WKU Public Radio
Broadcast area
WKYU-FM: Bowling Green
WKPB: Henderson/Owensboro
WDCL-FM: Somerset/Campbellsville
WKUE-FM: Elizabethtown
WKYU-FM: 88.9 MHz
WKPB: 89.5 MHz
WDCL-FM: 89.7 MHz
WKUE-FM: 90.9 MHz
Branding
WKU Public Radio
Programming
Public radio (News, Information, Classical Music)
Affiliations
National Public Radio
American Public Media
Public Radio International
Kentucky Public Radio
Ownership
Owner
History
First air date
January 14, 1980
Call sign meaning
Technical information
Transmitter coordinates
WDCL-FM:
W277AA 103.3, Somerset
WKUE:
W275BT 102.9, Frankfort
Links
Website
WKU Public Radio is the public radio service of Western Kentucky UniversityinBowling Green, Kentucky. It is a division of the Department of Information Technology at WKU. The network consists of four FM radio stations and one FM translator. Combined, the stations cover most of Western Kentucky and parts of Indiana and Tennessee, reaching into the northern suburbs of Nashville.
WKYU-FM signed on for the first time in November 1980 as the first public radio station for south central Kentucky. The station was spearheaded by Dr. Chuck Anderson, who had experimented with a carrier current station on-campus at WKU since 1975.
The inception of WKYU-FM, broadcasting at 88.9 megahertz, did not come without controversy; in its first several months on the air, the station's airwaves caused some local residents to experience the station's audio overlaying with the visual reception of Nashville, Tennessee's "Big 3" television stations (ABC affiliate WNGE (now WKRN-TV), NBC affiliate WSM-TV (now WSMV-TV) and CBS affiliate WTVF), which all broadcast on the lower-VHF band. It even prompted residents of nearby Butler County to file a class-action federal lawsuit against the university in February 1981;[1] the suit was dismissed in June of that year due to insufficient evidence.[2]
Over the next ten years, WKYU would expand its coverage through three satellite stations. WDCL-FM signed-on in 1985 to serve areas around Somerset and Campbellsville from a tower in Adair County. WDCL obtained its calls from longtime public radio supporter Daniel Cole. In 1990, two more stations were launched to joined the network: WKUE-FMinElizabethtown and WKPB for the Ohio River communities of Henderson and Owensboro.[3]
Until August 2009, the network was known as Western's Public Radio, airing mostly classical music during the day. However, on August 31, it rebranded itself as WKU Public Radio, and began airing mostly news and talk during the day. Prior to the sign-on of WKYU-FM, the only portions of the coverage area that had a clear signal from an NPR station was Henderson and Owensboro, which received NPR programming from WNIN-FMinEvansville, Indiana, and some southern Kentucky counties along the Kentucky–Tennessee state line, where WPLN-FM is received from Nashville.
In 2016, WKYU-FM signed on a new service on a new FM translator station, W248CF. That translator airs classical music 24 hours a day. Since its signal does not reach too far outside of Warren County, it is repeated on WKYU-FM's second HD channel, and also streams live on the Internet.
WKU Public Radio airs news and informational programming on weekdays, with classical music heard at night. Weekends feature informational shows by day, with jazz on Saturday nights and specialty music programs Sunday evenings. Saturdays and Sundays at noon, Erika Brady hosts the "Barren River Breakdown" show. WKU Public Radio is an affiliateofNational Public Radio, with shows from American Public Media and the Public Radio Exchange also heard.
The network consists of four full-power stations and two FM translators, all located in Kentucky and simulcasting the same programming at all times. Together, the five main stations reach 65% of Kentucky, including the fringes of the Louisville and Lexington areas. The stations also serve portions of Indiana, Illinois and Tennessee. Much of this area is composed of rural areas and small towns; Evansville, Indiana is by far the largest city in the region.
Location
Callsign
Frequency
Sign on date
Callsign meaning
Class
Facility ID
Transmitter coordinates
Notes
WKYU-FM
88.9 FM
January 14, 1980; 44 years ago (1980-01-14)
Western Kentucky University[4]
C1
98,000
219 m (718.50 ft)
71856
37°5′23″N 86°38′5″W / 37.08972°N 86.63472°W / 37.08972; -86.63472
Flagship station of WKU Public Radio; also serves north-central Tennessee
89.5 FM
April 1, 1990; 34 years ago (1990-04-01)
Western Kentucky Public Broadcasting
C2
43,000
115 m (377.30 ft)
71864
37°51′6.1″N 87°19′43″W / 37.851694°N 87.32861°W / 37.851694; -87.32861
Also serves southwest Indiana and southeast Illinois, including Evansville and Carmi
WDCL-FM
89.7 FM
July 1985
W Daniel CoLe
C1
100,000
174 m (570.87 ft)
71857
37°9′29.9″N 85°9′49.8″W / 37.158306°N 85.163833°W / 37.158306; -85.163833
WKUE
90.9 FM
October 15, 1990; 33 years ago (1990-10-15)[5]
Western Kentucky University Elizabethtown
C3
5,200
190 m (623.36 ft)
71860
37°44′42.2″N 85°53′21.9″W / 37.745056°N 85.889417°W / 37.745056; -85.889417
Grade B coverage available in Louisville
W277AA
103.3 FM
1993
FCC assigned
D
250
89 m (291.99 ft)
71859
37°7′3.3″N 84°36′41.8″W / 37.117583°N 84.611611°W / 37.117583; -84.611611
Translator of WDCL-FM
W275BT
102.9 FM
2017
FCC assigned
D
250
56 m (183.73 ft)
153212
38°15′35.2″N 84°51′20.8″W / 38.259778°N 84.855778°W / 38.259778; -84.855778
Translator of WKUE
WEKU stations
WKMS stations
LPM stations
WKU stations
Other stations
See also List of NPR stations
Located in: Bowling Green, Kentucky
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