- WMJJ
Infobox Radio station
name = WMJJ
airdate =December 26 ,1982
frequency = 96.5MHz
city =Birmingham, Alabama
area =
format =Adult Contemporary
owner =Clear Channel Communications
erp = 100,000watt s
haat = 313meter s
branding = "Magic 96.5"
slogan = "Birmingham's Biggest Variety"
sister_stations =WDXB ,WENN ,WERC ,WQEN
class = C0
facility_id = 2111
webcast = [http://www.magic96fm.com/cc-common/streaming_new/index.html?refreshed=yes Listen Live]
website = http://www.magic96fm.com
callsign_meaning = MJJ = Magic|WMJJ (96.5 FM), "Magic 96.5") is a
Clear Channel -ownedClassic Hits radio station that broadcasts fromBirmingham, Alabama . Other stations in the Birmingham market owned by Clear Channel includeWDXB -FM (102.5),WQEN -FM (103.7),WENN -FM (105.5), andWERC -AM (960). It is consistently one of the highest rated stations in the Birmingham market.History
Throughout the 1970s, there was very little choice in FM programming in Birmingham; most stations were either easy listening or album rock stations. 96.5 FM was the home of WQEZ-FM "your 'Q' to E-Z listening". The format consisted of instrumental music and soft vocals. The station was sold in 1982 to Capitol Broadcasting, a company owned primarily by radio group owner Ken Johnson. Ray Quinn, who had been Johnson's General Manager at his property in Louisville, KY (WRKA) moved to Birmingham and built a new management team and changed its format to adult contemporary on December 26 of that year. [cite news | first = Bob | last = Carlton | title = Ray Quinn returning to Birmingham to manage Clear Channel radio stations | url = http://www.al.com/birminghamnews/stories/index.ssf?/base/business/119684708665810.xml&coll=2 | work =
The Birmingham News | location = Birmingham, Alabama | date = 2007-12-05 | accessdate = 2008-01-03 | quote = Ray Quinn came to Birmingham in 1982 to help launch radio station Magic 96.5 (WMJJ-FM). Now, Quinn is back in town to run Clear Channel Radio's cluster of five stations, including his old station. He started here Tuesday.] Until this time there were no FM stations in the market with this format. The stations that came closest to filling this niche were WSGN-AM, WAPI-AM and Top-40 station WKXX. The new name of the station was Magic 96, and it has retained that name and format since then.Quinn's original team included program director Bill Thomas and original sales manager Chris Gallu. Later, the sales team leadership included Steve Streiker who was General Sales Manger from 1983 until 1985. Burt and Kurt hosted the morning show during the station's early years, Charlie Walker did middays, and Jeff Tyson handled evenings, both crossing the street from top-ranked (at the time) WKXX to join the station. When Bill Thomas left the programming chair to become VP/Programming for Capitol Broadcasting in the mid-80's, Smokey Rivers became program director and broadened WMJJ's playlist to even dabble in classic rock at night for several years. John Jenkins became PD in the early 90's and returned the station's focus to mainstream adult contemporary music. Thomas began a promotion in the early 1980's that remained a fixture on the station for nearly a decade, the "Magic Alabama Lottery". The promotion involved the mailing of numbered tickets to hundreds of thousands of Birmingham residents each Spring and Fall. One listener won $96,000, one of the largest cash prizes ever given away by a Birmingham radio station.
Magic 96 was one of the seminal "A/C" (
Adult Contemporary radio stations of the 1980s. Innovations in programming, audience promotion, advertising sales management, advertising inventory management and pricing, were pioneered at WMJJ and were widely emulated by stations in other radio markets.Current programming
From 2000 until 2002, the station had a harder edged format, leaning towards
hot adult contemporary . Lack of ratings success, plus the fact that it was competing with co-ownedWQEN , forced the station to segue to its present focus.Currently, the playlist of Magic 96.5 is heavy on oldies from the 1960s and 1970s, as well as 1980s music, with very few current soft rock hits. From noon on Friday until 12:00 midnight on Sunday, the station features a "Songs You Can Sing Along to Weekend", playing all oldies, with an all-
disco show from 7 PM to midnight Saturday.WMJJ also switches its programming to all
Christmas music each year, usually starting aroundThanksgiving Day and returning to regular programming onDecember 26 .References
External links
* [http://www.magic96fm.com Magic 96.5 WMJJ official website]
*FMQ|WMJJ
*FML|WMJJ
*FMARB|WMJJ
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