WZFT

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WZFT
City of license Baltimore, Maryland
Broadcast area Baltimore, Maryland
Branding "Z-104.3"
Slogan Baltimore's New #1 Hit Music Station
Frequency 104.3 MHz (also on HD Radio)
104.3-HD2: The Beat! Hip-Hop and R&B
First air date 1949 (as WITH-FM)
Format Top 40 (CHR)
ERP 13,000 watts
HAAT 294 meters
Class B
Facility ID 8684
Callsign meaning [W] Z 1-0 Four-Three
Former callsigns WITH-FM (1949-1970s)
WDJQ-FM (Early 1970s-1980)
WBSB (1980-1/1993)
WVRT (1/1993-02/01/1994)
WSSF (02/01/1994-11/01/1994)
WOCT (11/01/1994-10/10/2002)
WFXB (10/10/2002-09/05/2003)
WSMJ (09/05/2003-05/29/2008)
WCHH (05/29/2008-11/20/2009)
Owner iHeartMedia, Inc.
(Citicasters Licenses, Inc.)
Sister stations WCAO, WPOC, WQSR
Webcast Listen Live
HD2: Listen Live
Website z1043.com

WZFT (104.3 FM), known on-air as "Z104.3", is a rhythmic-leaning Top 40 (CHR) radio station located in Baltimore, Maryland. It is currently owned and operated by iHeartMedia, Inc.. Its studios are located at The Rotunda shopping center in Baltimore, and the transmitter is based atop Television Hill in the city's Woodberry district.

History

WITH-FM/DJ-104

104.3 signed on in 1949 as WITH-FM, the FM sister to WITH-AM 1230 (now WRBS). WITH-FM was Maryland's pioneer FM station, with local legend Jack Wells serving as its first announcer.

In the 1970s, WITH-FM became Top 40 WDJQ-FM "DJ-104". By the late 70s, DJ-104 made an attempt to do an all-Disco format, which failed in the ratings and the station went back to Top 40 at the end of 1979.

B-104

In June 1980, Scripps-Howard Broadcasting acquired WDJQ-FM and 104.3 became WBSB under the handle "B-104", but retaining the previous Top 40 format. B-104 was one of Baltimore's top-rated FM stations during the 80s and was home to "Brian and O'Brien" one of Baltimore's most notable morning drive time shows.

Radio & TV personalities Glenn Beck and Pat Gray hosted a show on B-104 for several years in the late 1980's and early 1990's.

Other notable air personalities were: Ken Merson (The Merson Person), Willie B., Kris Earl Phillips, J.R. Russ, Lisa Kay and Brian Carter.

Variety 104.3/Soft 104.3

In the early 1990s, Top 40 radio suffered a decline in audience and revenue due to the rise of alternative rock and hip hop. Many stations around the country flipped to other formats; WBSB was one of those. On February 18, 1992, at 9 AM, after playing a montage of station memories, the station flipped to "Variety 104.3", a Hot AC competitor to Mix 106.5, which was a mainstream AC at the time. The first song on "Variety" was "Listen to the Music" by The Doobie Brothers. In January 1993, the station changed its call letters to WVRT. The station suffered from low ratings during this time. Ironically, Capitol Broadcasting, the owners of WWMX, bought the station from The E.W. Scripps Company in the Fall of 1993. On December 13, the station began stunting with a simulcast of WWMX. At Midnight on December 20, the stunting switched to a 5-song loop, as well as liners redirecting listeners to WWMX. The loop would change to 5 new songs on December 27 and January 3. Finally, on January 12, 1994, the station flipped to "Soft 104.3" WSSF, a soft AC competing with well-established WLIF.[1] Capitol sold the station to American Radio Systems in 1994.

104.3 The Colt/104.3-OCT

After just 9 months of "Soft", on October 14, 1994, at 3 PM, the station flipped to '70s-based classic rock as "104.3 The Colt" WOCT, which later evolved into a classic hits format. In 1998, American Radio Systems merged with CBS Radio/Infinity Broadcasting. The company was forced to sell 1 station due to being over the ownership limitations of 5 FM stations in a market. As a result, WOCT was sold to Jacor Communications, which would merge with the station's current owner iHeartMedia (then known as Clear Channel Communications) a year later. Following the sale, the station changed its format again, this time to a harder classic rock format as "104.3-OCT."

Baltimore 104.3/B-104.3

In 2001, the station returned to mainstream classic rock as "Baltimore 104.3", and then a year later briefly brought back the heritage "B-104" name as WFXB ("B-104.3").

Smooth Jazz 104.3/Channel 104.3

On September 5, 2003, the station flipped to Smooth Jazz as WSMJ. During WSMJ's (near) five-year run, it was nominated by the Radio & Records Industry for "Smooth Jazz Station of the Year" in 2005, as well as, one nomination and one win for "Program Director of the Year" in 2005 and 2007.

On May 23, 2008, at 9 AM, the station began stunting with Christmas music, after playing Neither One of Us (Wants to Be the First to Say Goodbye) by Gladys Knight & the Pips. At Noon the same day, the station launched into a 1990s-intensive modern rock format similar to other Clear Channel modern rockers in Grand Rapids, MI, Philadelphia, and Hartford, CT as Channel 104.3. The first song on "Channel" was No Way Back by The Foo Fighters. On May 29, 2008, the station changed its call letters to WCHH. The WCHH call letters were last used in 2003 by an Urban Contemporary station in Charlotte, North Carolina.

In January 2009, the transmitter was moved from northeast of the city to Television Hill near downtown, with hopes of improving signal coverage in the Howard and Anne Arundel County suburbs.

Z104.3

File:Z1043WCHH.jpg
Z104.3 logo from November 4, 2009 to July 1, 2014

[2][3] At 10 AM on November 4, 2009, after playing No Way Back by The Foo Fighters (which was also the first song played on "Channel"), the station briefly stunted again, this time with R&B music as "Charm 104.3", before officially flipping to rhythmic-leaning Top 40 at Noon as "Z104.3". The first song played on "Z" was 3 by Britney Spears. The station changed calls to WZFT on November 20, 2009. The debut of "Z104.3" marked the first time that Baltimore had a Top 40 station since 2001, when WXYV flipped to mainstream urban. Hot AC-formatted WWMX-FM, a former sister station now owned by CBS Radio, has been leaning towards a Mainstream Top 40 direction beginning the preceding year to try and fill that void. On July 1, 2014, WZFT updated its logo, mirroring a logo similar to sister station WHTZ in New York.

References

External links

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