava" would play the hottest new artists mixed with old school.[4]

By Spring 1997, WLRD ranked third, behind WZFX and WKML, in the Arbitron ratings. Later that year, Beasley Broadcasting purchased WYRU and WLRD from Lumbee Regional Development Association for about $1.2 million. The company had also purchased WZFX, and briefly aired that station's programming on WLRD.[5]

"Kiss" logo

On August 11, 1997 WLRD became Kiss 107.7, playing a more adult version of urban contemporary known as "The Touch," with artists such as Al Green, Whitney Houston, Patti Labelle, and Earth, Wind and Fire.[6] The station changed its call letters to WUKS, increased its power to 25,000 watts, and added Tom Joyner in the mornings. Later, Kiss added live DJs and, for a while, moved more in an adult contemporary direction with George Michael, Dave Koz, The Temptations, Bobby Womack, The Chi-Lites, Babyface, and Kenny G.[7]

In the spring 2008, midday host Omega Jones, and afternoon host Jae McKrae, and Calvin P in the evening held their positions respectively. In Fall 2008, WUKS was ranked #2 overall in the market with 8.5 percent of listeners. That was the first time since 1986 a station other than Foxy 99 or WKML hit the number 2 mark. That successful trio lasted about a year February 2009. The station slipped to fourth with 7.6 the next year. The March 2009 debut of similarly formatted WMGU likely played a role in the station's continuous decline to eighth, at 4.3, in Spring 2010; WMGU was fourth.

By early 2010, Taylor Morgan and Calvin P were holding down midday and afternoon drive.

At 10:00 am on September 8, 2010, an announcement was made (from afternoon announcer Calvin Pee) in a variation of this: "As always we thank you, our loyal listeners, for listening to WUKS-FM, St. Pauls, Fayettville over the years. But as you know, things must change. Now, we must kiss and say goodbye." The final song on 107.7 Kiss FM was The Manhattans' "Kiss and Say Goodbye". Following the Manhattans track, another announcement was made stating the switch from Kiss FM to 107.7 Jackson FM. The station began playing music from the Jackson family, with the first song being "Thriller" by Michael Jackson.

The Jackson format was a stunt. On Friday, September 10, WUKS resumed under what reports called an "urban variety" format, using the name "107.7 Jamz... Everything that jamz."[8] Beasley said the new sound "targets men and women, ages 25 to 54, with a blend of rhythm-and-blues, funk and early hip-hop from the 1970s to today's hits."[1] Beasley market manager Mac Edwards said listeners indicated they wanted more energy and more of the songs they danced to when younger.[1]

References

  1. 1 2 3 Futch, Michael (September 15, 2010). "107.7 FM gets new format". The Fayetteville Observer. Retrieved September 29, 2010.
  2. "WUKS Facility Record". United States Federal Communications Commission, audio division.
  3. "Station Information Profile". Arbitron.
  4. Michael Futch, "'David and Goliath' Do Battle on the Airwaves," The Fayetteville Observer, October 14, 1994.
  5. Michael Futch, "Beasley Group Buys 2 More Stations," The Fayetteville Observer, July 31, 1997.
  6. Michael Futch, "Format Change Gives WLRD, 'Kiss 107.7,' a Woman's Touch," The Fayetteville Observer, August 24, 1997.
  7. Michael Futch, "Kiss Makes Its Niche with Love Songs," The Fayetteville Observer May 21, 2000.
  8. "Urban variety hits "107.7 Jamz" arrives in Fayetteville, NC". Radio-Info.com. September 13, 2010.

WUKS First APD/ Music Director Was DJ Toney Tone Radiobums Crew.The station was launched under the direction of Bobby Jay Program Director of WZFX Foxy 99 and WUKS.

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