- WPPN
Infobox Radio Station
name = WPPN
airdate =1971
(WPPN sinceNovember 1 ,2004 )
frequency = 106.7 (MHz)
city =Des Plaines, Illinois
area =Chicago, Illinois
format =Spanish-language oldies
owner =Univision Communications
erp = 50,000watt s
haat = 129 meters
class =
branding = La Pasión
slogan =
webcast =
website = [http://www.univision.com Parent company site]WPPN is an FM radio station licensed to Des Plaines,
Illinois that targets theChicago metropolitan area . WPPN broadcasts on 106.7 MHz with a Spanish-languageoldies format.History
The Des Plaines-licensed 106.7 signed on as locally owned WYEN in 1971. Initially, the station aired an
Adult Standards format. By the mid-1980's, the station took on the syndicatedZ-Rock format and the call letters WZRC. In 1987, the station took on a smooth jazz format as WTWV, "The Wave", until it was sold to Salem Media, an ancestor of today'sSalem Communications , in 1989.Upon acquiring the station, Salem flipped the station to a
Christian Contemporary Music format, using theWYLL call letters. However, the format was short lived, as Salem began selling half of the day to Christian ministries in 1990. By 1991, music was heard only in afternoons, and in 1992 the remaining music was eliminated entirely, other than a short block on Saturday afternoons.In 1993, local Christian talk shows was added during middays and afternoons. By this point, the format had entirely become what the radio industry would consider "Christian Talk and Teaching". They also ran 3-4 hour blocks of satellite Contemporary Christian music overnights.
The religious talk format continued on WYLL until 2000. In 2000, Salem acquired WXRT-AM 1160, a powerful signal formerly known as WJJD, which had been used by former owner Infinity to simulcast 93.1
WXRT following the move ofWSCR to 670 AM. Salem moved the Christian talk programming of WYLL to WXRT-AM, which soon received the WYLL call letters, which remain to this day.With the move of WYLL to 1160, the 106.7 frequency became a clean slate for a new format. Salem utilized the frequency to bring Christian Contemporary Music back to Chicago. The new station was known as WZFS, "106.7 The Fish", and launched with "40 Days and 40 Nights" of commercial free music. "The Fish" branding, which Salem used for new Christian Contemporary stations, was also used in such markets as
Atlanta , onWFSH-FM 104.7, andLos Angeles , on 95.9KFSH-FM .However, "The Fish" was never a huge success in Chicago. There are many possible reasons for the failure of WZFS, which could include the presence of numerous non-commercial CCM stations, including K-Love affiliate 94.3 WJKL, the weakness of the 106.7 signal in
Chicago 's southern suburbs, and the fact that the majority of Chicagoland Christians areCatholic , notProtestant , the denomination which "The Fish" stations are targeted toward.By 2004, Salem had set most of its expansion hopes on a network of secular conservative talk stations. Affiliates in typically-liberal markets, such as 1150
WTTT inBoston , saw little or no ratings progress, but enabled Salem to charge more for national advertisements.At the same time, Univision Radio wanted Salem's 106.7 signal in Chicago. Univision offered to trade KOBT 100.7 in Houston (now
KKHT-FM ), KHCK 1480 in Dallas (now KNIT), KOSL-FM 94.3 in Sacramento (nowKLMG ), and 560 WIND in Chicago, in exchange for WZFS and KSFB 100.7 (nowKVVZ ) in San Francisco. Salem agreed.So, at midnight on
November 1 ,2004 , Salem took control of 560 WIND, where the conservative talk format was launched. At the same time, Univision took control of WZFS. After a few minutes of fumbling around on air, a new Spanish-languageAdult Contemporary format debuted on the frequency, as WPPN, "Pasion 106.7".Pasion took fire in the ratings, and pulled far better ratings initially than WZFS, beating some of Chicago's full-signalled stations. However, by Summer 2005, the station was beginning to lose steam in the ratings, although the ratings were still better than those of WZFS.
As the one-year anniversary of WPPN approached, Univision tweaked the music blend of WPPN, but left the name and the personalities of Pasion in place. The station began to, and currently, airs a blend of Spanish oldies music, although the format mirrors that of an English-language
Jack FM station due to the idea of variety in the music.External links
* [http://www.univision.com/content/channel.jhtml?chid=9627&schid=9828 Pasión 106.7 FM]
*fmq|WPPN
*fml|WPPN
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.