- CIDR-FM
Infobox Radio station
name = CIDR-FM
city =Windsor, Ontario
area =Windsor, Ontario /Detroit, Michigan
branding = 93-9 The River
slogan = It's About the Music
airdate = September 1948
frequency = 93.9MHz
format = Triple A
power = 100,000watt s
haat = 200meter s
class = C1
facility_id = 124896
coordinates = coord|42|10|15|N|82|29|59|W|type:landmark
callsign_meaning = C WInDsoR
or
C I Detroit River
former_callsigns = CKLW-FM (1991-1993)
CKMR (1988-1991)
CKLW-FM (1986-1988)
CKEZ (1985-1986)
CFXX (1984-1985)
CKJY (?-1984)
CKLW-FM (9/48-?)
owner =CTVglobemedia
webcast =
website = [http://www.939theriverradio.com/ 93-9 The River]
affiliations =CIDR is the callsign for a radio station, broadcasting at 93.9 FM in
Windsor, Ontario . The station broadcasts a Triple A format using the brand name 93-9 The River. It is owned and operated byCTVglobemedia . It is currently the only commercial triple A station inCanada .History
CKLW-FM
The station was originally launched by Western Ontario Broadcasting in 1948 as CKLW-FM, rebroadcasting the CBC Dominion Network programming of sister station CKLW. It dropped the CBC affiliation in 1950, and became the
Metro Detroit outlet of theMutual Broadcasting System .The stations were subsequently acquired in 1956 by a consortium including the American company RKO; RKO subsequently acquired full ownership of the stations in 1963. Also that year, CKLW-FM began airing distinct programming from its AM sister station. It originally broadcast two hours of separate programming each evening from 7 to 9 p.m., and in 1967, this was expanded to six hours per night (from 6 p.m. to midnight).
CKJY/94 Fox FM
In 1970, due to the
Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission 's new rules on foreign ownership of Canadian media, RKO was forced to sell the stations toBaton Broadcasting . Under Baton's ownership, CKLW-FM completely separated programming from its successfulTop 40 AM sister, airing acountry music format with news and talk oriented toward the Windsor audience (as opposed to the AM, which chiefly targeted the American side). In the late 1970s, the station changed its callsign to CKJY, airing a big band/adult standards/jazz format.In 1984, with CKLW's top 40 format on its last legs due to the growing popularity of rock and pop music formats on the FM dial, management tried to move the AM's top 40 format to the FM dial with the new calls CFXX and the name "94 Fox FM". The station's staff spent months preparing for the change, commissioning new jingles, advertising extensively via billboards and television, and practicing the format until they were sure it was ready. The
Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission , however, refused to approve more than four hours of pop music programming a day - two in the morning and two in afternoon drive - and insisted that the station remain big-band the rest of the time, holding that Top 40 music belonged on AM and that FM was for "fine music" such as classical, jazz, big band andbeautiful music . The experiment was, understandably, a failure. In 1985, Baton sold both CKLW and CFXX toCUC Broadcasting , who moved the big-band "Music of Your Life" format to CKLW and instituted an easy listening format on the FM as CKEZ.Big 8 On FM/More 94
The calls changed back to CKLW-FM in 1986, and the station instituted an oldies format meant to recapture the sound of the original CKLW-AM. The awakened CKLW-FM brought back the well-known Johnny Mann Singers-performed jingles for the "Big 8", along with many of the legendary personalities and "20/20 News" and a music rotation based on the "Big 8" playlists from the 1960s to the 1980s plus the older 1950s and early '60s hits that the AM had played as "golden" titles. "Ladies and gentlemen, the good times are back!" proclaimed former "Big 8" jock "Big" Jim Edwards during the station IDs. Although the overall sound was faithful to the "Big 8"'s glory days, the station's ratings remained low.
CKLW-FM became CKMR, "More 94", in 1988, and eventually evolved the oldies format in a middle-of-the-road direction ("The Motor City's Adult Music Station").
I-94/The Legend/93-9 The River
Then in 1991, after a short attempt at a classic soul/urban gold format as "I-94" which lasted only a few months, the CKLW-FM calls and the "Big 8"-inspired oldies format were once again restored, with the station branded as "93.9 The Legend". Once again, the station sounded faithful to the original CKLW-AM, featuring stalwarts from the golden age of Detroit's Top 40 radio era such as Tom Shannon, Dave Prince, Dave Shafer and Lee Alan (host of the weekly feature "Back in the '60s Again"). Unfortunately, the change once again did nothing to raise the station's anemic ratings.
CHUM Limited acquired the station in early 1993. Soon afterward, the format was switched to a "Arrow"-styleclassic hits format dubbed "Rock & Roll Oldies" featuring mainly 1970s classic rock title with a smattering of '60s and '80s material. CKLW-FM then flipped toadult album alternative in 1994 as "93-9 The River - Quality Rock, Real Variety", with the new calls CIDR. "The River" was never a ratings powerhouse but, with Ann Delisi (formerly of Detroit public-radio stationWDET ) at the helm, attracted a loyal listenership, which the station then proceeded to largely alienate by tweaking the format to "Smooth Rock" in 1999 and adding many classic-rock titles to the playlist."Lite Rock" and The "River's" Return
In 2000, the station flipped to an
adult contemporary format as Lite Rock 93-9 FM in an attempt to take on AC market leaderWNIC . Ratings remained low, particularly whenWMGC-FM entered the Detroit AC competition. Eventually CIDR tweaked its format in ahot adult contemporary direction, dropped the "Lite Rock" identity from its on-air imaging and became known as simply 93.9 FM, Today's Best Music. The station now competed chiefly withWDVD -FM 96.3 (the former WHYT) for the hot AC audience, but in this, it was still unsuccessful.At 3:00 PM on Friday,
September 1 ,2006 , 93.9 once again became "939 - The River." About three quarters of the way through the All American Rejects' "Move Along", the song was interrupted by the sound of rushing water, and a promo for the River was broadcast. It was also announced that they would be playing clips of over 7,000 songs, all weekend long, commercial free until Monday morning when the songs would be "Super sized".On Monday
September 4 ,2006 at 8:00 am, The River was officially relaunched by playing "Take Me to the River" byTalking Heads . The new "939 The River" uses the slogan "It's about the music", featuring artists such asU2 ,Sheryl Crow ,Led Zeppelin ,Death Cab for Cutie , Jack Johnson, theRolling Stones ,Tom Petty ,Dave Matthews Band ,Coldplay and Keane. Musically, the station is less pop-oriented thanCumulus Media 's successfulWQKL inAnn Arbor and features more "deep" cuts. The return of "The River" brings the Adult Alternative format back to the Detroit radio dial after public radio stationWDET dumped it in 2005 in favor of mainly NPR news and talk.In 2007 CIDR along with sister stations CKLW-AM, CKWW-AM and CIMX-FM in Windsor/Detroit and other CHUM stations across Canada were sold to CTVglobemedia. The radio division will continue to use the CHUM name though.
References
* [http://www.michiguide.com/dials/radio/cidr.html Michiguide.com - CIDR History]
*RecnetCanada|CIDR-FM
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